Talk:List of Old Geelong Grammarians
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Untitled
[edit]just a note: of the 60 people mentioned on the article's page, 7 are women - hardly an egalitarian school. It should also be noted for the authors of the Rupert Murdoch article that make sound as if he is a "self-made" man, he - like Bill Gates - started out with substantial sums of money and connections your average college graduate can only fantasize about. With the exceptions of George Bush (Jr. & Sr.), Franklin Roosevelt and William Averell Harriman, as U.S. inhabitants of the 20th century. Winston Churchill (I'm sure there are other Brits) and Rupert Murdoch would be two others. Stevenmitchell 11:42, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
If you had any idea of the school, you would realise it was a boys school until the 1970's when it amalgamated with two girls schools.138.217.97.113 04:22, 10 February 2007 (UTC)
Bill Manifold (OGG) was an author whose books often denied the holocaust or expressed anti-semitic views.
Removed alumni
[edit]I have removed the following people from the list of alumni in the main article, as they are unreferenced and redlinked. If anyone finds a reliable ref for any of the below, proving their notability and that they attended the school, please include them in the article:
- Academia
- Alistair Crombie, Head of the Department of the History and Philosophy of Science, Oxford
- Charles Hamblin, philosopher, pioneer computer scientist
- Gordon Hamilton Fairley, cancer researcher
- Jeremy Pickett-Heaps, scientist
- Business
- Sir Roderick Carnegie, businessman
- Ranald Macdonald, media proprietor
- Sir Brian Massy-Greene, businessman
- James Sutherland, chief executive of Cricket Australia
- Clergy
- Rt Rev. Reginald Stephen, former Dean of Melbourne, Bishop of Tasmania, and Bishop of Newcastle
- Rt Rev. John Francis Stretch, former Co-adjutor Bishop of Brisbane, Dean of Newcastle, and Bishop of Newcastle
- Media, entertainment and the arts
- Prince Chatri Chalerm Yukol, film maker
- David Chipp, journalist
- Robin Cuming, actor
- Michael Duffield, actor
- Peter Gebhardt, poet
- Bill Manifold, author, historian, holocaust denier
- Stephen Murray-Smith, journalist
- Ken Myer, Chairman of the Victorian Arts Centre Trust, Chairman of the National Library Council of Australia, Chairman of the ABC
- Cynthia Nolan (née Reed), travel writer (C.E.G.G.S. The Hermitage)
- Arabella Ramsay (Fashion Designer)
- Stuart Sayers, journalist
- Simone Spitz (née Swallows), comedian
- Mark Steven, filmer, founder of snow.tv and television show the Snowshow
- Camille Summers-Valli, Actress
- Ronald Thompson, actor
- Politics, public service and the law
- Stephen Charles, former President of the Australian Bar Association, foundation Judge of the Court of Appeal
- Tamara Fraser (née Beggs), wife of Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser (C.E.G.G.S. The Hermitage)
- Kasem Kasemsri, Thai politician
- Sir John Young, Chief Justice of Victoria 1974-1991
- Sport
- Mark Steven Two time Olympic Mogels Skier, Professional Olympic Ski Coach
- Rebecca Joyce, former Female Lightweight Sculling World Champion
Loopla (talk) 01:48, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
Inclusion in list
[edit]Should we be including people not notable enough to warrant their own Wikipedia page? I note the hidden text at the top of the page, but I feel a simple external link should not suffice. Cavalryman V31 (talk) 03:12, 3 August 2017 (UTC)
- Cavalryman V31, the presence or absence of an article in Wikipedia does not signify (or determine) the notability of the subject. This is a matter of simple commonsense: If a notable individual (as per WP:BIO) does NOT have a Wikipedia page (or has a red link), then simply just create the relevant Wikipedia page. Kind regards, Jkokavec (talk) 03:24, 3 August 2017 (UTC)
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