As a teenager, a senior at
Venice High School, she was incarcerated with her family at Granada War Relocation Center in
Granada, Colorado, from 1942 to 1944 following the signing of
Executive Order 9066. "I thought, well, I guess, as a good American citizen, we have to do what the government wants us to do," she recalled many years later. She also briefly worked as a live-in servant for a family in
Boulder, Colorado. During her time as a student, she lived with the family of Hugh Anderson, a Quaker accountant in Altadena. Her enrollment was greeted with threats and harassment from anti-Japanese nativists in the area; sympathetic students and others volunteered to walk with her on campus, for her safety. "Her ultimately successful resettlement helped pave the way for the mass return of Japanese Americans to the West Coast beginning in January 1945," noted one profile. Takei left college without graduating, to help her parents re-establish themselves in Los Angeles; in 2010 Pasadena City College presented her with an honorary degree. == After the war ==