Abstract

In 1974 I enrolled in the inaugural class of the University of South Florida's (USF) M.A. program in applied anthropology. My undergraduate degree had been in finance and prelaw, and my experience with anthropology very limited. My interest in the program had been spurred by a St. Petersburg Times interview with Ailon Shiloh, then the graduate program director. The article told an exciting story about a new idea for anthropology—that the powerful analytical tools and perceptual abilities of the discipline could be taught to master's students, who could then be turned loose on modern American society to become effective and empathetic problem solvers. I was in my mid-twenties and ready to make a commitment to graduate education and a career. Anthropology had never occurred to me, probably because educational and career possibilities in this generally mysterious social science were limited, in my perception, to a Ph.D. and university teaching.

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