Dan Conners wore number 45 when he played for the Miami Hurricanes.
Kevin Garnett wore number 5 during his basketball career.
The people of Pompeii in 79 AD typically wore tunics made of wool or linen, which were draped and belted. Both men and women wore sandals or shoes made of leather or cloth. Wealthier individuals might have worn more elaborate clothing made of silk or dyed fabrics.
The rich wore silk. The poor wore ramie and hemp. After 200 B.C. cotton was used by the poor as clothing.
Kobe Bryant chose to wear number 8 during the early part of his career with the Lakers because it was the number he wore as a youth in Italy. He later switched to number 24 to symbolize a new chapter and to honor his growth and evolution as a player.
Alex Rodriguez wore number 3 on the Seattle Mariners. He also wore the number 3 when he played for the Texas Rangers.
Leonard Weaver, Fullback wore it.
Alex Rodriguez wore the number 3 from 1994 - 2003 with the Seattle Mariners, and Texas Rangers, then wore the number 13 with the Yankees from 2004 to the present (2009).
Ewing wore # 33.
Ray Allen
2000-2005 he wore #30 in honor of his dad Ken Sr. He had #24 in Seattle but in Cincinnati the number was already retired (Tony Perez). He also changed his number to 3 for the 2006-2008 seasons.
Curt Warner, RB, wore number 28 for the Seattle Seahawks from 1983-1989.
The pajamas that Meg Ryan wore in Sleepless in Seattle were a pair of pajamas that her daughter wore. The creator of the pajamas is unknown.
Lofa Tatupu wore #51 and now it is worn by Bruce Irvin.
Randy Johnson number 41Randy Johnson wore uniform number 41 with the New York Yankees during the 2004, and 2005 seasons. He wore uniform number 51 every other year with the Montreal Expos, Seattle Mariners, and the Arizona Diamondbacks. During the 1993 season with the Seattle Mariners for some reason he wore both numbers 34, and 51.
Hank Aaron wore uniform number 5 his first year for the 1954 Milwaukee Braves, and "The hammer" wore number 44 for the rest of his career.
Davey Johnson wore number 5 when he managed the Mets from 1984 to 1990.