December 20, 1946: It's A Wonderful Life debutsDecember 9, 1946: Nazi doctors put on trial at NurembergDecember 25, 1946: W. C. Fields dies at 66December 21, 1946: Eniwetok Atoll's 142 people removed before atomic bombing
U.S. Secretary of State
James F. Byrnes, and British Foreign Secretary
Ernest Bevin jointly announced the "economic fusion" of the
American and British occupation zones of Germany, to take place effective January 1, 1947, declaring that "The two zones shall be treated as a single area for all economic purposes." Nicknamed "
Bizonia", the Anglo-American occupation zone contained the German states of Schleswig-Holstein, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Niedersachsen, Bavaria, Hesse, and Württemberg-Baden (which later became part of Baden-Württemberg). The French zone would join the merger on April 8, 1949, and the three zones would then become
West Germany on May 24 of the same year.[3]
Notre Dame won the unofficial championship of the
1946 college football season, as the final
AP Poll ranked the Fighting Irish #1, with 1731+1⁄2 points overall (and 100 first-place votes). In second place was
Army, with 1,659+1⁄2 points and 48 first-place votes.
Georgia (1,448) and
UCLA (1,141) were third and fourth. All four teams were unbeaten in 1946; Notre Dame and Army were unbeaten, but not untied, having played a 0–0 game on
November 9.[4]
U.S. District Judge T. Alan Goldsborough found the
United Mine Workers and its president,
John L. Lewis, in contempt of court and fined both for continuing the nationwide coal miners strike. Lewis was fined $10,000 personally, and the union was fined $3,500,000 (equivalent to 35 million dollars in 2011).[5] Judge Goldsborough commented that the defiance of an injunction against continuing the strike "is an evil, demoniac, monstrous thing that means hunger and cold and unemployment and destitution and disorganization of the social fabric... if actions of this kind can be successfully persisted in, the government will be overthrown, and the government that would take its place would be a dictatorship, and the first thing the dictatorship would do would be to destroy the labor unions."[6]
U.S. President Truman issued Executive Order 9808, creating the 16-member Presidential Committee on Civil Rights, chaired by
General Electric President
Charles E. Wilson. Ten months later, the committee would deliver its report, To Secure These Rights.[7]
A crowd of 200 residents of an all-white Airport Homes neighborhood rioted when the
Chicago Housing Authority attempted to bring in the families of two distinguished African-American veterans in an attempt at integration of Chicago's West Lawn community. On the first day, the crowd attacked the movers who were bringing in the family furniture. Order was restored after 400 city police moved in, but the next day, demonstrators attacked the police. The project would remain all-white.[8]
U.S. Secretary of State Byrnes announced that, at the request of the United States,
Belgium, the
Netherlands and
Luxembourg had agreed to repatriate German war prisoners as soon as possible, and that he was awaiting an answer from France, where most of the 674,000 POWs had been held since World War II.[9]
The
French submarine 2326, converted to use by the French Navy after its capture from Germany as
Unterseeboot U-2326, disappeared in the Mediterranean with 18 men on board, after performing test dives near
Toulon. It was believed that the sub had struck a sea mine set adrift following a storm.[10]
The
Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), state news organ for
North Korea, was established. Its stated mission was "to turn all members of society into juche communist revolutionaries unconditionally loyal to the Great Leader".[11]
The final attempt at resolving the question of the independence of British India, as a single nation, failed. A four-day conference had been held at 10 Downing Street in London with Jawaharlal Nehru of the Congress Party, Muslim League president Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and Sikh leader Sardar Baldev Singh being hosted by Britain's Prime Minister Attlee. "The conversations held by His Majesty's Government... came to an end this evening as Pandit Nehru and Sardar Baldev Singh are returning to India tomorrow morning", the Prime Minister's office began in a press release, closing, "Should the constitution come to be framed by a Constituent Assembly in which a large section of the Indian population had not been represented, His Majesty's Government could not, of course, contemplate— as the Congress have stated they would not contemplate— forcing such a constitution upon any unwilling parts of the country."[12] British India became independent as the separate nations of India and Pakistan (which in turn split in 1971 between Pakistan and Bangladesh).[13]
The first known reference to the sport of
wheelchair basketball was published in the
Framingham, MassachusettsNews, in a story entitled "Cushing Wins Over Celtics In Wheel-Chair Basketball". The demonstration took place at the
Boston Garden, with players from the Cushing Veterans Hospital going up against the
Boston Celtics, who were sitting in wheelchairs as well. The Celtics lost, 18–2.[14] In the regular game, before 2,509 fans, the Celtics lost to the Detroit Falcons, 65–61.[15]
December 7, 1946: Daisy McCumber jumps from window to escape Winecoff Hotel fire; she survived
An
early-morning fire at the
Winecoff Hotel in
Atlanta killed 119 people. The fire broke out on the third floor of the 15-story building, in front of Room 326, before spreading to the floors above. The Atlanta Fire Department received the first call at 3:42 a.m.[16] Built before strict fire codes were put in place, the luxurious Winecoff Hotel had no alarms, no sprinklers, and no fire escape. Final records concluded that 46 people died of their burns, 40 died of smoke inhalation, and 31 others jumped from the building to their deaths.[17][18]
The
United Nations emblem was approved by the General Assembly's Resolution 92 ("a map of the world representing an azimuthal equidistant projection centred on the North Pole, inscribed in a wreath consisting of crossed conventionalized branches of the olive tree, in gold on a field of smoke-blue with all water areas in white. The projection of the map extends to 60 degrees south latitude, and includes five concentric circles"). The flag, which has the emblem in white against a light blue background, was adopted on October 20, 1947.[19]
The French liner
SS Liberté, formerly the German liner SS Europa, was accidentally sunk, not long after it had been captured from Germany as part of the spoils of World War II.[21] The 49,746-ton ship, third largest ocean liner in the world, broke loose from its moorings, collided with the wreckage of the sunken liner Paris, and went down in the harbor at Le Havre. It was finally put back into service on August 2, 1950.[22][23]
Gloria Loring (stage name for Gloria Jean Goff), American singer; in New York City
Died:
Walter Johnson, 59, American baseball pitcher and Hall of Fame inductee, American League most valuable player, 1913 and 1924, twelve-time AL strikeouts leader between 1910 and 1924, holder of the MLB record for most shutouts pitched in a career (110), died of a brain tumor.[30]
UNICEF, the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund, was founded as the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 57 (I).[31]
With December 11 as the deadline for the United Nations to have a permanent site, real estate developer
William Zeckendorf agreed to sell 17 acres of land in Manhattan to John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who, in turn would donate the land to the UN. Zeckendorf made the deal, through architect Wallace Harrison, at 2:00 in the morning while he and his wife were celebrating their wedding anniversary at the Club Monte Carlo.[32]
The collapse of an adjacent building killed 37 people at a six-story apartment building, on 2545
