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An aerial view shows the topping off of the Sears Tower on May 3, 1973, in Chicago. (James O’Leary/Chicago Tribune)
An aerial view shows the topping off of the Sears Tower on May 3, 1973, in Chicago. (James O’Leary/Chicago Tribune)
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Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on May 3, according to the Tribune’s archives.

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

Flashback: May 4, 1976

Author Saul Bellow, center, leaves his home on Oct. 21, 1976, in Chicago. Bellow had won the Nobel Prize. (George Quinn/Chicago Tribune)
Author Saul Bellow, center, leaves his home on Oct. 21, 1976, in Chicago. Bellow had won the Nobel Prize. (George Quinn/Chicago Tribune)

1976: Novelist and University of Chicago professor Saul Bellow won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for “Humboldt’s Gift.”

Bellow won the Nobel Prize for literature five months later.

Vintage Chicago Tribune: Nobel Prize winners with Chicago connections

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

  • High temperature: 92 degrees (1955)
  • Low temperature: 30 degrees (2004)
  • Precipitation: 1.59 inches (1919)
  • Snowfall: 0.8 inches (1907)
Workmen guide the final steel girder into position to top off the Sears Tower at 1,454 feet on May 3, 1973, in Chicago. (Charles Osgood/Chicago Tribune) published May 4, 1973 Date Created: 1973-05-03 Copyright Notice: Chicago Tribune Folder Description: Sears Tower Folder Extended Description: Exterior Title: SEARS TOWER EXTERIOR Subject: SEARS TOWER
Workers guide the final steel girder into position to top off the Sears Tower at 1,454 feet on May 3, 1973, in Chicago. (Charles Osgood/Chicago Tribune)

1973: Ironworkers bolted the last girder into place, making Sears Tower (now Willis Tower) the world’s tallest building. Sears Tower ended the Empire State Building’s four-decade reign as the world’s tallest and transformed the West Loop into a glittering office corridor.

The 1,451-foot Willis Tower lost its crown as the world’s tallest when it was surpassed in 1996 by Malaysia’s Petronas Towers, and the American title in 2013 when New York City’s One World Trade Center was completed. After decades of construction in Asian countries, it’s now the 25th tallest in the world.

Chicago Tribune’s 28 Pulitzer Prizes: A list of all the winners

1976: The Tribune won a Pulitzer Prize in special local reporting for two major investigations, one demonstrating the devastating effect of FHA loans on inner-city neighborhoods, the other exposing shoddy conditions and practices at several Chicago hospitals.

Chicago Cubs' greats Fergie Jenkins and Greg Maddux during a ceremony retiring their No. 31 jersey at Wrigley Field on May 3, 2009. (Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune)
Chicago Cubs' greats Fergie Jenkins, left, and Greg Maddux wave during a ceremony retiring their No. 31 jersey at Wrigley Field on May 3, 2009. (Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune)

2009: The Chicago Cubs retired the No. 31 jersey worn by Hall of Fame pitchers Fergie Jenkins and Greg Maddux at Wrigley Field.

If Jenkins had his druthers, he’d have worn No. 30 when he joined the Cubs after a trade with Philadelphia in 1966.

Column: Fergie Jenkins soaks up the adoration as the Chicago Cubs unveil his statue outside Wrigley Field

“That was my number with the Phillies, but Yosh Kawano informed me that was Mr. Ken Holtzman’s number,” Jenkins recalled. “He offered me 31, and I said, ‘Fine.’”

Kawano, the colorful longtime potentate of the Cubs clubhouse, was still around when Maddux showed up 20 years later. Perhaps he knew something when he gave Maddux No. 31. “They told me it was Fergie’s number,” Maddux said. “I thought, ‘That’s pretty cool.’”

Jenkins was the fifth Cubs player to have a statue unveiled outside Wrigley Field.

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