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September 1946

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The following events occurred in September 1946:

September 2, 1946: British India's Viceroy Wavell swears in transitional government and future prime ministers Nehru of India and Liaquat Ali Khan of Pakistan
September 10, 1946: Sister Agnes Bojaxhiu receives "call within a call" and inspiration to become Mother Teresa

September 1, 1946 (Sunday) edit

September 2, 1946 (Monday) edit

September 3, 1946 (Tuesday) edit

  • U.S. President Harry S. Truman approved the go-ahead for "Project Paperclip", ostensibly a campaign to bring German scientists to the U.S., and to keep them from being taken to the U.S.S.R. Many of the scientists had been former Nazis, and assisted in experimentation on human subjects with radiation, oxygen deprivation and flash blindness.[7]

September 4, 1946 (Wednesday) edit

  • An Air France plane bound for London crashed moments after takeoff, when it failed to clear the roof of a factory at Le Bourget, killing 20 persons. The evening before, another Air France plane crashed as it approached Copenhagen from Paris, killing all 22 persons on board.[8]
  • The Ben Hecht-written play A Flag is Born, advocating the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people in Israel, opened on Broadway.
  • The comedy film Monsieur Beaucaire starring Bob Hope was released.
  • Died: Nobu Shirase, 85, leader of the Japanese Antarctic Expedition of 1911–1912

September 5, 1946 (Thursday) edit

  • Trans-Luxury Airlines Flight 850, on its way (with several stops) from New York to San Francisco, crashed into a hillside as it attempted to land in Elko, Nevada, killing 21 of the 22 people on board. A 2-year-old boy survived the accident with only minor injuries.[9]
  • The Tuskegee Airmen unit was disbanded and the base at Tuskegee, Alabama, was closed.[10]
  • Born: Freddie Mercury, singer and songwriter for the rock group (Queen), as Farrokh Bulsara; in Stone Town, Zanzibar (d. 1991).

September 6, 1946 (Friday) edit

September 7, 1946 (Saturday) edit

  • Royal Air Force Captain Teddy Donaldson set a new official speed record, flying a Gloster Meteor at 615.78 miles per hour in level flight, or Mach 0.81 at 1,100 feet.[13]
  • In the fourth major airline accident in five days, a British South American Airways airliner crashed shortly after takeoff from Bathurst (modern day Banjul, capital of the Gambia). Only one of the 24 persons on board survived.[14]

September 8, 1946 (Sunday) edit

September 9, 1946 (Monday) edit

September 10, 1946 (Tuesday) edit

  • In what is now celebrated among the Missionaries of Charity as "Inspiration Day", 36-year-old Sister Agnes Teresa Bojaxhiu of the Loreto Sisters' Convent experienced what she would describe as the "call within a call". She was traveling on a train from Siliguri to Darjeeling when she heard the call of God: "I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them.".[19] As one author later noted, "Though no one knew it at the time, Sister Teresa had just become Mother Teresa".[20]
  • Fred Morrison, an American fighter pilot during World War II, first sketched his idea for a toy plastic disc could fly through the air after it was thrown. He called his invention the "Whirlo-Way". By 1955, he sold a lighter version, the "Pluto Platter", to the Wham-O toy company, which manufactured millions of the discs under the brand name Frisbee.[21]
  • With workers at Pittsburgh's electric utility threatening a walkout, and management standing firm against their demands, citizens of the 10th largest city in the U.S. braced for a 12:01 a.m. shutdown of all electric power. To their surprise, the blackout never came, as a judge issued an injunction at midnight.[22]
  • Born:

September 11, 1946 (Wednesday) edit

  • The Brooklyn Dodgers and the visiting Cincinnati Reds played the longest scoreless tie in Major League Baseball history, going for 19 innings in 4 hours, 40 minutes, before the game was called because of darkness.[23]
  • The United States turned over $1,121,400,000 worth of surplus U.S. Army property to the Philippines, including vehicles, construction equipment, prefab structures, clothing, medicine, food and other items. The material had been stockpiled in the Philippines after its recapture by the Allies, for the planned invasion of Japan.[24]
  • Died: Ida Stover Eisenhower, 84, mother of General Dwight D. Eisenhower

September 12, 1946 (Thursday) edit

 
 
Commerce Secretary Wallace and President Truman
  • U.S. Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace delivered a speech at a rally at Madison Square Garden, contradicting the statement of foreign policy that had been made six days earlier by Secretary of State Byrnes, embarrassing President Harry S. Truman, and bringing an end to Wallace's career in government. Truman, who had glanced at the speech two days earlier, was asked at a press conference about the speech and whether it "represented the policy of his administration", and replied that it was. That evening, Wallace declared that "We have no more business in the political affairs of Eastern Europe than Russia has in the political affairs of Latin America, Western Europe and the United States... and just two days ago, when President Truman read these words, he said they represented the policy of his Administration.".[25] Truman compounded the error by making the excuse that "It was my intention to express the thought that I approved the right of the Secretary of Commerce to deliver that speech. I did not intend to indicate that I approved the speech" which TIME magazine described as a "clumsy lie".[26]
  • Born: Neil Lyndon, British journalist and writer, known for his book No More Sex War: The Failures of Feminism[27]

September 13, 1946 (Friday) edit

  • Captain Amon Göth, 37, Nazi SS officer who had carried out the mass executions of more than 13,000 Jews in Kraków and Tarnów, and the Szebnia concentration camp, was hanged, along with Dr. Leon Gross, a Jew who had collaborated with him at the Plaszow concentration camp. Captain Göth was portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in the film Schindler's List.[28]
  • Ten days after the United States launched Project Paperclip, the Soviet Union issued decree No. 2163-880s, launching Operation Osoaviakhim, to transfer German rocket production potential to the USSR.[29]
  • The Boston Red Sox clinched the American League pennant, after Ted Williams hit an inside-the-park home run for a 1–0 win over the Cleveland Indians.[30]
  • Dr. Willis J. Potts performed the first aorta-to-pulmonary artery anastomosis to correct a congenital heart defect, a surgery later called the Potts shunt. The first patient was a 21-month-old girl at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago. The surgery was performed on 658 more patients until being discontinued in 1967 because of complications that often arose.[31]
  • Died: George Washington Hill, 61, President of American Tobacco Company, who increased cigarette sales worldwide over a 21-year period.[32]

