
Lily James
She transformed from a Downton Abbey lady's maid into a global star by bringing classic fairy-tale heroines to life with modern warmth and grit.
Space Shuttle Discovery lifted off for the last time, a routine resupply run that marked the beginning of the end for NASA's storied shuttle program.
At 6:21 AM Eastern Daylight Time on April 5, 2010, the Space Shuttle Discovery broke the stillness of the Florida morning. It was the thirty-einth flight for the orbiter, a machine more traveled than any of its siblings. Its mission, STS-131, was operational: seven astronauts, a Multi-Purpose Logistics Module named Leonardo, and 17,000 pounds of supplies for the International Space Station.
This launch lacked the public drama of a Hubble repair or the solemnity of a post-Columbia return-to-flight. It was a truck run. The news cycle that day was dominated by a mine explosion in West Virginia and political violence in Pakistan. Discovery’s ascent was a paragraph in the broader narrative of a program winding down. NASA had already announced the retirement of the shuttle fleet; this was one of the final five flights.
The wonder is in that very normalcy. For thirty years, the shuttle had been a vehicle of both profound ambition and tragic fallibility. On this day, it performed exactly as designed, a complex ballet of human and machine achieving orbit. The crew included a mix of veterans and rookies, a Japanese astronaut, and three women. They would spend fifteen days in space, transferring cargo, conducting experiments. The mission was flawless.
Discovery would fly once more, then be silenced. This April 5 launch was the penultimate chapter. It represented not a beginning, but a sustained peak before the descent. The shuttle, for all its compromises, was a machine that made the extraordinary routine. Its final missions were a long, quiet exhale.
Two women were shot on a Sarajevo bridge, their deaths marking the precise, terrible moment when political tension in Bosnia-Herzegovina crystallized into open war.
The air on the Vrbanja Bridge was cold, carrying the damp scent of the Miljacka River below. It was a Sunday. A crowd had gathered, perhaps two hundred people, mostly students and pacifists. They carried placards reading ‘Bosnia-Herzegovina = Peace’ and ‘We Want Peace.’ They were a human barrier, positioned between the ethnic Serb-held positions in the hills and the Bosnian government district.
Suada Dilberovic, a 24-year-old medical student from Dubrovnik, was there. Olga Sučić, a 34-year-old economist, was there. The protest was silent for a time, then songs began. The specifics of the sound are lost—whether it was a single shot or a volley from the Serbian Democratic Party building. The effect was absolute.
Dilberovic was hit in the chest. Sučić was struck in the neck. The crowd scattered, leaving the two women on the asphalt. The blood was dark against the grey of the bridge deck. A doctor from the nearby hospital rushed out, but it was too late. An ambulance arrived, its siren a new, sharp layer of noise over the stunned silence that followed the gunfire.
Their deaths were not the first violent acts in the dissolving Yugoslavia, but they became the formal zero point. The Bosnian War would claim over 100,000 lives. It would be defined by sieges and snipers and systematic atrocities. But it began here, with two women falling on a bridge named for a river. The transition from protest to war took only seconds. The bridge, a connective structure, became a dividing line. The date, April 5, entered the history books not for the protest, but for what ended it.
The Akashi Kaikyō Bridge, the world's longest suspension span, was engineered not for stillness, but to withstand forces that would shatter a rigid structure.
Most engineering marvels are celebrated for their solidity. The Akashi Kaikyō Bridge, which opened to traffic on April 5, 1998, is defined by its calculated flexibility. Its central span stretches 1,991 meters—a record that still stands—between the islands of Honshu and Awaji. The common assumption is that such a feat is about conquering distance with immovable steel and concrete. The truth is more dynamic.
The bridge is built in one of the most seismically and meteorologically volatile zones on Earth. The Great Hanshin earthquake of 1995 struck during its construction, shifting the tectonic plates beneath the towers. The engineers didn't start over; they simply recalculated. The final design allows the deck to sway up to 8 meters side-to-side in a typhoon. It can expand and contract by several meters over the course of a year with the temperature. The two main towers, appearing rigid from a distance, are designed to flex at their base.
This is not a monument to human rigidity, but to human adaptability. The bridge incorporates a complex system of pendulums and tuned mass dampers—essentially massive counterweights—that absorb and dissipate kinetic energy from wind and tremors. It is a structure in constant, subtle conversation with the elements it spans.
The opening ceremony was quiet, a procedural transition from construction site to public utility. There was no fanfare about taming nature. The bridge acknowledges a simple, profound principle: to endure immense force, you must first be willing to bend. Its longevity depends not on resisting the chaos of the Akashi Strait, but on moving with it.
A Supreme Court ruling found that Congress, by chipping away at a reservation's borders, could legally dissolve a tribe's sovereignty over its own land.
The case was Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Kneip. The question was jurisdictional. Did the State of South Dakota have the right to prosecute a Native American for a crime committed on land that was originally part of the Rosebud Reservation? The land in question had been carved out by a series of congressional acts between 1904 and 1910. These acts opened parcels to white settlement.
The Court, in a 6-3 decision delivered on April 5, 1977, said yes. The state had jurisdiction. The reasoning was technical, a matter of statutory interpretation. The majority opinion, written by Justice William Rehnquist, concluded that Congress had clearly intended to 'diminish' the reservation through these allotment acts. Therefore, the affected lands were no longer 'Indian country' for legal purposes.
The power of the decision lies in its quiet language. It did not involve soldiers or forced marches. It was a review of paperwork. By analyzing maps and legislative history, the Court ratified a process of erosion. Sovereignty was not violently seized but administratively disestablished. The reservation's boundaries, once guaranteed by treaty, were rendered permeable by statute.
The dissent, written by Justice Thurgood Marshall, called the outcome a 'great injustice.' He argued the acts were about land ownership, not political boundaries. The majority saw a change in lines on a map. The dissent saw the dissolution of a promise. The ruling set a precedent. It established that congressional intent, often inferred from century-old documents, could legally unravel the geographic foundation of tribal authority. It was sovereignty undone not by conquest, but by ledger.
The MS Sea Diamond struck a volcanic reef that wasn't on its charts, leading to a slow-motion disaster in the caldera of a dormant Greek volcano.
The Santorini caldera is a postcard of the ancient world. It is the flooded remnant of a volcanic explosion that shattered a island. Tourists are drawn to the sheer cliffs, the white villages, the deep blue water. They are seldom told they are sailing inside a volcano.
On the evening of April 5, 2007, the cruise ship MS Sea Diamond, with 1,195 passengers and 391 crew, maneuvered into this caldera. The approach to the port of Fira is tight. The captain made a turn. The ship struck a well-known but poorly charted volcanic reef near the islet of Nea Kameni. The reef is named 'Talbot' after a British survey ship that mapped it in 1848. Modern charts, it seems, were less precise.
The impact tore a gash in the hull. The ship did not list dramatically at first. It began to sink by the bow, slowly, over sixteen hours. The evacuation was orderly, even calm. Passidents were transferred to other vessels. By the next afternoon, the ship had slipped beneath the surface of the caldera, coming to rest on a ledge 100 meters down. Two French passengers, a father and his teenage daughter, were missing. They were never found.
The event poses an existential question about our maps. We navigate by charts that promise a known world. We build vessels of immense scale, trusting this knowledge. The Talbot Reef was a known unknown—a feature documented but not properly integrated into the active memory of navigation. The caldera, a site of cataclysmic force, became the setting for a mundane error. The ship sank not in a storm, but in a place of profound geological stillness, defeated by a rock that had waited for millennia. The volcano did not erupt; it simply remained.