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Prairie Fire on WILL-TV

7:30 pm Thursdays - telling compelling stories about central Illinois for the past 16 years.

Program info & archives

Story Subject Category: History

Japanese-American Spent War in Internment Camp
From Episode number 708, Yoga, Catsup Watertower, Japanese-American Spends WWII in Internment Camp , air date Thursday, April 24, 2008

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Yuki Okinaga Llewellyn of Champaign, Ill., spent three years during World War II interned at the Manzanar Assembly Center in California.  Llewellyn and her 23-year-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-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.

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Segment duration: 07:55

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: Ethnicity/CultureHistoryWorld War IIChampaign

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Trumpet Player John O'Connor Recalls World War II
From Episode number 707, 40 north/88 west, Vintage Baseball, John O'Connor, air date Thursday, April 17, 2008

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John O’Connor of Champaign served in the U.S. Air Force during World War II. He was chosen as lead pilot with the first experimental flying unit aboard the B-24 Liberator. He flew 50 missions and also used his skills as a trumpeter and band director. Flying back from a mission, John and his crew would often pull out their instruments and play. O’Connor later became a member of the Medicare 7, 8 or 9 Jazz Band, performing around the country.

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Segment duration: 04:46

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Chief Camera - Segment: Julius Bolton

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryMusicWorld War IIChampaign

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Vintage Baseball with the Rock Springs Ground Squirrels
From Episode number 707, 40 north/88 west, Vintage Baseball, John O'Connor, air date Thursday, April 17, 2008

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A group of baseball players in Macon County is preserving the old days of baseball. The Rock Springs Ground Squirrels play the game by 1860s rules, which don’t allow swearing or gloves. Producer Julius Bolton takes viewers to the Macon County Conservation District to enjoy a bygone era from our national pastime.

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Segment duration: 06:02

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Producer: Julius Bolton and Jeff Bossert
Editor: Tim Hartin

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryHobbiesIllinois Culture/HistorySportsDecatur

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Wartime Decatur
From Episode number 706, UI Students in China, Preserving Kenyan Wildlife, Wartime Decatur, air date Thursday, April 10, 2008

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In World War II, soldiers from Decatur, Ill., served in North Africa, Italy, the Philippines and Germany. Local volunteers rolled bandages, collected food, and recycled bales of paper and heaps of scrap metal. Citizens planted victory gardens and bought war bonds and savings stamps. Dan Guillory’s book, “Wartime Decatur: 1832 & 1945” documents the vigorous wartime culture based on community involvement and a strong sense of patriotism. Prairie Fire talks to Guillory about his stories of service both on and off the battlefield. Then producer Denise La Grassa recounts the experiences of Decatur’s Carl Mocabee, who was a master sergeant in the Army stationed in the Philippines and New Guinea. He received a Purple Heart and Silver Star during his service.

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Segment duration: 05:50

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryMilitaryWorld War II

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Friendship in Combat
From Episode number 705, Recycled Rhythms, Habitat for Humanity ReStore, World War II Friendships, air date Thursday, April 03, 2008

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A friendship during World War II helped George Kitterman of Bloomington survive fierce conditions during the Battle of the Bulge. In this Prairie Fire story, Kitterman describes being pinned down in a foxhole with his friend Joe Spencer, covered with snow with only a bazooka and one shell between them. They wondered what they would do if a German tank came over the ridge.

Producer Denise La Grassa begins with Kitterman learning about the bombing of Pearl Harbor, when he and his pals were finishing a game of touch football and turned on a car radio to hear the Chicago Bears score. “We follow him through much of his war experience, but the centerpiece is this friendship that was so important to him,” La Grassa said.

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Segment duration: 08:26

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Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryIllinois Culture/HistoryWorld War IIBloomington

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African-American Steward-Gunner on USS Missouri
From Episode number 704, World War II Special, air date Thursday, March 27, 2008

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Theodore Freeman of Rantoul was a steward, serving officers in the mess hall on the USS Missouri. But when the enemy struck, he had to man his position on a gun mount and defend the ship. He was on board the USS Missouri when a Japanese kamikaze pilot crashed his plane into the ship very near to where Freeman was standing. He talked with WILL-TV producer Denise La Grassa about the challenges he faced as an African-American on board ship and about the conflict between his life as Pentecostal pastor before Pearl Harbor and his life as a sailor pledged to defend the country.

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Segment duration: 06:23

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryMilitaryWorld War IIRantoul

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Japanese-American Spent War in Internment Camp
From Episode number 704, World War II Special, air date Thursday, March 27, 2008

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Yuki Okinaga Llewellyn of Champaign, Ill., spent three years during World War II interned at the Manzanar Assembly Center in California.  Llewellyn and her 23-year-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-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.

RealVideo archive

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Segment duration: 07:55

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryWorld War IIChampaign

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Serving on the Front Lines for the Red Cross
From Episode number 704, World War II Special, air date Thursday, March 27, 2008

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Jill Pitts Knappenberger of Champaign, Ill., was one of three women serving on the front lines during the Battle of the Bulge. Working for the Red Cross operating a refitted truck dubbed a “clubmobile,” she passed out donuts, coffee and cigarettes to weary soldiers. She talks to WILL-TV producer Denise La Grassa about being trapped for eight days during the Battle of the Bulge, surrounded by the enemy. Her brother, John Joseph Pitts III, an Army captain, was in the heat of battle only a few miles away. Knappenberger, shown at left with the clubmobile, said she joined the Red Cross effort because she was itching to get into the action of World War II. The soldiers taught her how to use a gun and she even got a few shots off at the Germans.

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Segment duration: 09:11

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryWorld War IIChampaign

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Battle of the Bulge
From Episode number 704, World War II Special, air date Thursday, March 27, 2008

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Sparky Songer of Danville, Ill., served in the infantry in Europe and was captured by the Germans in the Battle of the Bulge. He spent six months in German camps before escaping as the war was winding down and finding his way to American lines, thanks to the help of an English-speaking German guard who was a graduate of the University of Michigan. Songer talks to WILL-TV producer Denise La Grassa about his escape and his experiences in the German camps, where he subsisted almost almost entirely on rutabaga soup. He weighed under 100 pounds when he reached safety. Songer is curator and president of the Vermilion County War Museum.

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Segment duration: 09:11

Producer: Denise La Grassa

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryMilitaryWorld War IIDanville

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Pioneering Female Navigation Instructor
From Episode number 704, World War II Special, air date Thursday, March 27, 2008

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When World War II broke out, Iris Nigg Lundin of Champaign left her small town in Minnesota and joined hundreds of other women in the newly formed Marine Corps women’s Reserve. She became one of the first four female navigation instructors.

Producer Denise La Grassa said that in her conversations with Lundin, she was impressed by the strength of this woman who left a secure life in Minnesota to join the ranks of the Marines, the toughest of the tough. “This was the first time many of these men who were her students had encountered a female instructor and she really held her own,” said La Grassa. “When I listened to her stories, I was moved by her description of how she went to bat for African-Americans on the military bases where she worked. She was brave enough to tell a higher-ranking officer that he shouldn’t be treating a steward in a demeaning manner. Later in her life, equality was very important to her.”

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Segment duration: 07:39

Producer: Denise La Grassa
Editor: Eleanore Stasheff

This segment is filed in these categories: HistoryMilitaryWorld War IIChampaign

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