September 14, 1946 (Saturday) edit

 
Hank Williams
  • The U.S. Census Bureau forecast that the United States population in 1990 would peak at 165,000,000 and that it would decline to 168,177,000 by 2000.[33] The actual figures for the two censuses were 248,709,873 in 1990 and 281,421,906 in 2000.[34]
  • Hiram King "Hank" Williams began his celebrated career as a country musician, signing a contract with Fred Rose in Nashville.[35]
  • Ivan Serov completed his report to Joseph Stalin about the fate of Stalin's son, Lt. Yakov Dzhugashvili, who had been captured by the Germans in World War II, and killed in 1943 while attempting to escape from the POW camp at Sachsenhausen.[36]
  • Ho Chi Minh left Paris after being forced into signing an unfavorable agreement with France. During his stay, the future President of North Vietnam had visited the American Embassy in a fruitless attempt to obtain assistance from the United States.[37]
  • In a referendum on independence, residents of the small Faroe Islands voted 5,660 to 5,500 in favor of independence from Denmark. Approximately 25,000 people lived on 17 of the 21 islands in the group.[38]

September 15, 1946 (Sunday) edit

September 16, 1946 (Monday) edit

  • After drought and a poor harvest added to a famine in the Soviet Union, a governmental decree went into effect, doubling the price for rations of meat and dairy products, and tripling the price of bread. On September 27, another decree reduced the number of people entitled to bread rations. The famine lasted into 1947, costing more than a million lives.[42]
  • At his factory in Maranello, Italian auto manufacturer Enzo Ferrari produced his first V12 engine, the component that would set the Ferrari as a leader in the production of sports cars.[43]
  • Owners of baseball's National League and American League teams met in New York City and, according to Dodgers' owner Branch Rickey and baseball commissioner Happy Chandler, secretly voted 15–1 to approve an August 27 recommendation against allowing African American players into the major leagues. Although other owners disputed the story, Chandler's copy of the committee report was discovered after Chandler's death, when his papers had been donated to the University of Kentucky.[44]

September 17, 1946 (Tuesday) edit

 
RCA 630-TS, first mass produced TV set
  • Mass production of television sets began, with RCA producing the first new TV since World War II, a 10-inch set made at its plant in Camden, New Jersey.[45] Only 5,000 sets had been produced in the years before the U.S. entered the war. By the end of 1947, 150,000 had been sold, rising to 4 million in 1949 and 10 million in 1950.[46]

September 18, 1946 (Wednesday) edit

  • Hidden in the Warsaw Ghetto by the Ojneg-Szabes group during the Second World War, the archive of materials that had been written during the siege was unearthed. Dr. Emmanuel Ringelblum supervised the writing, collection, storage (in watertight milk cans) and burial for future generations to read.[47]
  • Mound Metalcraft, Inc., was founded in Mound, Minnesota, by Lynn E. Baker, Avery F. Crounse and Alvin F. Tesch. In 1947, the company introduced the first Tonka toys, a line of durable metal toy trucks and other equipment.[48]

September 19, 1946 (Thursday) edit

  • In a speech at Zürich, former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill proposed what would eventually become the European Community. Churchill suggested "a remedy, which, if generously and spontaneously adopted by a great majority of the people of many lands, would, as if by a miracle, transform the whole scene and make Europe as free and happy as Switzerland is today... We must build a kind of United States of Europe."[49]
  • The first Cannes Film Festival was held, taking place at the city of the same name on the French Riviera. The event had originally been planned for September 1, 1939, the day that World War II began, and postponed until the war's end.[50]
  • Walter F. White, executive director of the NAACP, and five other civil rights activists met at the White House with President Truman to ask for the help of the U.S. government in ending violence against African-Americans. Although White had met in the past with Presidents Coolidge, Hoover and Roosevelt without success, Truman was horrified by the description of the blinding of Isaac Woodard, and ordered Attorney General Tom Clark to begin working on "the inauguration of some sort of policy to prevent such happenings".[51]
  • Born: Gerald Brisco, professional wrestler; in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

September 20, 1946 (Friday) edit

  • President Truman fired Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace, eight days after Wallace's controversial speech in New York. Noting that "the Government of the United States must stand as a unit in its relations with the rest of the world", President Truman announced, "I have today asked Mr. Wallace to resign from the Cabinet."[52][53]
  • The landscape of the American and Canadian Niagara Falls was permanently altered when a 120-foot (37 m) wide section of rock collapsed at 10:19 a.m.[54]
  • The 1st Cannes Film Festival opened in France.

September 21, 1946 (Saturday) edit

  • The KB Toys business was created by brothers Harry Kaufman and Joseph Kaufman, who had operated the Kaufman Brothers wholesale candy business since 1922 and then acquired a toy company from a debtor and moved into becoming a wholesale seller of toys under the trade name Kay-Bee Toy & Hobby Stores, later a chain of retail stores.
  • Died: Vincent Benevento, 46, self-styled "Cheese King of Chicago", was murdered while vacationing in Lake Zurich, Illinois. After surviving being shot 10 times in a 1945 attack, Benevento died after being shot 7 more times in the new incident.[55]

September 22, 1946 (Sunday) edit

 
Berra
  • Yogi Berra made his major league debut, entering a game for the New York Yankees against the Philadelphia A's. Berra hit a home run in his first time at bat, and then went on to a colorful career.[56]

September 23, 1946 (Monday) edit

  • In what would later become South Vietnam, the Commissioner of the French-controlled Autonomous Republic of Cochin-China issued an order authorizing the arrest of any Asian resident whose identity papers were not in order. Police and the French Army arrested more than 50,000 Vietnamese and conscripted them to work at the area's rubber plantations.[57]
  • The Løgting, legislature for the Faroe Islands, voted 12–11 in favor of creating a nation independent of Denmark, which had ruled since the year 1386, in accordance with the September 15 plebiscite. King Christian X dissolved the Iagting the next day and denied the resolution. On September 9, 1947, a new Faroen parliament would accept a Danish proposal for autonomy in a continued union with Denmark.[58]

September 24, 1946 (Tuesday) edit

 
Clifford

September 25, 1946 (Wednesday) edit

  • African-American actor Canada Lee surprised and impressed audiences at Boston's Shubert Theatre, portraying Daniel de Bosola in a production of The Duchess of Malfi. In a reversal of the longtime practice of white men donning blackface, Lee "opened a new field for Negro actors today by donning white makeup and portraying a white character for the first time in the history of the American stage", according to a UPI report. In the production that opened September 23 and continued to Broadway, Lee wore a special white paste that had been used medically, to cover burns and marks, but had never before been used in the theatre.[63][64]
  • Born: Bishan Singh Bedi, Indian cricketer; in Amritsar, Punjab Province, British India)
  • Died: Dr. Hans Eppinger, physician at Dachau who oversaw experiments on making seawater drinkable. Eppinger committed suicide as the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials were concluding.

