5 geeky facts you may not know about Dayton

It is going to be a geeky weekend in Dayton.

But Dayton-based JackaByte Multimedia’s Epic-Con Ohio: Geek Fest Convention and Custom Auto Show Friday Saturday and Sunday at the Montgomery County Fairgrounds is by far just the tip of the geeky iceberg in the Dayton area.

The Miami Valley has tons of direct and indirect connects to geekdoom that will appeal to geeks who geek out on topics ranging from sci-fi to technology, to custom cars to creatures from outer space.

Here is a rundown of some of the geekiest things about the Dayton area that you may not know:

Another dimension

Rod Serling, the creator of the classic horror/fantasy series “The Twilight Zone,” earned his B.A. from Antioch College in Yellow Springs 1950 and taught there in 1963, according to the Dayton Daily News archives.

He worked at WLW Radio in Cincinnati from 1946-48 and later wrote a live TV show called “The Storm” for at WKRC-TV.

The original Twilight Zone series ran from 1959 to 1964. The show also ran 1985 to 1989 and 2002 to 2003. Who can forget 1983’s “Twilight Zone: The Movie.”

Little Green Men

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base has been rumored to be the final resting place of the little green men some believe crashed to Earth during the supposed 1947 Roswell, New Mexico crash.

Many fans of Ufology believe Wright Patt’s Hanger 18 is also where the flying saucer and other crash debris are kept.

A witch’s mother

Iconic actress Agnes Moorehead, Samantha Stephen’s say-what-ever-she-wanted mom on the 1960s fantasy sitcom Bewitched, is entombed in the mausoleum at Dayton Memorial Park Cemetery in Butler Twp., Montgomery County.

Moorehead never lived in the Dayton area. Her mother and father, a Presbyterian minister who had his last pastorate in Dayton, were buried at Memorial Park. Moorehead wanted to be buried near them. The 74-year-old died of cancer in 1974.

Coded

The barcode - one of the most sci-fi-ish of all codes - made its debut at a Troy supermarket 40 years ago.

Sharon Buchanan, a Marsh cashier, sold a 10-pack of Wrigley’s Juicy Fruit gum.

Patent City USA

Dayton is a city known for its thousands of patents.

Here is a sample of Dayton area ideas and products approved by the U.S. Patent Office listed on the City of Dayton's website:

Airplane; airplane ejection seat; anti-ram raid plinth; artificial heart; artificial kidney; assisted service travel terminals; backpack parachutes; bar code scanner with tool free tower housing assembly; bicycle parking rack; card reader; cash register; collapsible, portable crib; stimulation for paralyzed muscles; double glass windows; electric cash register; filter cigarettes; frostproof freezer; fuel storage and dispensing system; garment stretcher; glass photographic negatives; heart-lung machine; human-powered bicycles and wheelchairs for quad and paraplegics; ice cube tray; ink jet printer; instant blood-glucose testing; Internet stamp;laser weapons; “Mae West” life preserver; mail chute for buildings; media cassette sensing system; manufacturing system; multiple arrange continuous ink jet; night serial photography; paper sheet handling apparatus; paper skew correcting device; pet food container; plunger with interchangeable handle; pocket closet organizer; railroad boxcar wheels; railroad jack; secure tag validation; security in a database system; self-starter; semi-conductor computer memory; synchronized machine gun fire on airplanes; tactical shotgun grip; ; using a remote terminal to conduct assisted; wireless security module and yo-yo

Contact this blogger at arobinson@DaytonDailyNews.com or Twitter.com/DDNSmartMouth

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