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The young man climbs down, picks one of the hotel beds for himself, and goes to sleep.
NEWYORKER: Town of Cats
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Before Saint Andrew, there was the sun, and pagans needed a date to throw a thank-you party in its honour before it goes to sleep for the winter.
BBC: Pagan holidays in modern Ukraine
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So the lander wakes up in the morning, does some science, goes to sleep, wakes up again, doesn't remember a thing, does some science... oh, you get the idea.
ENGADGET: Anthropomorphized Mars lander in terminal "Groundhog Day" mode, tugging heartstrings
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He is limp and goes to sleep.
NEWYORKER: Magda Mandela
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Newton says she checks Facebook first thing when she wakes up, and then she checks her Facebook page as many as seven times while at work, and then she'll check Facebook again when she gets home and one more time before she goes to sleep.
CNN: Five clues that you are addicted to Facebook
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And remember, FlipShare has to be running and streaming video over the dongle the entire time you're using the set-top, so a lower-powered machine might feel the strain -- and if your computer goes to sleep, hangs, or crashes while you're watching the FlipShare, well, you won't be watching it any more.
ENGADGET: FlipShare TV review
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However, I also go to the gym every day, take time to play tennis, meditate and go to my recovery support meeting, meet with friends, and have certain times of the day that are off-limits for doing work (unless very extenuating circumstances), namely the evening from when I pick up my daughter at school until when she goes to sleep.
FORBES: The Good Enough Guide To Work-Life Balance
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Carville noted that Clinton goes on little sleep -- and refuses to slow down.
CNN: Clinton was on 'frenetic pace' before heart procedure
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When you need to take a break, close the lid and VAIO goes into an energy-efficient deep sleep, keeping your data stored safely for up to 90 days1 without running out of power.
ENGADGET: Sony announces its first Ultrabooks, the VAIO T13 and T11, for the European market
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He is a rumpled but unflappable traveller, seemingly oblivious of bad weather, uncomfortable transportation, and lack of sleep, as well as of the antiwar protesters who tend to appear wherever he goes.
NEWYORKER: The Next Crusade