Amsterdam Avenue in New York City's
Washington Heights section. The afternoon before, two boys, aged 13 and 10, had started a fire on the roof of an abandoned ice house on West 184th Street, and bragged about it to their friends. Firefighters put out the flames on the roof and then left, not realizing that a fire continued to smolder in the wooden beams beneath the roof.[33][34]
Socialist and anti-colonialist
Léon Blum took office as the new
Prime Minister of France. Historian
Stein Tønnesson would later theorize that in the seven days between Blum's entry into office and the Việt Minh's date for launching an attack against the French, war in Vietnam might have been averted.[36]
The
United Nations General Assembly voted, 34–6 (with 13 abstentions) to bar Spain from membership so long as
Francisco Franco was in power, and to urge member nations to withdraw their ambassadors from Madrid.[37] The ban would be lifted on
November 4, 1950.[38]
The first meeting of South Korea's Interim Legislative Assembly was held, with 45 appointed members and 45 elected ones, most of whom were right-wing.[39]
Born:
Emerson Fittipaldi, Brazilian Formula One (world champion 1972 and 1974) and Indy car racer (Indianapolis 500 winner 1989 and 1993); in
São Paulo
Died:Renee Falconetti, 54, French stage and film actress who played the title role in the silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc, died of self-imposed restrictive diet while living in Argentina.[40]
The
United Nations General Assembly approved creation of eight trust territories, to be administered by member nations, with the ten-member UN
Trusteeship Council to "safeguard the interests of non-self-governing peoples and to try to see that they eventually achieve full independence." The eight territories, which had been
League of Nations mandates, were
New Guinea (under mandate of Australia);
Western Samoa (New Zealand);
Ruanda-Urundi, which later split as the nations of
Rwanda and
Burundi (Belgium);
Tanganyika, later merged with Zanzibar as
Tanzania (United Kingdom); and the
Cameroons (
Cameroon) and
Togoland (
Togo), under a British and French mandate. The full trusteeship committee had approved the eight mandates 35–8 the day before.[41]
Employees at the Gigant cinema in the Soviet city of
Omsk discovered the corpses of 13 young boys. Horrified police investigators found the bodies of an additional seven children at a factory on the outskirts of town, and determined that the murders had been carried out by a gang of juvenile delinquents, whose motive was to steal shoes and jackets.[42]
The United Nations voted 46–7 to accept the offer by John D. Rockefeller Jr. of $8,500,000 for purchase of the 17 acres of Manhattan real estate bounded by 42nd Street, Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive, 48th Street, and First Avenue, for its permanent location.[44]
Patty Duke, American film and television actress, 1962 Academy Award winner for Best Supporting Actress in The Miracle Worker, 1970 and 1977 Emmy Award winner; in
Queens, New York City (d. 2016)
The
Chicago Bears scored 10 points in the fourth quarter of the
1946 NFL Championship Game to defeat the
New York Giants, 24–14. The game was watched by a record title game crowd of 58,346 at the Polo Grounds. Earlier in the day, the news broke that Giants' quarterback
Frankie Filchock and running back
Merle Hapes had been offered bribes (which they did not accept, but also failed to report) conditioned on the Bears winning by more than ten points.[47] Hapes was suspended before the game, and Filchock allowed to play. Both were banned from the NFL.[48]
Three days after retaking its Azerbaijan province, Iran's troops marched into the city of
Mahabad, putting an end to the Kurdish
Republic of Mahabad that had been created on
January 22.[49]
Vietnam's President
Ho Chi Minh sent a cable to France's interim Prime Minister,
Léon Blum, asking for negotiations to avert fighting between the two nations. Delivery of the message was delayed, and Blum did not receive it until December 26, after a French ultimatum and a Vietnamese attack had begun what would become a war of more than seven years.[50]
Dior, a marketer of luxury
fashion outfits for women and founded by French designer
Christian Dior and textile magnate
Marcel Boussac, began operations with the opening of a store at 30 Avenue Montaigne in
Paris.[51]
The
Third String Quartet of
Dmitri Shostakovich was first performed, in Moscow. The piece proved to be controversial and was withdrawn from public performance as part of
Andrei Zhdanov's campaign against artistic works deemed to be "anti-Soviet", with questions even about whether the musical notes had a subversive message.[53][54]
The
1947 NFL draft was held in New York. This was the first year that a lottery system was used to determine which team would get to pick first. The
Chicago Bears won the lottery and selected
Bob Fenimore of
Oklahoma A&M as the #1 overall pick.
A new American altitude record was set as a captured German V-2 rocket, No. 17, was launched to an altitude of 116 miles (187 km). The mark was unbroken until February 24, 1949, when a two-stage rocket more than doubled the height, to 250 miles (400 km).[57]
The
International Monetary Fund established its first par values and exchange rates, pegged against gold and the U.S. dollar, for the currencies of 32 of its member nations, with the 39 nations to pay in their subscriptions before March 1, 1947, for the privilege of borrowing from the World Bank.[31][58] The Canadian and U.S. dollars were at a 1 to 1 ratio, and the British pound was worth US$4.03.[59]
The
Battle of Hanoi began at 8:03 pm local time, when electric power to the city of
Hanoi was cut off as a force of 30,000
Việt Minh soldiers launched an attack against French army units in the city. The attack followed a directive made by General Louis Morlière for the Viet soldiers to disarm.[60] Co-ordinated by General
Võ Nguyên Giáp, the attackers used mortars, artillery and machine guns in a battle that failed, but began the
First Indochina War. Over seven and a half years, the French and their allies lost 172,708 people, more than 500,000 Việt Minh soldiers died, and 150,000 Vietnamese civilians were killed.[61]
Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life, with
Jimmy Stewart returning to film after completing his World War II service, was released in New York. Despite its Christmas setting, it was not released generally until January 7, and was a money loser in its theatrical release. A failure to renew the copyright in 1974 led to the film being run frequently on television afterward, turning it into one of the most popular Christmas films ever.[62]
A team of American
cryptanalysts, led by
Meredith Gardner, decoded a secret cable that had been sent in 1944 to Moscow, and found it contained a list of scientists working on the Manhattan Project, the first of many disclosures that there had been a Soviet espionage operating along atomic bomb researchers at Los Alamos.[63]
British Prime Minister
Clement Attlee announced to the House of Commons that the United Kingdom was prepared to offer
Burma its independence. Opposition leader and former Prime Minister
Winston Churchill denounced the move by the Labour Party government as hastening "the process of the decline and fall of the British Empire".[64][65]
Sugar Ray Robinson won the first of six boxing titles, becoming the world welterweight champion with a decision over Tommy Bell.[66] In 1951, he won the world middleweight title, retired, then won and lost the title several more times between 1955 and 1961.[67]
The 8.1 MwNankaidō earthquake killed at least 1,362 people in
Japan, with some survivors of the quake being killed 71 minutes later in a tsunami. The quake occurred at 4:19 in the morning local time (1919 hrs on December 20 UTC), and at 5:30 am, a wall of water struck the islands of Shikoku and Honshū, followed by five more waves over the next three hours. The town of
Kushimoto, with 10,000 residents, was reported washed away.[68]
