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Professor Dorothy Davis is an alumna of UNCG (Class of 1970) and was a professor in the Anthropology Department for over 40 years. At the time of this interview (Fall 2022), Prof. Davis had just retired from UNCG as Senior Lecturer. Davis begins the interview by talking about her family (she has a twin sister who also attended UNCG and is also a professor in the Anthropology field), growing up in Newport, Vermont, and her early interest in Anthropology. Davis explains how she got to UNCG from Vermont, differences in culture between her home state and North Carolina, campus life, favorite professors, male students, beauty culture, extracurricular activities, and the quality of education at UNCG during her undergraduate years. Davis also remembers the political atmosphere on campus during that time and mentions the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., the National Guard on campus, the Food Service Worker's Strike of 1969, and the Vietnam War. Davis continues her narrative to explain her career after graduating from UNCG. She attended UNC for her MA in Anthropology and thereafter held a number of teaching jobs at community colleges, colleges, and universities. Davis lived in Vermont, North Carolina, and Florida before eventually returning to North Carolina. Davis returned to teach in the Anthropology Department at UNCG in 1980. She discusses her life teaching and working as an adjunct professor, changes in teaching over time, teaching Scuba diving at UNCG, and changes in students at UNCG over time. About 1997 or 1998, Davis was promoted to a full time position and senior lecturer and she discusses at length the difficulty of working as an adjunct professor prior to that promotion. Davis also discusses her experience teaching during the COVID pandemic, including the difficulties of teaching remotely, hybrid classes, online testing, and other impediments to teaching and learning. To close, Davis compares UNCG of her undergraduate time to today and discusses what UNCG means to her.