September 26, 1946 (Thursday) edit

September 27, 1946 (Friday) edit

  • Nikolai V. Novikov, the Soviet ambassador to the United States, sent a long telegram to his boss, Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov, describing U.S. foreign policy as reflecting "imperialistic tendencies of monopolistic American capital" and "a striving for world supremacy". Analogous to George F. Kennan's February 22 "long telegram", the Novikov cable helped shape strategy for one nation against its greatest adversary during the Cold War. Classified for years, the cable was not released until 1990 as part of the "Conduct of the Cold War" conferences.[66]
  • Defending world middleweight boxing champion Tony Zale retained his title against heavily favored challenger Rocky Graziano, in a bout at Yankee Stadium. A crowd of 39,827 watched Zale, fighting after four years of World War II service, knock Graziano out midway through the sixth round.[67]
  • Died: Geoffrey de Havilland Jr., British test pilot, was killed when his DH-108 jet, the Swallow, broke apart as he reached Mach 0.875 while attempting supersonic flight.[68][69]

September 28, 1946 (Saturday) edit

September 29, 1946 (Sunday) edit

September 30, 1946 (Monday) edit

References edit

  1. ^ John S. Koliopoulos and Thanos M. Veremis, Modern Greece: a history since 1821 (John Wiley and Sons, 2009) p120; "Greek Monarchy Wins In Plebiscite; 8 Die In Voting Disturbances", Pittsburgh Press, September 2, 1946, p1
  2. ^ Justin Corfield, The History of Cambodia (ABC-CLIO, 2009) p43
  3. ^ Gavan Daws, Shoal of Time: A History of the Hawaiian Islands (University of Hawaii Press, 1974) p363
  4. ^ David Kamp, The United States of Arugula: How We Became a Gourmet Nation (Random House, Inc., 2007) p51
  5. ^ "Era of National Govt. Dawns", The Indian Express (Madras), September 3, 1946, p1
  6. ^ Jagdish Chandra Sharma, Indian Prime Ministership: A Comprehensive Study (Concept Publishing Company, 2002) p19-20
  7. ^ Nick Redfern, Body Snatchers in the Desert: The Horrible Truth at the Heart of the Roswell Story (Simon and Schuster, 2005) pp63-64
  8. ^ "Plane Crash In France Kills Score", Miami Daily News, September 4, 1946, p1
  9. ^ "18 Die, 2 Missing In Airliner Crash", Pittsburgh Press, September 5, 1946, p1
  10. ^ Cynthia Jacobs Carter, Freedom in My Heart: Voices from the United States National Slavery Museum National Geographic Books, 2009) p191
  11. ^ John Lewis Gaddis, The United States and the origins of the Cold War, 1941–1947 (Columbia University Press, 2000) p331; "Byrnes Urges Government For Germany", Pittsburgh Press, September 6, 1946, p1
  12. ^ Bob Carroll, Total Football: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League (HarperCollins, 1999) p528
  13. ^ Al Blackburn, Aces Wild: The Race for Mach 1 (Rowman & Littlefield, 1999) p11
  14. ^ "23 Killed in Crash Of Plane in Africa", Pittsburgh Press, September 7, 1946, p1
  15. ^ "Bulgar Boy King Loses His Thorne", Miami Daily News, September 9, 1946, p2-A
  16. ^ "Bulgaria's former king OK'd as premier", Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, July 25, 2001, p7A
  17. ^ Robert McHenry, Famous American Women: A Biographical Dictionary from Colonial Times to the Present (Courier Dover Publications, 1983) p121
  18. ^ Trans-Australia Airlines Museum 2011-02-25 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Meg Greene, Mother Teresa: a biography (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004) p27
  20. ^ Joseph Langford, Mother Teresa's Secret Fire: The Encounter That Changed Her Life, and How It Can Transform Your Own (Our Sunday Visitor Publishing, 2008) pp44
  21. ^ Pasquale Anthony Leonardo and Adam Zagoria, Ultimate: The First Four Decades (Ultimate History, Inc. 2010)
  22. ^ "COURT HALTS POWER STRIKE", Pittsburgh Press, September 10, 1946, p1
  23. ^ "Dodgers Battle to 19-Inning Scoreless Tie With Reds", New York Times, September 12, 1946, p11
  24. ^ William J. Pomeroy, The Philippines: Colonialism, Collaboration, and Resistance (International Publishers Co, 1992) p152
  25. ^ James Chace, Acheson: The Secretary of State Who Created the American World (Simon and Schuster, 2007) p158; "WALLACE TALK SPLITS CABINET", Miami Daily News, September 13, 1946, p1
  26. ^ , TIME Magazine, September 23, 1946
  27. ^ "From Trump to Ranieri: Is this the era of the older man?"
  28. ^ Henry Armin Herzog, And Heaven Shed No Tears (University of Wisconsin Press, 2005) p306
  29. ^ RussianSpaceWeb.com
  30. ^ "Williams' Homer Trips Indians 1-0; Blow to Left in First Inning Decides, Bringing First Flag to Boston Since 1918", New York Times, September 14, 1946
  31. ^ Constantine Mavroudis and Carl L. Backer, Pediatric Cardiac Surgery (Elsevier Health Sciences, 2003) p168
  32. ^ Randy Roberts, The rock, the curse, and the hub: a random history of Boston sports (Harvard University Press, 2005) p55
  33. ^ "U.S. Population in 1990 to be 165,000,000" Miami Daily News, September 15, 1946, p1
  34. ^ "Population and Area (Historical Censuses", U.S. Census Bureau