The 142 residents of the
Enewetak Atoll in the
Marshall Islands were relocated by the United States government to the
Ujelang Atoll, in order for Enewetak (spelled at the time Eniwetok) to be used for nuclear testing.[69]
Died:Eugene Talmadge, 62, who had been elected in November to a four-year term as
Governor of Georgia, died less than a month before he was scheduled to take office. Both his running mate, Lieutenant Governor-elect
Melvin E. Thompson and Talmadge's son,
Herman Talmadge, sought to become Governor on the expiration of Governor
Ellis Arnall's term. Under various interpretations of the state constitution at the time, Governor Arnall could have continued in office (though he declined to do so), Thompson could take office after being sworn in as Lieutenant Governor, or the legislature could select someone to serve the term. The legislature selected Herman Talmadge, who moved into the Governor's office while Thompson filed suit and maintained his own office as the rightful Governor. Thompson won the suit and was sworn in during March.[70]
The
Havana Conference, a summit of American
organized crime bosses was held at the Hotel Nacional in
Havana,
Cuba, owned by Meyer Lansky. The occasion was the return of Lucky Luciano from Italy, where he had been deported in February. Luciano, most powerful American mobster, accepted expensive tributes from the visitors, brokered a truce between
Albert Anastasia and
Vito Genovese, discussed establishing a new route for the trafficking of heroin, and planned the fate of rival boss
Bugsy Siegel. Siegel would be murdered on June 20, 1947.[71]
The
Prinz Eugen, the only German warship to survive World War II, capsized and sank in the
Kwajalein Lagoon after being towed and set adrift. The cruiser withstood the Able and Baker atomic bomb tests of
Operation Crossroads in July 1946, but was heavily irradiated and no longer useful. It went down at 12:43 pm.[73]
A record was set for the most persons to ride the
New York City Subway in a single day, with almost nine million (8,872,244) persons passing through the turnstiles—a number, notes one author, "not likely ever to be broken, by New York or any other city".[74]
The University of Tennessee men's basketball team, in Pennsylvania to play Duquesne University, refused to go through with the game because Duquesne's coach would not agree to bench its African-American freshman,
Chuck Cooper.[75] Only three days earlier, Cooper had scored the winning basket in a game in Louisville, Kentucky, against
Morehead Teachers College.[76]
The German scientific publisher
Akademie Verlag was founded at the
German Academy of Sciences in East Berlin, functioning as the largest publisher in
East Germany during that nation's existence from 1949 to 1990, and was later privately acquired.[77]
The
French Fourth Republic came into existence at 3:11 pm in Paris as the new Council of the Republic, replacing the former French Senate under the new constitution, convened. Jules Gasser, who had been senior member of the Senate that had existed until the Nazi occupation in 1940, presided over the opening session, which lasted 25 minutes.[78] The Fourth Republic, which followed the First (1793–94), Second (1848–52), Third (1871–1940), lasted until 1958, when it was supplanted by the current Fifth Republic.[79]
The Soviet Union first achieved a self-sustaining and controlled nuclear chain reaction, at the
F-1 uranium-graphite nuclear reactor at Moscow, at 6:00 pm local time. The team was guided by Soviet physicist
Igor Kurchatov, and the reactor still operates at the
Kurchatov Institute, renamed in his honor. The first controlled reaction had been achieved four years earlier, on December 2, 1942, at the University of Chicago. Soviet control of nuclear energy was followed by the successful test of its first nuclear bomb on August 29, 1949.[80]
The new
Constitution of the
Republic of China was adopted by the Constituent Assembly in Nanjing, where the Kuomintang government of
Chiang Kai-shek was operating during the Chinese Civil War, and is still in effect for the Republic on the island of
Taiwan.[81]
Died:W. C. Fields, 66, American actor and comedian, died at 12:03 pm at the Los Encinas sanitarium in Pasadena, California, where he had been hospitalized for 14 months.[82]
The
Pink Flamingo Hotel and Casino opened on the
Las Vegas Strip, the first of a new type of luxurious gambling resort that would transform Las Vegas. Mobster
Bugsy Siegel, who went millions of dollars over budget on money borrowed from other organized criminals in building the Flamingo, scheduled the opening for the day after Christmas, but most of the hotel rooms were not ready to be occupied, and most of the celebrities, scheduled to fly in for the inaugural event, were kept away by rainstorms in
Los Angeles. During the first few weeks, the casino lost $300,000 more money than it took in. Siegel, who had already offended many of his fellow mobsters, was murdered less than six months later.[83]
Ernie Adamson, lead counsel for the U.S.
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), released a report that he had made to the committee, charging that 17 of the labor unions of the
Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) were dominated by Russian agents and that plans were being made for Communist revolution in the United States. Adamson charged further that the
Library of Congress was "a haven for aliens and foreign-minded Americans". The HUAC had not yet read, let alone approved the report, which did not have specific information, and fired Adamson.[84][85][86]
The government of
Romania acquired state ownership of the
National Bank of Romania, which had been a private institution since its founding in 1880.[90]
Ornithologist
Edmund Jaeger discovered that the
common poorwill (Phalaenoptilus nuttallii) hibernates in the winter, the only species of bird to do so. Jaeger and two assistants found a poorwill in a crevice in the
Chuckwalla Mountains of California. The discovery wasn't entirely new. The traditional Hopi Indian name for the bird is holchko, "the sleeping one".[91]
The day after a British prison in
Palestine gave 18 lashes to punish 17-year-old bank robbery suspect Benjamin Kimchin of the Zionist group Irgun, the group retaliated by kidnapping British Army Major Paddy Brett and three non-commissioned officers from the Metropole Hotel at
Nathanya. The three non-coms were whipped 18 times, and Major Brett 20, before being released. The perpetrators were captured and punished, but the British forces never used corporal punishment against the Irgun again.[92]
Born:
Patti Smith, American singer and songwriter known for "Because the Night"; in
Chicago
Berti Vogts, West German footballer with 96 caps for the West Germany national team; in
Büttgen
President
Harry Truman delivered Presidential
Proclamation 2714, which officially ended American hostilities in World War II. The declaration, cited in statutes and regulations concerning the definition of World War II service for purposes of veterans benefits, noted that "a state of war still exists". Treaties ended the war with Germany on October 19, 1951, and with Japan on April 28, 1952, roughly 6 1/2 years after each nation had surrendered.[93]
^"U.S., Britain Sign Reich Zone Merger", Miami News, December 3, 1946, p. 1; Norman Friedman, The Fifty-Year War: Conflict and Strategy in the Cold War (Naval Institute Press, 2007) p. 66
^"Notre Dame Rated National Champion: Writers' Poll Gives Irish 100 Firsts To Army's 48", Miami News, December 3, 1946, p. 3-B
^"Lewis is Defiant in Spite of Fines; Truman Radio Talk Set for Sunday", Milwaukee Journal, December 5, 1946, p. 1
^"Court's Words on John Lewis", Milwaukee Journal, December 5, 1946, p. 2
^Nikki L. M. Brown and Barry M. Stentiford, eds., The Jim Crow Encyclopedia (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2008) pp. 279–280; "Truman Sets Up Civil Rights Group To Fight 'Hatreds'", Daytona Beach Morning Journal, December 6, 1946, p. 1.
