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        <title>Prairie Fire on WILL-TV</title>
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        <title>Yoga, Catsup Watertower, Japanese&#45;American Spends WWII in Internment Camp</title>
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        <description>Prairie Fire looks at why so many people in central Illinois are getting health benefits from yoga. Then the show goes to Collinsville where a group of people came together to save the world&apos;s largest catsup bottle. Then producer Denise La Grassa profiles Yuki Llewellyn of Champaign, whose childhood photograph came to symbolize the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.</description>
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        <title>Japanese&#45;American Spent War in Internment Camp</title>
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        <subject>Champaign, Ethnicity/Culture, History, World War II,</subject>
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        <description>Yuki Okinaga Llewellyn of Champaign, Ill., spent three years during World War II interned at the Manzanar Assembly Center in California.&amp;nbsp; Llewellyn and her 23&#45;year&#45;old single mother were evacuated from Little Tokyo in Los Angeles, to Manzanar in Lone Pine, Calif. The now famous 1942 National Archives photo, taken by Clem Albers and showing Yuki sitting on a suitcase in the train station, became representative of that period. A retired assistant dean of students at the University of Illinois, Llewellyn returned to Manzanar last fall for the first time since she and her mother left it in October 1945 with $25 and a pair of government&#45;issued bus tickets. Producer Denise La Grassa talks to Llewellyn about living in Block 2 inside the internment camp where she shared a 20 x 20 room with her mother and another family.</description>
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        <creator>Denise La Grassa</creator>
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        <contributor>Eleanore Stasheff</contributor>
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    <pbcoreTitle>
        <title>World&apos;s Largest Catsup Bottle</title>
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        <subject>Collinsville, Historical Landmarks, Illinois Culture/History, Villa Grove,</subject>
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        <description>Nestled along the bluffs of the Mississippi River, Collinsville, Ill., is home to the world&#8217;s largest catsup bottle. The bottle, formerly a water tower for a local catsup bottling plant, had become a bit of an eyesore by the late 1990s. The company that owned it was reluctant to do upkeep and maintenance. By 1993, the plant and the bottle were up for sale. After a community outcry, the town saved the famous bottle.</description>
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    <pbcoreCreator>
        <creator>Virginia Steffen</creator>
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    <pbcoreTitle>
        <title>Yoga for Health</title>
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        <subject>Champaign, Hobbies,</subject>
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        <description>For 6,000 years people have been practicing yoga. Its roots are religious, but outside of India, most people practice it as a form of exercise. Producer Virginia Steffen examines this ancient practice and learns that it&#8217;s something anyone can do.</description>
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        <creator>Virginia Steffen</creator>
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