YOURS AT CAR OLINA
Recording Carolina’s Alumni
While the Carolina Alumni Review is the most visi-
ble GAA benefit, the services performed by our
alumni records staff are among the most appreci-
ated contributions made to our University colleagues and
our alumni. With great care, daily changes and updates are
made to many of the more than 250,000 records of living
Carolina alumni. Last year, our records staff made
more than 60,000 home address changes, more
than 11,000 business address changes and more
than 26,000 name changes. And with fewer than 3
percent of our alumni considered “lost” — indi-
cating we, at least for the moment, do not have a
valid mailing address for them — we have one of
the lowest lost alumni percentages in the country.
Without alumni records, our colleagues across
the campus could not communicate with, inform
or involve Carolina’s former students in the life of
our University. Up-to-date addresses are essential for local
Carolina Club notices, reunion notices, GAA program
updates — and to mail this magazine. Increasingly, alumni
have expressed a preference for e-mail communications, and
we presently have good e-mail addresses for nearly half of
our alumni. The inspiring success of the Carolina First Cam-
paign has been greatly aided by our alumni records.
The first comprehensive alumni directory was published
by the GAA in 1924, under the leadership of the GAA’s first
full-time alumni secretary, Daniel L. Grant ’ 22. It contained
information on Carolina’s then- 15,000 alumni ( 11,000 living
and 4,000 deceased).
In the 1924 directory, Grant wrote that what motivated
those who worked to publish the directory was the hope that
it would “be more than the recitation of individual successes
and failures to grace or shame us, more than a book to be
pushed into the most unused corner of a bookshelf. ... We
want it to help bind into a conscious whole the component
parts of the entity — The University of North Carolina. And
that entity is not alone in Chapel Hill, as some of us are
wont to think; it is not alone in the days of one’s student life
which the rosy mist of memory have enshrouded in romance
and glory; neither is it alone in the past, nor will it be alone
in the future. It is not alone the great men who have been its
students. … It is all the men [and women] it has sent forth
whose lives have been broadened, deepened and sweetened
by her instruction, inspiration and conception of broad purpose. And it has a future to be shapened. …”
In 1943, James Lee Love (class of 1884) of Burlington
established the Cornelia Phillips Spencer Alumni Fund to
help ensure that adequate records of alumni are maintained
and that periodically an alumni directory be made available
to the University’s former students.
In the 1954 directory, Alumni Secretary J. Maryon “Spike”
Saunders ’ 27 noted that the directory contained a listing of
61,877 alumni ( 51,358 living and 10,519 deceased). Saunders
also acknowledged that “address changes are constantly in
process of being recorded. There is no day when the list is
the same as the day before. Nor is it ever completely up-to-date.”
Alumni Secretary Clarence E. Whitefield ’ 44 acknowledged in his introduction to the 1975 alumni directory that
the “compilation of the material for this directory took place
over a period of more than six years.” It contained a listing of
137,219 alumni (118,177 living and 19,042 deceased).
Our 1984 alumni directory was the first to include business
title and business address as well as home and business phone
numbers for all 160,000 living Carolina alumni. Our 1990
Bicentennial Alumni Directory included 211,684 alumni
(181,556 living and 30,128 deceased). In 1997, we published
our first two-volume alumni directory, which included
250,863 alumni (212,993 living and 37,870 deceased). Our
2002 edition of the alumni directory included 274,407 alumni
(228,866 living and 45,541 deceased) and was the first to
include e-mail addresses. Our just-released 2007 alumni directory is the first to include a listing of more than 300,000 Carolina alumni (252,337 living and 51,866 deceased).
Whenever you move, change jobs, have a birth in your
family, or change your phone number or e-mail address,
please share this information with us. It’s easy: Go to the
GAA’s Web site — alumni.unc.edu — and click on “Update
your address.” Or send the information to Alumni Records,
General Alumni Association, P.O. Box 660, Chapel Hill, N.C.
27514. As a GAA member, you have 24/7 access to our
online alumni directory, which is updated daily. All alumni
are encouraged to stop by the George Watts Hill Alumni
Center to review the paper files on Carolina’s alumni. These
files can be particularly helpful to those researching their
family history.
The more than 10,000 GAA members who purchased
the 2007 directory should receive their copies in July. We
hope your directory will help you connect and reconnect
with friends and colleagues as well as learn more about
UNC’s distinguished alumni, no longer living, who helped
shape North Carolina, their professions and the nation. Let
their legacy inspire each of us.
Yours at Carolina,
Douglas S. Dibbert ’ 70
doug_dibbert@unc.edu