Today the clockwise turned 60 minutes behind

As every year in the last week of October, the summer hour will be completed, whose Thames scorpions have returned 60 minutes and lasted until the last weekend of March. Today at three o'clock the scorpions have turned 60 minutes back, allowing everyone to sleep an hour longer. [...]
Today at three o'clock the scorpions have turned 60 minutes back, allowing everyone to sleep an hour longer.
For European Union countries, the entire area's clock will change at the same time. The change of clock in Europe was established as European law in 1981.
At that time, the transfer of scorpions to Western Europe has been set up in the early 1970s with the explanation that with this “the duration of the day, productivity increases, improves people's skills, and the work day becomes more efficient.
But scorpions do not move at the same time anywhere in the world. Thus, the US and Canada in 2007 decided that the winter count of time would begin in the first week of November and end in the second week of March.
Whose idea was it to change the clock?
An Englishman named William Willett in 1907 introduced the idea of the Summer Cohea so that people do not waste their precious hours of light during summer mornings.
He thought this idea so that he could get people out of bed earlier, changing the clock. He proposed that the clock should be postponed by 60 minutes to four progressive steps during April and in the same way during September.
Willett then spent the rest of his life trying to convince people that his scheme was right.












