We all knew that if the Japanese learned of our attempt to escape, or caught us in the attempt, our punishment would not be pleasant to consider--we had seen too much of Japanese-devised torture and death since we had become prisoners of war. "I will need a sextant," I pointed out, during a furtive meeting of our little group. Lieutenant Boelens said that he could make a sextant in the prison workshop. He not only kept his promise--he did a bang-up good job into the bargain. In some manner, Mellnik was able to lay his hands on a book on astronomy, and I was able to obtain the necessary data on the principal stars, and also the equation of time. We were also able to obtain the proper altitude corrections; and since I could compute the correct ascension and declination of the sun, I felt prepared to navigate within reasonable limits. I also had a pocket watch which had a fairly constant rate, and whose error I determined by comparing the watch with the time of apparent local noon. (I found, when finally I was able to get a time tick by radio, that I was only fifteen seconds off.) All in all, at the beginning of March, plans for our attempted escape were beginning to look good. Lieutenant Colonel Mellnik: ------------------------------- We now selected March 28th as the date for our escape. This was a Sunday, and we figured that once clear we would have as much as eight hours start before the Japs discovered our absence. - 71 - |