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TRIALS FOR PASTEUR MEDAL SET FOR TOMORROW NIGHT

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Trials for the debate which is annually held for the Pasteur Medal will be held in Sever 36 tomorrow at 8 o'clock. The question this year is "Resolved: That a capital levy as a solution for France's financial difficulties is unadvisable."

All men intending to enter the competition must see Professor L. J. A. Mercler or Mr. E. M. Rowe, 18 Garden Street, before 6 o'clock tonight.

The Pasteur Medal was first given in 1898, by Baron Pierre de Coubertin, to be awarded annually there-after to the successful candidate in a debate on a subject to be drawn from contemporary French politics, the debate to be conducted in English. The administration of the prize is in the hands of the French Department of the University, which under the terms of the competition is at liberty to call in the aid of other instructors, of students, and of graduates, in determining the precise conditions of the competition, and in selecting judges. The judges for tomorrow's debate have not as yet been announced.

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