On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 8:10 PM, Andrew Paprocki <andrew@ishiboo.com> wrote:
On Sat, May 5, 2012 at 4:06 PM, Arthur David Olson <arthurdavidolson@gmail.com> wrote:
Is September 13 the right date? What's the right time of day? Do any Russian newspapers front pages provide clues? Thanks for any light folks can shed.
Published on the BBC Ex-USSR newswire on September 11, 2011 was: "Programme summary of Khabarovsk's Guberniya TV weekly news 0800 GMT"
"8. 1120 Soon Maritime Territory will become one hour closer to the Moscow time zone than Khabarovsk, presenter says. Correspondent details the changes in the time zones distribution in Russia over a map. Deputies of the regional legislative assembly lobbied for a six-hour difference with Moscow too, but fortunately, the region has preserved its status quo. Correspondent talks about other regions where a time shift has taken place. Video shows a deputy advocating a time shift for the territory and people protesting against the idea."
Given that it says "Soon ... will become" on September 11th, that rules out September 6th. Although it does not explicitly say September 13th, that interpretation makes sense.
-Andrew
Also found this, indicating September 12th is the official date: http://www.rg.ru/2011/09/13/vremya.html "Yesterday came into force was published in the "Russian newspaper" September 6 government decree , under which the territory of Russia is set nine time zones, and transition to "winter" time is canceled." http://img.rg.ru/img/content/52/39/07/5579_3.gif