FACTOID # 13: The United States spends more money on its military than the next 12 nations combined.
 
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Encyclopedia > The Compass Players

The Compass Players was a 1950s cabaret-style revue show started by undergraduates at the University of Chicago. Several of the members went on to form the Second City. The troupe was active from 1955-1958 in Chicago and St. Louis. The University of Chicago is a private university located principally in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago. ... The second city of a country is the city that is (or was) the second-most important, usually after the capital or first city, according to some criteria. ... Nickname: The Windy City, The Second City, Chi Town, The City of Big Shoulders The 312 Motto: Urbs In Horto (Latin: City in a Garden), I Will Location in Chicagoland and Illinois Coordinates: Country United States State Illinois County Cook Incorporated March 4, 1837 Mayor Richard M. Daley (D) Area... The Gateway Arch, shown here behind the Old Courthouse, is the most recognizable part of the St. ...


Notable Alumni of the Compass Players


  Results from FactBites:
 
Revel with a Cause: Liberal Satire in Postwar America by Stephen E. Kercher, an excerpt (6512 words)
Perhaps the most poignant scenario the Compass Players produced during the summer of 1955 was May’s “Georgina’s First Date.” Unlike the great majority of scenarios and scenes that the Compass and its male-dominated successors performed in the 1950s and early 1960s, this piece focused solely on the experience of a female character.
The fact that Compass actors uttered obscenities and the undisguised names of national politicians confirmed that their enterprise was boldly out of step with the rest of 1950s cold war America.
Like the alienated, rebellious Compass goys (many of whom emulated and in some cases envied their Jewish colleagues), they were articulate outsiders well poised to observe the follies of America’s middle class and the shallow promises of the American Way.
compass - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about compass (280 words)
By the 12th century, European navigators were using compasses consisting of a needle-shaped magnet floating in a bowl of water.
The most commonly used is a magnetic compass, consisting of a thin piece of magnetic material with the north-seeking pole indicated, free to rotate on a pivot and mounted on a compass card on which the points of the compass are marked.
Compasses not dependent on the magnet are gyrocompasses, dependent on the gyroscope, and radiocompasses, dependent on the use of radio.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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