  35. ^ Paul Hemphill, Lovesick Blues: The Life of Hank Williams (Penguin Books, 2006) p60
  36. ^ Paul R. Gregory, Lenin's Brain and Other Tales from the Secret Soviet Archives (Hoover Press, 2008) pp64-66
  37. ^ Neil Sheehan, A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam (Random House, Inc., 2009)
  38. ^ "Faroes Favor Freedom: Islands' Plebiscite Shows Small Margin So Far for Secession", New York Times, September 16, 1946, p1
  39. ^ "Bulgaria a Republic". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. September 16, 1946. p. 2.
  40. ^ Georgeoff, Peter John (1968). The Social Education of Bulgarian Youth. University of Minnesota Press. p. 7.
  41. ^ Ghiglieri, Michael P.; Myers, Thomas M. (2016). Over the Edge: Death in Grand Canyon (Second ed.). Flagstaff, Arizona: Puma Press, LLC. ISBN 978-0-9847858-0-3.
  42. ^ Donald Filtzer, The Hazards of Urban Life in Late Stalinist Russia: Health, Hygiene, and Living Standards, 1943–1953, (Cambridge University Press, 2010) p4
  43. ^ John Lamm and Chuck Queener, Ferrari: Stories from Those Who Lived the Legend, (MBI Publishing Company, 2007 p13
  44. ^ Andrew Zimbalist, In the Best Interests of Baseball?: The Revolutionary Reign of Bud Selig (John Wiley and Sons, 2007)
  45. ^ James Von Schilling, The Magic Window: American Television, 1939–1953 (Psychology Press, 2003) p75
  46. ^ "State of the Art", by Edward Rosen, SPIN Magazine (July 1985) p55
  47. ^ David Patterson, Encyclopedia of Holocaust Literature (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002) p207; Elie Wiesel and Dorothy Rabinowicz, Dimensions of the Holocaust: Lectures at Northwestern University (Northwestern University Press, 1990) p69
  48. ^ Dennis David and Lloyd Laumann, Tonka (MBI Publishing Company, 2004) p14
  49. ^ "Churchill's Plea: United States of Europe", Sydney Morning Herald, September 20, 1946, p1; Manoranjan Dutta, European Union and the Euro revolution (Emerald Group Publishing, 2007)
  50. ^ Cannes Film Festival History; Remi Fournier Lanzoni, French Cinema: From Its Beginnings to the Present (Continuum International Publishing Group, 2004)
  51. ^ Steve Neal, Harry and Ike: The Partnership That Remade the Postwar World (Simon and Schuster, 2002) p92-93
  52. ^ "TRUMAN FIRES WALLACE: GAGS AIDES ON POLICY". Pittsburgh Press. September 20, 1946. p. 1.
  53. ^ Ferrell, Robert H. (1996). Harry S. Truman: A Life. University of Missouri Press.
  54. ^ "Niagara Falls Section Collapses". Pittsburgh Press. September 30, 1946. p. 1.
  55. ^ "Wife Sees Gunmen Slay Cheese King", Miami Daily News, September 22, 1946, p1
  56. ^ Yogi Berra and Dave Kaplan, Ten Rings: My Championship Seasons (HarperCollins, 2003)
  57. ^ Ngô Vĩnh Long (1991). Before the Revolution: The Vietnamese Peasants Under the French. Columbia University Press. pp. 114–115.
  58. ^ "Independence Voiced By Faroes Assembly", Ottawa Citizen, September 24, 1946, p9; "Danish King Dissolves Faroes Parliament", September 25, 1946, p7; "Faroe Islands Accept Proposal", September 10, 1947, p9
  59. ^ Hechler, Ken (1996). Working with Truman: A Personal Memoir of the White House Years. University of Missouri Press.
  60. ^ Truman, Margaret (1972). Harry S. Truman. William Morrow Co. p. 323.
  61. ^ Acacia, John (2009). Clark Clifford: The Wise Man of Washington. University Press of Kentucky.
  62. ^ Cathay Pacific Airways History
  63. ^ "Lee Makes Stage History As He Plays White Role". The New York Times. September 26, 1946. Retrieved 2016-02-20.
  64. ^ "Negro Actor Plays White Man on Stage—Successful Performance May Open New Field in American Theater". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. September 26, 1946. p. 3.
  65. ^ Richard Butwell, U Nu of Burma (Stanford University Press, 1969) p49
  66. ^ Gaddis, John Lewis (2006). The Cold War: A New History. Penguin. p. 30.
  67. ^ "Zale Staggers Back to Flatten Graziano". Milwaukee Journal. September 28, 1946. p. 6.
  68. ^ "Plane Hit 'Supersonic Wall' on Fatal Test Flight, Is Belief". Milwaukee Journal. September 29, 1946. p. 6.
  69. ^ Harrison, James P. (2000). Mastering the Sky: A History of Aviation from Ancient Times to the Present. Da Capo Press. p. 217.
  70. ^ "Australian Politics and Elections". University of Western Australia.
  71. ^ elections.uwa.edu.au
  72. ^ "King George II Returns to the Throne in Greece". The New York Times. September 30, 1946. p. 1.
  73. ^ Berry, Chad (2008). The Hayloft Gang: The Story of the National Barn Dance. University of Illinois Press. p. 89.
  74. ^ "Gen. Eisenhower Urges Outlawing Of Atomic Bomb". St. Petersburg Times. St. Petersburg, Florida. September 29, 1946. p. 11.
  75. ^ "Dodgers and Cards Muff Chance to Win Flag; Meet in Playoff", Milwaukee Journal, September 30, 1946
  76. ^ "Eagles Win Negro Title- Newark Nine Trips Kansas City Monarchs", New York Times, September 30, 1946
  77. ^ Carlos Santiago Nino, Radical Evil on Trial (Yale University Press, 1998); "Verdict Dooms 21 Nazis in War Trial", Pittsburgh Press, September 30, 1946, p1

