“…The demonstration was given by Alexander von Kryha himself and one George Evalenko, 39 Hitt was accompanied by a colleague, one 37 Within GC&CS, at least three different sections worked on Kryha traffic: ISOS-Intelligence Section, Oliver Strachey-responsible for solutions of hand ciphers used by German clandestine services such as the Abwehr [40]; ISK-Intelligence Section, Knox-responsible for solutions of traffic using unsteckered versions of the Enigma machine, including the special Enigma used by the Abwehr [3]; and the Commercial Section, based at Aldford House in London [13]. 38 The value of 23 for k is suggestive of a fixed precursor of the later adjustable control wheel, especially since the actual sum of the kicks is 179 (the number of teeth on the drive wheel of the later machine), but an examination of the corresponding stepping pattern recovered by Hitt shows that it could not have been produced by any possible setting of the grub screws on the later control wheel. 39 [7], [10], and [38] give A. M. Evalenko as the name of purchaser of the North American rights to the machine.…”