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Show became chief executive officer of Inter-mountain Milk Producers. Nadauld was inaugurated President of Weber State College in ceremonies held on November 7, 1985. Since assuming that office, Nadauld served a one-year term as Chair of the Big Sky Council of Presidents in 1986-1987. In addition he has been involved in a number of civic, business and religious activities. These include service as a member of the board of directors of Intermountain Health care, Bonneville Pacific Corporation, and First Security Bank. From 1983 to the present, Nadauld has been a member of the State Consumer Funds Facilities Board, and from 1979 to 1987 he served as vice chair of the Utah Housing Finance Agency. He is the author of a number of professional articles and monographs including the book Financial Strategy co-authored with Roger G. Clarke, Brent Wilson, and Robert H. Daines which was published in January 1988.A Weber tradition is repeated as President Nadauld and a student help with landscaping on a campus work day, May, 1988. Imagining Edenby Wayne CarverFor a long time after leaving Weber College in June, 1943, whenever I came back to Ogden, the first thing I would do was go up to the campus and walk around the white birch, Russian olives, and evergreen trees on the east side of the Moench building. From Twenty-fifth and Washington, I would go past Broadstones drug, a dress shop beauty parlor, a greasy spoon The Roost where every morning from September 1941 to June 1943 I had a breakfast of cold Dr. Pepper and two macs (globs of fried dough and icing) past Shirleys Candy and Magazine Shop, the Ogden Theater, the White Citys parking lot, Cluster Nilssons used-text store, to Eliasons Dry Cleaning on the corner. Then I would cross Adams to the campus, my home for two years while I dreamed a necessary dream. I would pass in front of West Central, Central, President Dixons house tucked between Central and the gym then turn north to where, if it were evening, the big purple W facing east from the roof of the Moench building glowed against the night. I was back home. I would sit on the front steps of Moench, or lean against one of the columns. Sitting there, I remembered eveiything that had happened to me on those grounds, in those buildings. Sometimes LaVon Earl would come by and invite me for a cherry Coke at the College Inn, next to the business office in the gym. I was in a fugue. Shaking myself into the present, taking another look around, I would go back down Twenty-fifth, turn north to the Bank Smokery where somebody from Plain City usually gave me a ride home. For as long as the Moench building stood, I made that pilgrimage. I never once felt like a fool. Not feeling like a fool is a gift fools have. In early June of 1941, President H. A. Dixon wrote, congratulating me on what until then did not exist: my outstanding record at Weber County High School. I was awarded a 25.00 scholarship to Weber College for the school year beginning in Wayne Carver graduated from Weber Junior College in 1943, where he was president of the freshman class and president of the student body. A member of the English faculty from 1947 to 1954, he has since 1954 taught at Carleton College, in Northfield, Minnesota, where he is the William H. Laird Professor of Liberal Arts. |