Chronology

Chronology

 

Chronology


1950
On February 20, Joseph McCarthy, U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, waged a crusade against communists infiltrated the federal government.
On March 29, RCA (Radio Corporation of America) launches a TV tube color entirely electronic.
On June 11, Henri Matisse, one of the great French masters of contemporary art, received the award at the Venice Biennale.
Matisse is considered the first representative of the Fauve school, but has broken with all formal styles early in their career.
The first TV station in Brazil, the Tupi TV starts broadcasting on September 19. Assis Chateaubriand, owner of the chain of radio stations and newspapers "Associated Newspapers," was the one who brought this new car to Brazil, the fourth country to have loGetúlio Vargas-candidate of the PTB (Brazilian Labor Party) was elected to the presidency of Republic with almost 50% of the vote, on Day 3 October.
On December 10, the American writer William Faulkner receives the Nobel Prize for literature for his work. Among them include "The Sound and the Fury" (1929) and "Absalom, Absalom!" (1936).
This year, it happens the first congress in Zurich on sociology and American artist Jackson Pollock painting "Autumn Rhythm" with the techniques of abstract expressionism.
1951
On March 30, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are convicted of espionage during the war. The two New Yorkers were accused of having stolen and delivered to the Soviet Union secrets about the atomic bomb the United States.
A federal court in New York indicates 21 Communist Party leaders for conspiring to overthrow the U.S. government, on June 20.
On June 23, is published in the newspaper "The New York Times, a study showing that television is changing the way American society views the leisure, politics, reading and expresses itself culturally in Brazil Congress approves dia17 in July, the law criminalizes any act of racism and can be punished with imprisonment of offenders.
On October 20, more than five thousand people witness the opening of the first Biennial of Art of Sao Paulo, Trianon in a pavilion in the park.
The book "Catcher in the Rye," the first novel of the American JD Salinger, is the great success of the year among U.S. adolescents.
This year, Marlon Brando became a star thanks to the film "A Streetcar Named Desire." From there, the white jersey used by the actor becomes popular among the young
1952
Gene Kelly dancing the title song from the movie "Singing in the Rain." On March 8, an artificial heart is first used in a human being, at Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia, USA. On April 24, the Spanish painter Pablo Picasso and other artists left to reaffirm their belief in the communist socialist realism.
New York premiere on Oct. 23, the film "Limelight" by Charles Chaplin. On November 5, Dwight Eisenhower is elected U.S. president by the Republican Party.
The Atomic Energy Commission announces the U.S., on November 16 that the H-bomb is ready to be used
1953
20th Century Fox Film Corporation announced, on 1 February, which will convert your entire system for the shooting of an enlarged screen called Cinemascope,
The couple Rosenberg is executed in the U.S. in June 19. On July 28, an armistice suspended the Korean War, after three years.
Sanctions law Vargas of Brazil's oil monopoly, Petrobras building, on October 3.
This year Marilyn Monroe become a diva of the cinema with the movie "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes." The film "From Here to Eternity" with Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr offend, and his view is almost forbidden because of the famous beach kiss between two actors.
1954
On February 5, Chanel reopened her fashion house in Paris, closed in 1939 because of the war.
On May 24, IBM (International Business Machines), U.S. company, announces that it has manufactured an electronic brain designed specifically for business use.
On July 24, Miss Brazil, Bahia Marta Rocha, not the title of Miss Universe, by having two more inches to the hips.
Mao Tse-tung is reelected to another four-year term as president of the People's Republic of China, on September 27th Ernest Hemingway won the Nobel Prize in Literature on December 10. Among his works include "Farewell to Arms (1929)," For Whom the Bell Tolls "(1940) and" The Old Man and the Sea "(1952), which earned him in 1953, the Pulitzer Prize.
Astronomers announced on 27 December that the observation of 800 galaxies shows that the universe was born of a gigantic cosmic explosion - called the Big Bang - that would have occurred some 5.5 billion years
1955
On May 14, the Eastern bloc nations signed the Warsaw Pact, which unifies the military
On May 31, the Supreme Court requires U.S. states to end racial segregation
On August 5, dies singer Carmen Miranda.
On October 3, Juscelino Kubitschek was elected president of Brazil
On 26 November, the then Soviet Union, has confirmed that the hydrogen bomb.

This year, the Japanese industry Sony launches the first portable transistor radio mass-produced.
Debut movie "Rebel," with James Dean, who becomes the symbol of rebellion for 50 years.
1956
On 1 February, President of Brazil, Juscelino Kubitschek, expose, in his first day in office, a developmental plan that promises to move the country forward "50 years in May."
On March 22, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is found guilty of the service bus boycotts in Montgomery, Alabama, USA Elvis Presley hits record hearing on his TV appearance, on Sept. 9
1957
On February 16, the mayor of Sao Paulo Quadros, prohibits the rock and roll in balls.
On July 27, Pele in the Brazilian national team debut aged 16 years and marks the only goal in the defeat to Argentina by 2-1.
Illustration of model 1A Sputnik Soviet Union announced on October 4, which successfully launched into orbit around the Earth the first manmade satellite, Sputnik 1.
The Soviet Union launches on November 3, his second space satellite, this time manned by a dog named Laika Albert Camus receives the Nobel Prize in literature on Dec. 10. Among his works include "The Foreigner" (1942) and the play "Caligula" (1948) On December 19, NATO approved the presence of U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe, including intermediate-range missiles.
The book "On the Road" by Jack Kerouac, and brand success is the so-called Beat Generation. The beatniks speak in rhythm and language of jazz and hate the middle-class obsession with objects and harmony. Poets Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti are some of the representatives of this new trend

