Transcript:
Mrs. Olsen: You're tardy. Caulfield: Time change. I'm half an hour early. Mrs. Olsen: You're a half hour late. Daylight-saving times ends November 4. Caulfield: I'm a month and 30 minutes early. Mrs. Olsen: Then you have 16 pages of worksheets due.
TheSkulker about 12 years ago
She got you this time Caulfield!
ReneTray about 12 years ago
Yes.
rhtatro about 12 years ago
Wouldn’t the work be past due if he is late, not early?
Olddog1 about 12 years ago
Now the first Sunday after Halloween. Heavily pushed by candy makers to let the kids stay out later collecting their goods.
QuiteDragon about 12 years ago
Nah, Caufield is a legitimate know-it-all, as opposed to one who merely deluded by hormones.
CasualBrowser about 12 years ago
Point – Mrs. Wormwood, er, Olsen.
mikel52 about 12 years ago
@catzilla23Amen
Thriller87 about 12 years ago
Yes Caufield where is all your homework?
phoenixnyc about 12 years ago
She actually wins about 1/3 of them.
lsheldon about 12 years ago
I assume the similarities with last nights “debate” is purely coincidental.
Zaristerex about 12 years ago
Daylight Saving Time is usually abbreviated DST, not DLS. There are scores of countries who used to observe DST, but have stopped doing so. Several studies show the energy savings is trivial.
runar about 12 years ago
When Franklin suggested it (he was in France at the time), he was joking. It was finally enacted during WWI for two excuses reasons: one, given publicly, was to make wartime blackouts more effective; the other, not aired about, to give fatcats more time to play golf in the summer.
DKHenderson about 2 months ago
I love it when Mrs. Olsen scores a hit! (And I would dearly have loved to have seen Caulfield’s face the moment she said that!)