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1. The Kalamazoo Promise is the first program ever to provide up to 100 percent funding for college tuition for any high school graduate in a public school district.
2. Dr. Homer Stryker invented the orthopedic walking heel, turning bed and oscillating saw for cast removal.
3. Derek Jeter, New York Yankees shortstop, team captain and World Series champion, was a star player at Kalamazoo Central High School.
4. Dr. W.E. Upjohn invented a new form of pill-based medication in Kalamazoo in 1885, setting the foundation of the region's pharmaceutical industry.

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5. Lindsay Tarpley, a graduate from Portage Central High School, helped the United States women's soccer team win an Olympic gold medal in 2004.
6. The corn flake was invented in Battle Creek in 1906 by W.K. Kellogg, who soon founded the Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company, now known as Kellogg's.
7. The big yellow taxi cabs seen in movies and sung about by Joni Mitchell were created in Kalamazoo by the Checker Motors Company.
8. Kalamazoo is home to the biennial Irving S. Gilmore International Keyboard Festival. Every four years, a new Gilmore Artist is announced and presented with the most generous musical arts award of financial support.

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17. The Kalamazoo Air Zoo is the tenth largest non-government aviation museum in the nation.
18. Kalamazoo is featured in two children’s books: From Kalamazoo to Timbuktu and I went to the party in Kalamazoo.
19. Western Michigan University’s baseball field, Hyames Field, was home to the first two College World Series in 1947 and 1948.
20. Sweetwater's Donut Mill was selected one of the10 best doughnut shops from coast to coast by Bret Stetka for MSN City Guides.

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21. Bell’s Brewery is rated #4 on the 2008 top 100 Brewers in the World list.
22. Stephen Zegree, the Bobby McFerrin professor of jazz at Western Michigan University, directs the Gold Company and was selected by Nick Lachey to coach his choir on NBC’s ‘Clash of the Choirs.’
23. Kalamazoo is the subject of Carl Sandberg’s poem, The Sins of Kalamazoo.
24. Kalamazoo County was the Celery Capital of the World in the early 1900s. Celery touted as “fresh as dew from Kalamazoo” was shipped throughout the United States

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29. The song, “I’ve Got a Gal in Kalamazoo,” was made famous by Glenn Miller. Kalamazoo College students voted Sara Wooley that “Gal” and she traveled around the country appearing at Bond Drives and USO dances.
30. The United Kennel Club, the nation’s second oldest and largest dog registry, was founded in Kalamazoo in 1898.
31. Kalamazoo native, Adam Hall, is a forward for the NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins.
32. The Barn Theatre, Michigan’s oldest summer stock theater, has seen performances by Tom Wopat, Jennifer Garner, Dana Delany and Lauren Graham.

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33. The Kalamazoo Stove Company’s motto, “A Kalamazoo Direct to You,” not only helped the company market their product but helped spread the city’s name nationally.
34. Gibson Guitars was founded in Kalamazoo.
35. Kalamazoo County is the leading producer of bedding plants in the U.S. and is the Bedding Plant Capital of the World.
36. The products of Kalamazoo Outdoor Gourmet, a popular designer and manufacturer of high-end grills and outdoor kitchen equipment, are sought out by such Hollywood elite as Gwyneth Paltrow.

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37. Miller Auditorium is one of the largest concert halls in the state and regularly features traveling Broadway shows.
38. Kalamazoo, Michigan is geographically located halfway between Chicago, Illinois and Detroit, Michigan.
39. Jason Newsted of the band Metallica was born and raised in Battle Creek, Michigan.
40. The indie movie Kalamazoo? was filmed in Kalamazoo and focuses on three women after they reconnect at their ten-year high school reunion.

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41. John Harbaugh, head coach of the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens, began his coaching career as a running backs/outside linebackers coach at Western Michigan University.
42. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Edna Ferber was born in Kalamazoo and went on to write So Big (for which she won the Pulitzer prize in 1924), Show Boat, Cimarron, Giant and Ice Palace.
43. Kalamazoo Civic Auditorium is Michigan’s oldest civic auditorium and is ranked number one amongst its peers by the American Association of Community Theatre.
44. Famed opera soprano, Susan B. Anthony, was born and raised in Kalamazoo and is a graduate of Western Michigan University.

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45. The Kalamazoo Sled Company manufactured such sledding favorites as the Champion Sno-liner and the Champion Flying Disk.
46. Andy Dumpis, CFO of MPI Research, Inc., was selected to the U.S. Olympic Men’s Volleyball team in 1980 and 1984.
47. Heritage Guitar, Inc., began in 1985 as a spin-off of Gibson Guitar Co., has achieved status as one of the premier guitar companies in the world today.
48. Before he was a Denver Bronco, Tony Scheffler was a Western Michigan University Bronco.

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49. Numerous songs reference the city’s name in lyrics and title, including “Down on the Corner” by Creedence Clearwater Revival, “I’ve Been Everywhere” by Johnny Cash, “Kalamazoo” by Ben Folds, “Kalamazoo” by Primus, Kalamazoo” by Dr. Freeman and the Defenders of the Universe and “Kalamazoo” by Luna.
50. A sign reading, “Now Leaving Kalamazoo County,” appears in the driving montage scene in the movie Tommy Boy.
51. The Kal-Haven Trail, enjoyed by bicyclists and snowmobilers, extends 34.5 miles from South Haven, on the shores of Lake Michigan, to just northwest of Kalamazoo.
52. Professional bass angler Kevin Van Dam is from Kalamazoo.

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53. The Ladies Library Association is the oldest women’s club in Michigan and third oldest in the United States. Its building was the first to house a women’s club in the nation.
54. The loose-leaf binder had its origin in Kalamazoo.
55. Western Michigan University graduate and comedic singer/songwriter Stephen Lynch was nominated for a Tony Award for his Broadway debut role in The Wedding Singer.
56. The Kalamazoo Nature Center is voted one of the best nature centers in the nation by its peers.

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61. Western Michigan University annually hosts the International Congress on Medieval Studies.
62. Florida Marlins pitcher Scott Olsen was also born in Kalamazoo.
63. Before he hit the USTA Pro Circuit, Scott Oudsema graduated from Portage Northern High School.
64. Neil Smith, a 1996 WMU Distinguished Alumni Award recipient, is a Canadian ice hockey broadcaster and previously the New York Rangers’ General Manager.

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65. This nationally recognized photo of a South Haven lighthouse, located 45 minutes west of Kalamazoo, shows the beauty of Michigan’s December days which have a record low of -18.4ºF and record high of 68 ºF. (Photo: Taken by Kalamazoo Gazette intern photojournalist Merissa Ferguson.)
66. The Oakwood Bistro ranks among the nation’s top 100 restaurants as selected by culinary professionals.
67. A passenger steamship named ‘City of Kalamazoo’ was built in the early 1890’s and cruised from South Haven to Chicago for $1. (Photo: Chicago Daily News negatives collection, DN-0003451. Courtesy of the Chicago Historical Society.)
68. Bell’s Greenhouse in Comstock is the largest grower of African violets in the state of Michigan.

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69. The hardcore punk pioneers, Violent Apathy, were formed at Western Michigan University.
70. Robinson Guitars come from the one-man-shop run by Luthier Jake Robinson which produces just 12 to 15 handcrafted guitars each year.
71. For 17 years running, the City of Portage has been named a Tree City USA by the National Arbor Day Foundation.

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