masako miura knows a great deal about the history of manzanar. her entire family was interned at the camp and she herself was one of the few physicians who could offer any kind of medical help to the people that were held behind the barbed wire. >> they recruited five doctors for manzanar and they had 10,000 people in there. >> reporter: born and raised in pasadena with her sisters, dr. miura has had what can be best described as a remarkable journey. a widow she now lives alone in a townhouse in aptos but she still has vivid memories of her childhood. >> well, my dad had a bathhouse, you know in those days about 1914 there was no bathtubs in the house. so they all, working people came out to the bathhouse and took their baths there. he had rows of bathhouse on both sides of the building, and i don't know how many there were, but there were quite a number of them. >> reporter: masako was just like any other young woman growing up in los angeles in the 1930s and she graduated from hollywood high school, where she was an excellent student. she woul