The Record (Troy, NY)

Today’s snapshot of what is going on locally

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Turn to the Community Page today and every day for upcoming area activities and a look at local history.

Today is Thursday, Oct. 15, the 289th day of 2020. There are 77 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On Oct. 15, 1976, in the first debate of its kind between vice-presidenti­al nominees, Democrat Walter F. Mondale and Republican Bob Dole faced off in Houston

On this date:

In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte, the deposed Emperor of the French, arrived on the British-ruled South Atlantic island of St. Helena, where he spent the last 5 ½ years of his life in exile.

In 1917, Dutch exotic dancer Mata Hari (Margaretha ZelleGeert­ruida MacLeod), 41, convicted by a French military court of spying for the Germans, was executed by a firing squad outside Paris. (Maintainin­g her innocence to the end, Mata Hari refused a blindfold and blew a kiss to her executione­rs.)

In 1940, Charles Chaplin’s first all-talking comedy, “The Great Dictator,” a lampoon of Adolf Hitler, opened in New York.

In 1945, the former premier of Vichy France, Pierre Laval, was executed for treason.

In 1946, Nazi war criminal

Hermann Goering (GEH’-reeng) fatally poisoned himself hours before he was to have been executed.

In 1954, Hurricane Hazel made landfall on the Carolina coast as a Category 4 storm; Hazel was blamed for some 1,000 deaths in the Caribbean, 95 in the U.S. and 81 in Canada.

In 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed a bill creating the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion. The revolution­ary Black Panther Party was founded by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale in Oakland, California.

In 1969, peace demonstrat­ors staged activities across the country as part of a “moratorium” against the Vietnam War.

In 1991, despite sexual harassment allegation­s by Anita Hill, the Senate narrowly confirmed the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court, 52- 48.

In 2001, Bethlehem Steel Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

In 2003, eleven people were killed when a Staten Island ferry slammed into a maintenanc­e pier. (The ferry’s pilot, who’d blacked out at the controls, later pleaded guilty to eleven counts of manslaught­er.)

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