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1932 and told
Mabel Fierz had pursued matters with Moore, and at the end of June 1932, Moore told Blair that Victor Gollancz was prepared to publish A Scullion's Diary for a £ 40 advance, through his recently founded publishing house, Victor Gollancz Ltd, which was an outlet for radical and socialist works.
In 1932 the British counterintelligence service, MI5, began a file on MacColl, after the local police told them that the singer was " a communist with very extreme views " who needed " special attention ".
In " The Dreams in the Witch House " ( 1932 ), the protagonist Walter Gilman dreams that he is told by the witch Keziah Mason that " He must meet the Black Man, and go with them all to the throne of Azathoth at the centre of ultimate Chaos ....
* The story told in sonnet XII (" The Howler ") presages " The Dreams in the Witch House " ( 1932 ).
In 1932, he starred in New York City's first broadcast Western, The Lone Star Rangers on WOR-AM, where he sang and told tales of the Old West.
On April 22, 1932, during a secret meeting, Schleicher told the SA leader — Count von Helldorf — that he and the rest of the Reichswehr were opposed to the ban on the SA, and that he would do his best to have it lifted as soon as possible.
On May 8, 1932, Schleicher had a secret meeting with Hitler, during which he told him that a new presidential government would soon be appointed, and in exchange for promising to dissolve the Reichstag and lift the ban on the SA and the SS, received a promise from Hitler to support the new government.
Schleicher brought down Papen ′ s government on December 3, 1932, when Papen told the Cabinet that he wished to declare martial law.
Schleicher, who was unaware of how Hitler had bested Strasser, told his Cabinet on December 7, 1932 that he would soon have the support the Nazi deputies in the Reichstag, which together with the Zentrum and some of the smaller parties would give his presidential government a majority in the Reichstag.
Christian is a patrilineal descendant of Fletcher Christian, leader of the mutineers in the late 18th century on the HMS Bounty, a story told in the 1932 Nordoff and Hall novel Mutiny on the Bounty, and several subsequent motion picture versions.
He is believed to have committed suicide in 1932 by drowning, as he reportedly told his friends that if life got too grim, he would row out into New York Harbor and, with weights tied to his feet, drop overboard.
* Black Elk Speaks, 1932, William Morrow & Company ; 1961 University of Nebraska Press edition with new preface by Neihardt ; 1979 edition with introduction by Vine Deloria, Jr .; 1988 edition: Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux, as told through John G. Neihardt ( Flaming Rainbow ), ISBN 0-8032-8359-8 ; 2000 edition with index: ISBN 0-8032-6170-5.
He had the role as Henry Field, a movie director, in the Monogram Pictures drama Police Court ( 1932 ) co-starring Henry B. Walthall, which told the story of a has-been alcoholic actor ( Walthall ) trying to make a comeback.
Edward McKim, a friend of Truman's since World War I, told of visits to the Resort in 1932 and Truman's success at the Breezy Point slot machine:
In 1932, with Arsenal's current right back Tom Parker ageing and his replacement, Leslie Compton, not looking entirely assured, Male was converted from left half to right back by Arsenal manager Herbert Chapman ; Male would later recount how, before being told of the switch by Chapman, he entered his office fearing for his future at the club, but Chapman convinced him not only could he play at right back, but that he was the best right back in the country.

1932 and Young
* 1996 – Faron Young, American singer ( b. 1932 )
Young ( born 1932 ), American business manager
* John Wesley Young ( 1879 – 1932 ), American mathematician
* December 10 – Faron Young, American singer ( b. 1932 )
Half the UAP members elected in the 1932 Victorian state election were Young Nationalists, almost trebling their parliamentary representation.
The second book in the series, its full title being A Teacher's Word Book of the Twenty Thousand Words Found Most Frequently and Widely in General Reading for Children and Young People, was published in 1932, and the third and final book, The Teacher's Word Book of 30, 000 Words, was published in 1944.
* A Teacher's Word Book of the Twenty Thousand Words Found Most Frequently and Widely in General Reading for Children and Young People ( 1932 )
Andrew Jackson Young ( born March 12, 1932 ) is an American politician, diplomat, activist and pastor from Georgia.
Andrew Young was born March 12, 1932 in New Orleans, Louisiana to Daisy Fuller Young, a school teacher, and Andrew Jackson Young, Sr., a dentist.
New York: Glenn Young Books, ( 1932, rev.
** 1931 – 1932 Mark Aitchison Young ( acting ) ( 1886 – 1974 )
* Let the Hurricane Roar ( 1932 ) ( fiction ) now better known as Young Pioneers.
* Sir Hubert Winthrop Young: 22 November 1932 – 9 April 1934
They convinced the director at the de Young Museum to give them the space, and on November 15, 1932, the first exhibition of Group f / 64 opened to large crowds.
In addition 49 fables of La Fontaine were adapted to the Seychelles dialect around 1900 by Rodolphine Young ( 1860 – 1932 ) but these remained unpublished until 1983.
Young Tanzanians organized themselves into dance clubs like the Dar Es Salaam Jazz Band, which was founded in 1932.
* Young Lincoln, Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1932
Image: PMYoungLincoln-1. jpg | Young Lincoln or Hoosier Youth, 1932, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Image: PMYoungLincoln-2. jpg | Young Lincoln or Hoosier Youth ( detail ), 1932, Fort Wayne, Indiana
Another dual winner of the race was Chatham in 1932 and 1934, as was Young Idea in 1936 and 1937.
* 1932: Young Ironsides
Young ( born April 24, 1932 ) is an American business executive.

