Today's Trivia and What Happened on October 6

Can you figure out the phrase?

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No one is above the law.

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Quote: When one door closes, another door opens. Other than that, it's a pretty good car. - Anonymous

Quote: When one door closes, another door opens. Other than that, it's a pretty good car. - Anonymous Close Large View

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What Happened On

Dr. No

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Dr. No

October 6, 1962

Dr. No, first in the James Bond series, makes its world premiere in London. It starred Sean Connery as 007.
It was based on the 1958 novel by Ian Fleming. Produced on a budget of $1.1 million, it took in over $59 million at the box office.
Connery wasn't the first choice for the role of Bond. Actor Patrick McGoohan who played spy John Drake in the television series Danger Man and David Niven both turned down the role. David Niven went on to play Bond in the 1967 James Bond spoof Casino Royale.
However, it was not the first James Bond movie. The first James Bond movie was a live TV-broadcast of Casino Royale.

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Al Jolson in blackface performing "My Mammy" Al Jolson in blackface performing "My Mammy"

Al Jolson in blackface performing "My Mammy" Al Jolson in blackface performing "My Mammy"
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First Major "Talkie" Movie

October 6, 1927

The Jazz Singer starring Al Jolson premieres. It was the first feature-length motion picture with a synchronized score and synchronized singing and speech in some scenes. It heralded the end of the silent film era.
Although the use of blackface was common in the era, it is now seen as racist.

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Rap Music Killer Executed

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Rap Music Killer Executed

October 6, 2005

Ronald Ray Howard is executed for the 1992 murder of a state trooper. He claimed the anti-police rap music he was listening to made him do it.

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Anita Hill

October 6, 1991

Anita Hill accuses U.S. Supreme Court Judge nominee Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment.

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LSD Becomes Illegal Photo Credit: Siddharth Patil

LSD Becomes Illegal Photo Credit: Siddharth Patil
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LSD Becomes Illegal

October 6, 1966

The psychedelic drug lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) is declared an illegal substance in the U.S.

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First Black Actress Nominated for an Emmy

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First Black Actress Nominated for an Emmy

October 6, 1961

Ethel Waters appears in an episode of the TV show Route 66, for which she was nominated for an Emmy.

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Oral Polio Vaccine

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Oral Polio Vaccine

October 6, 1956

Dr. Albert Sabin announces his oral polio vaccine (OPV) was ready for wide-scale testing. It was administered by sugar cube, as opposed to Jonas Salk's polio vaccine that was administered by injection.
By 1961, Salk's OPV had been tested on at least 100 million people in the USSR, parts of Eastern Europe, Singapore, Mexico, and the Netherlands. Clinical trials of the OPV in the United States began in April 1960 on 180,000 Cincinnati school children. This effectively eradicated polio in Cincinnati.

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American Library Association

October 6, 1876

American Library Association is founded, at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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First U.S. Robbery of a Train in Motion

October 6, 1866

The Reno Gang throws two safes off a train as it was leaving the station. This was the first peacetime train robbery in the U.S. An earlier robbery was perpetrated by armed guerrillas during the American Civil War.

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American Chess Association

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American Chess Association

October 6, 1857

American Chess Association is organized.

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Potassium Discovered

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Potassium Discovered

October 6, 1807

Potassium is discovered by English scientist Humphry Davy.

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Birthdays

Lonnie Johnson

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Inventor of the Super Soaker

Lonnie Johnson

Born October 6, 1949

African-American Toy Hall of Fame inventor, NASA aerospace engineer. Johnson invented the Super Soaker (1990) water gun and Nerf Gun (1995) toys.
In 2013, Johnson sued Hasbro for underpaying him royalties on the Super Soaker and was awarded $73 million.
In 1968, Johnson represented his Alabama high school at the state fair. He was the only black student attending the fair, winning first prize with a robot powered by compressed air.

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Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton

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First to Split an Atom with a Particle Accelerator

Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton

Born October 6, 1903 d. 1995

Irish nuclear physicist. He and John Cockcroft became the first to split an atom with a particle accelerator (1932); for this they were awarded the 1951 Nobel Prize.

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Jenny Lind

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The Swedish Nightingale

Jenny Lind (Johanna Maria Lind)

Born October 6, 1820 d. 1887

Swedish singer. Known as "The Swedish Nightingale." In 1850, Lind went to America and performed 93 highly-successful concerts for P.T. Barnum and then continued to tour on her own. She earned more than $350,000 from these concerts, donating the proceeds to charities.

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Britt Ekland (Britt Eklund)

Born October 6, 1942

Swedish actress. Film: The Man with the Golden Gun (1974, Mary Goodnight).

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Shana Alexander

Born October 6, 1925 d. 2005

American journalist, author of The Feminine Eye (1970). She represented the liberal view on TV's "Point/Counterpoint" segment of 60 Minutes.

