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Triton College

1964 establishments in IllinoisCommunity colleges in IllinoisEducational institutions established in 1964NJCAA athleticsTriton College
Universities and colleges in Cook County, Illinois

Triton College is a public community college in River Grove, Illinois.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Triton College (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Triton College
North 5th Avenue, Leyden Township

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Wikipedia: Triton CollegeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.915277777778 ° E -87.843055555556 °
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Address

Triton College

North 5th Avenue 2000
60171 Leyden Township
Illinois, United States
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Website
triton.edu

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The Thirsty Whale

The Thirsty Whale, which opened in 1971, was a rock music club at 8800 Grand Avenue, River Grove, Illinois. It brought in acts like Blue Öyster Cult, Molly Hatchet, Black Oak Arkansas, Extreme, Foghat, Johnny Winter, Mother Love Bone (who played their only Chicago show at the Whale), and Peter Criss. Survivor performed here monthly early in their career. Future Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Cheap Trick played there regularly in the late 1970s, promoting the release of their first two albums, Black & White and In Color, respectively. The club began to be a showcase for local Chicago area hard rock and heavy metal bands such as Enuff Z'nuff, D'Molls, 7th heaven band and others from the mid-80s through its closing in 1996. The height of the club was during the mid-1980s. Young bands would have the opportunity to open for national acts to grow their fan base and sometimes the attention of major record companies. Although the Thirsty Whale was a small club in size it had its own scene and from it grew a local music magazine, The Chicago Rocker, which was founded by Tony LaBarabra, one of the clubs many booking agents over the years. Chicago never had the metal scene that Los Angeles had but The Thirsty Whale was always a stopover for most bands playing the arenas in Chicago. If you were to ask a local rock musician from this era, they would say "Without The Thirsty Whale, there wouldn't have been a rock scene in Chicago".The club closed its doors on June 2, 1996, and was demolished to make way for a BP gas station and McDonald's. LaBarbara has hosted a "Thirsty Whale Reunion" where some of the bands that played The at the Whale, back in its heyday, held a one-night-only reunion.