Yard-a-pult

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Trinity vs. Millsaps: “The 15 Lateral Miracle”

In the final play of Trinity vs. Millsaps last year, Trinity was down by two points with 60 yards to go and two seconds left on the clock. The rest, as they say, is history. Here’s how it was done. Genius.

And here’s the actual play, executed to perfection:

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Tooled

I forgot I posted this last year until a YouTube user emailed me about it recently. A classic; a kid at a basketball game makes a run to the bathroom just before the buzzer. Keep an eye on our little blonde buddy. Most people find it difficult not to watch this one over and over and over and over…

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Daylight saving time and punctuation

Starting in 2007, daylight time began in the United States on the second Sunday of March and ended last week on the first Sunday in November. On the second Sunday in March, clocks were set ahead one hour at 2:00 a.m. local standard time, which bacame 3:00 a.m. local daylight time. On the first Sunday this November, clocks were set back one hour at 2:00 a.m. local daylight time, which became 1:00 a.m. local standard time. These dates were established by the Energy Policy Act of 2005.

Not all places in the U.S. observe daylight time. In particular, Hawaii and most of Arizona do not use it. Indiana adopted its use beginning in 2006.

In 2007, daylight time ended on November 4. In 2008, daylight time begins on March 9 and ends on November 2.

Many other countries observe some form of “summer time,” but they do not necessarily change their clocks on the same dates as the U.S.

That said, be sure you punctuate properly:

– eastern standard time (no caps); EST
– central daylight time; CDT
– mountain standard time; MST
– Pacific daylight time; PDT
– Greenwich mean time; GMT
– daylight saving time (not savings)