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Henry Morris

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Henry Morris

Born October 6, 1918 d. 2006

American young earth creationist. Considered the father of modern creation science. Co-wrote The Genesis Flood (1961) which used Noah's flood from the Bible to explain many geological formations.

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Gerry Wilmot

Born October 6, 1914 d. 1978

Canadian ice hockey commentator. According to Guinness Book of Records, he is the world's fastest speaking broadcaster.

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Carole Lombard (Jane Alice Peters)

Born October 6, 1908 d. 1942

American actress. Film: Nothing Sacred (1937) and To Be or Not to Be (1942).

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Milton Ager

Born October 6, 1893 d. 1979

American composer. Music: Ain't She Sweet and Happy Days Are Here Again.

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Reginald Fessenden

Born October 6, 1866 d. 1932

Canadian inventor. He invented the radio transmission method of continuous wave and made the first long-range radio transmission of voice (1906).

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George Westinghouse

Born October 6, 1846 d. 1914

American inventor. Invented railway air brakes (1868) and provided alternating current to the U.S.

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Deaths

Bette Davis in Jezebel (left) and a publicity photo Bette Davis in Jezebel (left) and a publicity photo

Bette Davis in Jezebel (left) and a publicity photo Bette Davis in Jezebel (left) and a publicity photo
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Bette Davis (Ruth Elizabeth Davis)

Died October 6, 1989 b. 1908

American Oscar-winning actress. After her success in her Oscar-winning role as as a spoiled Southern belle in Jezebel (1938), she sought the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind (1939), but was turned down by producer David O. Selznick.
On the death of her nemesis Joan Crawford she commented, "You should never say bad things about the dead, you should only say good. Joan Crawford is dead. Good."
Film: All About Eve (1950) and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962).

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Giulio Gavotti on a Farman biplane, Rome 1910 Giulio Gavotti on a Farman biplane, Rome 1910

Giulio Gavotti on a Farman biplane, Rome 1910 Giulio Gavotti on a Farman biplane, Rome 1910
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Conducted First Air Raid from an Airplane

Giulio Gavotti

Died October 6, 1939 b. 1882

Italian pilot. In 1911, Giulio Gavotti conducted the first air raid from an airplane. He used his Etrich Taube monoplane to drop 4 4½-pound (2 kg) grenades on the Ottoman military in Libya from an altitude of about 600 feet (183 meters). There were no casualties from the attack. The Ottoman Empire issued a protest against these types of raids as the dropping of bombs from balloons had been outlawed by the Hague Convention of 1899, but Italy argued that this ban did not extend to heavier-than-air craft.
The following year, Gavotti performed the first night mission of a heavier-than-air aircraft.

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Johnny Nash

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Johnny Nash (John Lester Nash Jr.)

Died October 6, 2020 b. 1940

American singer, songwriter. Music: I Can See Clearly Now (1972, #1).

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Eddie Van Halen Photo Credit: Carl Lender

Eddie Van Halen Photo Credit: Carl Lender
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Eddie Van Halen

Died October 6, 2020 b. 1955

Dutch-born American guitarist. He is considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time. Music: Runnin' With the Devil (1976) and Jump (1984, #1).

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Rip Taylor Photo Credit: Angela George

Rip Taylor Photo Credit: Angela George
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Rip Taylor (Charles Elmer Taylor, Jr.)

Died October 6, 2019 b. 1931

American comic. Known for his confetti-throwing TV personality. He was a regular throughout the 1970s as a celebrity guest panelist on television game shows such as Hollywood Squares, To Tell the Truth, and The Gong Show.

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Ronald Ray Howard

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Rap Music Killer

Ronald Ray Howard

Died October 6, 2005 b. 1973

American criminal, "Rap Music Killer." He was executed for the 1992 murder of a state trooper. He claimed the anti-police rap music he was listening to made him do it.

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Ted Bessell (Howard Weston Bessell, Jr.)

Died October 6, 1996 b. 1935

American actor, Emmy-winning director. TV: That Girl (1966-71, Marlo Thomas' character's boyfriend) and The Tracey Ullman Show (director).

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Denholm Elliott

Died October 6, 1992 b. 1922

British actor. Film: Trading Places (Eddie Murphy's butler).

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Anwar Sadat (Muhammad Anwar el-Sadat)

Died October 6, 1981 b. 1918

Egyptian president (1970-81), Time magazine's Man of the Year (1977), and co-winner of the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize (with Menachem Begin).

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Will Keith Kellogg

Died October 6, 1951 b. 1860

American breakfast-cereal manufacturer, philanthropist, founded the W.K. Kellogg Company (1906) to sell toasted corn flakes.

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Lord Alfred Tennyson

Died October 6, 1892 b. 1809

English poet, poet laureate of England (1850-92). He wrote Charge of the Light Brigade (1855), inspired by the Crimean War battle.

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Henry Timrod

Died October 6, 1867 b. 1828

American poet, known as the "Poet Laureate of the Confederacy."

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