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It doesn't take an Enigma machine to decipher what this honourable code might mean: gays are not welcome around here.
"He strips his fictional space of any concrete, recognizable geographical or cultural references, and what you are left with is a fragmentation both of bodies and text, an enigma you want to decipher".
In May 1941, Stuart-Menteth again assisted the capture of Enigma material from the German ship München, enabling Bletchley Park to begin to decipher German Enigma codes.
In his late 70s, he provided a typically graphic description of the attraction he felt for his own land: "It's a very enigmatic country, and that's a good thing because it keeps us alert, makes us constantly try to decipher the enigma of Mexico, the mystery of Mexico, to understand a country that is very, very baroque, very complicated and full of surprises".
We use a story as a kind of piece of information to orient ourselves, make sense of the loneliness, make sense of what we'll never be able to decipher: the enigma that surrounds us".
Over the last five years, the government has released other World War II records revealing, for example, that the British military had captured the Nazis' "enigma machine," enabling the Allies to decipher German coded messages throughout much of the war.
In the end, though, Raines choice of verse proves a fitting expressive vehicle for the history of this bewildering century--in which public truth gives way to private impulse, and human beings torn from one another and from themselves must look to poetic fiction to decipher the enigma of a chaotic and unintelligible life.
It is important to keep in mind that only a small fraction of the known histone PTMs have been examined in current studies, and a more comprehensive analysis of histone PTMs, together with their relationship to gene expression, may help to decipher the enigma of bivalent chromatin.
The film follows Turing's work as he attempted to decipher the Germans' Enigma codes – as well as the friction between him and his superiors like Denniston.
On his next ship, HMS Somali, he helped capture Enigma code fragments which enabled Bletchley Park to decipher the code, again capturing code in 1941, and in the same year was given his first command, HMS Berkeley.
Commander Henry Alexander Stuart-Menteth DSC, usually shortened to Alex Stuart-Menteth (26 August 1912 – 14 May 2000) was a British naval officer famous for his service in the Royal Navy, particularly during World War II where he assisted in the sinking of two U-boats; and helped capture Enigma code fragments which enabled Bletchley Park to decipher the code.
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