Monday, December 15, 2014

On This Day in History - December 15 Bill of Rights Becomes Law

Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history


Dec 15, 1791: The Bill of Rights becomes law

On this day in 1791, Virginia becomes the last state to ratify the Bill of Rights, making the first ten amendments to the Constitution law and completing the revolutionary reforms begun by the Declaration of Independence. Before the Massachusetts ratifying convention would accept the Constitution, which they finally did in February 1788, the document's Federalist supporters had to promise to create a Bill of Rights to be amended to the Constitution immediately upon the creation of a new government under the document.

The Anti-Federalist critics of the document, who were afraid that a too-strong federal government would become just another sort of the monarchical regime from which they had recently been freed, believed that the Constitution gave too much power to the federal government by outlining its rights but failing to delineate the rights of the individuals living under it. The promise of a Bill of Rights to do just that helped to assuage the Anti-Federalists' concerns.

The newly elected Congress drafted the Bill of Rights on December 25, 1789. Virginia's ratification on this day in 1791 created the three-fourths majority necessary for the ten amendments to become law. Drafted by James Madison and loosely based on Virginia's Declaration of Rights, the first ten amendments give the following rights to all United States citizens:

1.Freedom of religion, speech and assembly

2.Right to keep and bear arms for the purpose of a well-regulated militia

3.No forcible quartering of soldiers during peacetime

4.Freedom from unreasonable search and seizure

5.Right to a grand jury for capital crimes and due process. Protection from double jeopardy, self-incrimination and public confiscation of private property without just compensation.

6.Right to speedy and public trial by jury and a competent defense

7.Right to trial by jury for monetary cases above $20

8.Protection against excessive bail or fines and cruel and unusual punishments

9.Rights not enumerated are retained by the people

10.Rights not given to the federal government or prohibited the state governments by the Constitution, are reserved to the States... or to the people





December 15, 1993: Schindler’s List opens, wins Spielberg his first Oscar

On this day in 1993, Schindler’s List, starring Liam Neeson in the true story of a German businessman who saves the lives of more than a thousand Polish Jews during the Holocaust, opens in theaters. The film was nominated for 12 Academy Awards and took home seven Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director. It was the first Best Director win for Spielberg, who had been nominated in the category for three of his earlier films: 1977’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind, 1981’s Raiders of the Lost Ark and 1982’s E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial. Schindler’s List was adapted from Thomas Keneally’s 1982 book Schindler’s Ark, about the Catholic businessman Oskar Schindler, who saved a large number of Jews during the Holocaust by employing them in a factory that made supplies for the German army. The film co-starred Ben Kingsley as Schindler’s Jewish accountant and Ralph Fiennes as an evil Nazi officer.

Spielberg, born on December 18, 1946, had his first major success as a director with 1975’s Jaws, about a killer shark that terrorizes a New England beach community. Jaws became the first movie in history to gross more than $100 million. Spielberg’s next film, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, about several humans who have life-changing run-ins with UFOs, was another huge box-office success. Spielberg scored yet another massive hit with 1981’s Raiders of the Lost Ark, which starred Harrison Ford as the adventurous archeologist Indiana Jones. The movie, co-written by George Lucas (Star Wars), was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. It became a successful movie franchise, and Spielberg helmed the film’s sequels: Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) and Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull (2008). Spielberg’s credits also include E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial and Jurassic Park (1993), two of Hollywood’s all-time highest-grossing movies, as well as the Academy Award-winning dramas The Color Purple (1985) and Saving Private Ryan (1998), which earned him his second Best Director Oscar. Among Spielberg’s more recent directorial credits are Minority Report (2002), with Tom Cruise; Catch Me if You Can (2002), with Leonardo DiCaprio; and Munich (2005), for which he received another Best Director Oscar nomination.

Liam Neeson, born on June 7, 1952, in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, began his stage career in the 1970s and during the 1980s appeared in such films as Excalibur (1981), The Mission (1986), Suspect (1987), with Cher, and The Good Mother (1988), with Diane Keaton. Following his performance in Schindler’s List, for which he earned a Best Actor Oscar nomination, Neeson starred in such movies as Rob Roy (1995), Michael Collins (1996) and Star Wars: Episode 1-The Phantom Menace (1999). Among Neeson’s other credits are the director Martin Scorsese’s Gangs of New York (2002), Love Actually (2003), with Hugh Grant; the biopic Kinsey (2004), Batman Begins (2005) and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe (2005).

















