Consider the polynomial:
$$p(x) = \sum_{k=0}^{r}(-1)^{r-k} {r \choose k} x^{k(k-1) / 2}$$
I want to show that
$$p(x) = (x - 1)^{\lceil r/2 \rceil} \, q(x)$$
That is, $(x - 1)^{\lceil r/2 \rceil}$ is a factor of $p(x)$. Even better, find a formula for the quotient polynomial $q(x)$.
This problem arises when trying to compute the central moments of the log-normal distribution. Raw moments of this distribution are given by $M_r = \left< x^r \right> = e^{r\mu + \frac{1}{2} r^2 \sigma^2}$. So central moments are
$$C_r = \left< (x - M_1)^r \right> = \sum_{k=0}^{r} {r \choose k} M_k \, (-M_1)^{r-k} \\ = e^{r(\mu + \frac{1}{2}\sigma^2)} \sum_{k=0}^{r} (-1)^{r-k} {r \choose k} e^{\frac{1}{2}k(k-1)\sigma^2}$$
You will recognize the sum in this expression as the polynomial in the problem above. Using Mathematica or a similar program, it's easy to test that the alleged property holds for any particular $r$ you care to test. For numerical work, it's valuable to be able to express $C_r$ in factored form because there are catastrophic cancellations in the original form.
Presumably this comes down to some binomial identity with which I am unfamiliar.