The following events occurred in September 1948:
- A parliamentary assembly tasked with writing a provisional constitution for western Germany formally convened at Bonn. Christian Democratic leader Konrad Adenauer was elected Assembly President.
- 44 people, most of them circus performers, as well as an assortment of circus animals drowned off the coast of Colombia in the sinking of the Honduran ship Euzkera. 12 survived.
- A German appeals court acquitted Hjalmar Schacht of charges that he had been a major Nazi offender and ordered him released from prison.
- Born: James Rebhorn, actor, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (d. 2014)
- Died: Muhammad VII al-Munsif, 67, ruler of Tunisia 1942âÂÂ43
- 1948 Australian National Airways DC-3 crash: The Douglas DC-3 Lutana crashed en route from Brisbane to Sydney, killing all 13 on board.
- The Longshore strike began on the west coast of the United States.
- Andrei Zhdanov was buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis after a state funeral in which Joseph Stalin served as a pallbearer.
- Born: Nate Archibald, basketball player, in New York City; Terry Bradshaw, American football quarterback and TV sports analyst, in Shreveport, Louisiana; Christa McAuliffe, teacher and astronaut, in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1986)
- Died: Tancred Borenius, 63, Finnish art historian and diplomat; Sylvanus Morley, 65, American archaeologist, scholar and World War I spy
- The World Council of Churches called on its 150 member bodies to denounce anti-Semitism as "absolutely irreconcilable with the profession and practice of the Christian faith" and a "sin against God and man."
- Born: Don Brewer, drummer of the rock band Grand Funk Railroad, in Flint, Michigan; Levy Mwanawasa, 3rd President of Zambia, in Mufulira, Zambia (d. 2008)
- Died: Edvard BeneÃ
¡, 64, Czech politician and two-time President of Czechoslovakia; Evan Durbin, 42, British economist and politician (drowned)
- The government of French Prime Minister Robert Schuman was toppled after just two days in power when it lost a narrow confidence vote in the National Assembly, 295 to 289.
- Born: Susan Blakely, actress and model, in Frankfurt, Germany
- US President Harry S. Truman's name was knocked off the Louisiana ballot, leaving him to be only a write-in candidate there in the November election. The Louisiana Democratic State Central Committee declared that the States' Rights Democratic Party candidates Strom Thurmond and Fielding L. Wright were the Democratic party nominees in the state.
- Henry A. Wallace spoke in front of 48,000 supporters in Yankee Stadium, declaring that "Mr. Truman has demonstrated that he could not fill the shoes of Roosevelt," and that Wall Street corporations were keeping the South divided to multiply their profits.
- Lester B. Pearson became Canadian Secretary of State for External Affairs.
- Born: StanisÃ
Âaw Flejterski, Polish economist and professor; Judy Geeson, actress, in Arundel, England; Bob Lanier, basketball player, in Buffalo, New York (d. 2022); Margaret Trudeau, author, actress, social advocate and wife of Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, in Vancouver, British Columbia; Charlie Waters, American football player and coach, in Miami, Florida
- Died: Ferdinand I of Bulgaria, 87, ruler of Bulgaria 1887âÂÂ1918
- Forty American soldiers were killed in a train collision 20 miles north of Daejon, South Korea.
- Diplomat Folke Bernadotte was assassinated in Jerusalem when members of the Jewish Zionist group Lehi opened fire on a UN convoy. Bernadotte and French UN observer André Serot were transported to Hadassah Hospital on Mount Scopus but were found to have died instantly.
- Penalty flags were used in an NFL game for the first time, in a game between the Green Bay Packers and Boston Yanks.
- Born: John Ritter, actor and comedian, in Burbank, California (d. 2003)
- Died:
- Ruth Benedict, 61, American anthropologist and folklorist
- Folke Bernadotte, 53, Swedish diplomat and nobleman (assassinated by members of Lehi)
- Emil Ludwig, 67, German-Swiss author; André Serot, 52, French military officer (killed in the Bernadotte assassination)
- The Israeli government enacted emergency anti-terrorist legislation, allowing for imprisonment of 5 to 25 years for taking an active part in terrorist acts and 1 to 5 years for membership in a terrorist organization.
- Count Bernadotte's final report to the United Nations was published posthumously. It called for recognition of Israel but advocated transfer of the Negev area to Arabs, incorporation of all of Galilee into Israel and placing Jerusalem under UN control.
- Born: Rey Langit, journalist, in Pampanga, Philippines; George R. R. Martin, novelist, in Bayonne, New Jersey; Adrian Piper, conceptual artist, in New York City
- Died: Husain Salaahuddin, 67, Maldivian writer and scholar
- As a last-ditch effort to settle the Berlin dispute in a framework of four-party talks, identical notes from Britain, the United States and France were dispatched to the Soviet Union demanding a clear-cut statement on Soviet intentions.
- Born: Denis Burke, politician, in Queensland, Australia; Jim Byrnes, blues musician and actor, in St. Louis, Missouri; Mark Phillips, horseman and first husband of Anne, Princess Royal, in Tetbury, England
- Died: Prince Adalbert of Prussia, 64, third son of Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany
- At a United Nations address in Paris, Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Vyshinsky called upon the five great powers to reduce their armed forces by one-third as a first step toward disarmament.
- Born: Vladimir Yevtushenkov, business oligarch, in Smolensk, USSR
- Through an authorized broadcast on TASS, the Soviet Union replied to the three-power note on Berlin by naming its price for settlement of the dispute: control of all land and air traffic between Berlin and western Germany. The foreign ministers of the United States, Britain and France replied that further negotiations were impossible and that they intended to refer the matter to the UN Security Council.
- The Boston Braves clinched their first National League pennant since 1914 when they edged the New York Giants 3-2.
- Born: Olivia Newton-John, British-Australian singer, actress and activist, in Cambridge, England (d. 2022)
- Defense Ministers of Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg announced from Paris an agreement to establish a permanent common defense organization for Western Europe.
- Died: Gregg Toland, 44, American cinematographer (coronary thrombosis)
- The United States, Britain and France delivered identical notes to UN Secretary General Trygve Lie accusing the USSR of violating Article 2 of the United Nations Charter in which all members pledge to settle their international disputes "by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered."
- The United States Atomic Energy Commission barred the labor unions United Public Workers of America and United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America from nuclear energy plants because of suspected Communist affiliation.
- KXAS-TV in DallasâÂÂFort Worth signed on as the first television station in the state of Texas.
- Born: Mark Farner, lead singer and guitarist of Grand Funk Railroad, in Flint, Michigan; Bryant Gumbel, television journalist and sportscaster, in New Orleans, Louisiana; Theo Jörgensmann, jazz clarinetist, in Bottrop, Germany (d. 2025)
- Berlin Communists moved into the official chambers of the elected City Assembly in the Soviet zone and conducted business there over the protests of the regular City Assembly.
- Died: Edith Roosevelt, 87, First Lady of the United States 1901âÂÂ09
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