March 1934

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The following events occurred in March 1934:

March 1, 1934 (Thursday)

March 2, 1934 (Friday)

March 3, 1934 (Saturday)

March 4, 1934 (Sunday)

March 5, 1934 (Monday)

  • The Pahiatua earthquake struck northern New Zealand.
  • A British court awarded
    Nicholas II of Russia, £25,000 in damages in her lawsuit against the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer company over the film Rasputin and the Empress. Yusupova claimed that the character Natasha in the film was a libel against her and her character, although the attorneys for MGM had maintained that the character was fictional.[7]
  • Joseph Goebbels issued an order to all state governments to forbid Jews from performing on any stages in Germany. "I draw attention to the fact that only members of a professional guild are entitled to appear on the German stage", the order read. "Jews are not permitted membership in these guilds. I therefore request the police authorities to be instructed to demand that actors exhibit their membership cards in the guild. If the actors cannot produce them they are to be prevented from appearing on the stage."[8]
  • The
    U.S. Supreme Court decided Nebbia v. New York
    .
  • Born: Daniel Kahneman, psychologist, in Tel Aviv, Mandatory Palestine; Nicholas Smith, actor, in Banstead, Surrey, England (d. 2015)

March 6, 1934 (Tuesday)

March 7, 1934 (Wednesday)

  • In the Soviet Union, a Sovnarkom decree imposed a prison sentence of 3–5 years for those convicted of "homosexual relations". The sentence was increased to 5–8 years if force was used or if the guilty party took advantage of the partner's position of dependence.[11]
  • Born:
    Franklin Clarke, American football player, in Beloit, Wisconsin (d. 2018); Willard Scott, television personality and writer, in Alexandria, Virginia
    (d. 2021)

March 8, 1934 (Thursday)

  • Hitler opened the International Automobile and Motorcycle Exhibition in Berlin. The central attraction was a new German car costing only £61.[12][13]
  • The British historical film The Rise of Catherine the Great premiered in Germany, but hundreds protested outside the Berlin cinema because its star Elisabeth Bergner was Jewish.[14]

March 9, 1934 (Friday)

March 10, 1934 (Saturday)

  • President Roosevelt ordered the cessation of
    air mail delivery by army pilots "except on such routes, under which weather conditions and under such equipment and personnel conditions as will insure, as far as the utmost care can provide, against constant recurrence of fatal accidents." The president's order came after a three-week span in which ten pilots delivering air mail had been killed.[16]

March 11, 1934 (Sunday)

  • Vienna's famous Socialist newspaper Arbeiter-Zeitung, banned during February's civil war, reappeared in a form that shared nothing in common with its previous incarnation other than its name and publishing company.[17]
  • Switzerland held a
    referendum
    on whether voters approved of a federal law on maintaining public order. The proposal was rejected by 53.8% of voters.
  • Born: Sam Donaldson, reporter and news anchor, in El Paso, Texas
  • Died: Margaret Illington, 54, American actress

March 12, 1934 (Monday)

  • Estonian leader Konstantin Päts staged a "self-coup" by declaring martial law and installing Johan Laidoner as Commander in Chief of the army. Päts used his emergency powers to disband the Vaps Movement and arrest 400 of its leading members, removing a threat to his rule. The Era of Silence in Estonian history began.[18]
  • General Werner von Blomberg announced that Jews were banned from enlisting in the German military. The ambiguous wording of the announcement made it unclear whether Jews already serving in the military were affected or not.[19]

March 13, 1934 (Tuesday)

March 14, 1934 (Wednesday)

March 15, 1934 (Thursday)

March 16, 1934 (Friday)

March 17, 1934 (Saturday)

  • The Rome Protocols were signed between Austria, Hungary and Italy. The agreements strengthened economic ties among the signatories and formed a new power bloc to counterbalance the Little Entente and French influence.[26]
  • New York City
    taxicab drivers went back out on strike again, this time over union recognition.[27]
  • University of Cambridge won the 86th Boat Race.
  • Born:
    Fred T. Mackenzie
    , sedimentary and global biogeochemist, in the United States

March 18, 1934 (Sunday)

