Word: problem
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...result of this practice it was seen that the quarterback position is to be the real problem of the team next fall. Of the seven or eight possibilities for Gardner's position none as yet have filled the place to the satisfaction of the coaches. The candidates for quarterback at present are F. J. Bradlee '15, W. E. Bright '14, B. C. Cartmell '16, J. A. Doherty '16, V. Freedley '14, M. J. Logan '15, E. W. Mahan '16, W. Rollins '16, E. G. Swigert '15, and D. C. Watson '16. Of these Bradlee, Logan, Mahan, and Watson showed...
...Cage and in the few practice games that have been played, there has so far been no chance to see them working under really favorable conditions. The season opened with prospects very uncertain. There were practically no veterans to begin with as a nucleus, and so the problem has been to build up an almost entirely new team. In spite of these obstacles the team has made good progress and deserves our heartiest support. So to Captain Wingate and the players we extend our best wishes for a successful season...
...Rabindranath Tagore, the foremost poet-philosopher of India at the present time, delivered a lecture on "The Problem of Self," in Emerson D yesterday afternoon. Mr. Tagore stated the problem succinctly as follows: What is the true position of Self in the universe, and what is its object...
...solving the problem, Mr. Tagore first established the assumption of the actuality of self and that the fundamental property of self is its individuality. Not the annihilation of self but the separation of it from the tyranny of the sensual desires is the supreme goal of the philosophy of India. Selfish pleasures are in truth self-destructible. Ignorance is the only fetter which binds the self to these pleasures. Therefore, sinfulness is not contained in the original nature of man to be destroyed by God alone, but may be wiped out by the destruction of ignorance...
...Lecture on "Indian Philosophy in its Application to Life." V. "The Problem of Self," by Rabindranath Tagore, Esq., in Emerson...