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Snow College News Room
Public Relations and News Information
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Graduates Urged To Achieve Goals
By Suzanne Dean
Black & Decker CEO speaks at Snow; 1,053 get diplomas
EPHRAIM — Intellectually, each graduate at Snow College has the ability
to accomplish anything they set their hearts on, according to the school's keynote
graduation speaker.
Nolan D. Archibald gives the commencement speech at Snow, where he talked about
goal-setting. Nolan D. Archibald, the CEO of Black & Decker, told Snow College
graduates Saturday that he is an example of the premise that people can achieve
anything they desire if they pursue their dreams the right way. The school awarded
915 associate degrees and certificates at the Ephraim school's commencement
and another 138 at separate exercises Friday on Snow's Richfield campus.
During the Richfield
commencement, the college announced an anonymous donation of $1 million, the
largest gift ever at that location. The money will go to pay down debt on the
Sevier Valley Center, freeing up funds for programming at the center, and to
endow nursing scholarships.
Archibald, a native of Ogden whose parents didn't graduate from high school,
received an honorary doctorate during the college's 118th commencement. He said
as a teen, he finished Ogden High with a 2.0 grade point average and was cut
from the basketball team three times.
Yet upon returning from an LDS mission, he set two goals: to play basketball
at a Division 1 college and to get an MBA. "I soon realized that setting
goals was the easy part," he said.
He enrolled at Dixie College and started training to try to make the basketball
team. He worked out on his own several hours each day to get in shape and always
showed up for basketball practice an hour early to "work on the fundamentals."
He made the team as a starter.
Academically, "I worked so hard that first semester out of sheer fright,"
he said. He ended the year with a B average.
The next year, Archibald met his future wife, Margaret Hafen, a straight-A student
from an academically inclined family. He couldn't accept being academically
inferior to her, so he brought his GPA up to an A average.
Meanwhile, the Dixie basketball team made it to the national junior college
championships. Archibald got noticed and ended up with more than 100 scholarship
offers from universities. "After 3,000 hours of work, my dream had become
a reality," he said.
Some of the offers were from large schools, including the University of Utah,
but Archibald chose to play at Weber State in his hometown. There, he started
a lifelong friendship with teammate Roger Reid, who became head coach at BYU,
coached for the Phoenix Suns and is now basketball coach at Snow College. Reid
was instrumental in inviting Archibald to address the commencement.
Archibald said that as he wrapped up his time at Weber, he focused on his next
goal — an MBA. He applied to the Harvard Business School. "You can
imagine the thrill I had when I learned I had been accepted," he said.
He outlined four steps graduates could follow to achieve any goals they set.
First, focus, he said. "Have a clear idea of what you want to achieve and
don't get sidetracked." Second, develop a plan. Third, work hard and be
persistent. Fourth, "keep a proper perspective as to what is important
in life," putting family first, followed by church, career and community
service.
In introducing Archibald, Snow President Michael Benson said the Black &
Decker board of directors has asked him to continue as CEO until he is 70. At
that point, Benson said, Archibald will have led the corporation for 27 years,
compared to an average tenure for Fortune 500 CEOs of four years.
Besides heading Black & Decker, which has 35,000 employees and $7 billion
in annual sales, Archibald is on the boards of Lockheed Martin, the Huntsman
Corp. and the Brunswick Corp.
Jesse A. Smith of Manti was honored as valedictorian while Trevor K. Frank of
Tremonton was recognized as salutatorian. Both graduated with 4.0 GPAs. Tracy
G. Healy of Salt Lake City received the "Outstanding Student Citizen"
award.
Snow College
Snow College, founded in 1888, serves approximately 3,000 students at
its Ephraim campus. The college provides general education and applied
technology programs leading to Associate of Arts, Associate of Science,
Associate of Applied Science and Associate of Pre-Engineering degrees,
and certificates of completion in a number of occupational areas. Once
owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Snow College
became a state college in 1932.
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