World Events

Population: 2.593 billion

Nobel Peace Prize: Léon Jouhaux (France)


Seoul falls first to Communist forces (Jan. 4), then to US-led UN troops (Mar. 14). Despite peace talks in July and October, the Korean War continues.


Six nations agree to Schuman Plan to pool European coal and steel (March 19; in effect Feb. 10, 1953).


Japanese peace treaty signed in San Francisco by 49 nations (Sept. 8).


Libya gains independence from Italy (Dec. 24).



U.S. Events


President: Harry S Truman

Vice President: Alben W. Barkley

Population: 154,877,889

Life expectancy: 68.4 years

Homicide Rate (per 100,000): 4.9



Economics

US GDP (1998 dollars): $339.7 billion

Federal spending: $45.51 billion

Federal debt: $255.3 billion

Consumer Price Index: 26

Unemployment: 5.3%

Cost of a first-class stamp: $0.03


22nd Amendment to the US Constitution, limiting the number of terms a president may serve, is ratified (Feb. 27).


Julius and Ethel Rosenberg sentenced to death for treason (April 5; executed June 19, 1953).



Sports

World Series

NY Yankees d. NY Giants (4-2)

NBA Championship

Rochester d. New York (4-3)

Stanley Cup

Toronto d. Montreal (4-1)

Wimbledon

Women: Doris Hart d. S. Fry (6-1 6-0)

Men: Dick Savitt d. K. McGregor (6-4 6-4 6-4)

Kentucky Derby Champion

Count Turf

NCAA Basketball Championship

Kentucky d. Kansas St. (68-58)

NCAA Football Champions

Tennessee (10-0-0)



Entertainment


Pulitzer Prizes

Fiction: The Town, Conrad Richter

Music: Music for opera Giants in the Earth, Douglas Stuart Moore


Oscars awarded in 1951

Academy Award, Best Picture: All About Eve(Twentieth Century-Fox)


Nobel Prize for Literature: Pär Lagerkvist (Sweden)


Miss America: Yolande Betbeze (AL)


Yul Brynner makes his first appearance as the king of Siam in Rodgers and Hammerstein's The King and I. Gertrude Lawrence costars (March 29).


Color television introduced in the U.S.


In an effort to introduce rhythm and blues to a broader white audience, which was hesitant to embrace "black music," disc jockey Alan Freed uses the term rock 'n' roll to describe R&B.


In the first broadcast of Edward R. Murrow's See It Now series, Murrow shows the split-screen image of the Golden Gate and Brooklyn bridges and tells viewers it is the first time to see the Atlantic and Pacific oceans simultaneously.


Movies

The African Queen, A Streetcar Named Desire, An American in Paris, A Place in the Sun

Music

Elliott Carter, String Quartet No. 1

Books

Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism

Hortense Calisher, In the Absence of Angels

Truman Capote, The Grass Harp

Carson McCullers, The Ballad of the Sad Café

Marianne Moore, Collected Poems

Adrienne Rich, A Change of World

J. D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye

Herman Wouk, The Caine Mutiny



Science


Nobel Prizes in Science


Chemistry: Glenn T. Seaborg and Edwin H. McMillan (both US), for discovery of plutonium.


Physics: Sir John Douglas Cockcroft (UK) and Ernest T. S. Walton (Ireland), for work in 1932 on transmutation of atomic nuclei.


Physiology or Medicine: Max Theiler (South Africa), for development of anti-yellow-fever vaccine.


Charles F. Blair, Jr. makes the first solo flight across North Pole (May 29). Background: Famous Firsts in Aviation.


UNIVAC (Universal Automatic Computer), the first business computer to handle both numeric and alphabetic data, is introduced. Background: Computers and Internet.


Gregory Pincus, Min Chuch Chang, John Rock, and Carl Djerassi (US) develop the first oral contraceptive. Background: Contraceptive Use, World; Contraceptive Use, U.S.


The first nuclear power plant is built by the US Atomic Energy Commission. Background: Nuclear Energy.



Deaths

John Alden Carpenter

Dorothy Dix

André Gide