september, 1946, 1946, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1415, 2122, 2829, following, events, occurred, september, 1946, british, india, viceroy, wavell, swears, transitional, government, future, prime. 1946 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt September 1946 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 70 8 0 9 10 11 12 13 1415 16 17 18 19 20 2122 23 24 25 26 27 2829 30 The following events occurred in September 1946 September 2 1946 British India s Viceroy Wavell swears in transitional government and future prime ministers Nehru of India and Liaquat Ali Khan of Pakistan September 10 1946 Sister Agnes Bojaxhiu receives call within a call and inspiration to become Mother Teresa Contents 1 September 1 1946 Sunday 2 September 2 1946 Monday 3 September 3 1946 Tuesday 4 September 4 1946 Wednesday 5 September 5 1946 Thursday 6 September 6 1946 Friday 7 September 7 1946 Saturday 8 September 8 1946 Sunday 9 September 9 1946 Monday 10 September 10 1946 Tuesday 11 September 11 1946 Wednesday 12 September 12 1946 Thursday 13 September 13 1946 Friday 14 September 14 1946 Saturday 15 September 15 1946 Sunday 16 September 16 1946 Monday 17 September 17 1946 Tuesday 18 September 18 1946 Wednesday 19 September 19 1946 Thursday 20 September 20 1946 Friday 21 September 21 1946 Saturday 22 September 22 1946 Sunday 23 September 23 1946 Monday 24 September 24 1946 Tuesday 25 September 25 1946 Wednesday 26 September 26 1946 Thursday 27 September 27 1946 Friday 28 September 28 1946 Saturday 29 September 29 1946 Sunday 30 September 30 1946 Monday 31 ReferencesSeptember 1 1946 Sunday editBy a margin of 1 136 289 in favor and 524 771 against voters in Greece approved the keeping of the monarchy King George II returned from exile on September 27 1 Cambodia held its first elections in history The Democrat party won a majority of seats in the legislature 2 Hawaiian sugar workers went on strike with 21 000 workers walking off of the job on 33 plantations The strike which was aided by an unseasonable lack of rain ended after 79 days and put an end to the perquisite system that had paid the laborers with company vouchers rather than cash 3 Julia McWilliams married Paul Child and later became famous as Julia Child 4 Born Roh Moo hyun 16th President of South Korea 2003 to 2008 in Gimhae d 2009 Barry Gibb British vocalist and guitarist for The Bee Gees in Douglas Isle of ManSeptember 2 1946 Monday editAn interim government for the Dominion of India was inaugurated to make the transition from British colonial rule to independence Archibald Wavell 1st Earl Wavell the Viceroy of India presided on behalf of the United Kingdom At 11 00 am at the Viceroy s House in Delhi Wavell administered the oath of office to Jawaharlal Nehru as vice president and to Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Dr Rajendra Prasad Asaf Ali Sarat Chandra Bose and Syed Ali Zaheer 5 Other members of the Executive Council included Liaquat Ali Khan Finance Minister who would become the first Prime Minister of Pakistan were Sir John Mathai Sardar Baldev Singh Shri Jagjivan Ram and Chakravarti Rajagopalachari 6 Born Billy Preston American soul musician in Houston d 2006 September 3 1946 Tuesday editU S President Harry S Truman approved the go ahead for Project Paperclip ostensibly a campaign to bring German scientists to the U S and to keep them from being taken to the U S S R Many of the scientists had been former Nazis and assisted in experimentation on human subjects with radiation oxygen deprivation and flash blindness 7 September 4 1946 Wednesday editAn Air France plane bound for London crashed moments after takeoff when it failed to clear the roof of a factory at Le Bourget killing 20 persons The evening before another Air France plane crashed as it approached Copenhagen from Paris killing all 22 persons on board 8 The Ben Hecht written play A Flag is Born advocating the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people in Israel opened on Broadway The comedy film Monsieur Beaucaire starring Bob Hope was released Died Nobu Shirase 85 leader of the Japanese Antarctic Expedition of 1911 1912September 5 1946 Thursday editTrans Luxury Airlines Flight 850 on its way with several stops from New York to San Francisco crashed into a hillside as it attempted to land in Elko Nevada killing 21 of the 22 people on board A 2 year old boy survived the accident with only minor injuries 9 The Tuskegee Airmen unit was disbanded and the base at Tuskegee Alabama was closed 10 Born Freddie Mercury singer and songwriter for the rock group Queen as Farrokh Bulsara in Stone Town Zanzibar d 1991 September 6 1946 Friday editU S Secretary of State James F Byrnes delivered the speech Restatement of Policy on Germany in Stuttgart The address described as an important reversal of the American position on Germany signaled a plan to build the conquered German nation into a self sustaining state that would be able to resist the spread of Communism 11 The All America Football Conference held its first game kicking off at 8 30 pm as the Cleveland Browns hosted the Miami Seahawks The Browns won 44 0 before a record crowd of 60 135 fans 12 September 7 1946 Saturday editRoyal Air Force Captain Teddy Donaldson set a new official speed record flying a Gloster Meteor at 615 78 miles per hour in level flight or Mach 0 81 at 1 100 feet 13 In the fourth major airline accident in five days a British South American Airways airliner crashed shortly after takeoff from Bathurst modern day Banjul capital of the Gambia Only one of the 24 persons on board survived 14 September 8 1946 Sunday editVoters in Bulgaria approved the abolition of the monarchy and the creation of a republic by a reported margin of 3 801 160 to 171 000 Nine year old Tsar Simeon II and his mother Queen Ioanna went into exile in Italy 15 The boy king last Bulgarian monarch of the House of Saxe Coburg and Gotha would return to power 55 years later as Simeon Sakskoburggotski Prime Minister of Bulgaria 16 Born Beriz Belkic President of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2001 02 in Sarajevo d 2023 Wong Kan Seng Singaporean business executive Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore 2005 2011 in Singapore Died Dorothy Harrison Eustis 60 philanthropist who founded The Seeing Eye the first school in the U S to train guide dogs an idea pioneered in Germany The canines trained to aid blind persons are often referred to as seeing eye dogs 17 September 9 1946 Monday editTrans Australia Airlines TAA made its inaugural flight a trip from Melbourne to Sydney The government owned carrier which operated domestically changed its name to Australian Airlines in 1986 and then was merged with Qantas in 1993 18 Born Anna Lee Walters American author in Pawnee OklahomaSeptember 10 1946 Tuesday editIn what is now celebrated among the Missionaries of Charity as Inspiration Day 36 year old Sister Agnes Teresa Bojaxhiu of the Loreto Sisters Convent experienced what she would describe as the call within a call She was traveling on a train from Siliguri to Darjeeling when she heard the call of God I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them 19 As one author later noted Though no one knew it at the time Sister Teresa had just become Mother Teresa 20 Fred Morrison an American fighter pilot during World War II first sketched his idea for a toy plastic disc could fly through the air after it was thrown He called his invention the Whirlo Way By 1955 he sold a lighter version the Pluto Platter to the Wham O toy company which manufactured millions of the discs under the brand name Frisbee 21 With workers at Pittsburgh s electric utility threatening a walkout and management standing firm against their demands citizens of the 10th largest city in the U S braced for a 12 01 a m shutdown of all electric power To their surprise the blackout never came as a judge issued an injunction at midnight 22 Born Jim Hines American track athlete and 100 meter dash record holder 1968 83 in Dumas Arkansas d 2023 Don Powell