^Adam Cohen and Elizabeth Taylor, American Pharaoh: Mayor Richard J. Daley (Hachette Digital, Inc., 2000); "Crowd Protests Housing Move", Milwaukee Journal, December 6, 1946, p. 12; "Police Quell Mob in Chicago Riot", New York Times, December 10, 1946, p. 26.
^Lawrence Paterson, Black Flag: The Surrender of Germany's U-Boat Forces (MBI Publishing Company, 2009) p. 146; "Prisoner Return Spurred By U.S.", Spokane Daily Chronicle, December 5, 1946, p. 1.
^"Submarine Missing: Believed To Have Hit Mine", Sydney Morning Herald, December 9, 1946, p. 2.
^
Yonhap News Agency, North Korea Handbook (M. E. Sharpe, 2003) p. 421.
^Hastings, Max (1988). The Korean War. Simon and Schuster. p. 38.
^Drum, Jean; Drum, Dale D. (2000). My Only Great Passion: The Life and Films of Carl Th. Dreyer.
Scarecrow Press. p. 130.
^"UN Approves 8 Trusteeships", Los Angeles Times, December 14, 1946, p. 5
^Juliane Fürst, Stalin's Last Generation: Soviet Post-war Youth and the Emergence of Mature Socialism (Oxford University Press, 2010) p. 170
^International Governmental Organizations (Martinus Nijhoff, 1956) p. 672
^"UN Headquarters", in Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements, Volume 4, edited by Edmund Jan Osmańczyk and Anthony Mango (Taylor & Francis, 2003) p. 2474; "Vote Is 46 to 7 for Rockefeller Site Gift", Milwaukee Sentinel, December 15, 1946, p. 1
^Report of the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy (Government Printing Office, 1997) pA-33
^"Britain to Give Independence To Burma", Pittsburgh Press, December 20, 1946, p. 8
^The Union of Burma (now the Republic of Myanmar) was created on January 4, 1948 Shelby Tucker, Among Insurgents: Walking Through Burma (Radcliffe Press, 2000) p. 40
^"Ray Robinson Finally Cops Welter Title", Calgary Herald, December 21, 1946, p. 21
^David L. Porter, African-American Sports Greats: A Biographical Dictionary (ABC-CLIO, 1995) p. 287
^Donald Denoon, et al., The Cambridge History of the Pacific Islanders (Cambridge University Press, 2004) p. 326
^Harold P. Henderson and Gary L. Roberts, Georgia Governors in an Age of Change: From Ellis Arnall to George Busbee (University of Georgia Press, 1988) pp. 5–6
^Michael Newton, Mr. Mob: The Life and Crimes of Moe Dalitz (McFarland, 2009) pp. 124–125
^"Cleveland Rallies to Beat New York, 14–9, in All-America Loop Title Game", Youngstown (OH) Vindicator, December 23, 1946, p. 10
^Joseph P. Slavick, The Cruise of the German Raider Atlantis (Naval Institute Press, 2003) p. 246
^Brian J. Cudahy, Under the Sidewalks of New York: The Story of the Greatest Subway System in the World (Fordham University Press, 1995), p xv
^"Dukes- Tennessee Game Canceled Over Player; Vols Refuse to Go Through With Contest With Bluff Frosh Negro Star in Lineup", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 24, 1946
^Frank Fitzpatrick, And the Walls Came Tumbling Down: The Basketball Game That Changed American Sports (University of Nebraska Press, 2000) p. 56; "Dukes Nose Out Morehead, 53 to 52: Basket By Cooper Decides Thriller", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 21, 1946, p. 12
^Anthony M. Angiletta, The State of Western European Studies: Implications for Collection Development (Haworth Press, 1984) p. 54
^"France Creates Fourth Republic", Eugene (OR) Register-Guard, December 24, 1946, p. 1
^Chris Cook and John Stevenson, eds., The Routledge Companion to European History Since 1763 (4th Ed.)(Taylor & Francis, 2005) pp. 10–15
^
Arkadii Kruglov, The history of the Soviet atomic industry (CRC Press, 2002) p. 38; V.S. Emelyanov, "Nuclear Energy in the Soviet Union", Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (November 1971) p. 40
^Bih-jaw Lin and James T. Myers, Contemporary China and the Changing International Community (University of South Carolina Press, 1994) pp. 9–12
^"Noted Comedian, W. C. Fields, Dies", Spokane Spokesman-Review, December 26, 1946, p. 1
^Griffin, Dennis N. (2006). The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob. Huntington Press Inc. pp. 10–12.
^"House Group Eases Communist Charge". The New York Times. January 2, 1947. p. 4.
^Nelson, Harold L. (1999). Libel in News of Congressional Investigating Committees.
University of Minnesota Press. pp. 72–73.
^Atkins, Stephen E. (2004). Encyclopedia of Modern Worldwide Extremists and Extremist Groups. Greenwood Publishing Group.
