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Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, left, with Capt. Lewis at the University of Chicago, circa 1920s. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, left, with Capt. Lewis at the University of Chicago, circa 1920s. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
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Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Sept. 16, according to the Tribune’s archives.

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

Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)

  • High temperature: 92 degrees (1955)
  • Low temperature: 37 degrees (1984)
  • Precipitation: 1.16 inches (1980)
  • Snowfall: None
A cavalcade of singers and dancers from Hollywood entertain an enthusiastic crowd on Sept. 16, 1943, at Soldier Field in Chicago. The show was part of a national drive to buy war bonds, which raised more than $200 million here. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)
A cavalcade of singers and dancers from Hollywood entertain an enthusiastic crowd on Sept. 16, 1943, at Soldier Field in Chicago. The show was part of a national drive to buy war bonds, which raised more than $200 million here. (Chicago Tribune historical photo)

1943: A war bond rally at Soldier Field featured Judy Garland, Lucille Ball, Fred Astaire, Harpo Marx and more Hollywood performers who raised more than $200 million.

Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, center, watches Otto Strohmeier for the University of Chicago football team, circa 1920. (Chicago Herald and Examiner)
Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, second from left, watches Otto Strohmeier for the University of Chicago football team, circa 1920. (Chicago Herald and Examiner)

1960: Former University of Chicago athletic director Amos Alonzo Stagg quit coaching football — at age 98. The Yale graduate guided the Maroons from 1892 until 1932, when he reached the school’s retirement age of 70. Stagg was offered a department position, but declined and instead accepted a coaching job at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif. He finished his career at Stockton Junior College.

Stagg died in 1965 at age 102. The American Football Coaches Association award is named after Stagg and the world’s fifth tallest tree was renamed in his honor in 1960.

Lincoln Park Zoo Director Lester Fisher looks into an empty cage at the animal nursery on Sept. 16, 1973, where thieves broke in the previous night to steal a baby gorilla and a baby snow leopard. (William Kelly/Chicago Tribune)
Lincoln Park Zoo Director Lester Fisher looks into an empty cage at the animal nursery on Sept. 16, 1973, where thieves broke in the previous night to steal a baby gorilla and a baby snow leopard. (William Kelly/Chicago Tribune)

1973: A 10-month-old female gorilla named Pat — who was recovering from brain surgery — and a snow leopard cub were found in an Uptown apartment one day after they were taken by teenagers from Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo.

“They said they were animal lovers and they wanted these animals,” police investigator James Biebel told the Tribune. “They didn’t try to hide them. The snow leopard was in the bedroom and the gorilla was playing in the living room.”

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