Dec 15, 1961: Architect of the Holocaust sentenced to die

In Tel Aviv, Israel, Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi SS officer who organized Adolf Hitler's "final solution of the Jewish question," is condemned to death by an Israeli war crimes tribunal.

Eichmann was born in Solingen, Germany, in 1906. In November 1932, he joined the Nazi's elite SS (Schutzstaffel) organization, whose members came to have broad responsibilities in Nazi Germany, including policing, intelligence, and the enforcement of Adolf Hitler's anti-Semitic policies. Eichmann steadily rose in the SS hierarchy, and with the German annexation of Austria in 1938 he was sent to Vienna with the mission of ridding the city of Jews. He set up an efficient Jewish deportment center and in 1939 was sent to Prague on a similar mission. That year, Eichmann was appointed to the Jewish section of the SS central security office in Berlin.

In January 1942, Eichmann met with top Nazi officials at the Wannsee Conference near Berlin for the purpose of planning a "final solution of the Jewish question," as Nazi leader Hermann Goering put it. The Nazis decided to exterminate Europe's Jewish population. Eichmann was appointed to coordinate the identification, assembly, and transportation of millions of Jews from occupied Europe to the Nazi death camps, where Jews were gassed or worked to death. He carried this duty out with horrifying efficiency, and between three to four million Jews perished in the extermination camps before the end of World War II. Close to two million were executed elsewhere.

Following the war, Eichmann was captured by U.S. troops, but he escaped a prison camp in 1946 before having to face the Nuremberg International War Crimes Tribunal. Eichmann traveled under an assumed identity between Europe and the Middle East, and in 1950 he arrived in Argentina, which maintained lax immigration policies and was a safe haven for many Nazi war criminals. In 1957, a German prosecutor secretly informed Israel that Eichmann was living in Argentina. Agents from Israel's intelligence service, the Mossad, were deployed to Argentina, and in early 1960 they located Eichmann living in the San Fernando section of Buenos Aires under the name of Ricardo Klement.

In May 1960, Argentina was celebrating the 150th anniversary of its revolution against Spain, and many tourists were traveling to Argentina from abroad to attend the festivities. The Mossad used the opportunity to smuggle more agents into the country. Israel, knowing that Argentina might never extradite Eichmann for trial, had decided to abduct him and take him to Israel illegally. On May 11, Mossad operatives descended on Garibaldi Street in San Fernando and snatched Eichmann away as he was walking from the bus to his home. His family called local hospitals but not the police, and Argentina knew nothing of the operation. On May 20, a drugged Eichmann was flown out of Argentina disguised as an Israeli airline worker who had suffered head trauma in an accident. Three days later, Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion announced that Eichmann was in Israeli custody.

Argentina demanded Eichmann's return, but Israel argued that his status as an international war criminal gave them the right to proceed with a trial. On April 11, 1961, Eichmann's trial began in Jerusalem. It was the first televised trial in history. Eichmann faced 15 charges, including crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people, and war crimes. He claimed he was just following orders, but the judges disagreed, finding him guilty on all counts on December 15 and sentencing him to die. On May 31, 1962, he was hanged near Tel Aviv. His body was cremated and his ashes thrown into the sea.



Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:


533 - Byzantine general Belisarius defeats the Vandals, commanded by King Gelimer, at the Battle of Ticameron.

687 - St Sergius I begins his reign as Catholic Pope succeeding Conon

1124 - Chancellor Haimeric selects pope (Lamberto becomes Honorius II)

1167 - Sicilian chancellor Stephen du Perche moves the royal court to Messina to prevent a rebellion.

1256 - Hulagu Khan captures and destroys the Hashshashin stronghold at Alamut in present-day Iran as part of the Mongol offensive on Islamic southwest Asia.

1467 - Stephen III of Moldavia defeats Matthias Corvinus of Hungary, with the latter being injured thrice, at the Battle of Baia.