1932 and Liberals
In early 1932 it was agreed to suspend the principle of collective responsibility to allow the Liberals to oppose the introduction of tariffs.
Later in 1932 the Liberals resigned their ministerial posts over the introduction of the Ottawa Agreement on Imperial Preference.
After United Fruit bought out Cuyamal, Sam Zemurray, a strong supporter of the Liberal Party, left the country and the Liberals were short on cash by the 1932 general election.
He remained in government when the official Liberals withdrew in September 1932 over the issue of free trade, being promoted to Financial Secretary to the Treasury.
In the midst of the depression, the Liberals made a resurgence in 1932 with Allison Dysart becoming premier.
Close to William Lyon Mackenzie King's Liberals, he did not get along with other Labour and Independent Labour MPs and refused to join the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation when it was founded in 1932.
In Manitoba, the Progressives and Liberals merged in 1932 under Premier John Bracken and ran as Liberal-Progressives.
Pressured by William Lyon Mackenzie King, Mackay brought the Liberals into a coalition with Premier John Bracken's Progressives before the 1932 election.
The government's moves to introduce tariffs caused further friction for the Liberals and Samuel withdrew the party from the government in stages, first obtaining the suspension of cabinet collective responsibility on the matter to allow Liberal members of the government to oppose tariffs, then in October 1932 the Liberal ministers resigned their ministerial posts but continued to support the National Government in Parliament, and finally in November 1933 Samuel and the bulk of the Liberal MPs crossed the floor of the House of Commons to now oppose the government outright.
MacKay brought the Manitoba Liberals into an alliance with the governing Progressives in 1932.
The Liberals joined the government in early 1932, and two members of the party were brought into cabinet.
When the provincial Liberals merged with John Bracken's Progressives in 1932, Campbell led a group of dissident, anti-merger Liberals into the subsequent election.
This was partly the result of historical francophone voting patterns in the province — most Franco-Manitobans supported the Progressive Party of John Bracken in the 1920s, and continued to support the party after it merged with the Liberals in 1932.
Mackay subsequently led the Liberals into an electoral alliance with the Progressive Party in 1932.
Hamilton opposed this alliance, and campaigned for David Campbell's " Continuing Liberals " in the 1932 campaign.
When in late 1932 the official Liberals resigned their ministerial posts, Runciman very nearly resigned with them but decided not to.
The government was voted out of office in the elections of 1932, when Iorga was replaced by Alexandru Vaida-Voevod, a member of the National Peasants ' Party ( PNŢ ) who was himself challenged with solving the agrarian issue ; Argetoianu subsequently founded the minor Agrarian Party, which, after the National Liberals returned to power with Ion G. Duca, remained a close associate of the king in his competition with traditional forces ; when Duca was assassinated by the Iron Guard in the final days of 1933, Argetoianu, together with the his former adversary, PNŢ dissident Grigore Iunian, and the National Agrarian Party's Octavian Goga, was probably one of the king's main options in his attempt to create an altogether new political establishment around the camarilla, relying on a compromise with Corneliu Zelea Codreanu ( leader of the Iron Guard ).
Exiled opposition figures were allowed to return to Honduras, and the Liberals, trying to overcome years of inactivity and division, nominated Ángel Zúñiga, the same individual whom Carías had defeated in 1932.
The Progressives and Liberals merged prior to the 1932 provincial election.
In 1932, the Liberals joined with the Progressive Party of Manitoba to create a " Liberal-Progressive " alliance.
The Progressives and Liberals of Manitoba formed an alliance for the 1932 provincial election, after which time government members became known as " Liberal-Progressives ".
In 1932, the governing Progressives formed an electoral alliance with the Liberals.
The Liberals and Progressives formed an electoral alliance in 1932, and all government members became known as " Liberal-Progressives ".

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