English rock drummer for Slade in Bilston StaffordshireSeptember 11 1946 Wednesday editThe Brooklyn Dodgers and the visiting Cincinnati Reds played the longest scoreless tie in Major League Baseball history going for 19 innings in 4 hours 40 minutes before the game was called because of darkness 23 The United States turned over 1 121 400 000 worth of surplus U S Army property to the Philippines including vehicles construction equipment prefab structures clothing medicine food and other items The material had been stockpiled in the Philippines after its recapture by the Allies for the planned invasion of Japan 24 Died Ida Stover Eisenhower 84 mother of General Dwight D EisenhowerSeptember 12 1946 Thursday edit nbsp nbsp Commerce Secretary Wallace and President Truman U S Secretary of Commerce Henry A Wallace delivered a speech at a rally at Madison Square Garden contradicting the statement of foreign policy that had been made six days earlier by Secretary of State Byrnes embarrassing President Harry S Truman and bringing an end to Wallace s career in government Truman who had glanced at the speech two days earlier was asked at a press conference about the speech and whether it represented the policy of his administration and replied that it was That evening Wallace declared that We have no more business in the political affairs of Eastern Europe than Russia has in the political affairs of Latin America Western Europe and the United States and just two days ago when President Truman read these words he said they represented the policy of his Administration 25 Truman compounded the error by making the excuse that It was my intention to express the thought that I approved the right of the Secretary of Commerce to deliver that speech I did not intend to indicate that I approved the speech which TIME magazine described as a clumsy lie 26 Born Neil Lyndon British journalist and writer known for his book No More Sex War The Failures of Feminism 27 September 13 1946 Friday editCaptain Amon Goth 37 Nazi SS officer who had carried out the mass executions of more than 13 000 Jews in Krakow and Tarnow and the Szebnia concentration camp was hanged along with Dr Leon Gross a Jew who had collaborated with him at the Plaszow concentration camp Captain Goth was portrayed by Ralph Fiennes in the film Schindler s List 28 Ten days after the United States launched Project Paperclip the Soviet Union issued decree No 2163 880s launching Operation Osoaviakhim to transfer German rocket production potential to the USSR 29 The Boston Red Sox clinched the American League pennant after Ted Williams hit an inside the park home run for a 1 0 win over the Cleveland Indians 30 Dr Willis J Potts performed the first aorta to pulmonary artery anastomosis to correct a congenital heart defect a surgery later called the Potts shunt The first patient was a 21 month old girl at Children s Memorial Hospital in Chicago The surgery was performed on 658 more patients until being discontinued in 1967 because of complications that often arose 31 Died George Washington Hill 61 President of American Tobacco Company who increased cigarette sales worldwide over a 21 year period 32 September 14 1946 Saturday edit nbsp Hank WilliamsThe U S Census Bureau forecast that the United States population in 1990 would peak at 165 000 000 and that it would decline to 168 177 000 by 2000 33 The actual figures for the two censuses were 248 709 873 in 1990 and 281 421 906 in 2000 34 Hiram King Hank Williams began his celebrated career as a country musician signing a contract with Fred Rose in Nashville 35 Ivan Serov completed his report to Joseph Stalin about the fate of Stalin s son Lt Yakov Dzhugashvili who had been captured by the Germans in World War II and killed in 1943 while attempting to escape from the POW camp at Sachsenhausen 36 Ho Chi Minh left Paris after being forced into signing an unfavorable agreement with France During his stay the future President of North Vietnam had visited the American Embassy in a fruitless attempt to obtain assistance from the United States 37 In a referendum on independence residents of the small Faroe Islands voted 5 660 to 5 500 in favor of independence from Denmark Approximately 25 000 people lived on 17 of the 21 islands in the group 38 September 15 1946 Sunday editOne week after the referendum abolishing the monarchy the People s Republic of Bulgaria was declared in Sofia with Vasil Kolarov as the Eastern European nation s first President 39 40 American fashion designer Dee Dee Johnson nearly fell to her death from the South Rim of the Grand Canyon while conducting a photo shoot modeling pedal pushers Park rangers William Bowen and Dean Dazey rescued Johnson but the rope rescue left her topless much to her chagrin 41 Born Tommy Lee Jones American film actor in San Saba Texas Oliver Stone American film director in New York City Jones and Stone were both nominated for Academy Awards for their work in the film JFK and collaborated again in Natural Born Killers Tetsu Nakamura Japanese Afghan physician in Fukuoka d 2019 September 16 1946 Monday editAfter drought and a poor harvest added to a famine in the Soviet Union a governmental decree went into effect doubling the price for rations of meat and dairy products and tripling the price of bread On September 27 another decree reduced the number of people entitled to bread rations The famine lasted into 1947 costing more than a million lives 42 At his factory in Maranello Italian auto manufacturer Enzo Ferrari produced his first V12 engine the component that would set the Ferrari as a leader in the production of sports cars 43 Owners of baseball s National League and American League teams met in New York City and according to Dodgers owner Branch Rickey and baseball commissioner Happy Chandler secretly voted 15 1 to approve an August 27 recommendation against allowing African American players into the major leagues Although other owners disputed the story Chandler s copy of the committee report was discovered after Chandler s death when his papers had been donated to the University of Kentucky 44 September 17 1946 Tuesday edit nbsp RCA 630 TS first mass produced TV setMass production of television sets began with RCA producing the first new TV since World War II a 10 inch set made at its plant in Camden New Jersey 45 Only 5 000 sets had been produced in the years before the U S entered the war By the end of 1947 150 000 had been sold rising to 4 million in 1949 and 10 million in 1950 46 September 18 1946 Wednesday editHidden in the Warsaw Ghetto by the Ojneg Szabes group during the Second World War the archive of materials that had been written during the siege was unearthed Dr Emmanuel Ringelblum supervised the writing collection storage in watertight milk cans and burial for future generations to read 47 Mound Metalcraft Inc was founded in Mound Minnesota by Lynn E Baker Avery F Crounse and Alvin F Tesch In 1947 the company introduced the first Tonka toys a line of durable metal toy trucks and other equipment 48 September 19 1946 Thursday editIn a speech at Zurich former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill proposed what would eventually become the European Community Churchill suggested a remedy which if generously and spontaneously adopted by a great majority of the people of many lands would as if by a miracle transform the whole scene and make Europe as free and happy as Switzerland is today We must build a kind of United States of Europe 49 The first Cannes Film Festival was held taking place at the city of the same name on the French Riviera The event had originally been planned for September 1 1939 the day that World War II began and postponed until the war s end 50 Walter F White executive director of the NAACP and five other civil rights activists met at the White House with President Truman to ask for the help of the U S government in ending violence against African Americans Although White had met in the past with Presidents Coolidge Hoover and Roosevelt without success Truman was horrified by