One of the things that was intriguing about the camp was that
because there was such a reservoir of skilled people in the camp,
they said, "We should be having classes. We should be having some
lectures." So, literally, a university sprang up within the camp.
There were six people who were actually doing medical studies.
They would do their studies, they would write their exams under
invigilation, and then the results would be sent to Switzerland,
and they would forward them on to London. In my early days
there, I was being taken around to the Hut 104 to meet some
of the other prisoners, and we went into one room and there was
a skeleton sitting in a, in a armchair that somebody had created,
and they said, "George, meet George, but don't tell the Germans
he's still on ration." And I was naive enough to believe it, took
me a couple of days to find out that they were pulling my leg.
But that was typical of the supplies that we were able to get
for the camp with this small amount of money, and we were able
to order things from Berlin until quite late in the war. And it
meant a great deal in terms of, of... probably a little more in
terms of more the sports and so on, which raises a little side
track. I had an e-mail from Jonathan Vance yesterday, who is a
professor at Western University in London, Ontario, and he said,
"You'll be interested knowing, George, that I have a graduate
student who's doing his thesis on sports in Stalag Luft 3."
So, the sports payments that we, the equipment that we got
meant that we ran games, organized games of cricket, of course,
and baseball and volleyball and even in the wintertime, we had
skating because it was a huge water reservoir, sort of a fire
protection reservoir, in the camp and when it froze over...
I don't know how we acquired... We must have got skates through
the same sort of purchasing thing. And then, suddenly the
Germans one day relented and said, "Tomorrow, we're going to
allow a hockey team to come from the east compound to take
on your team that you've got here in the north compound." And we
said "Oh, that's great." Well, as it turned out, it was terrific
for me because who arrived with the hockey team from the east
compound was my former WAG, my wireless op, and he was
their coach. So, we had a whole hour together talking while he
was shouting directions to his team, but I got, I found out what
had happened to the rest of my crew, and that they had all got to
the ground safely and had been picked up within a few days, as I
was, and then put into the system. So it was a, a marvellous boon
to me that this happened.