Every night, he dreams about still being in the prisoner-of-war camp and being beaten.
He dreams himself into ancient Rome, where, now called Oedipus, he confronts real despots and real danger.
Yet even as he dreams of an initial public offering, Brownell is entering his most vulnerable season.
So far his new bosses at Amgen are letting him be, but he dreams of going off on his own.
He dreams of creating a cable channel: all Vegas, all the time.
He dreams of profits made selling galvanised steel, as he did when Pakistan briefly allowed imports of it after the 2005 earthquake in Kashmir.
He dreams that, by the time he turns 60, he will be a world-class master of architecture who bridges the worlds of Internet technology and architectural art.
He dreams of a newspaper group with a tiny core of journalists whose copy is adapted for use across a swathe of papers, upmarket and downmarket, regional and national.
He dreams of one day restoring Havana's historic architecture.
He dreams of a day, a decade or more away, when doctors will routinely and rapidly churn out the individual maps of thousands of patients, spotting the genetic errors that cause an array of dysfunctions or diseases.
It is a vision embraced by the club's founder, Maurice Engler, a former guidance counselor at the school who said he dreams of creating a network of poker teams across the city to akin to what's in place for chess.
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He dreams of building gigawatt-size plants, of shipping solar thermal power to the cloudy Northeast and of using molten salt to store energy so thermal plants can power homes at night. (Nevada Solar One is only for daytime peak loads.) He envisions mirrors in space that can soak up sunlight 24 hours a day.
He had dreams of being cheered as he entered the National Stadium in Nairobi.
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To this day, he said he still has dreams that he's working for O'Reilly, much like adults might dream they are missing a math test in school.
He saw dreams as a symptom of our perpetual struggle with our more fundamental, animal selves.
His ascension to superstardom had just begun, and he told me about the big dreams he had for himself.
He has dreams, too, nightmares about filthy pelting storms and attacks by mysterious strangers on him and his family.
Even if he had dreams of significant new domestic spending programs, it is unlikely that the Republican-controlled House would accommodate them.
When the depression hit, the jobs dried up and my grandfather went home, but he had dreams for his own children, who came to America several decades later.
Barrett spoke of so many grand dreams he made me proud for my adopted Ireland.
He has new dreams of going to college and maybe even becoming a lawyer.
Mike is a narcoleptic: every time he blacks out, he has lyrical dreams composed of imagery from his childhood.
However, he believes that Dreams is doing an excellent job mitigating this challenge.
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Yet at his best he could render dreams on film with a gossamer-light facility that continues to beguile us.
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While books and movies may be old hat for Crichton, having his own dinosaur species satisfies dreams he barely knew he had.
He not only made his own dreams come true, but he inspired us all to achieve our fullest potential.
But, when he had to decide between a dream posting in a position he coveted and sowing his own entrepreneurial dreams of opening a surf school, he caught the wave.
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