The end of daylight saving? Georgia lawmakers vote to end twice-yearly time changes
Georgia lawmakers want to stop changing their clock twice a year, saying shifting from standard time to daylight saving time and back is disruptive. Share Updated: 7:13 AM EST Feb 25, 2021 Associated Press
The end of daylight saving? Georgia lawmakers vote to end twice-yearly time changes
Georgia lawmakers want to stop changing their clock twice a year, saying shifting from standard time to daylight saving time and back is disruptive. Share Updated: 7:13 AM EST Feb 25, 2021
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Show Transcript daylight saving time is just around the corner. And if you re asking yourself whether we re gaining or losing an hour, sleep sadly, the ladder. And if you think just one hour of sleep gone is not that big of a deal. Think again, according to muscle. It can have a huge impact on our bodies. The body s production and levels of melatonin hormone that
What Winter Was Like the Year You Were Born
By Rachel Cavanaugh, Stacker News
On 2/6/21 at 9:00 AM EST
The United States has seen a wide range of winters over the past century everything from warm, mild years where folks could stroll leisurely through parks in February, to turbulent, frigid seasons where people had to hunker down inside. There were years where blizzards swept in unannounced, covering huge swaths of the country in blankets of snow, while other years brought hurricane-force winds to cities and towns across the nation.
The Midwest region is particularly susceptible to cold winters, especially in states like Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Michigan. In these places, residents lie in the path of both the low-pressure systems that originate in Alberta and travel southward (sometimes called Canadian clippers ) and the shortwave low-pressure systems that come from the southwest, traveling northeast toward the Great Lakes region (also cal