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Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search
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First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni
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Lee Durocher, suspended from baseball for the second time Friday by Commissioner Albert B. Chandler after an incident at the Polo Grounds was hear toned by the support of many fans who said they witnessed the affair and declared Durocher was blameless. One fan even said he "accidentally kicked and tripped over" Fred Boyson. Boyson, a 22-year old Brooklyn fan, charged that Durocher hit him from behind, knocked him to the ground and scuffed him, after the Giant's 15 to 2 loss to the Dodgers Thursday.
The United States intends to see that any arms supplied to the Atlantic Pact countries, are used strictly to bolster this areas defenses, government officials said yesterday. This means that the Dutch and the French could not use American guns, ammunition and equipment in Indonesia and Fronck-Indonesia. The American government would reserve the right to halt all arms shipments to any country violating these conditions.
The only thing standing in the way of another U. S. Russian meeting on lining the Berlin blockade is the simple matter of a telephone call, a State Department spokesman said yesterday.
The next meeting between Phillip C. Jessup, U. S. Ambassador-at-large, and Jakob A. Malik, Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister, will be called when one or the other party picks up a phone and says "lot's meet," but no one knows which party is going to do that, the spokesman said.
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