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Change to daylight saving time takes biggest health toll today
In the U.S., daylight saving time was first used during World War I to conserve resources. It was reinstated again during World War II until Sept. 1945. The Uniform Time Act of 1966 made a standardized system to observe daylight saving time.
WASHINGTON – Some Metro riders were charged too much for their Monday morning ride, and the wits has to do with the start of Daylight Saving Time. Metro had to "spring forward" on Sunday just like everyone else, but an automatic software update
A new survey — OK, it's by the mattress industry, but still — shows that the morning after the “spring forward” time change that takes away an hour of our precious sleep, 61 percent of Americans are dragging. (That day would be today, if you forgot
Bringing up the rear a release hour may seem trivial in the scheme of things, but medical researchers have spent a excellent amount of time investigating some of the health consequences of switching to daylight saving time. Here are some of the things they have learned:
I never use an alarm clock (never have). I don't seem to need much sleep, and I let my body wake me up whenever it wants to. Daylight savings means I start.
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