1488 - Bartholomeus Diaz returns to Portugal after sailing round Cape of Good Hope

1569 - Westmoreland flees to Scotland

1582 - Leidse university names Rembert Dodoens prof of botany/medicine

1582 - Spanish Netherlands/Denmark/Norway adopt Gregorian calendar

1586 - Laevinus Torrentius, becomes bishop of Antwerp

1593 - State of Holland grants patent on windmill with crankshaft

1612 - Simon Marius, is 1st to observe Andromeda galaxy through a telescope

1640 - Duke of Braganca crowned King Johan IV of Portugal

1660 - Philippines: Andres Malongs rebels plunders Bagnotan

1664 - English colonizing Connecticut

1667 - Brandenburg declares himself neutral in Devolutie War

1680 - Tax revolt on Terschelling due to tax on cereal

1688 - Lord Delamere sides with King James II [NS 12/25]

1745 - Battle at Kesseldorf: Prussia beats Saksen & Austria

1791 - 1st US law school established at University of Pennsylvania

1791 - Bill of Rights ratified when Virginia gave its approval

1792 - 1st life insurance policy issued in US (Phila)

1794 - Revolutionary Tribunal abolished in France

1810 - 1st Irish magazine in US, Shamrock, is published

1815 - Rossini gets assignment for Il barbiere di Siviglia

1820 - 1st General pharmacopoeia in US published, Boston

1836 - Patent Office burns in Wash, DC

1854 - 1st street-cleaning machine in US 1st used in Philadelphia

1859 - GR Kirchoff describes chemical composition of Sun

1863 - Skirmish at Bean's Station, Tennessee (Knoxville Campaign)

1863 - Romania is using for the first time a mountain railway (from Anina to Oravita).

1864 - Battle of Nashville, TN

1864 - Raid on Stoneman: Abingdon & Glade Springs, VA

1868 - Shogunate rebels found Ezo Republic in Hokkaidō.

1874 - 1st reigning king to visit US (of Hawaii) received by Pres Grant

 Inventor Thomas Edison 1877 - Thomas Edison patents phonograph

1891 - James Naismith invents basketball (Canada)

1893 - Dvoráks "From the New World" premieres at Carnegie Hall NYC

1894 - Cricket day 2 1st T Aus v Eng Aus 586 (Gregory 201) England 3-130

1899 - Battle at Colenso, South Africa (Boers-British army)

1905 - The Pushkin House is established in St. Petersburg to preserve the cultural heritage of Alexander Pushkin

1909 - Thomas J Lynch becomes president of baseball's National League

1913 - Nicaragua becomes a signatory to the Buenos Aires copyright treaty.

1914 - Battle of Lodz ends; Russians retreat toward Moscow

1914 - British fleet forfeits chance to destroy German fleet in North Sea

1914 - Serbian troops retake Belgrade in Austria-Hungary

1916 - French defeat Germans in WW I Battle of Verdun

1917 - Moldavian Republic declares independence from Russia

1917 - World War I: An armistice is reached between the new Bolshevik government and the Central Powers.

1918 - American Jewish Congress holds it's 1st meeting

 Inventor James Naismith 1919 - Edna St Vincent Millay's "Aria da Capo," premieres in NYC

1919 - Fiume (Rijeka) declares it's Independence

1922 - IVVV (association) peace congress on war forms in Hague

1925 - 1st hockey game at Madison Sq Garden, Mont Candiens 3, NY Americans 1

1925 - 1st road with a depressed trough (Texas) opens to traffic

1926 - Facist national symbol elevated in Italy

1927 - Ed Hickman kidnaps child he later beheads

1929 - Walter Mittelholzer flies as 1st about the Kilimanjaro

1930 - Don Bradman takes his 1st Test Cricket wicket (Ivan Barrow, WI, lbw)

1933 - Baseball owners agree to ban Sunday doubleheaders until after June 15

1934 - Fokker F18 Snip flies to Neth West Indies

1935 - Detroit Lions win NFL championship

1935 - Max Euwe becomes world champ chess beating Alexander Alekhine

1936 - KVL-AM in Seattle Wash changes call letters to KEEN (now KING)

1938 - Groundbreaking begins for Jefferson Memorial in Wash DC

1939 - "Gone With the Wind" premieres in Atlanta

1939 - 1st commercial manufacture of nylon yarn, Seaford, Delaware

1939 - Snip departs for 1st flight to Paramaribo/Curacao

1941 - Gas/electrical use restricted in Holland

1941 - German submarine U-127 sinks

1941 - Nazi's transfers 100 Czech citizens/Heinrich Himmler falls faint

1941 - North Africa: allied assault up Italians Gazala-posing

1941 - USS Swordfish becomes 1st US sub to sink a Japanese ship

1941 - The American Federation of Labor adopts a no-strike policy in war industries.

