Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Jan. 23, according to the Tribune’s archives. Is an important event missing from this date? Email us. Weather records (from the National Weather Servic) High temperature: 65 degrees (1909) Low temperature: Minus 18 degrees (1963) Precipitation: 0.
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Chicago's Lee Loughnane tells UCR why it was initially a struggle to attract an audience with their debut album.
The CTA relies on its “protectors of the railroad” — hundreds of workers ready to repair any rail cracks caused by subzero cold. "Without them, [trains] wouldn’t be able to run,” said Lenny Romano, the CTA’s vice president of infrastructure maintenance.
The idea is to do this before President-elect Donald Trump takes office, paving the way for the addition of the Far South side to move forward.
The portfolio being marketed by Hilco on behalf of notorious property owner Suzie Wilson is the city’s largest mass sale of land since the Great Chicago Fire.
Chicago's Regional Transportation Authority released a plan calling for $1.5 billion in operating funding from state and local sources and more RTA control.
The incoming Trump administration is reconsidering whether to launch mass deportation raids in Chicago next week, according to a report from The Washington Post.
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Dorval R. Carter Jr., the president of the Chicago Transit Authority, announced he will retire at the end of the month.
Chicago’s immigrant community and supporters are speaking out, fearful that families could soon be ripped apart.
To start the new year, New York City instituted a forward-thinking policy Jan. 5. Every personal vehicle entering Manhattan south of 60th Street is now required to pay a congestion pricing charge of $9,