Daylight saving time ends Sunday - and Stanford study suggests it should go away for good
Briefly

Daylight saving time ends Sunday - and Stanford study suggests it should go away for good
"I'm from Asia, and we don't do this,"
"had no idea you'd have to actually adjust the clocks."
"It doesn't matter too much, but I'll take one more hour of sleep,"
"I know it's really confusing for the kids when we pick them up from daycare and it's already dark outside, especially because my eldest's afraid of the dark,"
A UC Berkeley freshman from Asia had never adjusted clocks for daylight saving time and was surprised by the practice. A junior economics student at Cal welcomed the extra hour and expected little disruption. A Berkeley parent finds the transition difficult for her 2- and 4-year-olds because earlier darkness causes confusion and fear. More than 300 million people across the U.S. will adjust when clocks change, with a reversal back to daylight saving time in March. Daylight saving time remains controversial, and recent Stanford research revisited the ongoing debate in September.
Read at The Mercury News
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