1942 - Massachusetts issues 1st US vehicular license plate tabs

1944 - Bandleader, Major Glenn Miller, lost over English Channel

1944 - Hizbu'allah (Arm forces for Allah) forms

1944 - US Congress gives General Eisenhower his 5th star

1944 - US troops lands on Mindoro

1945 - John J "Cardinal" O'Connor, ordained as a priest

1946 - Chic Bears beat NY Giants 24-14 in NFL championship game

1946 - Giants Filchock & Hapes suspended by NFL, didn't report bribe attempt

1948 - Former state dept official Alger Hiss indicted in NYC for perjury

 Author Albert Camus 1949 - Albert Camus' "Les Justes" premieres in Paris

1950 - Ezzard Charles KOs Nick Barone to retain heavyweight boxing title

1950 - NYC's Port Authority opens

1952 - "Two's Company" opens at Alvin Theater NYC for 90 performances

1952 - Christine Jorgenson is 1st person to undergo a sex-change operation

1952 - KHON TV channel 2 in Honolulu, HI (NBC) begins broadcasting

1952 - Pope Pius XII publishes encyclical Orientales Ecclesias

1953 - WJHG TV channel 7 in Panama City, FL (NBC/ABC) begins broadcasting

1954 - Fordham University scraps football team for financial reasons

1954 - Netherlands Antilles becomes co-equal part of Kingdom of Netherlands

1956 - Emergency crisis in North Ireland proclaimed after IRA strikes

1956 - KGW TV channel 8 in Portland, OR (NBC) begins broadcasting

1956 - WRAL TV channel 5 in Raleigh-Durham, NC (CBS) begins broadcasting

1959 - Everly Brothers record "Let It Be Me"

1961 - Adolf Eichmann convicted of crimes against humanity in Israel

1961 - Equal access rule, political parties get TV broadcasting time

1961 - JFK visits Puerto Rico

1961 - L J Suenens appointed archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels

1962 - Vaughn Meader's "1st Family," album goes #1 & stays #1 for 12 wks

1964 - 1st time 4 people in space

1964 - American Radio Relay League (organization for hams) founded

1964 - Canada adopts maple leaf flag

1965 - 3rd cyclone of year kills 15,000 at the mouths of the Ganges River in Bangladesh

1965 - D Heneker & J Taylor's musical "Charlie Girl," premieres in London

1965 - Gemini 6 launched; makes 1st rendezvous in space (with Gemini 7)

1965 - Queen Juliana opens Zeeland Bridge to Oosterschelde

1965 - William Eckert replaces Ford Frick as 4th commissioner of baseball

1966 - "Joyful Noise" opens at Mark Hellinger Theater NYC for 12 performances

1966 - Audouin Dollfus discovers 10th satellite of Saturn, Janus

1966 - John W Mecom Jr becomes 1st owner of New Orlean Saints

1967 - Beatles release "Christmas Time is Here Again"

1967 - Joe Garagiola joins Today Show panel

1967 - Silver Bay bridge (Oh-WV) collapes during afternoon rush hr, 34 die

1967 - The Silver Bridge collapses, killing 46 people.

1969 - Plastic Ono Band, play their only concert at London's Lyceum Ballroom

1969 - SF Fire Dept replaces leather helmets with plastic ones

1970 - Ferryboat capsized in Korean Strait drowning 261

1970 - S Korean ferry Namyong-Ho sinks in Strait of Korea, 308 killed

1970 - Soviet Venera 7 is 1st spacecraft to land on another planet (Venus)

1970 - Illinois State Constitution is adopted at a special election.

1971 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

1973 - American Psychiatric Association declares homosexuality is not mental illness

1973 - Golf Resort (Disney Inn) opens

1973 - Pirates of Caribbean ride opens at Disneyland

1973 - Sandy Hawley becomes 1st jockey to win 500 races in 1 year

1973 - Tennessee beats Temple 11-6 in low scoring NCAA basketball game

1973 - US Psychiatrist say homosexuals are not mentally ill

1974 - A's Catfish Hunter is ruled a free agent (later signs with Yankees)

1976 - Argo Merchant tanker off Massachusetts' SE coast, spills 7.6 m gallons of crude when ship ran aground

1976 - Jamaica premier Manley wins elections

1976 - Samoa becomes a member of the UN.

