US Lieutenant General John R. Hodge announced that general elections would be held in Korea under UN supervision on May 9. The elections would be observed "in such parts of Korea as are accessible to the commission."[1]
The Costa Rican Congress annulled as fraudulent the election of February 8 in which Otilio Ulate Blanco was elected president.[2]
Juraj Slávik and František Němec, the Czechoslovakian ambassadors to the United States and Canada respectively, resigned their posts in protest of the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia. "I cannot accept as legal the government nominated by President Beneš under duress and terror," Slávik explained at a press conference, further declaring that he would "fight for a free Czechoslovakia."[5]
In London, exiled former king Michael of Romania commented in public for the first time since abdicating the throne. In front of a gathering of reporters he read a statement explaining that his abdication "was imposed on me by force by a government installed and maintained in power by a foreign country, a government utterly unrepresentative of the will of the Romanian people ... The removal of the monarchy constitutes a new act of violence in the policy for the enslavement of Romania. In these conditions I do not consider myself bound in any way by this act imposed upon me."[6]
New records for US rocket missiles were established when a Navy rocket reached a speed of 3,000 miles per hour (4,800 km/h) and an altitude of 78 miles (126 km) during tests at White Sands, New Mexico.[8]
The US Atomic Energy Commission announced a $3 million program to encourage research into the use of radioactive materials for treating cancer. Radioisotopes would be provided for free to qualified medical and research workers.[9]
Died:Zelda Fitzgerald, 47, American socialite, novelist and wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald (died in a hospital fire); Jan Masaryk, 61, Czech diplomat and politician (officially said to be suicide but widely believed to have been murdered)
A bombing of the Jewish Agency's headquarters in Jerusalem killed 12 Jews.[4]
American movie producers agreed to end a boycott of the British market that had been in place since August because of a 75 percent ad valorem tax imposed upon imported films. Britain promised to eliminate the tax in exchange for American producers agreeing not to withdraw from Britain any profits above $17 million.[13]
Chile formally accused the Soviet Union of threatening world peace and demanded that the UN Security Council investigate what role Moscow had in the Czechoslovak coup.[14]
Governors of the Southern United States met in Washington and signed a pledge to oppose President Truman's re-election bid. While not mentioning Truman by name, the document affirmed that "we go on record as repudiating the present leadership of the Democratic party in opposing the so-called civil rights program," and recommended "to the people of the Southern States that they fight to the last ditch to prevent the nomination of any candidate for President or Vice President who advocates such invasions of State sovereignty as those proposed in the said program." The signers of the document were Governors Fielding L. Wright of Mississippi, Beauford H. Jester of Texas, Jim Folsom of Alabama, Melvin E. Thompson of Georgia, Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, Ben Laney of Arkansas and Senator Harry F. Byrd on behalf of Virginia Governor William M. Tuck.[15]
A state funeral was held in Prague for Jan Masaryk. Prime Minister Klement Gottwald used his eulogy to blame the Western press for making a concerted effort to drive Masaryk to suicide by hurting his feelings.[16]
British Prime Minister Clement Attlee told Parliament that known or suspected Communists or Fascists in the Civil Service would be dismissed from posts vital to national security.[17]
President Truman addressed a special joint session of Congress in which he called for swift passage of the Marshall Plan as well as a temporary peacetime draft.[19]
The United States, Great Britain and France announced that they had proposed to the Soviet Union and to Italy that the Free Territory of Trieste be returned to Italian sovereignty.[22]
Moscow radio responded to the US-British-French proposal to return the Free Territory of Trieste by accusing the three powers of "acting behind the back of the Soviet Union" to revise the Italian peace treaty.[23]
The Civil War in Mandatory Palestine had one of its worst days when Jews blew up two areas in the Arab quarter of Haifa, killing 17 and wounding at least 150. Arabs responded with mortar shelling of the Jewish business quarter, killing a constable when four bombs fell on a British police station. 60 more were killed at Hartuv when British troops shelled Arab positions in the hills with 25-pound guns.[24]
A group of civil rights leaders including A. Philip Randolph met with President Truman about integrating the US military. "In my recent travels around the country I found Negroes not wanting to shoulder a gun to fight for democracy abroad unless they get democracy at home," Randolph told reporters after the meeting. "The President was disturbed by that statement. More than that, he was strongly moved. It was most unwelcome news to him, as it was to me."[25][26]
The two most representative bodies of Palestinian Jews, the Jewish Agency for Palestine and the Jewish National Council, agreed to establish a Jewish provisional government on May 16, the day after the expiration of the British mandate over Palestine.[27]
A State District Court in Washington sentenced Gerhart Eisler to one-to-three years imprisonment for concealing his Communist ties when applying for a permit to leave the United States in 1945.[29]
President Truman issued a proclamation that starting on April 15, the export of aircraft, radar and other potential war materiel would require a license from the National Munitions Control Board.[31]
Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. and Elliott Roosevelt, sons of the late 32nd President, issued statements urging a Democratic draft of Dwight D. Eisenhower. "Circumstance requires a man who will convince the Russian leaders that the constant aim of our policy is to secure the lasting peace for which World War II was fought and who, at the same time, will take all necessary steps to stop further aggression, direct or indirect, by the U.S.S.R. against the free peoples of the world," the statement by Roosevelt Jr. read. "The American people have such a man in Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. I am mindful of the General's earlier statement on this matter, but since the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia we have entered a period as critical as that after Munich. The American people have a right to call the General back into active public service."[32]
Born:Nash the Slash, musician, as James Plewman in Toronto, Canada (d. 2014); Steven Tyler, lead singer of the rock band Aerosmith, as Steven Tallarico in New York City
US Army Information Chief Floyd L. Parks said that "under no conceivable circumstances" would Dwight D. Eisenhower accept a Democratic draft, explaining that his close friend's announcement refusing to accept a presidential nomination "applies to Democrats as well as to Republicans."[37]
Occupation authorities in Japan prohibited a looming general strike of 400,000 communications workers.[38]
The Soviets began restricting ground traffic to western Berlin by announcing plans to inspect all motor vehicles and trains moving between Berlin and western Germany in order to hunt for spies and "illegal" shipments of machinery to the West.[39]
The Committee on Control of the UN Atomic Energy Commission adjourned indefinitely due to an impasse between the Soviet Union and the western powers over how to set up the organizational structure of the proposed International Atomic Agency.[40]