 


1950
On February 20, Joseph McCarthy, U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, waged a crusade against communists infiltrated the federal government.
On March 29, RCA (Radio Corporation of America) launches a TV tube color entirely electronic.
On June 11, Henri Matisse, one of the great French masters of contemporary art, received the award at the Venice Biennale.
Matisse is considered the first representative of the Fauve school, but has broken with all formal styles early in their career.
The first TV station in Brazil, the Tupi TV starts broadcasting on September 19. Assis Chateaubriand, owner of the chain of radio stations and newspapers "Associated Newspapers," was the one who brought this new car to Brazil, the fourth country to have loGetúlio Vargas-candidate of the PTB (Brazilian Labor Party) was elected to the presidency of Republic with almost 50% of the vote, on Day 3 October.
On December 10, the American writer William Faulkner receives the Nobel Prize for literature for his work. Among them include "The Sound and the Fury" (1929) and "Absalom, Absalom!" (1936).
This year, it happens the first congress in Zurich on sociology and American artist Jackson Pollock painting "Autumn Rhythm" with the techniques of abstract expressionism.
1951
On March 30, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are convicted of espionage during the war. The two New Yorkers were accused of having stolen and delivered to the Soviet Union secrets about the atomic bomb the United States.
A federal court in New York indicates 21 Communist Party leaders for conspiring to overthrow the U.S. government, on June 20.
On June 23, is published in the newspaper "The New York Times, a study showing that television is changing the way American society views the leisure, politics, reading and expresses itself culturally in Brazil Congress approves dia17 in July, the law criminalizes any act of racism and can be punished with imprisonment of offenders.
On October 20, more than five thousand people witness the opening of the first Biennial of Art of Sao Paulo, Trianon in a pavilion in the park.
The book "Catcher in the Rye," the first novel of the American JD Salinger, is the great success of the year among U.S. adolescents.
This year, Marlon Brando became a star thanks to the film "A Streetcar Named Desire." From there, the white jersey used by the actor becomes popular among the young
1952
Gene Kelly dancing the title song from the movie "Singing in the Rain." On March 8, an artificial heart is first used in a human being, at Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia, USA. On April 24, the Spanish painter Pablo Picasso and other artists left to reaffirm their belief in the communist socialist realism.
New York premiere on Oct. 23, the film "Limelight" by Charles Chaplin. On November 5, Dwight Eisenhower is elected U.S. president by the Republican Party.
The Atomic Energy Commission announces the U.S., on November 16 that the H-bomb is ready to be used
1953
20th Century Fox Film Corporation announced, on 1 February, which will convert your entire system for the shooting of an enlarged screen called Cinemascope,
The couple Rosenberg is executed in the U.S. in June 19. On July 28, an armistice suspended the Korean War, after three years.
Sanctions law Vargas of Brazil's oil monopoly, Petrobras building, on October 3.
This year Marilyn Monroe become a diva of the cinema with the movie "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes." The film "From Here to Eternity" with Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr offend, and his view is almost forbidden because of the famous beach kiss between two actors.
1954
On February 5, Chanel reopened her fashion house in Paris, closed in 1939 because of the war.
On May 24, IBM (International Business Machines), U.S. company, announces that it has manufactured an electronic brain designed specifically for business use.
On July 24, Miss Brazil, Bahia Marta Rocha, not the title of Miss Universe, by having two more inches to the hips.
Mao Tse-tung is reelected to another four-year term as president of the People's Republic of China, on September 27th Ernest Hemingway won the Nobel Prize in Literature on December 10. Among his works include "Farewell to Arms (1929)," For Whom the Bell Tolls "(1940) and" The Old Man and the Sea "(1952), which earned him in 1953, the Pulitzer Prize.
Astronomers announced on 27 December that the observation of 800 galaxies shows that the universe was born of a gigantic cosmic explosion - called the Big Bang - that would have occurred some 5.5 billion years
1955
On May 14, the Eastern bloc nations signed the Warsaw Pact, which unifies the military
On May 31, the Supreme Court requires U.S. states to end racial segregation
On August 5, dies singer Carmen Miranda.
On October 3, Juscelino Kubitschek was elected president of Brazil
On 26 November, the then Soviet Union, has confirmed that the hydrogen bomb.

This year, the Japanese industry Sony launches the first portable transistor radio mass-produced.
Debut movie "Rebel," with James Dean, who becomes the symbol of rebellion for 50 years.
1956
On 1 February, President of Brazil, Juscelino Kubitschek, expose, in his first day in office, a developmental plan that promises to move the country forward "50 years in May."
On March 22, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is found guilty of the service bus boycotts in Montgomery, Alabama, USA Elvis Presley hits record hearing on his TV appearance, on Sept. 9
1957
On February 16, the mayor of Sao Paulo Quadros, prohibits the rock and roll in balls.
On July 27, Pele in the Brazilian national team debut aged 16 years and marks the only goal in the defeat to Argentina by 2-1.
Illustration of model 1A Sputnik Soviet Union announced on October 4, which successfully launched into orbit around the Earth the first manmade satellite, Sputnik 1.
The Soviet Union launches on November 3, his second space satellite, this time manned by a dog named Laika Albert Camus receives the Nobel Prize in literature on Dec. 10. Among his works include "The Foreigner" (1942) and the play "Caligula" (1948) On December 19, NATO approved the presence of U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe, including intermediate-range missiles.
The book "On the Road" by Jack Kerouac, and brand success is the so-called Beat Generation. The beatniks speak in rhythm and language of jazz and hate the middle-class obsession with objects and harmony. Poets Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti are some of the representatives of this new trend.

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