The World
Series is broadcast in color for the first time. NY Giants defeat Cleveland (4-0) |
Robert
Joffrey Ballet debuts. |
IBM announces
the development of an electronic brain for business use. Named it Bill Gates - nah, just kidding. |
Sports
Illustrated is born! |
Another
boon for sports fans - the first l6 oz beer can introduced by Schlitz, The Beer That Made Milwaukee Famous! |
"Let's
Eat Right to Keep Fit" by Adele Davis, was an early entry into the health food movement. |
A test
program using sterilized males wipes out screwworm flies on the Caribbean island
of Curacao in only 4 months. (I swear, I found that item in my research.) |
Ernest
Hemingway won the Nobel Prize for Literature. |
French
colonial rule in Vietnam weakens when Viet Minh rebels take Dien Bien Phu. Vietnam
is divided into northern and southern regions. |
Brown
v. Board of Education. Landmark school desegregation case. |
On the
Air! You'd find 2,487 AM radio, 560 FM radio and 349 TV Stations. (TV has doubled from 125 stations in 1953.) |
Senator
Joseph McCarthy accelerates his anti-Communist witch hunt with the nationally televised Army-McCarthy Hearings and is formally
censured by Congress. |
Baseball
legend Hank Aaron begins his career by joining the Milwaukee Braves. |
Sun Myung
Moon founds the Unification Church. |
William
Golding, who will proceed to win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1983, publishes his tale of the dark side of human nature,
The Lord of the Flies. |
Ray Kroc
gets his first look at the original McDonalds! |
Hold
the pickle! Hold the lettuce! The first Burger King opens. |
Kraft
introduces CRACKER BARREL® brand natural cheese. |
And the
winner is...Oscar stuff. |
Catholic
Church declares watching Mass on TV does not fulfill obligations. Oh, pooh! |
M&M's
Peanut Chocolate Candies were introduced. Also, the universally loved M&M's Brand Characters and the famous slogan, "The
milk chocolate melts in your mouth, not in your hand," slogan debuted. |
The Butterball
brand and the self-basting turkey are introduced. Through genetics, Swift develops a broad-breasted bird without the tough
tendons and uses a hot-water bath to remove feathers. |
A 1953
incident where Eisenhower's aircraft was "Air Force 8610" and an Eastern Airlines plane was "8610" created the need to devise
a unique call sign. In 1954, the call sign "Air Force One" was classified to identify not only the president's plane, but
any plane when he was aboard.
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Of the
94 million phones in the world, 52 million of them are in the US. |
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Chain
supermarkets now account for two fifths of the food sold retail. |
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Iwo Jima
Flag Raising memorial Statue is erected. Each figure is 32 feet high. The flagpole is 60 feet in length. It's the world's
tallest bronze statue. It's stands 78 feet high. A cloth flag flies from the pole. The inscription reads: "Uncommon Valor
was a Common Virtue." |
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Ellis Island, the immigration station in NY Harbor,
is closed. Between 1892 and 1954, 12 million immigrants were processed at Ellis Island. |
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Trix,
46.6 percent sugar, is introducd by General Mills. |
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The first
nuclear submarine, The Nautilus, is launched. |
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Federal
Trade Commission and cigarettes. |
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Bazooka
Joe comics were first introduced. |
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There
is a 42% business failure rate.Chart for 1946-1964 |
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A revolution
in an aluminum tray! The TV Dinner. This is a good story! |
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Dr Sam
Sheppard's wife Marilyn is murdered (he is accused of crime) |
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My favorite
- Play Doh. |
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Nash-Kelvinator
and Hudson Motor Car Co. merge to form the American Motors Co.(AMC). |
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President
Eisenhower introduces the phrase "under God" into the Pledge of Allegiance, changing the phrase "one nation, indivisible,"
to "one nation, under God, indivisible." |
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The first
successful kidney transplant is performed in the U.S.
by Harvard physicians. The patient will survive for seven more years. |
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Colonel
Gamal Abdel Nasser seizes power in Egypt
April 17. On October 19, Nasser signs a treaty with the British under which the British will
withdraw from the Suez Canal Zone. |
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Canada and the United States agree to build a 3000-mile-long array of radar warning stations across northern
Canada (the DEW line - Distant Early Warning).
The stations will warn the North American nations of airplanes or missiles approaching over the Arctic.
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Dr. Roger
Bannister of England becomes the first
person to run a mile in less than four minutes on May 6. His time is 3 minutes, 59.4 seconds |
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General
Electric introduces colored kitchen appliances. Bye, bye white! |
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A hydrogen (fusion) bomb is detonated March 1 on the Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. |
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There
are 35,586 motor vehicle related deaths. While in the air, there were 3 accidents resulting in 16 fatalities. A good year
to fly. |
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Unemployment
is 5.6% |
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U.S.
GNP (Gross National Product) is $383.0 billion | |
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