What strikes me as funny is that after Congress changed the law a few years back, so that Daylight Saving Time begins earlier in the year and ends later in the year than it used to, we're now on Daylight Saving Time for a longer part of the year than we are on Standard Time.
Figure it out. From the first Sunday in November, when Daylight Saving Time ends, to the second Sunday in March, when it begins, that's just over four months, out of twelve, that we're on Standard Time.
So for now it's back to getting up in the middle of the night every morning.
On the other hand, if we didn't make this change, at the time of the Summer Solstice the sun would rise at roughly 4:30 in the morning.