May 1932

Month of 1932 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in May 1932:

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May 15, 1932: Japan's Prime Minister Inukai assassinated in Tokyo
May 6, 1932: France's President Paul Doumer assassinated in Paris
May 4, 1932: Al Capone enters U.S. Penitentiary in Atlanta as Prisoner #40886

May 1, 1932 (Sunday)

  • Three people died in May Day riots during workers' demonstrations around the world, though reports of violence were down from previous years.[1]
  • In Bologna, the first edition of the Sport Lictorian Games begins; 2000 undergraduates, members of the GUF (Fascist University Groups) take part to the contest.[2]
  • Born: Douglas Day, American scholar and writer; in the Panama Canal Zone (d. 2004)

May 2, 1932 (Monday)

  • Baltimore repealed its 200-year-old blue law which prohibited Sunday movie showings, sporting events, and men kissing their wives.[3]
  • The Canada Dry Program, the first radio show to be hosted by Jack Benny, went on the air.[4]
  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided Nixon v. Condon, ruling that political parties did not have the right to determine who could vote in a primary election to determine the political candidates. On March 7, 1927, the Court had ruled in Nixon v. Herndon that a Texas law that had provided that "in no event shall a negro be eligible to participate in a Democratic party primary election held in the State of Texas" was unconstitutional. The state legislature then passed a new law leaving the matter to the political parties themselves. Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon, an African American physician who had been barred from the 1924 primary, challenged the new law after having been barred from the 1928 primary.
  • Born:
  • Died: John Clum, 80, American Indian agent

May 3, 1932 (Tuesday)

May 4, 1932 (Wednesday)

May 5, 1932 (Thursday)

  • Japan and China signed a ceasefire.[12]
  • In Ferrara, the second "Conference of unionist and corporatist studies", promoted by the Fascist government, began. In the debate, socialist ideas emerged; the philosopher Ugo Spirito proposed the “incorporation” of bolshevism by fascism.[13]
  • Born:

May 6, 1932 (Friday)

May 7, 1932 (Saturday)

May 8, 1932 (Sunday)

May 9, 1932 (Monday)

May 10, 1932 (Tuesday)

  • Four thousand relief workers in New Zealand marched on parliament in Wellington demanding the repeal of the Unemployment Amendment Act, which increased the levy of income other than salaries and wages. Public Works Minister Gordon Coates announced that the crowd would have to wait a day for a government response, which sparked a riot. Over 200 windows were smashed and some shops were looted before police gained control of the city centre.[22]
President Lebrun

May 11, 1932 (Wednesday)

May 12, 1932 (Thursday)

Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr. on the May 2 cover of Time magazine

May 13, 1932 (Friday)

May 14, 1932 (Saturday)

May 15, 1932 (Sunday)

  • Japanese Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi was assassinated by a group of young naval officers and army cadets, while other groups tried to attack the police headquarters and power station of Tokyo.[32]
  • German pilot Hans Bertram and his mechanic Adolph Klausmann disappeared in northern Australia during a round-the-world goodwill trip.[33]
  • Born: John Glen, English film director, in Sunbury-on-Thames

May 16, 1932 (Monday)

The ocean liner Georges Philippar
  • Fifty-four people were killed when a fire broke out aboard the ocean liner MS Georges Philippar, which was out to sea, 145 miles (233 km) off of the coast of Africa near Cape Guardafui, Italian Somaliland. The other passengers were rescued by ships in the area.[34]
  • Died: Albert Londres, 47, French journalist, was killed in the Georges Philippar fire.

May 17, 1932 (Tuesday)

May 18, 1932 (Wednesday)

  • Hundreds of people were jailed in Havana, Cuba for what police reported to be a plot to overthrow the government of Gerardo Machado.[37]
  • A railway tunnel under construction in Argentina collapsed and killed 42 workers.[38]

May 19, 1932 (Thursday)

May 20, 1932 (Friday)

May 21, 1932 (Saturday)

May 22, 1932 (Sunday)

Prime Minister Saitō
  • Japan's Emperor Hirohito appointed Saitō Makoto to be the new Prime Minister of Japan.[44]
  • Italy's leader Benito Mussolini opened the first International Convention of Trans-Oceanic Flyers in Rome, as 51 aviators met to discuss the prospects of commercial air travel across the ocean.[45] The news about the Lindbergh kidnapping and the death of the Hungarian aviator Gyorgy Endresz and of his partner in a landing crash at the Littorio Airport darken the event.[46]
  • Died: Augusta, Lady Gregory, 80, Irish dramatist, folklorist and theatre manager

May 23, 1932 (Monday)

  • By a vote of 228 to 69, the U.S. House of Representatives rejected a bill that would have legalized beer with a 2.75% alcohol content and placed a federal tax on the beverage.[47]
  • In Geneva, Albert Einstein urged all pacifists in the world to demand complete disarmament over the next five years.[48]
  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided North American Oil Consolidated v. Burnet.
  • Born: Dino Sani, Brazilian football player and coach, in Sao Paulo.

May 24, 1932 (Tuesday)

  • Germany's Nazi legislators introduced a motion to the Reichstag's committee on foreign affairs requesting that the government warn the "Polish republic that any attack against Danzig would be considered by Germany as an attack on the vital rights of Germany and would be answered as such." The motion passed, 11 to 10.[49]
  • In Pallanza, the Luigi Cadorna’s Memorial, by Marcello Piacentini, is inaugurated, in presence of Costanzo Ciano.[50] 

May 25, 1932 (Wednesday)

May 26, 1932 (Thursday)

Prime Minister Papanastasiou

May 27, 1932 (Friday)

May 28, 1932 (Saturday)

May 29, 1932 (Sunday)

May 30, 1932 (Monday)

May 31, 1932 (Tuesday)

Chancellor Von Papen [66]

References

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