^"United States Recaptures Davis Cup as Doubles Combination Whips Australia", Youngstown Vindicator, December 27, 1946, p. 10
^Michael P. Riccards, The presidency and the Middle Kingdom: China, the United States, and executive leadership (Lexington Books, 2000) p. 112
^Nige Healey and Barry Harrison, Central Banking in Eastern Europe (Routledge, 2004) p. 224
^Rita Christopher, ed., Reader's Digest Book of North American Birds (Reader's Digest, 1990) p. 81
^Leslie Stein, The Hope Fulfilled: The Rise of Modern Israel (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003) p. 252; "British Soldiers Flogged", Sydney Morning Herald, December 31, 1946, p. 3
^Civil Law Opinions of The Judge Advocate General, United States Air Force, 1992–1996 p. 542
December 20, 1946: It's A Wonderful Life debutsDecember 9, 1946: Nazi doctors put on trial at NurembergDecember 25, 1946: W. C. Fields dies at 66December 21, 1946: Eniwetok Atoll's 142 people removed before atomic bombing
U.S. Secretary of State
James F. Byrnes, and British Foreign Secretary
Ernest Bevin jointly announced the "economic fusion" of the
American and British occupation zones of Germany, to take place effective January 1, 1947, declaring that "The two zones shall be treated as a single area for all economic purposes." Nicknamed "
Bizonia", the Anglo-American occupation zone contained the German states of Schleswig-Holstein, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Niedersachsen, Bavaria, Hesse, and Württemberg-Baden (which later became part of Baden-Württemberg). The French zone would join the merger on April 8, 1949, and the three zones would then become
West Germany on May 24 of the same year.[3]
Notre Dame won the unofficial championship of the
1946 college football season, as the final
AP Poll ranked the Fighting Irish #1, with 1731+1⁄2 points overall (and 100 first-place votes). In second place was
Army, with 1,659+1⁄2 points and 48 first-place votes.
Georgia (1,448) and
UCLA (1,141) were third and fourth. All four teams were unbeaten in 1946; Notre Dame and Army were unbeaten, but not untied, having played a 0–0 game on
November 9.[4]
U.S. District Judge T. Alan Goldsborough found the
United Mine Workers and its president,
John L. Lewis, in contempt of court and fined both for continuing the nationwide coal miners strike. Lewis was fined $10,000 personally, and the union was fined $3,500,000 (equivalent to 35 million dollars in 2011).[5] Judge Goldsborough commented that the defiance of an injunction against continuing the strike "is an evil, demoniac, monstrous thing that means hunger and cold and unemployment and destitution and disorganization of the social fabric... if actions of this kind can be successfully persisted in, the government will be overthrown, and the government that would take its place would be a dictatorship, and the first thing the dictatorship would do would be to destroy the labor unions."[6]
U.S. President Truman issued Executive Order 9808, creating the 16-member Presidential Committee on Civil Rights, chaired by
General Electric President
Charles E. Wilson. Ten months later, the committee would deliver its report, To Secure These Rights.[7]
A crowd of 200 residents of an all-white Airport Homes neighborhood rioted when the
Chicago Housing Authority attempted to bring in the families of two distinguished African-American veterans in an attempt at integration of Chicago's West Lawn community. On the first day, the crowd attacked the movers who were bringing in the family furniture. Order was restored after 400 city police moved in, but the next day, demonstrators attacked the police. The project would remain all-white.[8]
U.S. Secretary of State Byrnes announced that, at the request of the United States,
Belgium, the
Netherlands and
Luxembourg had agreed to repatriate German war prisoners as soon as possible, and that he was awaiting an answer from France, where most of the 674,000 POWs had been held since World War II.[9]
The
French submarine 2326, converted to use by the French Navy after its capture from Germany as
Unterseeboot U-2326, disappeared in the Mediterranean with 18 men on board, after performing test dives near
Toulon. It was believed that the sub had struck a sea mine set adrift following a storm.[10]
The
Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), state news organ for
North Korea, was established. Its stated mission was "to turn all members of society into juche communist revolutionaries unconditionally loyal to the Great Leader".[11]
The final attempt at resolving the question of the independence of British India, as a single nation, failed. A four-day conference had been held at 10 Downing Street in London with Jawaharlal Nehru of the Congress Party, Muslim League president Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and Sikh leader Sardar Baldev Singh being hosted by Britain's Prime Minister Attlee. "The conversations held by His Majesty's Government... came to an end this evening as Pandit Nehru and Sardar Baldev Singh are returning to India tomorrow morning", the Prime Minister's office began in a press release, closing, "Should the constitution come to be framed by a Constituent Assembly in which a large section of the Indian population had not been represented, His Majesty's Government could not, of course, contemplate— as the Congress have stated they would not contemplate— forcing such a constitution upon any unwilling parts of the country."[12] British India became independent as the separate nations of India and Pakistan (which in turn split in 1971 between Pakistan and Bangladesh).[13]
The first known reference to the sport of
wheelchair basketball was published in the
Framingham, MassachusettsNews, in a story entitled "Cushing Wins Over Celtics In Wheel-Chair Basketball". The demonstration took place at the
Boston Garden, with players from the Cushing Veterans Hospital going up against the
Boston Celtics, who were sitting in wheelchairs as well. The Celtics lost, 18–2.[14] In the regular game, before 2,509 fans, the Celtics lost to the Detroit Falcons, 65–61.[15]
December 7, 1946: Daisy McCumber jumps from window to escape Winecoff Hotel fire; she survived
An
early-morning fire at the
Winecoff Hotel in
Atlanta killed 119 people. The fire broke out on the third floor of the 15-story building, in front of Room 326, before spreading to the floors above. The Atlanta Fire Department received the first call at 3:42 a.m.[16] Built before strict fire codes were put in place, the luxurious Winecoff Hotel had no alarms, no sprinklers, and no fire escape. Final records concluded that 46 people died of their burns, 40 died of smoke inhalation, and 31 others jumped from the building to their deaths.[17][18]
The
United Nations emblem was approved by the General Assembly's Resolution 92 ("a map of the world representing an azimuthal equidistant projection centred on the North Pole, inscribed in a wreath consisting of crossed conventionalized branches of the olive tree, in gold on a field of smoke-blue with all water areas in white. The projection of the map extends to 60 degrees south latitude, and includes five concentric circles"). The flag, which has the emblem in white against a light blue background, was adopted on October 20, 1947.[19]
The French liner
SS Liberté, formerly the German liner SS Europa, was accidentally sunk, not long after it had been captured from Germany as part of the spoils of World War II.[21] The 49,746-ton ship, third largest ocean liner in the world, broke loose from its moorings, collided with the wreckage of the sunken liner Paris, and went down in the harbor at Le Havre. It was finally put back into service on August 2, 1950.[22][23]
Gloria Loring (stage name for Gloria Jean Goff), American singer; in New York City
Died:
Walter Johnson, 59, American baseball pitcher and Hall of Fame inductee, American League most valuable player, 1913 and 1924, twelve-time AL strikeouts leader between 1910 and 1924, holder of the MLB record for most shutouts pitched in a career (110), died of a brain tumor.[30]
UNICEF, the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund, was founded as the UN General Assembly adopted Resolution 57 (I).[31]
With December 11 as the deadline for the United Nations to have a permanent site, real estate developer
