From the 
 
What Happened on February 29th ....... 

1288 - Scotland established this day as one when a woman could
propose marriage to a man! If he refused, he was required to pay a fine.

 1704 - The town of Deerfield, MA was raided on this date by French
 Canadians and Indians who were trying to retrieve their church bell that
 had been shipped from France. The bell was to hang in the Canadian
 Indian's village church. Neither the raiders nor the residents of Deerfield
 were aware that the bell had been stolen from the ship. The Deerfield
 folks had purchased the bell from a privateer, unaware that it belonged to
 the Indian congregation. Although 47 people were killed in the incident,
 we could say that the 120 captured were saved by the bell.

 1860 - The first electric tabulating machine -- the forerunner of the
 calculator -- was invented by Herman Hollerith. We think it was
 unfortunate that Mr. Hollerith chose to make his invention on Leap Day,
 causing the machine to only calculate numbers divisible by four.

 1904 - On this day in Washington, DC, a seven-man commission was
 created to hasten the construction of the Panama Canal. Work began
 May 4th. It's always hard to get something going by committee; so we
 guess that's why it took seven men two months to get the work going.

 1920 - Dateline -- Budapest, Hungary: Miklos Horthy de Nagybanya
 became the Regent of Hungary just six months after leading a
 counterrevolution. He probably gained control because everyone else
 was distracted while trying to pronounce his name.

 1932 - Bing Crosby and the Mills Brothers teamed up to record "Shine"
  for Brunswick Records.

1936 - Fanny Brice brought her little girl character "Baby Snooks" to
 radio on "The Ziegfeld Follies of the Air" on CBS Radio. Miss Brice
 presented the character and later sang "My Man" on the program. She
 was 44 at the time, and was known as America's "Funny Girl" long
 before Barbra Streisand brought her even greater fame and notoriety
 nearly 30 years later.

 1940 - Hattie McDaniel was the first black person to win an Oscar. She
 won the Best Supporting Actress award for her role as Mammy in "Gone
 with the Wind". GWTW also won Best Picture, Best Actress for Vivien
 Leigh's performance and Best Director for Victor Fleming, Best
 Screenplay for Sidney Howard's writing plus awards for Color
 Cinematography, Interior Decoration and Film Editing. Other Oscar
 winners on this night were Best Actor, Robert Dunat in "Goodbye, Mr.
 Chips", and Best Supporting Actor, Thomas Mitchell in "Stagecoach".

 1944 - The invasion of the Admiralty Islands began on this date as U.S.
 General Douglas MacArthur led his forces in "Operation Brewer".
 Troops surged onto Los Negros, following a month of Allied advances in
 the Pacific.

 1944 - The first woman appointed secretary of a national political party
 was named to the Democratic National Committee. Dorothy McElroy
 Vredenburgh of Alabama began her new appointment this day. 1944 -
 The Office of Defense Transportation, for the second year, restricted
 attendance at the Kentucky Derby to residents of the Louisville area to
 prevent a railroad traffic burden during wartime. We imagine that horses
 were allowed in from elsewhere, though...

 1952 - New York City pedestrians were told when to walk and when
 not to as four signs were installed at 44th Street and Broadway in Times
 Square. Each sign flashed "Walk" for 22 seconds, then "Don't Walk" for
 ten seconds before the "Don't Walk" turned red for 58 seconds more.
 We're told that eight out of ten people obeyed the signs ... not bad for
 New Yorkers who will walk right through one door of a car and out the
 other to get across the street quickly.

 1960 - A report from the White House stated that America's kids were
  getting too fat! I'll have a cheeseburger, fries and a shake.

 1964 - Dawn Fraser got her 36th world record this day. The Australian
 swimmer was timed at 58.9 seconds in the 100-meter freestyle in
  Sydney, Australia.

 1964 - The United States was in the grip of Beatlemania! "I Want to
 Hold Your Hand", by the lads from Liverpool, was in its 5th week at #1
 on the pop charts. It stayed there until March 21, when it was replaced
 by "She Loves You", which was replaced by "Can't Buy Me Love",
  which was finally replaced by "Hello Dolly", by Louis Armstrong, on May
 9, 1964. 14 straight weeks of #1 stuff by the Beatles! Yeah, yeah, yeah...

 1964 - Hang on to your racquets on this one, sports fans: A shuttlecock
 drive record was set by Frank Rugani this day. Mr. Rugani slammed the
  birdie 79-feet, 8-1/2 inches in a test at San Jose, CA. A giant leap for
  badminton. A little leap for all mankind.

