It hasn't emerged from hibernation yet, from the article it says Sunday morning, right?
I hope it wakes up, ESA said themselves, that the turning their probe, Rosetta, online after it's hibernation, was the most intense moment.
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory says it wakes up 2 hours from now (3:00 EST), sends out a signal about an hour and a half later, which they should receive about 8.5 hours from now (9:30 EST)
http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/news_center/news/20141113.php
According to that site they've woken it from hibernation on average twice a year to test systems, do trial runs, and collect data