From Dateline March 13, 2003
Entrepreneur's Legacy Funds
Scholarships
by Gail Matsunaga
She was among the best in her business - providing
jukeboxes, pool tables, video games and pinball machines to restaurants
and bars for almost 50 years. An icon to her fellow vendors,
she started G&G Amusement Co. as a 52-year-old single mother.
And although business students will not have the privilege of meeting
Faith Guthrie - who passed away just over a year ago - they will
benefit from her legacy, thanks to an endowed scholarship in her
name.
Established by Guthrie's grandson, John Arthur Guthrie
- who, with his wife, Dana, own and operate G&G - the Faith
Guthrie Endowed Scholarship will recognize an outstanding full-time
business administration major and single parent. Donations from
friends, family and business acquaintances have contributed to the
scholarship, the first recipient of which will be named in the fall.
“I wanted to keep her name going,” says
Guthrie when asked about his reason for setting up the endowment.
He explained that during his grandmother's 100th birthday celebration
at Summit House Restaurant in Fullerton, she received “so
many flower arrangements of every size. We ended up selling all
the vases in a garage sale.” When Faith died two years later,
Guthrie said, “People asked, 'can we send flowers?' and I
said, 'no.'”
It was Guthrie's mother-in-law, Titan alumna Faye
Alms Sullivan, who suggested an endowment. As for deciding on Cal
State Fullerton as recipient, Guthrie explains, “Grandma lived
in Fullerton, and Cal State Fullerton has a good business program.”
Faith Guthrie was born in 1899 in Ottawa, Kan. One
of her earliest recollections was seeing a Wright Brothers demonstration
flight of one of their early airplanes. At age 24, she moved to
Southern California to help her aunt run a sanatorium. When that
business failed, she worked for a bank and in 1927, married Walter
Harry Guthrie. They had one son, John Walter. Following her divorce,
Guthrie distributed the Los Angeles Times to newsstands and homes.
G&G Amusement took root when she bought 10 cigarette
machines and 90 cartons of cigarettes for $1,203, money she had
saved delivering newspapers. From that humble start - plus a determined
and hard-working attitude - she built G&G into one of the region's
biggest jukebox routes, frequently outlasting and buying out her
competitors along the way.
What was it like working with his grandmother, who
also raised him? “We got into some knock-down, drag-out fights,”
says Guthrie. “But at home, it was completely different. We
kept things separate.”
Aside from a successful business, Faith Guthrie also
passed along to her devoted grandson some sage advice given to her
by her own father. “She said, 'don't ever make a promise you
can't keep. Even if it kills you, keep your promise.'”
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