the description of the blinding of Isaac Woodard and ordered Attorney General Tom Clark to begin working on the inauguration of some sort of policy to prevent such happenings 51 Born Gerald Brisco professional wrestler in Oklahoma City OklahomaSeptember 20 1946 Friday editPresident Truman fired Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace eight days after Wallace s controversial speech in New York Noting that the Government of the United States must stand as a unit in its relations with the rest of the world President Truman announced I have today asked Mr Wallace to resign from the Cabinet 52 53 The landscape of the American and Canadian Niagara Falls was permanently altered when a 120 foot 37 m wide section of rock collapsed at 10 19 a m 54 The 1st Cannes Film Festival opened in France September 21 1946 Saturday editThe KB Toys business was created by brothers Harry Kaufman and Joseph Kaufman who had operated the Kaufman Brothers wholesale candy business since 1922 and then acquired a toy company from a debtor and moved into becoming a wholesale seller of toys under the trade name Kay Bee Toy amp Hobby Stores later a chain of retail stores Died Vincent Benevento 46 self styled Cheese King of Chicago was murdered while vacationing in Lake Zurich Illinois After surviving being shot 10 times in a 1945 attack Benevento died after being shot 7 more times in the new incident 55 September 22 1946 Sunday edit nbsp BerraYogi Berra made his major league debut entering a game for the New York Yankees against the Philadelphia A s Berra hit a home run in his first time at bat and then went on to a colorful career 56 September 23 1946 Monday editIn what would later become South Vietnam the Commissioner of the French controlled Autonomous Republic of Cochin China issued an order authorizing the arrest of any Asian resident whose identity papers were not in order Police and the French Army arrested more than 50 000 Vietnamese and conscripted them to work at the area s rubber plantations 57 The Logting legislature for the Faroe Islands voted 12 11 in favor of creating a nation independent of Denmark which had ruled since the year 1386 in accordance with the September 15 plebiscite King Christian X dissolved the Iagting the next day and denied the resolution On September 9 1947 a new Faroen parliament would accept a Danish proposal for autonomy in a continued union with Denmark 58 September 24 1946 Tuesday edit nbsp CliffordWhite House counsel Clark Clifford presented President Truman with a top secret report authored by George Elsey entitled American Relations with the Soviet Union The U S must be prepared to wage atomic and biological warfare the report stated in part adding that a war with the USSR would be total in a more horrible sense than any previous war and there must be constant research for both offensive and defensive weapons 59 In her biography of her father Margaret Truman wrote that when Clifford said that only ten copies existed Truman told him I want the other nine 60 The Clifford Elsey Report remained secret until 20 years later when a copy was given to Arthur Krock of The New York Times 61 Roy C Farrell and Sydney H de Kantzow founded Cathay Pacific Airways 62 Born Mean Joe Greene American NFL player and Hall of Famer as Charles Edward Greene in Temple Texas Lars Emil Johansen 2nd Prime Minister of Greenland 1991 1997 in Illorsuit Died Jeff Tesreau 57 American baseball pitcherSeptember 25 1946 Wednesday editAfrican American actor Canada Lee surprised and impressed audiences at Boston s Shubert Theatre portraying Daniel de Bosola in a production of The Duchess of Malfi In a reversal of the longtime practice of white men donning blackface Lee opened a new field for Negro actors today by donning white makeup and portraying a white character for the first time in the history of the American stage according to a UPI report In the production that opened September 23 and continued to Broadway Lee wore a special white paste that had been used medically to cover burns and marks but had never before been used in the theatre 63 64 Born Bishan Singh Bedi Indian cricketer in Amritsar Punjab Province British India Died Dr Hans Eppinger physician at Dachau who oversaw experiments on making seawater drinkable Eppinger committed suicide as the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials were concluding September 26 1946 Thursday editAung San who had led the fight against British colonial rule of Burma as leader of the Anti Fascist People s Freedom League agreed to become part of the interim government that would form an independent nation Sir Hubert Rance the British Governor and Chairman of the Executive Council had been given permission to negotiate with the AFPFL and Aung San became the Deputy Chairman 65 Born Christine Todd Whitman first woman Governor of New Jersey 1994 2001 EPA Administrator 2001 03 in New York City Andrea Dworkin American crusader against pornography in Camden New Jersey d 2005 September 27 1946 Friday editNikolai V Novikov the Soviet ambassador to the United States sent a long telegram to his boss Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov describing U S foreign policy as reflecting imperialistic tendencies of monopolistic American capital and a striving for world supremacy Analogous to George F Kennan s February 22 long telegram the Novikov cable helped shape strategy for one nation against its greatest adversary during the Cold War Classified for years the cable was not released until 1990 as part of the Conduct of the Cold War conferences 66 Defending world middleweight boxing champion Tony Zale retained his title against heavily favored challenger Rocky Graziano in a bout at Yankee Stadium A crowd of 39 827 watched Zale fighting after four years of World War II service knock Graziano out midway through the sixth round 67 Died Geoffrey de Havilland Jr British test pilot was killed when his DH 108 jet the Swallow broke apart as he reached Mach 0 875 while attempting supersonic flight 68 69 September 28 1946 Saturday editIn Australia s national election the Australian Labor Party led by Prime Minister Ben Chifley retained its majority in both houses of the parliament with 30 of the 36 seats in the Senate 70 and 43 of the 74 House of Representatives posts 71 King George II of Greece returned to the throne four years after fleeing to the United Kingdom stepping ashore at Piraeus at 10 00 am Hours after greeting the monarch on his return Prime Minister Constantine Tsaldaris and his entire cabinet resigned 72 The popular NBC radio program National Barn Dance was broadcast for the last time 73 U S Army General and future United States President Dwight D Eisenhower said at a press conference in Frankfurt that nuclear weapons should be made illegal stating I believe the outlawing of the atom bomb is the outlawing of wars I think the time has come when humanity is intelligent enough to do away with war 74 Born Jeffrey Jones American actor best known as Mr Rooney in Ferris Bueller s Day Off in Buffalo New YorkSeptember 29 1946 Sunday editThe St Louis Cardinals and the Brooklyn Dodgers both lost their final scheduled game of the season in the National League finishing with identical 96 58 records and forcing the first tiebreaker playoff in Major League Baseball history 75 The Newark Eagles beat the Kansas City Monarchs 3 2 to win Game 7 of the 1946 Negro World Series and the championship 76 Died Raimu stage name for Jules Auguste Muraire 62 French actorSeptember 30 1946 Monday editThe Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal announced its verdicts on 21 members of the Nazi German regime Three Franz von Papen Hjalmar Schacht and Hans Fritzsche were acquitted and the other 18 were convicted of crimes against humanity receiving sentences the next day ranging from 10 years to death by hanging 77 Born Hector Lavoe Puerto Rican singer in Ponce d 1993 Claude Vorilhon French born messenger of Raelism in Vichy Died Takashi Sakai 58 Japanese general who oversaw the brutal Japanese occupation of Hong Kong