William Zeckendorf agreed to sell 17 acres of land in Manhattan to John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who, in turn would donate the land to the UN. Zeckendorf made the deal, through architect Wallace Harrison, at 2:00 in the morning while he and his wife were celebrating their wedding anniversary at the Club Monte Carlo.[32]
The collapse of an adjacent building killed 37 people at a six-story apartment building, on 2545
Amsterdam Avenue in New York City's
Washington Heights section. The afternoon before, two boys, aged 13 and 10, had started a fire on the roof of an abandoned ice house on West 184th Street, and bragged about it to their friends. Firefighters put out the flames on the roof and then left, not realizing that a fire continued to smolder in the wooden beams beneath the roof.[33][34]
Socialist and anti-colonialist
Léon Blum took office as the new
Prime Minister of France. Historian
Stein Tønnesson would later theorize that in the seven days between Blum's entry into office and the Việt Minh's date for launching an attack against the French, war in Vietnam might have been averted.[36]
The
United Nations General Assembly voted, 34–6 (with 13 abstentions) to bar Spain from membership so long as
Francisco Franco was in power, and to urge member nations to withdraw their ambassadors from Madrid.[37] The ban would be lifted on
November 4, 1950.[38]
The first meeting of South Korea's Interim Legislative Assembly was held, with 45 appointed members and 45 elected ones, most of whom were right-wing.[39]
Born:
Emerson Fittipaldi, Brazilian Formula One (world champion 1972 and 1974) and Indy car racer (Indianapolis 500 winner 1989 and 1993); in
São Paulo
Died:Renee Falconetti, 54, French stage and film actress who played the title role in the silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc, died of self-imposed restrictive diet while living in Argentina.[40]
The
United Nations General Assembly approved creation of eight trust territories, to be administered by member nations, with the ten-member UN
Trusteeship Council to "safeguard the interests of non-self-governing peoples and to try to see that they eventually achieve full independence." The eight territories, which had been
League of Nations mandates, were
New Guinea (under mandate of Australia);
Western Samoa (New Zealand);
Ruanda-Urundi, which later split as the nations of
Rwanda and
Burundi (Belgium);
Tanganyika, later merged with Zanzibar as
Tanzania (United Kingdom); and the
Cameroons (
Cameroon) and
Togoland (
Togo), under a British and French mandate. The full trusteeship committee had approved the eight mandates 35–8 the day before.[41]
Employees at the Gigant cinema in the Soviet city of
Omsk discovered the corpses of 13 young boys. Horrified police investigators found the bodies of an additional seven children at a factory on the outskirts of town, and determined that the murders had been carried out by a gang of juvenile delinquents, whose motive was to steal shoes and jackets.[42]
The United Nations voted 46–7 to accept the offer by John D. Rockefeller Jr. of $8,500,000 for purchase of the 17 acres of Manhattan real estate bounded by 42nd Street, Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive, 48th Street, and First Avenue, for its permanent location.[44]
Patty Duke, American film and television actress, 1962 Academy Award winner for Best Supporting Actress in The Miracle Worker, 1970 and 1977 Emmy Award winner; in
Queens, New York City (d. 2016)
The
Chicago Bears scored 10 points in the fourth quarter of the
1946 NFL Championship Game to defeat the
New York Giants, 24–14. The game was watched by a record title game crowd of 58,346 at the Polo Grounds. Earlier in the day, the news broke that Giants' quarterback
Frankie Filchock and running back
Merle Hapes had been offered bribes (which they did not accept, but also failed to report) conditioned on the Bears winning by more than ten points.[47] Hapes was suspended before the game, and Filchock allowed to play. Both were banned from the NFL.[48]
Three days after retaking its Azerbaijan province, Iran's troops marched into the city of
Mahabad, putting an end to the Kurdish
Republic of Mahabad that had been created on
January 22.[49]
Vietnam's President
Ho Chi Minh sent a cable to France's interim Prime Minister,
Léon Blum, asking for negotiations to avert fighting between the two nations. Delivery of the message was delayed, and Blum did not receive it until December 26, after a French ultimatum and a Vietnamese attack had begun what would become a war of more than seven years.[50]
Dior, a marketer of luxury
fashion outfits for women and founded by French designer
Christian Dior and textile magnate
Marcel Boussac, began operations with the opening of a store at 30 Avenue Montaigne in
Paris.[51]
The
Third String Quartet of
Dmitri Shostakovich was first performed, in Moscow. The piece proved to be controversial and was withdrawn from public performance as part of
Andrei Zhdanov's campaign against artistic works deemed to be "anti-Soviet", with questions even about whether the musical notes had a subversive message.[53][54]
The
1947 NFL draft was held in New York. This was the first year that a lottery system was used to determine which team would get to pick first. The
Chicago Bears won the lottery and selected
Bob Fenimore of
Oklahoma A&M as the #1 overall pick.
A new American altitude record was set as a captured German V-2 rocket, No. 17, was launched to an altitude of 116 miles (187 km). The mark was unbroken until February 24, 1949, when a two-stage rocket more than doubled the height, to 250 miles (400 km).[57]
The
International Monetary Fund established its first par values and exchange rates, pegged against gold and the U.S. dollar, for the currencies of 32 of its member nations, with the 39 nations to pay in their subscriptions before March 1, 1947, for the privilege of borrowing from the World Bank.[31][58] The Canadian and U.S. dollars were at a 1 to 1 ratio, and the British pound was worth US$4.03.[59]
The
Battle of Hanoi began at 8:03 pm local time, when electric power to the city of
Hanoi was cut off as a force of 30,000
Việt Minh soldiers launched an attack against French army units in the city. The attack followed a directive made by General Louis Morlière for the Viet soldiers to disarm.[60] Co-ordinated by General
Võ Nguyên Giáp, the attackers used mortars, artillery and machine guns in a battle that failed, but began the
First Indochina War. Over seven and a half years, the French and their allies lost 172,708 people, more than 500,000 Việt Minh soldiers died, and 150,000 Vietnamese civilians were killed.[61]
Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life, with
Jimmy Stewart returning to film after completing his World War II service, was released in New York. Despite its Christmas setting, it was not released generally until January 7, and was a money loser in its theatrical release. A failure to renew the copyright in 1974 led to the film being run frequently on television afterward, turning it into one of the most popular Christmas films ever.[62]
A team of American
cryptanalysts, led by
Meredith Gardner, decoded a secret cable that had been sent in 1944 to Moscow, and found it contained a list of scientists working on the Manhattan Project, the first of many disclosures that there had been a Soviet espionage operating along atomic bomb researchers at Los Alamos.[63]
British Prime Minister
Clement Attlee announced to the House of Commons that the United Kingdom was prepared to offer
Burma its independence. Opposition leader and former Prime Minister
Winston Churchill denounced the move by the Labour Party government as hastening "the process of the decline and fall of the British Empire".[64][65]
Sugar Ray Robinson won the first of six boxing titles, becoming the world welterweight champion with a decision over Tommy Bell.[66] In 1951, he won the world middleweight title, retired, then won and lost the title several more times between 1955 and 1961.[67]
The 8.1 MwNankaidō earthquake killed at least 1,362 people in
