As the ZzzQuill commercials say, "sleep is a beautiful thing."

Still, when college students deprive themselves of sleep to finish a paper or study for an exam, they are doing more harm than good. They also lead to impromptu naps during the day, which have resulted in the latest and greatest blog idea.

"Sleeping MIT Students," "Napping All Over Rutgers" and "Ephs Still Sleeping in Public" are three examples of blogs dedicated to capture students catching a few extra Zs in public places. The blogs are obviously meant to be lighthearted, but there are still some slightly more serious sleep deprivation undertones to them.

According to the Atlantic, any student who wanted to pay for college with no financial help would have to work 48 hours a week making minimum wage to pay for a semester's courses. This can either be a leading factor in a college student's over exhaustion or his or her mountain of student loan debt upon graduation.

It has become practically impossible for students to pay their way through school. The Atlantic reported that, in 1980, a student would have to work no more than one nine-hour day making minimum wage to pay off one credit hour at Michigan State University. Today, it would take someone 60 hours of minimum wage work to pay off one MSU credit hour.

Some students can even try to do a little bit of both, taking out as little in student loans as possible while working as many hours as possible to pay for school. There are also lower-cost education options like community college and small state schools.

With so many exhausted college students sleeping on campus, schools like UPenn are investigating the relationship between depression and anxiety and academic pressure. Princeton has also explored the importance of sleep since a lack thereof can lead to or exacerbate stress and other mental conditions.