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In 1962, Buck O'Neil became the first African American coach in the major leagues with the Chicago Cubs. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
In 1962, Buck O’Neil became the first African American coach in the major leagues with the Chicago Cubs. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
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Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on May 29, according to the Tribune’s archives.

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

Flashback: May 29, 1981

Oscar Lopez Rivera speaks during a community meeting at Tuley High School in Chicago on Feb. 1, 1973. (John Bartley/Chicago Tribune)
Oscar Lopez Rivera speaks during a community meeting at Tuley High School in Chicago on Feb. 1, 1973. (John Bartley/Chicago Tribune)

1981: After he had been indicted in 1977, in connection with 16 Chicago-area bombings, Óscar López Rivera was arrested by police in Glenview. He was found guilty by a federal jury on July 24, 1981, on seven counts of weapons, explosives and seditious conspiracy charges, then sentenced to 55 years in prison.

President Barack Obama in 2017 commuted López’s prison sentence for his role in the FALN, an organization that in the 1970s and early 1980s plotted bombings, prison escapes and armed robberies in an effort to secure independence for Puerto Rico.

How many presidential pardons or sentence commutations have been granted to people from Illinois?

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

  • High temperature: 95 degrees (1942)
  • Low temperature: 37 degrees (1984)
  • Precipitation: 3.45 inches (1981)
  • Snowfall: None

1962: The Chicago Cubs hired John “Buck” O’Neil as the first Black on-field coach in major league history.

“I have never told anyone this before, but I was the one who talked to [then-Cubs owner] P.K. Wrigley and asked him to hire Buck,” Cubs Hall of Famer Ernie Banks told the Tribune in 2006.

“That had always been between just me and Buck. I’m saying this with love today; it was me. I said to Mr. Wrigley: ‘There is a man I know who has a lot of talent with baseball, it’s Buck O’Neil.'”

First words of Chicago Cubs managers, from World Series aspirations to needing to be ‘crazy’ — but not going ‘cuckoo’

A solid-hitting first baseman, O’Neil barnstormed with pitching legend Satchel Paige during his youth and twice won a Negro leagues batting title. He later became a pennant-winning manager of the Kansas City Monarchs.

O’Neil — who fell short of induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame by one vote in 2006 — was finally enshrined there in 2022. He died in 2006 at age 94.

1976: Six Flags Great America (which was originally known as Marriott’s Great America) debuted in Gurnee.

Vintage Chicago Tribune: Major milestones in Six Flags Great America’s 50-year run

The $50 million playland opened in miserable Memorial Day weekend weather, but 12,000 visitors still showed up. Roller coasters including the corkscrew barrel roll Turn of the Century were a big hit.

Darwin Barney greets Chicago Cubs catcher Dioner Navarro after Navarro hit his second home run of the game during the Crosstown Classic against the Chicago White Sox on May 29, 2013 at Wrigley Field. (Phil Velasquez/Chicago Tribune)
Darwin Barney, right, greets Chicago Cubs catcher Dioner Navarro after Navarro hit his second home run of the game during the Crosstown Classic against the Chicago White Sox on May 29, 2013, at Wrigley Field. (Phil Velasquez/Chicago Tribune)

2013: Catcher Dioner Navarro had the first three home-run game of his career, connecting from both sides of the plate at Wrigley Field to lead the Cubs to a 9-3 win over the Chicago White Sox. Navarro had 6 RBIs and scored four times. Navarro hit six home runs for the White Sox during the 2016 season, before he was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays.

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