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* 1953 – Horace Panter, English bass player ( The Specials and General Public )
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1953 and –
* 1953 – Alex Lifeson, Canadian singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer ( Rush and Big Dirty Band )
* 1953 – Pope Pius XII establishes the Dioceses of Norwich and Bridgeport and makes the Diocese of Hartford an archdiocese.
The tide finally turned in 1953 when England won the final Test at The Oval to take the series 1 – 0, having narrowly evaded defeat in the preceding Test at Headingley.
Iuliu Maniu ( 1873 – 1953 ) was prime minister with an agrarian cabinet from 1928 to 1930, but the Great Depression made proposed reforms impossible.
Franciszek Bujak ( 1875 – 1953 ) and Jan Rutkowski ( 1886 – 1949 ), the founders of modern economic history in Poland and of the journal Roczniki Dziejów Spolecznych i Gospodarczych ( 1931 – ), were attracted to the innovations of the Annales school.
1953 and Horace
* Van Deusen, Glyndon G. Horace Greeley, Nineteenth-Century Crusader ( 1953 ), standard biography online edition
AO was first envisioned by Horace W. Babcock in 1953, and was also considered in Science Fiction, as in Poul Anderson's novel Tau Zero ( 1970 ), but it did not come into common usage until advances in computer technology during the 1990s made the technique practical.
* Van Deusen, Glyndon G. Horace Greeley, Nineteenth-Century Crusader ( 1953 ), standard biography online edition
Campbell worked on the emendation of Horace ( 1924 ) and published this as Horace Odes and Epodes ( University of Liverpool Press, 1953 ).
The remainder is the result of two sessions on 19 May, 1953 and March 15, 1954, the first being a quintet with John Lewis, Charles Mingus ( on piano, not bass ), Percy Heath and Max Roach, and the second a quartet with Horace Silver, Heath and Art Blakey.
1953 and English
Francis Harry Compton Crick, OM, FRS ( 8 June 1916 – 28 July 2004 ) was an English molecular biologist, biophysicist, and neuroscientist, and most noted for being a co-discoverer of the structure of the DNA molecule in 1953 together with James D. Watson.
* John Ford ( cricketer ) ( born 1934 ), English right-handed batsman and right-arm fast bowler who played for Gloucestershire Second XI between 1953 and 1956
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