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This Day In History: November 15th

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Communication
 
 
Crime and Corruption
 
 
Defence
 
 
Disasters
 
 
Discovery
 
 
Education
 
 
Film, Television and Radio
 
 
Heads of State
 
 
Health and Social Welfare
 
 
Industry
 
 
Law
 
 
Motor Sport
 
 
People
   
 
Politics
 
 
Publishing
 
 
Religion
 
 
Science
   
 
Sport
 
 
Technology
 
 
The Arts
 
 
The Environment
 
 
The Law
1777
USA The Continental Congress approved the Articles of Confederation, precursor to the U.S. Constitution.
 
The Workforce
 
 
Trade and Economy
 
 
Transport
1978
Australia
On this day in 1978 the West Gate Bridge opened in Melbourne, Victoria. Measuring 2583 metres in length, it was the second cable-stayed bridge to have been built in Australia, and had the country's second-longest single span. The opening ceremony was overshadowed by memories of October 15th, 1970, when the first steel span on the western bank collapsed killing 35 men.
 
War
 
 




1806: Explorer Zebulon Pike spotted the mountaintop that became known as Pikes Peak.

1889: Brazil's monarchy was overthrown.

1901: Miller Reese patented an electrical hearing aid.

1902: Anarchist Gennaro Rubin failed in his attempt to murder King Leopold II of Belgium.

1920: The League of Nations met for the first time in Geneva, Switzerland.

1926: The National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) debuted with a radio network of 24 stations. The first network radio broadcast was a four-hour "spectacular."

1939: U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt laid the cornerstone of the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, DC.

1940: The first 75,000 men were called to Armed Forces duty under peacetime conscription.

1965: The Soviet probe, Venera 3, was launched from Baikonur, Kazakhstan. On March 1, 1966, it became the first unmanned spacecraft to reach the surface of another planet when it crashed on Venus.

1966: The flight of Gemini 12 ended successfully as astronauts James A. Lovell and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr. splashed down safely in the Atlantic Ocean.

1969: In Washington, DC, a quarter of a million protesters staged a peaceful demonstration against the Vietnam War.

1985: Britain and Ireland signed an accord giving Dublin an official consultative role in governing Northern Ireland.

1986: A government tribunal in Nicaragua convicted American Eugene Hasenfus of charges related to his role in delivering arms to Contra rebels. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison and was pardoned a month later.

1986: Ivan F. Boesky, reputed to be the highest-paid person on Wall Street, faced penalties of $100 million for insider stock trading. It was the highest penalty ever imposed by the SEC.

1988: The Palestine National Council, the legislative body of the PLO, proclaimed the establishment of an independent Palestinian state at the close of a four-day conference in Algiers.

1992: Richard Petty drove in the final race of his 35-year career.

1993: A judge in Mineola, NY, sentenced Joey Buttafuoco to six months in jail for the statutory rape of Amy Fisher. Fisher was serving a prison sentence for shooting and wounding Buttafuoco's wife, Mary Jo.

1995: Texaco agreed to pay $176 million to settle a race-discrimination lawsuit.

1999: Representatives from China and the United States signed a major trade agreement that involved China's membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO).

2000: Three police officers from the Rampart division of the Los Angeles police department were convicted on several counts of conspiracy to obstruct justice. One other officer was acquitted. The case was the first major case against the anti-gang unit.

2005: In Amiens, France, Isabelle Dinoire became the first person to undergo a partial face transplant. She had been attacked by a dog earlier in the year.

2006: Andy Warhol's painting of Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong sold for $17.4 million. At the same auction "Orange Marilyn" sold for $16.2 million and "Sixteen Jackies" sold for $15.6 million.

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