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Miller's Time
Most of his life, William P. "Bill" Miller '77 has been
preparing, unknowingly, for his role as president of the Duke Alumni
Association. His late grandfather was a Trinity College graduate.
His father, Jim Miller '47, played football for the legendary coach
Wallace Wade, and his late brother, James T. Miller '74, was Duke's
first wheelchair graduate.
"I've been involved with athletics all my life," says
Miller. "And I was a manager on the football team under Coach
Mike McGee. I never got far away. I went from Duke to law school
in Chapel Hill, but I would still be cheering in Cameron whenever
possible."
He's a longtime volunteer. When he joined the High Point, North
Carolina, law firm Roberson Haworth & Reese, where he is now
a partner, Miller first got involved in the Duke Club of High Point,
serving as president from 1988 through 1989. He joined the local
Alumni Admissions Advisory Committee, where he worked in helping
establish the Trinity Scholars program. Trinity Scholarships are
awarded to outstanding students from the Carolinas, many of them
from Guilford, Davidson, Montgomery, and Randolph counties.
In 1995, Miller was asked to serve a three-year term on Duke's
Athletics Council, which assisted in the search for the new athletics
director, Joe Alleva. He joined the DAA board of directors in 1998
and has been a member of its executive committee since 2001.
Miller has also been active outside the Duke community. He has
presided over the American Business Clubs and the High Point Arts
Council, and he has chaired the Church Council, Staff-Parish Committee,
Commission on Evangelism, and Council of Ministries for his church,
Wesley Memorial United Methodist, in High Point. Miller and his
wife, Stephanie, live in Greensboro. Their fourteen-year-old son,
Alex, is a ninth-grader at Woodberry Forest School, and their twelve-year-old
daughter, Cait, is a seventh-grader at Aycock Middle School.
Serving as alumni association president during a period of transition--working
with a new university president and a new alumni director--doesn't
faze him. He characterizes it as "building on strength," while
celebrating a record of successes. "The great thing about
this time of transitions," he says, "is that the first
half of my year as president, we get to celebrate the legacy of
Laney [Funderburk '60, who steps down in December]. The second
half, we get to welcome Sterly Wilder ['83] in her first year as
executive director. Her roots are awfully deep at Duke; that will
make it easy. And that dovetails with the other campus transition--the
excitement of a new president."
Miller says he's "thrilled" that he'll be introducing
President Richard H. Brodhead to alumni at the first three events
in North Carolina. "He will enrich the undergraduate experience
from day one, based on his career at Yale."
Since becoming DAA president in July, Miller has met with as many
campus administrators as possible. "I wanted administrators
to know that the DAA is poised to assist in helping to identify
and accomplish all university goals and objectives," he says. "We
want to be sitting at every table on campus where important decisions
are being made. The DAA board can offer unique intellectual and
perceptive viewpoints in university conversations, plus a good
dose of plain common sense and historical context.
"We have a dedicated group of volunteers who are an immensely
talented and powerful force in furthering the mission of Duke.
We will be starting a strategic planning and visioning process
at Alumni Affairs to identify the next bold steps that will take
Duke and the alumni association to new levels of excellence."
Miller's message to alumni: "You're wasting an opportunity
if you don't get involved. You'll reconnect with all the things
that brought you to Duke as a student. The more interacting with
Duke, the more rewarding. I found that I'm the better for it. Working
on committees, talking to administrators, being a part of Career
Week--I've taken so much away from those relationships, in my work
and in my life."
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