Soviet time zone rule change on 1991/03/31
Arthur David Olson
ado
Sat Mar 30 04:53:05 UTC 1991
The attached from Paul Eggert should be of interest.
It looks as if three sets of "Rule" lines for the Soviet Union will be needed;
while they should clearly be called SU-Thesis, SU-Antithesis, and SU-Synthesis,
which should be which is debatable.
--ado
> From daemon at ncifcrf.gov Sat Mar 23 18:08:44 1991
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> Date: Sat, 23 Mar 91 13:46:25 PST
> From: yata!eggert at twinsun.com (Paul Eggert)
> Message-Id: <9103232146.AA04965 at yata.mv.la.ca.us>
> To: ado at ncifcrf.gov, buz at csd.hku.hk, moraes at cs.toronto.edu, rsalz at bbn.com
> Subject: Soviet time zone rule change on 1991/03/31 (``go to bed as usual'')
> Status: RO
>
> [Is there a mailing list or newsgroup for time zones in software?
> Anyway, just to show that the US has no monopoly on time zone screwups,
> here's a story from the Los Angeles Times, 1991/03/22, page A18.
> Of course they blame it all on Stalin. -- Paul <eggert at twinsun.com>]
>
>
> Soviets Get Clocks Back on Track--and It's About Time
>
> >From Associated Press
>
> MOSCOW--Red-faced Soviet officials are admitting they haven't kept the
> correct time in more than six decades, blaming a mistake in the Stalin
> era when clocks should have bene turned back an hour.
>
> As a result, officials are scrapping the Soviet version of
> daylight-saving time this summer. Clocks, however, will still ``fall
> back'' an hour in the autumn.
>
> All this timekeeping havoc is bound to further baffle a nation that has
> had its share of confusion for 1991.
>
> March 31 is when clocks usually are moved forward an hour for summer
> time in the Soviet Union, which has 11 time zones.
>
> But the Council of Ministers has decreed that the move won't be made
> for most of the Soviet Union--the huge Russion Federation, which
> includes Moscow; Armenia; Azerbaijan; Byelorussia; Turkmenia and the
> Ukraine.
>
> The republics of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Moldova, however, will
> follow their rebellious tradition and move their clocks ahead as
> before.
>
> To confound the masses even more, Tadzhikistan, parts of Kazakhstan and
> some other regions will actually set their clocks back an hour to
> better organize daylight hours, the decree said.
>
> According to the newspaper Evening Moscow, the move was made to correct
> a 61-year-old mistake.
>
> ``In 1930, it was decided to introduce summer time and move the hands
> of clocks one hour ahead,'' the paper said. ``In the passage of time,
> they did not announce winter time'' in the fall of 1930, leaving the
> country with a single time year-round.
>
> In 1981, it was decided to restore the seasonal time change. But when
> the clocks were moved forward an hour that spring, the country wound up
> with two extra hours of sunlight during summer instead of the intended
> one.
>
> Officials figured that the end of March--the regular date to move
> clocks ahead--was the best time to correct the imbalance. ``On March
> 31, one should not move the hands of the clock ahead, but go to bed as
> usual,'' the newspaper advised.
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