Col. Billy Mitchell, who knows a little about air crashes, says the crash of the Shenandoah and the sea, um, shall we say landing, of a Navy plane attempting a non-stop flight from San Francisco to Hawaii, which set a distance record for a seaplane, if you include the bit where they had to sail the thing to Hawaii using a sail they made out of the material on the wing, “are the direct result of the incompetency, criminal negligence and almost treasonable administration of the national defense by the War and Navy Departments.” And then he gets on a plane to go fishing, and, I mean, what sort of person gets on any plane less than a week after being in a plane crash?
Representatives of ethnic Germans in Czechoslovakia, presumably in the Sudetenland, a word beginning to come into general usage, protest government plans to close a quarter of German schools.
The German Army holds war games near the Danzig Corridor, the territory awarded to Poland after the war, pissing Poland off. The Germans respond by accusing Polish propaganda of “warlike persecution of Germany” (that’s from the Acht-Uhr-Abendblatt newspaper, which accuses Poland of trying to get the League of Nations to allow a “Polish war of conquest against East Prussia”). Germany spreads false rumors about Polish cavalry crossing the border (well, they did, chasing after their escaped horses).
Headline of the Day -100:
Stanley Melbourne Bruce, prime minister of Australia and also in charge of the sheep dip, explains the White Australia policy to the NYT. It’s not a policy of racial superiority, he lies. Rather, it’s about maintaining a certain living standard by excluding people from poor countries who would cause “dilution” of the present population. He points out that the US, and Coolidge in particular, have the same view of immigration from shithole countries.
Lon Chaney’s The Phantom of the Opera premieres. You don’t even want to know how he got his face like that.