  • Benito Mussolini made a speech in Rome outlining a 60-year plan that would give Italy the "primacy of the world" in the 21st century and would make that century a "blackshirt era". Mussolini proclaimed that Italy's future lay to the "east and south in Asia and Africa. The vast resources of Africa must be valourized and Africa brought within the civilized circle. I do not refer to conquest of territory but to natural expansion. We demand that nations which have already arrived in Africa do not block at every step Italian expansion."[28]
  • Samuel Insull was allowed to leave Greece by ship again, on the conditions that he enter no Greek ports and that he radio a message ahead of time saying where he would land once he chose to do so.[29]
  • Born: Charley Pride, American country singer; in Sledge, Mississippi (d. 2020)

March 19, 1934 (Monday)

March 20, 1934 (Tuesday)

March 21, 1934 (Wednesday)

March 22, 1934 (Thursday)

March 23, 1934 (Friday)

March 24, 1934 (Saturday)

  • President Roosevelt signed the Philippine Independence Act, or the Tydings–McDuffie Act, providing for a ten-year transition phase leading to self-government for the Philippines.[32]
  • An editorial in Mussolini's newspaper Il Popolo d'Italia wrote that "The dimunition of births in the United States is assuming alarming proportions". The editorial concluded, "When we reflect there are in the United States 11,500,000 Negroes, people of extraordinary fecundity, it is necessary to conclude with a real cry of alarm. The Yellow Peril is nothing. We will encounter an Africanized America in which the white race, by the inexorable law of numbers, will end by being suffocated by the fertile grandsons of Uncle Tom. Are we to see within a century a Negro in the White House?"[38]

March 25, 1934 (Sunday)

March 26, 1934 (Monday)

  • The Strength Through Joy organization in Nazi Germany announced that every week during the summer 3,500 workers would be taken on a free vacation cruise aboard a German ocean liner.[40]
  • Born: Alan Arkin, actor, director, musician and author, in Brooklyn, New York (d. 2023)

March 27, 1934 (Tuesday)

  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt suffered his first defeat in congress. Roosevelt vetoed a bill increasing compensation to war veterans, but the House promptly overrode the veto by repassing the bill 310-72.[41][42]

March 28, 1934 (Wednesday)

March 29, 1934 (Thursday)

March 30, 1934 (Friday)

March 31, 1934 (Saturday)

References

  1. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 1, 1934. p. 1.
  2. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 11.
  3. ^ "Primo Carnera". BoxRec. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  4. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 3, 1934. p. 3.
  5. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 4, 1934. p. 1.
  6. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 7.
  7. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 6, 1934. p. 3.
  8. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 12.
  9. ^ .
  10. ^ "Yellow Jack". Playbill Vault. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  11. .
  12. ^ "Tageseinträge für 8. März 1934". chroniknet. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  13. ^ .
  14. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 9, 1934. p. 1.
  15. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 10, 1934. p. 11.
  16. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 1.
  17. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 12, 1934. p. 6.
  18. .
  19. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 7.
  20. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 9.
  21. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 15, 1934. p. 7.
  22. .
  23. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    . January 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  24. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 1.
  25. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 1.
  26. ^ "Chronology 1934". indiana.edu. 2002. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  27. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 18, 1934. p. 4.
  28. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 19, 1934. p. 1.
  29. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 18, 1934. p. 1.
  30. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 20, 1934. p. 22.
  31. ^ .
  32. ^ a b "1934". MusicAndHistory. Archived from the original on August 28, 2012. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  33. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 11.
  34. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 23, 1934. p. 1.
  35. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 24, 1934. p. 5.
  36. .
  37. ^ McBride, Jessica (16 July 2019). "Neil Armstrong's Wife Janet: Real Story Behind First Man". Breaking News. Heavy. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  38. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 25, 1934. p. 1.
  39. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 8.
  40. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 27, 1934. p. 3.
  41. ^ "Tageseinträge für 27. März 1934". chroniknet. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  42. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 1.
  43. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 1.
  44. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 30, 1934. p. 18.
  45. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 18.
  46. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 29, 1934. p. 1.
  47. ^ Bader, Robert S. "Groucho Marx Chronology". Marx-Brothers.org. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  48. Brooklyn Daily Eagle
    . March 31, 1934. p. 2.
  49. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . April 1, 1934. p. 21.