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The Purple cipher was used by the Japanese Foreign Office as its most secure system. The U.S. called this the "Purple" code, because they kept intercepted traffic in purple binders. Although the Japanese purchased the Enigma machine, they chose to base their cipher machine on a different technology, using a stepping switch rather than several ...
PURPLE was an enticing, but quite tactically limited, window into Japanese planning and policy because of the peculiar nature of Japanese policy making prior to the War (see above). Early on, a better tactical window was the Japanese Fleet Code (an encoded cypher), called JN-25 by U.S. Navy cryptanalysts.
The Color Purple is a 1982 epistolary novel by American author Alice Walker that won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for Fiction. [1] [a]The novel has been the target of censors numerous times, and appears on the American Library Association list of the 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2000–2010 at number seventeen because of the sometimes explicit ...
Set in the farmhouses, churches and small-town world of rural Georgia, early in the 20th century, “The Color Purple” is not a pop musical, relying more on the traditions of gospel, jazz, big ...
In the book, the narrative is told in epistolary form, with each chapter written as a letter from Celie to God. In the original 1985 film, these letters become voiceovers that play throughout.
Her The Color Purple version was adapted from Alice Walker’s 1982 novel. The book was previously adapted for film in 1985 and directed by Steven Spielberg. A musical version was mounted on ...
Purple Book may refer to: The Purple Book (Labour Party), a collection of essays by Labour politicians; Compendium of Macromolecular Nomenclature, published by IUPAC;
Therefore, the Joint Planning Board developed a new series of "Rainbow" plans [8] [9] —the term being a logical extension of the previous "color" plans. Rainbow 1 was a plan for a defensive war to protect the United States and the Western Hemisphere north of ten degrees [south] latitude. In such a war, the United States was assumed to be ...