during World War II was executed in China by a firing squad Ernst Spath 60 Austrian chemistReferences edit John S Koliopoulos and Thanos M Veremis Modern Greece a history since 1821 John Wiley and Sons 2009 p120 Greek Monarchy Wins In Plebiscite 8 Die In Voting Disturbances Pittsburgh Press September 2 1946 p1 Justin Corfield The History of Cambodia ABC CLIO 2009 p43 Gavan Daws Shoal of Time A History of the Hawaiian Islands University of Hawaii Press 1974 p363 David Kamp The United States of Arugula How We Became a Gourmet Nation Random House Inc 2007 p51 Era of National Govt Dawns The Indian Express Madras September 3 1946 p1 Jagdish Chandra Sharma Indian Prime Ministership A Comprehensive Study Concept Publishing Company 2002 p19 20 Nick Redfern Body Snatchers in the Desert The Horrible Truth at the Heart of the Roswell Story Simon and Schuster 2005 pp63 64 Plane Crash In France Kills Score Miami Daily News September 4 1946 p1 18 Die 2 Missing In Airliner Crash Pittsburgh Press September 5 1946 p1 Cynthia Jacobs Carter Freedom in My Heart Voices from the United States National Slavery Museum National Geographic Books 2009 p191 John Lewis Gaddis The United States and the origins of the Cold War 1941 1947 Columbia University Press 2000 p331 Byrnes Urges Government For Germany Pittsburgh Press September 6 1946 p1 Bob Carroll Total Football The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League HarperCollins 1999 p528 Al Blackburn Aces Wild The Race for Mach 1 Rowman amp Littlefield 1999 p11 23 Killed in Crash Of Plane in Africa Pittsburgh Press September 7 1946 p1 Bulgar Boy King Loses His Thorne Miami Daily News September 9 1946 p2 A Bulgaria s former king OK d as premier Milwaukee Journal Sentinel July 25 2001 p7A Robert McHenry Famous American Women A Biographical Dictionary from Colonial Times to the Present Courier Dover Publications 1983 p121 Trans Australia Airlines Museum Archived 2011 02 25 at the Wayback Machine Meg Greene Mother Teresa a biography Greenwood Publishing Group 2004 p27 Joseph Langford Mother Teresa s Secret Fire The Encounter That Changed Her Life and How It Can Transform Your Own Our Sunday Visitor Publishing 2008 pp44 Pasquale Anthony Leonardo and Adam Zagoria Ultimate The First Four Decades Ultimate History Inc 2010 COURT HALTS POWER STRIKE Pittsburgh Press September 10 1946 p1 Dodgers Battle to 19 Inning Scoreless Tie With Reds New York Times September 12 1946 p11 William J Pomeroy The Philippines Colonialism Collaboration and Resistance International Publishers Co 1992 p152 James Chace Acheson The Secretary of State Who Created the American World Simon and Schuster 2007 p158 WALLACE TALK SPLITS CABINET Miami Daily News September 13 1946 p1 http www time com time magazine article 0 9171 777086 00 html THE PRESIDENCY What I Meant to Say TIME Magazine September 23 1946 From Trump to Ranieri Is this the era of the older man Henry Armin Herzog And Heaven Shed No Tears University of Wisconsin Press 2005 p306 RussianSpaceWeb com Williams Homer Trips Indians 1 0 Blow to Left in First Inning Decides Bringing First Flag to Boston Since 1918 New York Times September 14 1946 Constantine Mavroudis and Carl L Backer Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Elsevier Health Sciences 2003 p168 Randy Roberts The rock the curse and the hub a random history of Boston sports Harvard University Press 2005 p55 U S Population in 1990 to be 165 000 000 Miami Daily News September 15 1946 p1 Population and Area Historical Censuses U S Census Bureau Paul Hemphill Lovesick Blues The Life of Hank Williams Penguin Books 2006 p60 Paul R Gregory Lenin s Brain and Other Tales from the Secret Soviet Archives Hoover Press 2008 pp64 66 Neil Sheehan A Bright Shining Lie John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam Random House Inc 2009 Faroes Favor Freedom Islands Plebiscite Shows Small Margin So Far for Secession New York Times September 16 1946 p1 Bulgaria a Republic Daytona Beach Morning Journal September 16 1946 p 2 Georgeoff Peter John 1968 The Social Education of Bulgarian Youth University of Minnesota Press p 7 Ghiglieri Michael P Myers Thomas M 2016 Over the Edge Death in Grand Canyon Second ed Flagstaff Arizona Puma Press LLC ISBN 978 0 9847858 0 3 Donald Filtzer The Hazards of Urban Life in Late Stalinist Russia Health Hygiene and Living Standards 1943 1953 Cambridge University Press 2010 p4 John Lamm and Chuck Queener Ferrari Stories from Those Who Lived the Legend MBI Publishing Company 2007 p13 Andrew Zimbalist In the Best Interests of Baseball The Revolutionary Reign of Bud Selig John Wiley and Sons 2007 James Von Schilling The Magic Window American Television 1939 1953 Psychology Press 2003 p75 State of the Art by Edward Rosen SPIN Magazine July 1985 p55 David Patterson Encyclopedia of Holocaust Literature Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 p207 Elie Wiesel and Dorothy Rabinowicz Dimensions of the Holocaust Lectures at Northwestern University Northwestern University Press 1990 p69 Dennis David and Lloyd Laumann Tonka MBI Publishing Company 2004 p14 Churchill s Plea United States of Europe Sydney Morning Herald September 20 1946 p1 Manoranjan Dutta European Union and the Euro revolution Emerald Group Publishing 2007 Cannes Film Festival History Remi Fournier Lanzoni French Cinema From Its Beginnings to the Present Continuum International Publishing Group 2004 Steve Neal Harry and Ike The Partnership That Remade the Postwar World Simon and Schuster 2002 p92 93 TRUMAN FIRES WALLACE GAGS AIDES ON POLICY Pittsburgh Press September 20 1946 p 1 Ferrell Robert H 1996 Harry S Truman A Life University of Missouri Press Niagara Falls Section Collapses Pittsburgh Press September 30 1946 p 1 Wife Sees Gunmen Slay Cheese King Miami Daily News September 22 1946 p1 Yogi Berra and Dave Kaplan Ten Rings My Championship Seasons HarperCollins 2003 Ngo Vĩnh Long 1991 Before the Revolution The Vietnamese Peasants Under the French Columbia University Press pp 114 115 Independence Voiced By Faroes Assembly Ottawa Citizen September 24 1946 p9 Danish King Dissolves Faroes Parliament September 25 1946 p7 Faroe Islands Accept Proposal September 10 1947 p9 Hechler Ken 1996 Working with Truman A Personal Memoir of the White House Years University of Missouri Press Truman Margaret 1972 Harry S Truman William Morrow Co p 323 Acacia John 2009 Clark Clifford The Wise Man of Washington University Press of Kentucky Cathay Pacific Airways History Lee Makes Stage History As He Plays White Role The New York Times September 26 1946 Retrieved 2016 02 20 Negro Actor Plays White Man on Stage Successful Performance May Open New Field in American Theater Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 26 1946 p 3 Richard Butwell U Nu of Burma Stanford University Press 1969 p49 Gaddis John Lewis 2006 The Cold War A New History Penguin p 30 Zale Staggers Back to Flatten Graziano Milwaukee Journal September 28 1946 p 6 Plane Hit Supersonic Wall on Fatal Test Flight Is Belief Milwaukee Journal September 29 1946 p 6 Harrison James P 2000 Mastering the Sky A History of Aviation from Ancient Times to the Present Da Capo Press p 217 Australian Politics and Elections University of Western Australia elections uwa edu au King George II Returns to the Throne in Greece The New York Times September 30 1946 p 1 Berry Chad 2008 The Hayloft Gang The Story of the National Barn Dance University of Illinois Press p 89 Gen Eisenhower Urges Outlawing Of Atomic Bomb St Petersburg Times St Petersburg Florida September 29 1946 p 11 Dodgers and Cards Muff Chance to Win Flag Meet in Playoff Milwaukee Journal September 30 1946 Eagles Win Negro Title Newark Nine Trips Kansas City Monarchs New York Times September 30 1946 Carlos Santiago Nino Radical Evil on Trial Yale University Press 1998 Verdict Dooms 21 Nazis in War Trial Pittsburgh Press September 30 1946 p1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title September 1946 amp oldid 1213658995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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