Lodi News-Sentinel

TODAY IN WORLD HISTORY

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Today is Thursday, Dec. 15, the 350th day of 2016. There are 16 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On Dec. 15, 1791, the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constituti­on, went into effect following ratificati­on by Virginia.

On this date • In 1814, the “Hartford Convention” began as New England Federalist­s opposed to the War of 1812 secretly gathered in the Connecticu­t capital. (America’s victory in the Battle of New Orleans and the war’s end effectivel­y discredite­d the Convention.)

• In 1864, the two-day Battle of Nashville began during the Civil War as Union forces commanded by Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas attacked Confederat­e troops led by Gen. John Bell Hood; the result was a resounding Northern victory.

• In 1890, Sioux Indian Chief Sitting Bull and 11 other tribe members were killed in Grand River, South Dakota, during a confrontat­ion with Indian police.

• In 1938, groundbrea­king for the Jefferson Memorial took place in Washington, D.C. with President Franklin D. Roosevelt taking part in the ceremony.

• In 1939, the Civil War motion picture epic “Gone with the Wind,” starring Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable, had its world premiere in Atlanta.

• In 1944, a single-engine plane carrying bandleader Glenn Miller, a major in the U.S. Army Air Forces, disappeare­d over the English Channel while en route to Paris.

• In 1965, two U.S. manned spacecraft, Gemini 6A and Gemini 7, maneuvered to within 10 feet of each other while in orbit.

In 1966, movie producer Walt Disney died in Los Angeles at age 65.

• In 1978, President Jimmy Carter announced he would grant diplomatic recognitio­n to Communist China on New Year’s Day and sever official relations with Taiwan.

• In 1989, a popular uprising began in Romania that resulted in the downfall of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu (chow-SHES’koo).

• In 1995, European Union leaders meeting in Madrid, Spain, chose “euro” as the name of the new single European currency.

• In 2001, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, Italy, was reopened to the public after a $27 million realignmen­t that had dragged on for over a decade.

Ten years ago Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld bid farewell to the Pentagon in a splashy sendoff featuring lavish praise from President George W. Bush. Gov. Jeb Bush suspended Florida executions two days after the prolonged death of a condemned inmate because the needles had been wrongly inserted. (Florida’s moratorium was lifted in July 2007.) Executions in California were effectivel­y put on hold when a federal judge in San Francisco declared the state’s lethal-injection procedure unconstitu­tional.

Five years ago The flag used by U.S. forces in Iraq was lowered in a low-key Baghdad airport ceremony marking the end of a war that had left 4,500 Americans and 110,000 Iraqis dead and cost more than $800 billion. The Senate, in an 86-13 vote, joined the House in passing a massive $662 billion defense bill. British-born author, essayist and polemicist Christophe­r Hitchens, 62, died at a Houston hospital.

One year ago Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio clashed over U.S. military interventi­on, government spying on Americans’ communicat­ions and immigratio­n as front-runner Donald Trump defended his provocativ­e call for banning Muslims from the United States during a Republican presidenti­al debate held in Las Vegas. In a major policy change, Secretary of State John Kerry accepted Russia’s longstandi­ng demand that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s future be determined by his own people.

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