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Anderson earned a spot with the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program and moved overseas after graduating from Randolph-Macon College in 2008. She taught English at eight schools in Ishinomaki, a city about 240 miles north of Tokyo, and was set to return to Virginia in August. She enjoyed traveling around the island nation and developed great affection for her students and the Japanese people, her mother said. Friends and family had used Facebook and other social networks to put the word out
-- in English and Japanese -- about the search for Anderson after the tsunami. Two fellow teachers with the program were found safe last week, but officials notified Anderson's family Monday that her body was found in Ishinomaki. Anderson's father, Andy, was in Japan, and arrangements for memorial services were pending. Randolph-Macon President Robert R. Lindgren marked Anderson's death in an email to the school community, asking people to reflect "both on the fragility of life and on the significant impact on so many, most recently the children in Japan who benefited from her caring and gifted teaching." Some of Anderson's Alpha Gamma Delta sorority sisters, friends and other alumni went to the Ashland, Va., campus to visit a brick inscribed with her name on the alumni walkway, school spokeswoman Pam Harris Cox said. The college dedicates a brick on the walkway for each student after he or she graduates, she said. The Alpha Gamma Delta house displayed red ribbons around its columns. Cox said the college, which currently is on spring break, plans a memorial service in the near future.
[Associated
Press;
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