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A poster of the 1971 Chicago production of "Grease" by the Kingston Mines Theatre Company hangs on a wall at the home of Hedda Lubin and Gary Houston on Jan. 27, 2016, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
A poster of the 1971 Chicago production of “Grease” by the Kingston Mines Theatre Company hangs on a wall at the home of Hedda Lubin and Gary Houston on Jan. 27, 2016, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
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Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Feb. 5, according to the Tribune’s archives.

Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.

Front page flashback: Feb. 4, 1980

Chicago Public Schools teachers went on strike for five days starting on Feb. 4, 1980. (Chicago Tribune)
Chicago Public Schools teachers went on strike for five days starting on Feb. 4, 1980. (Chicago Tribune)

1980: By a 3-to-1 margin, Chicago Public Schools teachers voted to go on strike. The strike continued a work stoppage that began the previous week to protest the fact that school employees had not been paid as part of the district’s financial crisis (though checks to remedy the situation had been issued since then).

102 days on strike: Take a look back at Chicago’s 11 teacher strikes since 1969

How it was resolved: After some 35 people attended a bargaining session called by Mayor Jane Byrne on Feb. 10, 1980, the strike came to an end. Teachers agreed to give up one day of pay instead of two as required by an earlier plan; 504 jobs were restored and occupational training instructors were permitted to work eight hours a day instead of six as required by an earlier plan.

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

  • High temperature: 56 degrees (1946)
  • Low temperature: Minus 17 degrees (1979)
  • Precipitation: 0.81 inches (1909)
  • Snowfall: 7 inches (1907)
Tribune critic loved Mozart's "Don Giovanni" that opened Lyric Theater of Chicago on Feb. 5, 1954. "That it was conjured out of the air by a company which really did not exist until the curtain rose was a kind of authentic miracle, for miracles are born of love," she wrote. (Chicago Tribune)
Tribune critic Claudia Cassidy loved the production of Mozart's "Don Giovanni" that opened Lyric Theater of Chicago on Feb. 5, 1954. "That it was conjured out of the air by a company which really did not exist until the curtain rose was a kind of authentic miracle, for miracles are born of love," she wrote. (Chicago Tribune)

1954: Lyric Theater of Chicago (later Lyric Opera) debuted to a sold-out audience with a performance of Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” at the Civic Opera House with Nicola Rossi-Lemeni in the starring role. The show repeated the next night. The success of those first two performances made possible a three-week autumn season consisting of 16 performances of eight operas; 12 of those performances sold out.

Tribune critic Claudia Cassidy called it “a big, bold performance with the full quota of stage bands, a performance so Mozartean in its play of light and shadow that it spun all of a piece the splendor of Eleanor Steber’s Donna Anna, the silky textured tenor Leopold Simoneau bestowed on Don Ottavio, the mischievous glint of Bidu Sayao’s Zerlina, and the other sides of the comic face, from the rue of Irene Jordan’s Elvira, the peasant not quite bumpkin that was Lorenzo Alvary’s Masetto, and the knowing Leporello of John Brownlee, who used to sing the Don.”

Tribune critic Will Leonard wrote "this has to be one of the most screamingly funny shows in town," in his review of "Grease," which was staged by Chicago's Kingston Mines Theater Co. in Feb. 1971. (Chicago Tribune)
Tribune critic Will Leonard wrote "this has to be one of the most screamingly funny shows in town" in his review of "Grease," which was staged by June Pyskacek's Kingston Mines Theatre Company in Chicago in February 1971. (Chicago Tribune)

1971: “Grease” was performed for the first time — at Kingston Mines Theatre, 2356 Lincoln Ave., Chicago, in a building that was a converted trolley barn.

The musical was later adapted for Broadway and the 1978 movie, which Tribune critic Gene Siskel gave three stars.

In his mother's South Side home, Anthony Porter after being released from prison in February 1999. (Heather Stone/Chicago Tribune)
Anthony Porter is in his mother's South Side home after being released from prison in February 1999. (Heather Stone/Chicago Tribune)

1999: Anthony Porter, who had come within 48 hours of execution, became the 10th exonerated death row prisoner in Illinois, thanks in part to Northwestern journalism students.

Anthony Porter, ex-death row inmate whose case was ‘Exhibit A’ in prompting Illinois to halt executions, dies at 66

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