UW-Eau Claire’s Ava Bullert earns the 2026 WIAC Women’s Ice Hockey Judy Kruckman Scholar-Athlete Award, recognizing academic, athletic and leadership excellence.
Since 1918, the clocks in Creston, a town in eastern British Columbia, ran an hour ahead of nearby communities for half the year. For the other six months, they slipped back into sync. Not because the ...
A pilot program described by the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority as a way to "travel on your terms" made its debut ...
The Canadian province is permanently ending the biannual time shifts for more light at the day's end. But research shows ...
Daylight savings time takes effect on Sunday, March 8 — and it will be the last time most BC residents turn their clocks ...
The No. 15 Boston College men’s hockey team stumbled and tumbled into the Hockey East tournament. Northeastern extended BC’s losing streak to four games with a 4-2 victory in the regular season finale ...
The premier of the Canadian province of British Columbia, David Eby, explains why this Sunday is the beginning of a new era ...
Yipee. An extra hour of daylight at the end of the day. Not only will we get that tomorrow with tonight's one-hour 'spring forward'.
No springing forward here! Saskatchewan has been observing Mountain Daylight Time (which was called Central Standard Time) year-round since 1966.
Don't forget to "spring forward" one hour tonight (Sunday, 2 a.m.) as Daylight Saving Time (DST) is back this weekend.
It’s time to spring forward – again. Daylight saving time, when most Americans set their clocks forward one hour, starts this weekend.
Most British Columbians will wake up Sunday having lost an hour of sleep — one that they'll never gain back come November, given the province will have shifted to permanent daylight time year-round.