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They had a chance at survival but it was more likely that they would never see daylight again.
CNN: Chilean miners waited for death
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But, the government-owned corporation says that an Android release is in the hopper and should see daylight this fall.
ENGADGET: Amtrak readies conductors to trade in their hole punchers for iPhones
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Registered reps who sat at desks and could see daylight wrote orders on slips of paper which went on the tracks.
FORBES: Occupy Wall Street - Forget Carried Interest - Here is How to Really Stick it to the Hedge Funds
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Even more-radical ideas also might see daylight, such as a federal takeover of higher education from the states or universal free higher education.
FORBES: Don't Fear The Higher Ed Bubble, Obama Will Keep Reflating It
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That pigs living out in their little huts and eating swill as they have done over generations are better off than those who never really see daylight.
BBC: Foot-and-mouth: Do you want a public inquiry?
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So he's nearly lined up now - he'll be looking to see daylight down the side of the ship so as he can go ahead safely to get through the passageway.
BBC: Ӣ���˵Ĺ���
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Chickens, for instance, never see daylight, but are mostly kept in long, dark, stifling sheds where they stand in their own waste, fatted with corn until they are slaughtered, in a mere forty-nine days.
NEWYORKER: Food, Inc.
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Could be a while before you see daylight.
NPR: Excerpt: 'The Broken Shore'
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It probably seemed like a good idea at the time of filing (2009) when other force-sensing options had yet to hit market, but this one seems unlikely to see daylight -- though, you never know.
ENGADGET: Sony patent claims touch force detection via microphone
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But when most voters look at the two of you, they don't see a lot of daylight between you on policy.
CNN: Transcript of Thursday's Democratic presidential debate
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The forces of darkness (pun intended) seem to be massing against Rebecca Harris's Daylight Saving Bill (see earlier posting).
BBC: Is night falling on Daylight Saving Bill?
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On average, New Yorkers see 3, 147 fewer minutes of daylight in September than they do in August, the biggest drop of any month, according to the study.
WSJ: Is the 'September Swoon' for Real?