1978 - Saint Maarten Patriotic Movement (SPM) forms under W James

1978 - Test Cricket debut of Malcolm Marshall, v India at Bangalore

1979 - Deposed Shah of Iran leaves US for Panama

1979 - World Court in Hague rules Iran should relase all US hostages

1980 - NY Yankee Dave Winfield becomes highest-paid player, 10 years $15M

1980 - Premier Queddei troops conquers Chad capital N'djamena

1980 - ZBZ Sangha registered after 5 yrs of administrative hassles in Warsaw

1981 - 4th Emmy Sports Award presentation

1981 - NASA launches Intelsat V satellite, no. 503

1982 - Bill Parcells becomes 12th head coach of NY Giants

1982 - Roy Williams, Teamsters pres, & 4 others convicted of bribery

1982 - Sao Tome & Principe constitution approved

1982 - Spain reopens border with Gibraltar

1983 - 3 KC Royals suspended due to cocaine usage

1983 - Columbia flies to Kennedy Space Center via El Paso, Kelly AFB

1983 - Last 80 US combat soldiers in Grenada withdrew

1983 - Wendy Wasserstein's "Isn't It Romantic," premieres in NYC

1984 - USSR launches Vega 1 for rendezvous with Halley's Comet

 Actor/Director Sylvester Stallone 1985 - Sylvester Stallone & Brigitte Nielson wed

1986 - 150 killed during race riot in Karachi

1986 - CIA director William Casey suffers a cerebral seizure

1986 - Carnegie Hall reopens after a $50 million facelift

1987 - "Les Miserables" opens at Shubert Theatre, Boston

1988 - Lori Davis of Long Island sues Mike Tyson for grabbing her buttocks

1991 - "Nick & Nora" closes at Marquis Theater NYC after 9 performances

1991 - Deb Richard wins JBP Cup LPGA Match Play Golf Championship

1992 - Arthur Ashe is named Sports Illustrated Sportman of Year

1992 - WNew AM (1130) NYC resigns air, replaced by WBBR

1993 - C-130 flies into a Philippines hill & explodes, 16 killed

1993 - Haitian premier Robert Malval resigns

1993 - John Williams final appearance as conductor of Boston Pops

1993 - Lee Aspen resigns as secretary of defense

1993 - Y-12 crashes at Phonesavanh, Laos: 18 killed

 Heavyweight Boxing Champion Mike Tyson 1993 - British premier Major/Irish premier Reynolds signs Downing Street Declaration concerning Northern Ireland self determination

1994 - "Tuna Christmas" opens at Booth Theater NYC for 20 performances

1994 - John Bruton becomes Ireland's premier

1994 - Liberia militia kills 48 inhabitants of Monrovia

1994 - Palau becomes a member of the UN.

1995 - Playboy goes back on sale after 36 year ban in Ireland

1995 - The European Communities Court of Justice hands down the "Bosman ruling", giving EU footballers the right to a free transfer at the end of their contracts, with the provision that they are transferring from one UEFA Federation to another.

1996 - Dottie Pepper & Juli Inkster win LPGA Diner's Club Golf Matches

1996 - Jim Colbert & Bob Murphy wins Diner's Club Senior PGA Golf Matches

1996 - Tom Lehman & Duffy Waldoff wins Diner's Club PGA Golf Matches

1997 - SF 49ers retire Joe Montana's #16

2001 - The Leaning Tower of Pisa reopens after 11 years and $27,000,000 to fortify it, without fixing its famous lean.

2005 - Latvia amends its constitution to eliminate possibility of same-sex couples being entitled to marry.

2005 - Argentina's president Néstor Kirchner announces the early repayment of its external debt to the IMF.

2005 - Introduction of the F-22 Raptor into USAF active service.

2005 - The 2005 Atlantic Power Outage began.

2006 - First flight of the F-35 Lightning II.

2009 - Boeing's new 787 Dreamliner makes its maiden flight from Seattle, Washington.

2012 - 18 Asylum seekers drown in the Aegean Sea on the way to Greece from Turkey










The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/dec15.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

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