As National Aboriginal Day dawns Monday, the statistics for aboriginal youth remain depressing. |
|
The others have just had so many false dawns they've learnt not to be too gung-ho, which is good news from an investment point of view. |
|
Perhaps the optimism is slightly guarded, as there have been false dawns at other clubs in the past when new owners have come in. |
|
As this awareness dawns, the quality of mind itself manifests as unborn and uncompounded. |
|
As puberty dawns for a young girl, the ritu kala home-ceremony is performed to acknowledge her first menses. |
|
In fact, it probably dawns on one of them that they just might have a talking frog on their hands. |
|
When you take the field for the opening game, the finality of the coming games dawns on you in a very powerful way. |
|
But after several false dawns and funding setbacks, councillors were today able to confirm that the money was finally in place. |
|
A few lights blinked out across the desert-like prairie, a land of strong, ruddy dawns and drawn, bluish-yellow evenings. |
|
Of course there have been some false dawns along the way, players who were hailed as the next great thing but unfortunately never made it. |
|
But several new dawns and rebirths later, look how far we have come. 1999 will always be remembered as an important year in Irish rugby. |
|
It dawns, suddenly, that we may not be helping the prime minister very much after all. |
|
There have been too many false dawns so a cut in interest rates would be a timely and wise move. |
|
It suddenly dawns on him that there is no earthly reason for him to go to Pritchard at all. |
|
I was pretty numb when dad died, but the sheer crumminess of it all sort of dawns on you slowly. |
|
We've had a few false dawns this year where we've had one or two results but then went back to square one. |
|
This may be the day when, finally, after all the false dawns and dashed hopes, peace replaces war. |
|
Christmas Day itself generally dawns grey, with an easterly blustering off the Pacific, but it doesn't matter! |
|
Recently, my wife and I experienced the snowy white peaks of Maine's mountains illuminated by pink dawns and golden sunsets. |
|
In the cold dawns of January and early February in Vermont, a semi-permanent thin white crust is stretched over the frozen ground. |
|
|
Perhaps, it dawns on our fraternal protagonists, you really shouldn't mess about with practical jokes on the airwaves. |
|
Then it dawns on her he is suggesting that they should go and inspect a studio apartment he has found. |
|
Sometimes an idea, instead of springing forcibly into life and dying unembodied, dawns gradually. |
|
You will only placate them until you are finished with the days, the dawns, the dusks, the sky, the moon. |
|
Then a couple of weeks before the appointed day it dawns on me that the lecture isn't going to write itself. |
|
Red Dead Redemption has some of the finest dawns and dusks in all of moving pictures. |
|
So the beanbag's ready, the lava lamp's warming up and the joss-sticks are lit, when gradually the realisation dawns that something's not quite right. |
|
It reproduces a full solar year with 365 dawns and 365 sunsets chosen among the six tables available. |
|
During two lost decades, pundits have prophesied a string of new dawns and turning-points for Japan's economy, and most have come to naught. |
|
There have been over a trillion dawns and dusks since life began some 3.8 billion years ago. |
|
As for Adolphe Leroy, he painted dawns and dusks, because it was during these times that he let his imagination soar to his art. |
|
The notion of carefully packing away your winter wools as spring dawns, and lovingly laundering delicates by hand, has become an alien concept. |
|
When that day dawns, those who would have ripped it up will be remembered as villainously as King John. |
|
Zarathustra used to invoke saviours who, like the dawns of new days, would come to the world. |
|
An efficient early-warning system will be particularly important to avoid ruffling national feathers as a new era dawns for Europe. |
|
We have had many false dawns in the past regarding the permanent political solution in Northern Ireland. |
|
As its tenth anniversary dawns, Dexia has chosen to share its vision of banking and to increase its renown as a European group. |
|
I think also that as a new millennium dawns, it would be wise to chart the state of the university and its functions. |
|
As the engine races to a crescendo, we head off along what appears to be a new-mown field, then just as it dawns on me that this is the airstrip, we are airborne. |
|
As a new year dawns, maintaining profitability is likely to be at the top of the priority list of many business owners. |