Japan, with some survivors of the quake being killed 71 minutes later in a tsunami. The quake occurred at 4:19 in the morning local time (1919 hrs on December 20 UTC), and at 5:30 am, a wall of water struck the islands of Shikoku and Honshū, followed by five more waves over the next three hours. The town of
Kushimoto, with 10,000 residents, was reported washed away.[68]
The 142 residents of the
Enewetak Atoll in the
Marshall Islands were relocated by the United States government to the
Ujelang Atoll, in order for Enewetak (spelled at the time Eniwetok) to be used for nuclear testing.[69]
Died:Eugene Talmadge, 62, who had been elected in November to a four-year term as
Governor of Georgia, died less than a month before he was scheduled to take office. Both his running mate, Lieutenant Governor-elect
Melvin E. Thompson and Talmadge's son,
Herman Talmadge, sought to become Governor on the expiration of Governor
Ellis Arnall's term. Under various interpretations of the state constitution at the time, Governor Arnall could have continued in office (though he declined to do so), Thompson could take office after being sworn in as Lieutenant Governor, or the legislature could select someone to serve the term. The legislature selected Herman Talmadge, who moved into the Governor's office while Thompson filed suit and maintained his own office as the rightful Governor. Thompson won the suit and was sworn in during March.[70]
The
Havana Conference, a summit of American
organized crime bosses was held at the Hotel Nacional in
Havana,
Cuba, owned by Meyer Lansky. The occasion was the return of Lucky Luciano from Italy, where he had been deported in February. Luciano, most powerful American mobster, accepted expensive tributes from the visitors, brokered a truce between
Albert Anastasia and
Vito Genovese, discussed establishing a new route for the trafficking of heroin, and planned the fate of rival boss
Bugsy Siegel. Siegel would be murdered on June 20, 1947.[71]
The
Prinz Eugen, the only German warship to survive World War II, capsized and sank in the
Kwajalein Lagoon after being towed and set adrift. The cruiser withstood the Able and Baker atomic bomb tests of
Operation Crossroads in July 1946, but was heavily irradiated and no longer useful. It went down at 12:43 pm.[73]
A record was set for the most persons to ride the
New York City Subway in a single day, with almost nine million (8,872,244) persons passing through the turnstiles—a number, notes one author, "not likely ever to be broken, by New York or any other city".[74]
The University of Tennessee men's basketball team, in Pennsylvania to play Duquesne University, refused to go through with the game because Duquesne's coach would not agree to bench its African-American freshman,
Chuck Cooper.[75] Only three days earlier, Cooper had scored the winning basket in a game in Louisville, Kentucky, against
Morehead Teachers College.[76]
The German scientific publisher
Akademie Verlag was founded at the
German Academy of Sciences in East Berlin, functioning as the largest publisher in
East Germany during that nation's existence from 1949 to 1990, and was later privately acquired.[77]
The
French Fourth Republic came into existence at 3:11 pm in Paris as the new Council of the Republic, replacing the former French Senate under the new constitution, convened. Jules Gasser, who had been senior member of the Senate that had existed until the Nazi occupation in 1940, presided over the opening session, which lasted 25 minutes.[78] The Fourth Republic, which followed the First (1793–94), Second (1848–52), Third (1871–1940), lasted until 1958, when it was supplanted by the current Fifth Republic.[79]
The Soviet Union first achieved a self-sustaining and controlled nuclear chain reaction, at the
F-1 uranium-graphite nuclear reactor at Moscow, at 6:00 pm local time. The team was guided by Soviet physicist
Igor Kurchatov, and the reactor still operates at the
Kurchatov Institute, renamed in his honor. The first controlled reaction had been achieved four years earlier, on December 2, 1942, at the University of Chicago. Soviet control of nuclear energy was followed by the successful test of its first nuclear bomb on August 29, 1949.[80]
The new
Constitution of the
Republic of China was adopted by the Constituent Assembly in Nanjing, where the Kuomintang government of
Chiang Kai-shek was operating during the Chinese Civil War, and is still in effect for the Republic on the island of
Taiwan.[81]
Died:W. C. Fields, 66, American actor and comedian, died at 12:03 pm at the Los Encinas sanitarium in Pasadena, California, where he had been hospitalized for 14 months.[82]
The
Pink Flamingo Hotel and Casino opened on the
Las Vegas Strip, the first of a new type of luxurious gambling resort that would transform Las Vegas. Mobster
Bugsy Siegel, who went millions of dollars over budget on money borrowed from other organized criminals in building the Flamingo, scheduled the opening for the day after Christmas, but most of the hotel rooms were not ready to be occupied, and most of the celebrities, scheduled to fly in for the inaugural event, were kept away by rainstorms in
Los Angeles. During the first few weeks, the casino lost $300,000 more money than it took in. Siegel, who had already offended many of his fellow mobsters, was murdered less than six months later.[83]
Ernie Adamson, lead counsel for the U.S.
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), released a report that he had made to the committee, charging that 17 of the labor unions of the
Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) were dominated by Russian agents and that plans were being made for Communist revolution in the United States. Adamson charged further that the
Library of Congress was "a haven for aliens and foreign-minded Americans". The HUAC had not yet read, let alone approved the report, which did not have specific information, and fired Adamson.[84][85][86]
The government of
Romania acquired state ownership of the
National Bank of Romania, which had been a private institution since its founding in 1880.[90]
Ornithologist
Edmund Jaeger discovered that the
common poorwill (Phalaenoptilus nuttallii) hibernates in the winter, the only species of bird to do so. Jaeger and two assistants found a poorwill in a crevice in the
Chuckwalla Mountains of California. The discovery wasn't entirely new. The traditional Hopi Indian name for the bird is holchko, "the sleeping one".[91]
The day after a British prison in
Palestine gave 18 lashes to punish 17-year-old bank robbery suspect Benjamin Kimchin of the Zionist group Irgun, the group retaliated by kidnapping British Army Major Paddy Brett and three non-commissioned officers from the Metropole Hotel at
Nathanya. The three non-coms were whipped 18 times, and Major Brett 20, before being released. The perpetrators were captured and punished, but the British forces never used corporal punishment against the Irgun again.[92]
Born:
Patti Smith, American singer and songwriter known for "Because the Night"; in
Chicago
Berti Vogts, West German footballer with 96 caps for the West Germany national team; in
Büttgen
President
Harry Truman delivered Presidential
Proclamation 2714, which officially ended American hostilities in World War II. The declaration, cited in statutes and regulations concerning the definition of World War II service for purposes of veterans benefits, noted that "a state of war still exists". Treaties ended the war with Germany on October 19, 1951, and with Japan on April 28, 1952, roughly 6 1/2 years after each nation had surrendered.[93]
^"U.S., Britain Sign Reich Zone Merger", Miami News, December 3, 1946, p. 1; Norman Friedman, The Fifty-Year War: Conflict and Strategy in the Cold War (Naval Institute Press, 2007) p. 66
^"Notre Dame Rated National Champion: Writers' Poll Gives Irish 100 Firsts To Army's 48", Miami News, December 3, 1946, p. 3-B
^"Lewis is Defiant in Spite of Fines; Truman Radio Talk Set for Sunday", Milwaukee Journal, December 5, 1946, p. 1
^"Court's Words on John Lewis", Milwaukee Journal, December 5, 1946, p. 2
^Nikki L. M. Brown and Barry M. Stentiford, eds., The Jim Crow Encyclopedia (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2008) pp. 279–280; "Truman Sets Up Civil Rights Group To Fight 'Hatreds'", Daytona Beach Morning Journal, December 6, 1946, p. 1.
