| Remarks
for Memorial Service for Ed Littlefield
By
George P. Shultz Former U.S. Secretary of State (1982-89)
Currently
Distinguished Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
[Honorary Wells Trustee Edmund Wattis
Littlefield, a prominent business executive, civic leader, and philanthropist,
died on October 27, 2001, in Burlingame, California, at the age of 87.
He is survived by his wife, Jeannik Mequet Littlefield '41, who sparked
his longtime interest in Wells because she had a very positive experience
at the college as a student.
The Littlefields have been generous
supporters of Wells for decades and received much attention in 1997 when
they pledged $1.2 million in the form of a challenge grant to upgrade and
expand campus technology. As a result, a total of $2.4 million was raised.
Their gift is recognized in college history as being the catalyst that
brought Wells firmly and permanently into the Information Age. More recently,
the Littlefields have been generous supporters of the campaign to build
a new science building.
He was born in Ogden, Utah, on April
16th, 1914, and graduated with great distinction from Stanford University
in 1936, a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and earned his MBA from Stanford in
1938. During World War II he served as an officer in the U.S. Navy and
with the Petroleum Administration for War.
He joined the Utah Construction
Company as financial vice president and treasurer in 1951 and became general
manager in 1958. During the time he served as the company's principal officer,
that organization was transformed from one of the leading heavy construction
and engineering firms to an international natural resource company engaged
in mining, petroleum, ocean shipping, and land development with major operations
in the United States, South America, Canada, and Australia.
In 1976 the company, then known
as Utah International, Inc., merged with General Electric Company in a
deal valued at $7.2 billion, then the largest in U.S. Corporate history.
At that time Utah had become the most valuable and profitable of all mining
companies headquartered in the United States.
Mr. Littlefield served on numerous
corporate boards of directors including Bechtel Investment Company, Birmingham
Steel, Chrysler Corporation, Del Monte Corporation, Federated Department
Stores, FMC Gold, General Electric Company, Hewlett Packard Company, and
Wells Fargo Company. The Management Center at the Stanford School of Business
bears his name. He served on the Wells Board of Trustees since 1994; Mrs.
Littlefield joined at the same time and remains an honorary trustee.
He also served as a Stanford University
trustee, a regent of the University of San Francisco, president and director
of the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, director of the California State
Chamber of Commerce as well as the San Francisco Symphony.
He was the recipient of many awards
including the Lone Sailor Award from the U.S. Naval Foundation, Member
of the National Mining Hall of Fame, the Alexis de Toqueville Society Award
from the United Way, International Statesman Award from the San Francisco
World Trade Club, Stanford Athletic Board Achievement Award, Ernest C.
Arbuckle Award from the Stanford Graduate School of Business, and the 1977
Award from the National Conference of Christians and Jews.
Mrs. Littlefield was born in France
and prior to World War II attended the International School in Geneva,
Switzerland, where her father worked for the League of Nations. She attended
the Sorbonne before completing her education in the United States and spent
her senior year at Wells, earning her degree in 1941. The Littlefields
established an endowed scholarship to ensure financial support for international
students at Wells. They were inspired to make this particular gift because
Mrs. Littlefield received a scholarship from the college that enabled her
to complete her bachelor's degree, and she wants young women to have the
same opportunities she had. (She then went on to attend graduate school
at Mills – staying faithful to the women's college tradition.)
Mr. Littlefield is also survived
by his three children and six grandchildren.]
I. Fellow Friends of Ed Littlefield,
Jeannik, Denise, Eddie, Jacques,
Ed Littlefield loved you deeply with
a special directness and tenderness.
He was so proud of you - he reveled
in your triumphs and suffered with you any setbacks.
In this sense and many others, I could
easily see that he was your friend as well as husband or father.
II. The fact that this church is overflowing
is warm testimony to Ed's unparalleled capacity for friendship.
He was universally liked and respected.
When you walked down River Road with
Ed at the annual Bohemian Grove encampment, you couldn't get from A to
B because so many people wanted to talk to Ed - with a greeting, a joke,
a story, a reminiscence, or an "Ed, what do you think about this?"
III. Friends asked Ed for advice on
matters large and small.
And we all learned: Never ask Ed's
opinion unless you were ready to hear exactly what he thought.
Not combative or abusive ... but certainly
clear, with his special and gifted way with the English language.
IV. And boy, was he a clear thinker
- with an unusual gift for moving easily back and forth between ideas and
operating reality.
His business acumen is legendary.
But he could apply his capacity for
clear thinking and management ability to all sorts of tasks that came to
suit his fancy.
Captain of our camp at the Grove.
Helping the Bohemian Club keep its
accounts.
How to run a duck club.
V. He loved Stanford and he loved the
Bohemian Club. He asked that this memorial be at Stanford and then later,
a special show at the Club.
He also loved golf and duck shooting.
When it came to priorities among sports,
I got a lesson a few years back when I called him with an invitation to
a Stanford football game. There was dead silence at the other end of the
phone. Finally, in tones of disbelief came the reply: "George, don't you
know that is the date of the opening of the duck season?!"
VI. And Ed had tremendous integrity
in everything.
I remember once asking him why he seemed
so down on a certain individual. "I saw him improve his lie in the rough."
Out 'a here!
VII. I come back to friendship.
"Friendship is different from all other
human relationships. Unlike acquaintanceship, friendship is based on love.
"Friendship is freely entered into,
freely given, freely exercised. Friends glory in each other's successes
and are downcast by their failures. Friends minister to each other. Friends
give to each other, worry about each other, stand always ready to help.
At its height, friendship is an ecstasy."*
[*Stephen B. Ambrose, author of Undaunted
Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American
West, Copyright 1994]
Ed, I will always be grateful for the
gift of your friendship - one of the greatest gifts a man can receive.
I miss you terribly but you will always
be with me because the depth and quality of your friendship transcends
time and place.
Thank you, Ed, and may God be with
you.
Delivered November 9, 2001 at the
Stanford Memorial Church.
Last updated 1/22/2002
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