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EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT |
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DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME |
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DST Begins |
DST Ends |
Summertime |
Summertime |
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at 2 a.m. |
at 2 a.m. |
period begins |
period ends |
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at 1 a.m. UT |
at 1 a.m. UT |
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2001 |
1-Apr |
28-Oct |
25-Mar |
28-Oct |
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2002 |
7-Apr |
27-Oct |
31-Mar |
27-Oct |
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2003 |
6-Apr |
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30-Mar |
26-Oct |
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2004 |
4-Apr |
31-Oct |
28-Mar |
31-Oct |
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2005 |
3-Apr |
30-Oct |
27-Mar |
30-Oct |
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2006 |
2-Apr |
29-Oct |
26-Mar |
29-Oct |
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2007 |
11-Mar |
4-Nov |
25-Mar |
28-Oct |
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2008 |
9-Mar |
2-Nov |
30-Mar |
26-Oct |
Date change in 2007
On August
8, 2005, President George W. Bush signed the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
This Act changed the time change dates in the U.S. Beginning in 2007, DST will
begin on the second Sunday of March, and end the first Sunday of November. Note
that the Secretary shall report to Congress on the impact of this change.
Congress retains the right to revert the Daylight Saving Time back to the 2005
time schedules once the Department study is complete.
Spelling & grammar
The
official spelling is Daylight Saving Time, not Daylight SavingS Time.
Saving is used here as a verbal adjective (a
participle). It modifies time and tells us more about its nature;
namely, that it is characterized by the activity of saving daylight. It is a saving
daylight kind of time. Similar examples would be dog walking time or
book reading time. Since saving is a verb describing a single
type of activity, the form is singular.
Nevertheless,
many people feel the word savings (with an 's')
flows more mellifluously off the tongue, and Daylight Savings Time is
also in common usage, and can be found in dictionaries.
Part of the
confusion is because the phrase Daylight Saving Time is inaccurate,
since no daylight is actually saved. Daylight Shifting Time would be
better, but it is not as politically desirable.
When in the morning?
In the
In the
Some
Daylight
Saving Time, for the
A safety reminder
Many fire
departments encourage people to change the battery in the smoke detector when
they change their clocks, because it can be so easy to forget otherwise.
"A working smoke detector more than doubles a person's chances of
surviving a home fire," says William McNabb of the Troy Fire Department in
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