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Word: nap (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...individual but found nothing out of the ordinary. Musical Spaces Wednesday, July 26, 1:41 a.m.: Officers were dispatched to a report of an individual switching parking spaces near the Grant Street Parking Lot. The officers found the driver, who claimed that he was only attempting to take a nap. The case was closed. Get your Alcohol! Wednesday, July 26, 11:58 p.m.: Officers were dispatched to investigate a report of two individuals passing alcohol out to others in public. Officers were unable to find the two purported distributors. —JENNIFER LIEN, EVI HEILBRUNN, MATTHEW WILLMOTT

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Police Log, July 21-26 | 7/28/2006 | See Source »

...next day, after Rusty had left to run errands, Andrea told her mother Jutta that she was going to nap. Andrea then took at least 40 pills of her mother's trazodone, an antidepressant prescribed to help Jutta sleep. Andrea was lying unconscious in her mother's bed when Jutta walked in, saw the empty bottle and called 911. An ambulance arrived, with Rusty following behind. As paramedics carried Andrea away on a stretcher, her sons sobbed uncontrollably...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Yates Odyssey | 7/26/2006 | See Source »

...Napping has had the hardest time gaining traction, despite the scientific evidence in its favor. A study by NASA found, for example, that a 26-minute nap increased pilots' performance 34%. "What other management strategy will improve people's performance 34% in 26 minutes?" asks Mark Rosekind, president of Alertness Solutions, a fatigue-management consultancy, and the former NASA scientist who conducted the research. Yet most businesses still reject public napping. According to a survey by William Anthony, a Boston University professor of rehabilitation counseling who created National Napping Day, 70% of respondents who sleep at work do so secretly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Place for the Power Nap | 7/6/2006 | See Source »

...Where nap facilities are provided, sleep experts say, most employers offer them mainly as a perk to retain workers; the productivity and health benefits are often an afterthought. In the offices of Kaye/Bassman, a corporate headhunting firm in Dallas, a spiffy new relaxation room features $4,500 massage chairs, headphones and a four-way dimmer for the lights. CEO Jeff Kaye says he installed the room primarily as a fun reward for his employees, but he also sees the benefits for productivity. "After a stressful negotiation, people need to unplug," he says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Place for the Power Nap | 7/6/2006 | See Source »

MetroNaps, a company that pioneered the concept of selling naps in sleep environments, is seeing the change in corporate attitudes firsthand. The New York City-- based company opened its first sleep-pod center in 2004 in the Empire State Building, a place where workers could pay $14 and discreetly tuck in to one of the pod-shaped, hooded recliners for a midday nap and recharge for 20 minutes. The company is expanding the concept with franchises -- the first one opened in New York City's financial district in March -- but MetroNaps co-founder Arshad Chowdhury says he is discovering...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Place for the Power Nap | 7/6/2006 | See Source »

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