|
|
As Anzac Day dawns this year, it might be time for a new pledge. |
|
Shaun's grief with his girlfriend and his mom is the focal crisis of his life until it gradually dawns on him that London is overrun with groaning, flesh-eating living dead. |
|
Those born into servitude, however benign and remote the oppression may seem, cannot know fully what it is to be free until the day of liberation actually dawns. |
|
Liberal Democrats were in buoyant mood this week, leaner, hungrier and more convinced than ever that their party's long history of false dawns could soon be over. |
|
There must not be any more lost opportunities or false dawns. |
|
Through thirty years of setbacks, false dawns, raised and disappointed hopes, he kept at the peace process until it bore fruit in the Good Friday Agreement. |
|
Few believe credit markets will spring back to normal as 2009 dawns. |
|
A multitude of fraternal spirits unites and guides us as we sow new dawns. |
|
How to give the continent the chance to experience luminous dawns? |
|
The light dawns and Rhys becomes a zealous member of the chapel and is set on the path towards being a preacher after all. |
|
This long convulsion of anonymous, pulses of dawns that don't survive, tourism of black vultures above the dunghills, people as wild beasts eating the unserviceable, light signal pollution and gathering of beggars. |
|
According to Yogic tradition, wisdom dawns when the realisation and insight of the Wisdom Chakra is integrated with the compassion and caring of the Heart Chakra. |
|
But Lucas knows about false dawns, and is not getting carried away. |
|
That, if little else, can be said with certainty as a new season dawns. |
|
However, considerable risks remain and the committee will remember past recessions that featured false dawns and 'double dips', which it will be keen to avoid. |
|
History is littered with false dawns following the collapse of tyrannies. |
|
In the cold dawns and the cold dusks of October, they hit like hammers, some days on the surface, some days below it, a mass idiosyncrasy that is not well understood. |
|
Its significance dawns on you with the leisureliness of shock, in the state of mind that occupies, for example, the moment — a foretaste of eternity — after you have slipped on an icy sidewalk and before you hit the ground. |
|
There have been some false dawns on prospective buyers and developments over many years. |
|
There have been a few false dawns but I think we are finally within sight of this road being resurfaced. |
|
|
The Toon Army are used to false dawns but if Pardew can deliver three points today, the future may look a little brighter. |
|
We don''t want any more false dawns but need to create something that will deliver jobs and a better future. |
|
The idea of reopening the line was first mooted in 1995 but the Aln Valley Railway Trust has suffered a series of delays and false dawns. |
|
If you haven't yet experienced it, you will soon: The day dawns for every parent when he or she is no longer the driving influence in a child's life. |
|
As a new year dawns, we are filled with a renewed sense of hope. |
|
It prompts us to feel and answer the newness of every day that dawns. |
|
The curmudgeon can point out that there have been false dawns before. |
|
After countless false dawns, Japan may at last have the combination of political circumstance and economic exigency to make reform inevitable and, in Mr Abe, a leader with the nous to bring it about. |
|
With the Middle East geopolitical order upended by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Iran is becoming a key player as a new era dawns in this part of the world. |
|
It dawns on me that within the dictionary and within the context of discrimination there is negative discrimination and there is affirmative discrimination. |
|
For them, each day is a new day that dawns. |
|
After a number of false dawns in the 1970s, this approach has produced a range of reliable hybrid cultivars now commercially available in North America and Europe. |
|
There have been many false dawns over the past seven years for the relatives of the men who lost their lives serving their country with distinction. |
|
He came to the land of the Bluenoses, in the middle of a great nation, but where success in battle had not been tasted for many a long year, despite many false dawns. |
|
In modern history, the end of the early period falls in the late eighteenth century, as an Age of Revolutions dawns, beginning with those in North America and France. |
|
The whole community is gripped with excitement as the big wedding day dawns, for which friends and relations have returned to the island from around the world. |
|