^Adam Cohen and Elizabeth Taylor, American Pharaoh: Mayor Richard J. Daley (Hachette Digital, Inc., 2000); "Crowd Protests Housing Move", Milwaukee Journal, December 6, 1946, p. 12; "Police Quell Mob in Chicago Riot", New York Times, December 10, 1946, p. 26.
^Lawrence Paterson, Black Flag: The Surrender of Germany's U-Boat Forces (MBI Publishing Company, 2009) p. 146; "Prisoner Return Spurred By U.S.", Spokane Daily Chronicle, December 5, 1946, p. 1.
^"Submarine Missing: Believed To Have Hit Mine", Sydney Morning Herald, December 9, 1946, p. 2.
^
Yonhap News Agency, North Korea Handbook (M. E. Sharpe, 2003) p. 421.
^Hastings, Max (1988). The Korean War. Simon and Schuster. p. 38.
^Drum, Jean; Drum, Dale D. (2000). My Only Great Passion: The Life and Films of Carl Th. Dreyer.
Scarecrow Press. p. 130.
^"UN Approves 8 Trusteeships", Los Angeles Times, December 14, 1946, p. 5
^Juliane Fürst, Stalin's Last Generation: Soviet Post-war Youth and the Emergence of Mature Socialism (Oxford University Press, 2010) p. 170
^International Governmental Organizations (Martinus Nijhoff, 1956) p. 672
^"UN Headquarters", in Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements, Volume 4, edited by Edmund Jan Osmańczyk and Anthony Mango (Taylor & Francis, 2003) p. 2474; "Vote Is 46 to 7 for Rockefeller Site Gift", Milwaukee Sentinel, December 15, 1946, p. 1
^Report of the Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy (Government Printing Office, 1997) pA-33
^"Britain to Give Independence To Burma", Pittsburgh Press, December 20, 1946, p. 8
^The Union of Burma (now the Republic of Myanmar) was created on January 4, 1948 Shelby Tucker, Among Insurgents: Walking Through Burma (Radcliffe Press, 2000) p. 40
^"Ray Robinson Finally Cops Welter Title", Calgary Herald, December 21, 1946, p. 21
^David L. Porter, African-American Sports Greats: A Biographical Dictionary (ABC-CLIO, 1995) p. 287
^Donald Denoon, et al., The Cambridge History of the Pacific Islanders (Cambridge University Press, 2004) p. 326
^Harold P. Henderson and Gary L. Roberts, Georgia Governors in an Age of Change: From Ellis Arnall to George Busbee (University of Georgia Press, 1988) pp. 5–6
^Michael Newton, Mr. Mob: The Life and Crimes of Moe Dalitz (McFarland, 2009) pp. 124–125
^"Cleveland Rallies to Beat New York, 14–9, in All-America Loop Title Game", Youngstown (OH) Vindicator, December 23, 1946, p. 10
^Joseph P. Slavick, The Cruise of the German Raider Atlantis (Naval Institute Press, 2003) p. 246
^Brian J. Cudahy, Under the Sidewalks of New York: The Story of the Greatest Subway System in the World (Fordham University Press, 1995), p xv
^"Dukes- Tennessee Game Canceled Over Player; Vols Refuse to Go Through With Contest With Bluff Frosh Negro Star in Lineup", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 24, 1946
^Frank Fitzpatrick, And the Walls Came Tumbling Down: The Basketball Game That Changed American Sports (University of Nebraska Press, 2000) p. 56; "Dukes Nose Out Morehead, 53 to 52: Basket By Cooper Decides Thriller", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 21, 1946, p. 12
^Anthony M. Angiletta, The State of Western European Studies: Implications for Collection Development (Haworth Press, 1984) p. 54
^"France Creates Fourth Republic", Eugene (OR) Register-Guard, December 24, 1946, p. 1
^Chris Cook and John Stevenson, eds., The Routledge Companion to European History Since 1763 (4th Ed.)(Taylor & Francis, 2005) pp. 10–15
^
Arkadii Kruglov, The history of the Soviet atomic industry (CRC Press, 2002) p. 38; V.S. Emelyanov, "Nuclear Energy in the Soviet Union", Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (November 1971) p. 40
^Bih-jaw Lin and James T. Myers, Contemporary China and the Changing International Community (University of South Carolina Press, 1994) pp. 9–12
^"Noted Comedian, W. C. Fields, Dies", Spokane Spokesman-Review, December 26, 1946, p. 1
^Griffin, Dennis N. (2006). The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob. Huntington Press Inc. pp. 10–12.
^"House Group Eases Communist Charge". The New York Times. January 2, 1947. p. 4.
^Nelson, Harold L. (1999). Libel in News of Congressional Investigating Committees.
University of Minnesota Press. pp. 72–73.
^Atkins, Stephen E. (2004). Encyclopedia of Modern Worldwide Extremists and Extremist Groups. Greenwood Publishing Group.
^"United States Recaptures Davis Cup as Doubles Combination Whips Australia", Youngstown Vindicator, December 27, 1946, p. 10
^Michael P. Riccards, The presidency and the Middle Kingdom: China, the United States, and executive leadership (Lexington Books, 2000) p. 112
^Nige Healey and Barry Harrison, Central Banking in Eastern Europe (Routledge, 2004) p. 224
^Rita Christopher, ed., Reader's Digest Book of North American Birds (Reader's Digest, 1990) p. 81
^Leslie Stein, The Hope Fulfilled: The Rise of Modern Israel (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003) p. 252; "British Soldiers Flogged", Sydney Morning Herald, December 31, 1946, p. 3
^Civil Law Opinions of The Judge Advocate General, United States Air Force, 1992–1996 p. 542