Word: sleeps
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...stuffed Elmo toys, and even a two-year-old climbing over my lap to get his ninja sword, I resigned myself to my fate. Forget dreams of that hot romance instigated in JetBlue row 24. Hell, forget even catching up on some of that forgotten homework. My only option: sleep and pretend this wasn’t happening...
...once over the course of the year, and 10 percent said they had seriously considered committing suicide. Although Harvard students may have heavy workloads, Barreira said that a recent national survey did not find Harvard students more likely to be depressed. Depression is characterized by mood and appetite changes, sleep problems, and loss of energy. “People develop really negative thinking that has no basis in reality” which seems rational to the sufferer, Barreira said. Anxiety disorders are the most common mental illness, affecting 11 percent of the population in a general medical setting, he said...
...never get much sleep at a patrol base at night. In Ramadi, where Marines man several combat outposts amid the inner city, darkness often brings fear as Iraqi security forces come and go, leaving some Marines wondering whether they are among friends or enemies. In Ghazaliya, a violent neighborhood in western Baghdad with similar combat outposts, nearby gunfire cracks through the inky blackness outside seemingly every time you drift off. And in Diyala Province, where nine U.S. soldiers died Monday, troops stand watch on rooftops overlooking stretches of palm groves where they know insurgents dwell, waiting for the right moment...
...polish off a bit of reading for one of the three philosophy classes that round out his course load this semester. But despite having attended a Delta Gamma sorority formal in Boston the previous night, he doesn’t appear to be affected by a lack of sleep. The thrust of this morning’s breakfast meeting is the issue of how to ensure voter turnout for the upcoming referendum. With Petersen planning to use the results as an advocacy tool in a push for a new College calendar, widespread student participation in the vote is crucial.Sundquist puts...
...Donohue was interviewed by two University police officers. They told her she didn't have to go to any more classes that day. They offered to find her a hotel room and offered to get her medication to help her sleep. The two officers who interviewed her, however, hadn't seen the crime scene themselves, she says. "They really didn't know what had happened, " she says...