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"The Baron of Arizona" (1950) "Champagne for Caesar" (1950) "Curtain Call at Cactus Creek" (1950) "Adventures of Captain Fabian" (1951) "His Kind of Woman" (1951) "The Las Vegas Story" (1952) "House of Wax" (1953) "Dangerous Mission" (1954) "The Mad Magician" (1954) "Son of Sinbad" (1955) "Serenade" (1956) "While the City Sleeps" (1956) "The Ten Commandments" (1956) "The Story of Mankind" (1957) "Collector's Item" (1958). Made for television. "The Fly" (1958) "House on Haunted Hill" (1959) "The Big Circus" (1959) "The Tingler" (1959) "Return of the Fly" (1959) "The Bat" (1959)
1951: 53 cents 1953: 60 cents 1956: 50 cents 1959: 51 cents
In 1950, it was: Lou "Doc" Skender. During the years of 1951-1959, they had no teams.
The starting or primary catchers for the White Sox in the 50s were: 1950 and 1951 - Phil Masi 1952 through 1959 - Sherm Lollar
Sierra - 1950 was released on: USA: 1 June 1950 Sweden: 13 July 1950 Finland: 4 May 1951 Japan: 3 August 1951 Philippines: 26 February 1952 (Davao) Portugal: 15 April 1952 West Germany: 1 July 1955 Austria: September 1955 Denmark: 19 October 1959
During the civil war times... In 1950'sDon't you mean Civil Rights Era 1950s
John Baldock (November 19, 1915 - October 3, 2003) succeeded Humphrey Attewell as the fourteenth Member of Parliament for Harborough, serving between 1950 and 1959, including the whole of 1951.
James Johnson (September 16, 1908 - Janaury 31, 1995) succeeded William Brown as the ninth Member of Parliament for Rugby, serving between 1950 and 1959, including the whole of 1951.
Elaine Burton (February 2, 1904 - October 6, 1991) served as the first Member of Parliament for Coventry South, serving between 1950 and 1959, including the whole of 1951.
Ernest Davies (May 18, 1902 - September 16, 1991) served as the first Member of Parliament for Enfield East, serving between 1950 and 1959, including the whole of 1951.
Charles Gibson (April 7, 1889 - March 22, 1977) succeeded John Battley as the ninth Member of Parliament for Clapham, serving between 1950 and 1959, including the whole of 1951.
Frederick Messer (May 12, 1886 - May 8, 1971) served as the third Member of Parliament for the remerged constituency of Tottenham, serving between 1950 and 1959, including the whole of 1951.