Andrei Gromyko Proposes Banning Nuclear Weapons on Behalf of the USSR
On 19 June, Andrei Gromyko, the Soviet Union's representative to the UN, on behalf of the USSR proposed a general reduction and regulation of armaments and a ban on the military use of atomic energy. He also proposed a draft convention on the prohibition and destruction of all finished and unfinished atomic weapons within three months.
Three Lives of Franz von Papen
Associate of Gandhi & Nehru Calls on Goa to Fight For Independence
On 18 June 1946, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia, Indian socialist, associate of Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, announced the beginning of a campaign of passive resistance against the Portuguese administration in Goa and the surrounding area. At the same time, he campaigned for a Direct Action Day in the colony. In 1940, Mahatma Gandhi described Lohia as follows: “I do not know a person braver than him. He never used violence. No matter what he did, it was always imbued with dignity and honour”.
'Hans Fritzsche Speaks!'
The Voice of Nazi propaganda
First Commercial Mobile Phone Service Opens in the US
On 17 June 1946 the American company Bell Systems, owned by the telecommunications giant AT&T (American Telephone and Telegraph Company), started the sale of 0G generation mobile phones. The service name was the Mobile Telephone Service (MTS) . The original equipment weighed 36 kg and was designed to be installed in a vehicle.
"Night of the Bridges" in Palestine
Free German Youth (FDJ) Established in East Germany
Baruch Plan on Nuclear Arms Control Presented to UN
Prime Minister Alcide de Gasperi Assumes Power in Italy
Second National Constituent Assembly of France Began Work
The Nuremberg Trials Wouldn’t Have Taken Place Without Interpreters
At the Nuremberg Trials, everything was a first - including the debut of international simultaneous interpretation. The new practice of interpretation was invented and introduced at the tribunal - "simultaneous interpretation" was necessary for the new world, which was going to live on without war. Countries and people managed to come to an agreement in every sense: a common space for dialogue was provided by interpreters, who bore perhaps the greatest responsibility and who had never done anything like this before or since. The Soviet interpreters had a particularly difficult time - and they passed the unprecedented test with flying colours.
Dragoljub Mihailoviс Questioned by Court in Belgrade
Deportation of Germans From Czechoslovakia to Soviet Occupation Zone
Press Reports On Possible Federalisation Of Germany
Hans Frank, Hitler's Lawyer
From lawyer to Butcher of Poland, stormtrooper to Catholic.