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To the Editors of the CRIMSON:
In a course called Government In, the perspiring student learns of a place in London called Hyde Park where free speech may he had at no cost to the speaker and at a slight cost to the government. The time is ripe, it seems, for the establishment of a Hyde Park in Harvard University.
There is an increasing portion of Labor-Unionists in the student body and the number of those who believe that Sovietism and Communism represent human Utopia is by no means small. These gentlemen would find relief of mind and body in a place where their most radical thoughts could gain utterance.
May I offer two suggestions for Harvard's Hyde Park? The first, that its location be just beside Phillips Brooks House, where the spirit of the noble man may exercise its influence. The second, that receptacles be provided to catch the "hot air," which might then be used to heat the Germanic Museum. ALLEN H. GLEASON '20.
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