| Sunday, Mar. 1,
2009 |
St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
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For Leapers,
Another Year Without A Birthday
by Molly Morris
Feb. 28, 2009 -- Living among
we mere mortals in the Virgin
Islands, is a person – one of 1,461
born each year – a very special
being termed a "Leaper."
Leap Year Babies have their own
honor society, countless web pages,
and heaven knows what else -- maybe
special diets. Anyhow, the
territory's own Leaper, Sen. Louis
Patrick Hill, is modest about his
accomplishment.
Your chance of being born on a
leap year day is about 1 in 1461
(the next leap year is 2012). Put
another way, only 0.0684 percent of
the world's population are Leapers,
according to the
Honor Society of Leap Year Babies.
Informed of this impressive
feat, Hill seemed, well, merely
mortal.
"Really?" he said.
Growing up one of several
children on Dominica, Hill says his
birthday was not at all special. "We
didn't celebrate any birthdays," he
said. "It was not a big celebration
for me. It was a tough time growing
up. I was 18, and working before my
mother ever had any money to
celebrate. We just didn't do it; it
wasn't part of our experience."
Speaking from St. John Saturday
morning, Hill was pumped up, but not
because of his date of birth. He had
just completed another tough
experience, one of his own choosing
– the 13th annual 8 Tuff Miles race
from Cruz Bay and Coral Bay on St.
John.
Still kind of panting, Hill
said, "The race was exhilarating, a
wonderful time. I always enjoy it,
this is my third time. And I always
love being on St. John." An avid
runner, Hill is almost as familiar a
figure at racing events as in his
last six years at the Earle B.
Ottley Legislative Hall.
About that birthday. "Four
years ago, on my 46th birthday, my
wife, Desiree, threw me the best
birthday party I ever had," Hill
said. "It was at Coral World, loads
of friends, very sweet."
Actually, there's not a whole
lot of political folk holding the
day special; a web search revealed
no other politicians of great note.
Entertainers rank a bit better,
depending. They include Swing Era
musician Jimmy Dorsey and the
perhaps less notable Tempest Storm,
highly regarded in San Francisco
stripping circles of the 1950s. The
rapper and actor Ja Rule is a
Leaper, too, as is motivational
speaker Tony Robbins.
The Leapers are a spirited
bunch. The Honor Society says a
movement to put Leap Year Day on the
calendar is afoot.
"Leap Year Day is the world's
extra day," Honor Society devotees
say. "If Groundhog Day is on the
calendar, how about Leap Year? It's
the world's extra day."
A somewhat unscientific Source
poll has revealed there is at least
one other Virgin Island Leaper of
Note: His name is Clyde, and he is
said to be very sociable; however,
he had his nose buried in kibble and
declined an interview.
He is a one-year-old -- give or
take -- Rottweiler belonging to
Unise Tranberg, owner of Pier 69
Restaurant in Frederiksted.
For the more scholarly types,
here's a bit of background from
wikipedia. In the Gregorian
calendar, the current standard
calendar in most of the world, most
years whose division by 4 equals an
integer are leap years. In each leap
year, the month of February has 29
days instead of 28. Adding an extra
day to the calendar every four years
compensates for the fact that a
period of 365 days is shorter than a
solar year by almost six hours.
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