Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Sept. 11, according to the Tribune’s archives.

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

3 Sept. 11 victims’ remains are newly identified, nearly 24 years later

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

High temperature: 95 degrees (1952)
Low temperature: 42 degrees (1993)
Precipitation: 2.37 inches (2000)
Snowfall: None

Judge John R. Caverly, from left, Nathan Leopold Jr., Richard Loeb, Atty. Robert E. Crowe and Sam Ettelson in the jail yard in 1924. (Chicago Herald and Examiner) Judge John Caverly, from left, Nathan Leopold Jr., Richard Loeb, attorneys Robert E. Crowe and Sam Ettelson in the jail yard in 1924. (Chicago Herald and Examiner)

1924: A caravan of vehicles transported friends Nathan “Babe” Leopold Jr. and Richard “Dickie” Loeb — who killed Robert “Bobby” Franks after they offered him a ride home from school — to Joliet where they would become convicts No. 9305 and No. 9306 in Illinois’ penal system.

Vintage Chicago Tribune: Leopold and Loeb

The pair were greeted by a mob of reporters, photographers, guards armed with rifles and spectators just outside the penitentiary’s gates.

Leopold and Loeb confessed to the murder and were brought to trial for what became the “crime of the century.” They were sentenced to life in prison.

Loeb was slain in Stateville prison in 1936. Leopold was granted parole in 1958.

Original cast members of "Bozo's Circus," which premiered in 1961, include (standing, left to right )Don Sandburg as Sandy the Clown; Ray Rayner as Oliver O'Oliver; Maestro Bob Trendler; Ned Locke as the Ringmaster, and Bob Bell as Bozo (seated in front). (Chicago Tribune archive)Original cast members of “Bozo’s Circus,” which premiered in 1961, include (standing, left to right )Don Sandburg as Sandy the Clown; Ray Rayner as Oliver O’Oliver; Maestro Bob Trendler; Ned Locke as the Ringmaster, and Bob Bell as Bozo, seated. (Chicago Tribune archive)

1961: “Ringmaster” Ned Locke blew his whistle and announced to thousands of kids on WGN-TV around lunchtime that “’Bozo’s Circus’ is on the air!” Though the Bozo character — played for 23 years by the late Bob Bell and by Joey D’Auria from 1984 onward — debuted in Chicago as a half-hour show in 1960, this one-hour iteration involved, music, magic, comedy and games.

The show’s name and airing time changed through the years until it was moved to Sundays in 1994 to make room for WGN’s weekday morning news. “The Bozo Super Sunday Show” was canceled in 2001.

Actor David Arquette purchased the rights to Bozo in 2021 from Larry Harmon Pictures Corp.

Ranking the Bears’ 10 most memorable ‘Monday Night Football’ appearances

1995: Season ticket holder Mike Pantazis got his 15 seconds of fame, leaping from his Soldier Field seat to catch in mid-air a Kevin Butler extra point against the Green Bay Packers as the football cleared the netting behind the end zone and descended into the tunnel in the stadium’s south end. Pantazis not only held on to the ball during the “Monday Night Football” broadcast, he escaped unhurt.

Pantazis’ acrobatic maneuver on national TV led to appearances on shows with David Letterman and Tom Snyder, plus a pro tryout.

But there wouldn’t be a repeat — the Bears moved his seat into the north end zone and away from any tunnels.

The Kane County Cougars lost to the Lansing Lugnuts 9-7 in the Class A Midwest League championship on Sept. 11, 1997 at Elfstrom Stadium in Geneva. (Chicago Tribune)The Kane County Cougars lost to the Lansing Lugnuts 9-7 in the Class A Midwest League championship on Sept. 11, 1997, at Elfstrom Stadium in Geneva. (Chicago Tribune)

1997: The lights went out — literally — on the Kane County Cougars’ dreams in a loss to the Lansing Lugnuts in the fifth and deciding game of the Midwest League championship series. Kane County jumped out to a 4-0 lead after three innings, but the Lugnuts sent 11 men to the plate in a five-run fifth that turned the game around. A 92-minute delay in the ninth inning because of a power outage gave Cougars fans a chance to sneak away in the dark without having to watch the Lugnuts celebrate at Elfstrom Stadium.

Chicago Bears quarterback Kyle Orton fumbles the ball but managed to recover it as Washington Redskins safety Omar Stoutmire closes on Sept. 11, 2005 at FedEx Field in Maryland. The Bears lost 9-7. (Pete Souza/Chicago Tribune)Chicago Bears quarterback Kyle Orton fumbles the ball but managed to recover it as Washington Redskins safety Omar Stoutmire closes on Sept. 11, 2005 at FedEx Field in Maryland. The Bears lost 9-7. (Pete Souza/Chicago Tribune)

2005: Kyle Orton — the first rookie quarterback to start a Bears opener since Zeke Bratkowski in 1954 — led an offense that managed just 166 yards, three first-half first downs and scored its only touchdown on a short drive set up by a special-teams turnover on the second-half kickoff.

How have Chicago Bears QBs — including Caleb Williams — done in their debut?

Three straight false-start penalties killed a potential go-ahead scoring drive midway through the fourth quarter, blamed on the noise of more than 90,000 fans in what was then the NFL’s largest-capacity stadium. The Bears lost to the Washington Redskins 9-7 at FedExField.

Former Chicago Bulls and Washington Wizards guard Michael Jordan cries as he takes the podium during his enshrinement ceremony into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., on Sept. 11, 2009. (Stephan Savoia/AP)Former Chicago Bulls and Washington Wizards guard Michael Jordan cries as he takes the podium during his enshrinement ceremony into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., on Sept. 11, 2009. (Stephan Savoia/AP)

2009: Chicago Bulls legend Michael Jordan was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.

Jordan took shots — mostly good-natured ones — at everyone from University of North Carolina coach Dean Smith to Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf during his speech.

An image of Jordan becoming emotional at the event was soon turned into a “Crying Jordan” meme.

Want more vintage Chicago?

Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago’s past.

Have an idea for Vintage Chicago Tribune? Share it with Kori Rumore and Marianne Mather at krumore@chicagotribune.com and mmather@chicagotribune.com