 1972 - The U.S. Justice Department had recently settled an antitrust
 lawsuit in favor of International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation.
  On this date, newspaper columnist, Jack Anderson revealed a memo
 written by ITT's Washington lobbyist, Dita Beard, that connected ITT's
 funding of part of the Republican National Convention with the resulting
 lawsuit settlement.

1972 - Swimmer Mark Spitz was named the 1971 James E. Sullivan
Memorial Trophy winner as the top amateur athlete in America.

1972 - Karen and Richard Carpenter of Downey, CA, received a gold
record for the hit single "Hurting Each Other". When they tore the golden
platter from its protective frame and plunked it on the player, they heard,
"Hurt So Bad", by Little Anthony and the Imperials. They were so upset
by this that they ran out to the back yard and used the record as a
Frisbee for the rest of the day. (Some of the preceding is based upon
actual fact.)

1988 - "Day by Day", a situation comedy, premiered on this date on
NBC-TV. It was one of the "yuppie sitcoms" that were all over the TV
dial in the late '80s. This particular one was about a suburban
overachieving couple who dropped out and opened up a day-care center
in their home to spend more quality time with their children. The quality
time lasted just under five months.

1992 - Mr. Big hit it big this day, moving to #1 with, "To Be with You".
 It would be the biggest hit in the U.S. for three big weeks.



1996 - Four links listed in Yahoo for "Leap Year /Leap Day"
"@February 29" - links and information for leap day, leap year babies.
Leap Day - February 29th, which appears only in a leap year.
Leap Years - from the Royal Greenwich Observatory
Worldwide Leap Year Festival - Feb 29-Mar 3, 1996, in Anthony, NM/TX.
 
 
Birthday Board: February 29 
 

1736 - Ann Lee (Ann the Word or Mother Ann) (religious zealot:
founder of Shakerism in U.S.)

1792 - Gioacchino Rossini (operatic composer: The Barber of Seville)

1876 - Theodore 'Theo' Hardeen (magician)

1904 - Jimmy Dorsey (bandleader: So Rare, Contrasts, June Night)

1904 - Pepper (John) Martin (baseball: St. Louis Cardinals CF)

1920 - Arthur Franz (actor: The Member of the Wedding, Dream No Evil)

1920 - Michele Morgan (Simone Roussel) (actress: The Fallen Idol, Joan of Paris, Bluebeard, Everybody's Fine)

1920 - Howard Nemerov (Pulitzer Prize-winning poet: Collected Works [1978]; 3rd poet laureate of U.S. [1988-1990])

1924 - Al Rosen (baseball: Cleveland Indians 3rd Baseman)

1928 - Joss Ackland (actor: The Hunt for Red October, The House that
                        Dripped Blood, The Sicilian, A Woman Named Jackie)

 1936 - Jack Lousma (astronaut)

1936 - Henri Richard (The Pocket Rocket) (hockey player: Montreal
                        Canadiens: 4-time All-Star, played on 11 Stanley Cup champion teams
                        [1955 - 1975])

1940 - Gretchen Christopher (singer: group: The Fleetwoods: Mr. Blue,
                        Come Softly to Me, Tragedy)

1944 - Steve Mingori (baseball)

1944 - John Niland (football: Dallas Cowboys Guard, Super Bowl V, VI)

1948 - Al Clark (football)

1952 - Al Autry (baseball)

1972 - Antonio Sabato, Jr. (actor: Earth 2, Beyond the Law, War of the
                        Robots, Thundersquad)

 @ February 29 LEAP DAY - LEAP YEAR 1999
Chart Toppers: February 29 

                        1956
                        The Great Pretender - The Platters

                        Band of Gold - Don Cherry

                        The Poor People of Paris - Les Baxter and his Orchestra

                        I Hear You Knocking - Gale Storm

                        1964
                        I Want to Hold Your Hand - The Beatles

                        Dawn (Go Away) - The Four Seasons

                        You Don't Own Me - Leslie Gore

                        See the Funny Little Clown - Bobby Goldsboro
 
                        1972
                        Without You - Nilsson

                        Never Been to Spain - Three Dog Night

                        American Pie - Don McLean

                        It's Four in the Morning - Faron Young

                        1984
                        Jump - Van Halen

                        Girls Just Want to Have Fun - Cyndi Lauper

                        Thriller - Michael Jackson

                        Stay Young - Don Williams

                        Special thanks to 440 International Inc.