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...Litchfield, Conn. resident became the third freshman in Harvard history 'o hold a University record when he ran the 600 in 1:10.9 his rookie season. In his second year he was timed in 48.1 for the 440, .1 off the still standing varsity standard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Huvelle, Gonzalez, Sullivan, Nicosia, Keefe Named Captains | 5/23/1967 | See Source »

During the ten-year tenure of former Chancellor Edward H. Litchfield, the University of Pittsburgh gained stature and generated excitement before tailspinning into insolvency (TIME, July 2, 1965). Last week Pitt pinned its hopes for regaining level flight on one of the sharpest intellects in the U.S. Air Force. The university's trustees named Colonel Wesley W. Posvar, 41, founding chairman of the Air Force Academy's political science department, as new chancellor, effective June...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: New Pilot for Pitt | 1/20/1967 | See Source »

Westinghouse's former chief, Gwilym A. Price, 70, is now the chairman of the University of Pittsburgh's trustees, and has been assuming more and more responsibility at the financially troubled institution since Chancellor Edward Litchfield resigned last year. Equally prestigious, from the retired executive's viewpoint, is an appointment to a powerful (if nonpaying) position in public service. One such plum was won in October by Edwin M. Clark, 65, the recently retired boss of Southwestern Bell Telephone, who was picked to head St. Louis' industrial-development drive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Executives: What They Work At After They Quit Working | 11/26/1965 | See Source »

...chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh since 1954, Edward H. Litchfield undertook a $100 million expansion program, increased the school's faculty from 561 to 1,091, raised professors' salaries from an average $6,548 to $12,126. But Litchfield's big dreams outstripped big donations (TIME, July 2), and last month, with the university running nearly $20 million short in operating expenses over the past five years, the state legislature was forced to provide $2,500,000 to meet the school's payroll. Last week, in the face of mounting criticism, Chancellor Litchfield abruptly resigned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Big Dreams or Pipe Dreams? | 8/6/1965 | See Source »

...reason was given for the resignation, although Litchfield, 51, is still recuperating from a heart attack and is under doctors' orders to reduce his work load (among his other jobs: chairmanship of the S.C.M. Corp., formerly Smith Corona Marchant). Litchfield leaves with the legislature still debating whether to put privately endowed Pitt under state control and with trustees divided as to what he has actually accomplished. Banker Frank Denton brusquely dismissed his plans as "pipe dreams." But Trustee Chairman Gwilym Price, accepting the resignation, wrote Litchfield: "You have done more for the University of Pittsburgh in a decade than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Big Dreams or Pipe Dreams? | 8/6/1965 | See Source »

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