Many non-military people are also familiar with the 24-hour clock, such as my 
wife, who was in nursing for 40 years.  American medical people are all fluent 
in 24-hour TODs. 
Bill Fairchild 

----- Original Message -----

From: "John Gilmore" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, March 10, 2014 2:11:43 PM 
Subject: Re: Another reason to hate the time change 

Every American who has been in  the military has perforce mastered and 
used the 24-hour clock.  Adopt it for your report, explaining what it 
is in an attached text note for the first 15 days for which it is 
used. 

The twelve-hour clock has nothing to recommend it.  Anciently, there 
were not two but three suffixes, viz., 

o AM, ante meridiem, as in antebellum or antecedent, before noon, 

o M, meridies, noon, middle of the day, and 

o PM, post meridiem, as in postwar, afternoon. 

This scheme did parse, but dumbing down has destroyed it 

The latin case endings are now all but unknown; hoi polloi have 
somehow lost meridies and M entirely; and I now hear speculation about 
whether noon is AM or PM, about whether, that is, it is noon before 
noon or noon after noon. 

Dump it, and tough out the complaints you will hear.  They will 
subside quickly, and you will be surprised to discover that you have 
many allies. 


John Gilmore, Ashland, MA 01721 - USA 

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