Tony Lazzeri, a second baseman on the New York Yankees, hit for the natural cycle (a single, double, triple, and home run in consecutive plate appearances) against the Philadelphia Athletics, a feat that had only occurred twice previously in the history of the MLB, and 14 times to this day. He is the only player in history to end the natural cycle with a grand slamhome run.
The government of Greek Prime Minister Alexandros Papanastasiou resigned after just one week in office after being defeated on a vote.[7]
German President Paul von Hindenburg dissolved the Reichstag and called new elections when it became apparent that new chancellor Franz von Papen would not pass a vote of confidence.[8][9]
Anita Garibaldi, whose remains had been brought from Genoa, was reburied under an equestrian statue on the Janiculum in Rome marking the 50th anniversary of Giuseppe Garibaldi's death. A huge Fascist parade was held for the occasion, meant to present the Blackshirts as the successor to the Redshirts' cause.[11][12]
Italian police foiled another assassination attempt on Benito Mussolini's life, arresting Angelo Sbardellotto while he was loitering outside Mussolini's office with two bombs and a revolver. Sbardellotto missed Mussolini when he left his office to go to the statue unveiling on the Janiculum and missed him again when he returned around noon.[13]
Lord Rothermere stated for the Daily Mail that there was no safer political prophecy than that the Hohenzollerns would retake the throne of Germany within eighteen months.[19]
The Supreme Court of Cuba ordered President Gerardo Machado to reopen the University of Havana and reinstate 350 faculty members with full pay, ruling that Machado's indefinite closure of the university in 1930 was unconstitutional. University student council released a statement saying, "The reopening of the university means nothing and the students will not again step into the university until Machado is ousted."[20]
The airline Misr Airwork, known today as EgyptAir, was founded.
The Irish senate committee gutted the bill abolishing the Oath of Allegiance to the extent that the premier Éamon de Valera vowed not to recognize it.[21]
In Munich, Adolf Hitler was fined 1,000 marks for contempt of court and threatened with prison for refusing to answer questions from a Jewish lawyer. Hitler had been called as a witness in a perjury lawsuit against the writer Werner Abel, who accused Hitler of accepting bribes from Italian Fascists in exchange for abandoning his party's demand for the return of South Tyrol to Austria.[22][23]
The Westerglen transmitting station came on line, allowing 80% of Scotland's population to hear uniquely Scottish programming as an alternative to the regular BBC.[25]
German Interior Minister Wilhelm von Gayl announced that government censorship of the press would be eased, and newspapers would only be prohibited if they printed false or distorted news.[26]
Tennessee congressman Edward Everett Eslick died shortly after collapsing on the floor of the House while speaking in support of payment of the soldiers' bonus.[29]
The Grunewald hunting lodge, the oldest palace in Berlin dating back four centuries to the age of Joachim II, opened its doors to the public as a museum.[35]
Jack Sharkey won the World Heavyweight Boxing Championship in a controversial split decision over Max Schmeling at Madison Square Garden Bowl in Queens, New York. "I was robbed", Schmeling said in the dressing room after the fight. "Tell me, how can they take the championship away from me when Sharkey was all the time running away?"[37] New York City mayor Jimmy Walker said it was "the rottenest decision I ever heard in my life."[38]
In a White House press conference, President Hoover proposed a dramatic worldwide arms reduction abolishing all tanks, large guns and bomber planes, reducing land armies beyond the minimum to keep domestic order by one-third and reducing naval tonnage by one-quarter to one-third. Hoover estimated that his plan would assure peace as well as save $10–15 billion worldwide.[39]
The Federal Kidnapping Act was passed in the United States in response to the Lindbergh kidnapping, giving federal authorities the jurisdiction to investigate kidnappings when victims were transported across state lines.[40]
Vicar General of RomeFrancesco Marchetti Selvaggiani publicized new regulations from Pope Pius XI banning the sale of candles by church officials, use of artificial flowers at altars and the taking of photographs inside church during weddings or other sacred functions.[41]
Walter W. Waters resigned as leader of the Bonus Army as thousands of the movement's members continued to mill around the U.S. capital rather than concede defeat and go home.[44]
1 million people participated in the Eucharistic Congress of Dublin at Phoenix Park.[45] Northern Ireland was the scene of violence as Protestants attacked Catholic pilgrims on their way to and from the Congress by throwing stones and bottles.[46]
In Flemington, New Jersey, Charles Lindbergh took the stand in the trial of John H. Curtis, who was charged with obstruction of justice in the Lindbergh kidnapping case. Curtis was initially accused of perpetrating a hoax by pretending to be in contact with the kidnappers and leading authorities on wild goose chases, but at the last minute the prosecution changed its approach and accused Curtis of, in fact, knowing the kidnappers but refusing to disclose their whereabouts. Lindbergh testified about his meetings with Curtis as a jam-packed courtroom listened in hushed silence.[48][49]
The Democratic National Convention voted 934-213 to advocate repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment.[50]
At the Lausanne Conference, the British delegation proposed that Germany be allowed to pay a flat sum to buy off its creditors once and for all.[51]
Franz von Papen's cabinet issued an emergency decree assuring Nazis of the right to wear their brownshirt uniforms and hold political meetings, overriding state-level laws against such actions.[52]
^Falzini, Mark W. (2008). Their Fifteen Minutes: Biographical Sketches of the Lindbergh Case. Bloomington, Indiana: iUniverse. pp. 75–77. ISBN978-0-595-52253-8.
^Pettey, Tom (June 28, 1932). "Lindbergh Goes on Stand; Tells of Curtis Hoax". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 1.
^Evans, Arthur (June 30, 1932). "Repeal Plank Wins, 934-213". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 1.
^Allen, Jay (June 30, 1932). "British Propose Germany Settle for a Flat Sum". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 14.