Word: faintly
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This incident of bias and closed mindedness by the Crimson in many ways explains why we at AALARM have banded together. Harvard University can be seen as a forum for many voices. The individiual students' voices are faint and rarely heard. But the voices of student organizations, publications and the Faculty and administration are strong...
Fighting inflation is a relatively new challenge for the Bank of Japan. For most of the 1980s, inflation was a faint, distant threat. Low oil prices kept increases at bay, even while property values soared. The rampant speculation in land prices, in fact, which made slivers of land in downtown Tokyo worth a fortune, was a powerful engine for the stock market. Investors could use their real estate holdings as collateral for buying stocks on margin. Then they could turn around and use their stocks as collateral to buy more real estate...
...Cruzan case may finally provide the lower courts with some clear guidance in striking a fundamental balance between the rights of individuals and the duties of the state. If they chose, the Cruzans' lawyers could have suggested that Nancy's "life" is so faint that it does not meet a minimum standard of protection under the law; that, unaware as she is, she has none of those qualities and prospects and experiences that give life its value. But such an argument would require setting some line above which lives are protected, below which they are not. "In the public realm...
...slowing economy worries Wall Street because corporate profits, which are already growing faint, would evaporate during a recession. Of 795 firms surveyed by Zacks Investment Research that have released fourth-quarter results, 51% had worse-than-expected earnings. Another factor depressing Wall Street is the pervasive feeling that the 1980s gold rush of takeovers and leveraged buyouts has finally subsided, largely because the junk-bond market is moribund and banks have grown leery of financing major new deals...
...poet named Benjamin Franklin Taylor caught both the metaphysics and, unintentionally, the comedy when he wrote this rhapsody to the phone: "The far is near. Our feeblest whispers fly/ Where cannon falter, thunders faint and die./ Your little song the telephone can float/ As free of fetters as a bluebird's note...