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Newsletter October 2014

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Partial solar eclipse on Thurs, Oct 23

Most of North America, including the United States and Canada will have front row seats to a partial solar eclipse on Thursday, October 23.

Can I see the eclipse from my city?

People on the US East Coast and in eastern Canada will see the eclipse during sunset. If you are in the Midwest or the West Coast of the U.S., you will be treated to a spectacular afternoon eclipse, weather permitting, of course.

About Solar eclipses | Photographing sunsets

Sun, Nov 2: DST ends in USA & Canada

Most of the US, Canada and some Mexican border cities will end Daylight Saving Time (DST) on Sunday, November 2, 2014. Clocks will be set back 1 hour at 2 am (2:00) to 1 am (1:00) local time.

Do I have to set my watch?

Europe Falls Back on Sunday, October 26

Europeans will turn their clocks back 1 hour in the early hours of Sunday, October 26, 2014 as DST ends on most of the continent.

Local times for DST end

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Tell us what you think!

Are you superstitious about solar eclipses?

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  1. No. I think solar eclipses are cool!
  2. I think they affect human behavior and the weather.
  3. I am not overly superstitious, but it can't hurt to be careful.
  4. I hate solar eclipses! They are evil omens!
  5. Solar eclipses are lucky. They bring good luck!
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Time Zone News

 

 ▶Fiji starts DST on Nov 2, 2014

 ▶Papua New Guinea adds a new time zone


Did you know...

...that many ancient cultures believed that a solar eclipse happens when a demon or a mythical animal tries to eat the Sun?

More solar eclipse myths


Tip of the month

Protect your eyes!
Never look directly at the Sun, even during an eclipse! Don't have protective eclipse glasses?
Make a pinhole projector!


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