Arizona Daily Wildcat Online
sections
Front Page
News
Sports
· Football
· Basketball
Opinions
· Columnists
Live Culture
GoWild
Police Beat
Datebook
Comics
Crossword
Online Crossword
Photo Spreads
Special Sections
Classifieds
The Wildcat
Letter to the Editor
Wildcat staff
Search
Archives
Job Openings
Advertising Info
Student Media
Arizona Student Media info
UATV - student TV
KAMP - student radio
Daily Wildcat staff alumni

News
Fastfacts


Photo
Illustration by Arnie Bermudez
Arizona Daily Wildcat
Monday, December 1, 2003
Print this

Things you always never wanted to know

  • In the late 19th century, doctors discovered a Mexican porter named Paul Rodrigues who had a bone more than 4 inches long protruding from the upper part of his forehead. The horn was divided into three principal shafts and had a circumference of about 14 inches. Rodrigues wore a special pointed cap to hide it. But that case was by no means unique. Sir W.J. Erasmus Wilson, a 19th century English dermatologist, recorded 90 cases of human horns ÷ 44 females and 46 males. Of these 90 cases, the majority of the horns were situated on the head. A few, however, grew from the face (several from the nose), thighs, back, foot and one from the penis.

  • The sensitivity of the human eye is so keen that on a clear, moonless night, a person standing on a mountain peak can see a match struck as far as 50 miles away. Much to their amazement, astronauts in orbit around Earth were able to see the wakes of ships.

  • A Harvard student on his way home to visit his parents fell between two railroad cars at a station in Jersey City, N. J., and was rescued by an actor on his way to visit a sister in Philadelphia. The student was Robert Lincoln, heading for 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The actor was Edwin Booth, the brother of the man who a few weeks later would murder the student's father.

  • In July 1585, 108 Englishmen landed at Roanoke Island off the coast of North Carolina. Sponsored by Sir Walter Raleigh, the settlers built a fort and houses, planted crops and sought gold. Hurricanes and hostile American Indians forced them to return to England within a year. In 1587, another 118 colonists arrived, among them the parents of Virginia Dare, the first English baby born in the New World. The leader of the colony, John White, sailed back to England after a few weeks in order to get more provisions. When he returned to Roanoke in 1591, he found it deserted. The word "Croatoan" was carved on a tree, and no one to this day knows what happened to the settlers.


    Write a Letter to the Editor
  • articles
    Wildcats hire Stoops
    divider
    Law school fees will rise for new students
    divider
    Campus Health to move over break into new, bigger Highland offices
    divider
    Cochise dorm will welcome females for first time next year
    divider
    On the spot
    divider
    Flashback
    divider
    Fastfacts
    divider
    Police Beat
    divider
    Datebook
    divider
    Restaurant and Bar guide
    Search for:
    advanced search Archives
    CAMPUS NEWS | SPORTS | OPINIONS
    CLASSIFIEDS | ARCHIVES | CONTACT US | SEARCH


    Webmaster - webmaster@wildcat.arizona.edu
    © Copyright 2003 - The Arizona Daily Wildcat - Arizona Student Media