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Brooke Consults Harvard Faculty

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Cormack on civil rights, crime and corruption, and urban problems. A group of undergraduates in Winthrop House is also working with the committees.

Economics and professors from Wellesley and M.I.T.

None of the professors have taken part in the actual drafting of Brooke's statements, though a few have submitted written suggestions to him.

But the Faculty members advising Brooke may not all support him politically, one of them cautioned yesterday. Although several professors are impressed with Brooke and are willing to aid his campaign, others simply want to express their views to "a very attractive liberal who next year may well be a Senator," he said.

Before seeking the meetings at Harvard Brooke reportedly felt for some time that his campaign was suffering from a lack of research on national and international affairs. His response to a question about Vietnam on a television program last February, for example, met with unfavorable reaction and was blasted as an "evasion" by a Boston newspaper.

John S. Saloma, Brooke's new research director and president of the Ripon Society, a college-based group of independent Republicans, said yesterday that the suggestions the Attorney-General has received here have begun to "shape his

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