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This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Cewbot (talk | contribs) at 17:53, 17 February 2024 (Maintain {{WPBS}}: 4 WikiProject templates. Keep majority rating "List" in {{WPBS}}. Remove 3 same ratings as {{WPBS}} in {{WikiProject Illinois}}, {{WikiProject Chicago}}, {{WikiProject Universities}}.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

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Page Clean Up

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There seems to be a lot of unlinked and unreferenced names on this list. I suggest a clean up, involving the deletion of the following names (due to reasons stated in my deletion history of said names): Vitus Barbaro, James A. Cour, Justin Salk, Lucille I. Johnson, Robert A. Fefferman, Robert Kottwitz, Raghavan Narasimhan, Madhav Nori, Joseph Kitagawa, Martin K. Marty, Barbara Lewalski, Marjorie Levinson, Tony Curtis Fox

References to significance and UoC relationship are needed for the following people:

Alumni: Charles V. Hamilton, Omar Ramadhan Mapuri, James B. Parsons, Fernando Sanchez Ugarte, Aaron Lipstadt, Myron Meisel, John P. Amboian, Russel Baker, Casey Cowell, Scott Durchslag, Mark Ernst, Joseph J. Fitzsimmons, Melvin R. Goodes, Thomas L. Kalaris, Michael Klingensmith, Thomas W. Sidlik, Dean Valentine, Roger M. Vasey, B. Kenneth West, Justin Salk, Aaron Ben-Ze'ev, Grant H. Cornwell, Luther H. Foster, Higdon, Jr., Chimere Ikoku, Herma Hill Kay, Christopher W. Kimball, Larry D. Kramer, S.J. Ono, Gerardo della Paolera, R. Scott Appleby, Constance B. Bouchard, Antoinette Burton, Caroline Ford, Lawrence M. Friedman, Stéphane Gerson, Dena Goodman, Herbert S. Klein, Julien Victor Koschmann, Terry Martin, Walter A. McDougall, Michael Puett, William M. Reddy, Francesca Rochberg, Barbara H. Rosenwein, Michael P. Steinberg, Richard S. Wortman, Dan Hertzberg, Carl H. Lavin, Roderick MacLeish, Daniel Nasaw, Joshua Cooper Ramo, Kinsey Wilson, Tony Curtis Fox, Marjorie Levinson, Barbara Lewalski, Ulysses G. Mason, Davíd Carrasco, Amy Hollywood, Elenie Huszagh, Emilie M. Townes, Walter Berns, Susanna Hecht, Stathis Kalyvas, Tracey Meares, Kath Weston, Daniel L. Wisecarver, Henry Tutwiler Wright, Mack Gipson, Jr., Warren E. Henry, D. Franklin Ogletree, Paul Volberding

Professors: Roberta Cooper Ramo, Shailer Matthews, David Tracy, Ole J. Kleppa, Susan Gal, Harry D. Harootunian, Tetsuo Najita,

Board of Trustees: Needs a bunch of references as well (not gonna list all)

All names listed here may be considered suspect until referencing is produced. Any wikipedia editors who are looking for a some fun time activities should feel free to grab a name of this list, find a suitable reference, and update the page. Please also add a line across the name in the above list so other editors know which names have been properly reference. Thanks for the helpDkriegls (talk) 04:21, 12 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]


I looked online and Eliot Ness did graduate from the U of C in 1925 in Business and Law. Previously it said (x).

Tucker Max?

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Tucker Max amongst the likes of Enrico Fermi and John Ashcroft?! Come on!

Jack McCoy (fictional)

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I can't substantiate this, but the Wiki entry for Jack McCoy on Law & Order says that he went to the U of C. It's been attributed elsewhere to the L&O Unofficial Companion.

U of C Official Facebook page has posted this. As has a U of C recruiting mailer sent recently to high school students. I realize these aren’t the types of sources preferred by Wikipedia—my point is that it appears to be correct, if someone can find a more substantiated reference.

Images

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There are plenty of public domain and GFDL images available to illustrate this article. All of the unfree images I removed I replaced with free images. Please do not insert fair use images, as this purpose is not acceptable within our fair use policy. Thanks. Chick Bowen 18:10, 7 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The descriptions on this page are crazy

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They provide way too much information. Compare this page to the list of Princeton or Harvard people. Those descriptions are a lot shorter. I'm going to go through the article and eliminate unnecessary information.Willow1729 (talk) 04:01, 16 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Refimprove tag

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Almost none of the entries in this list are unsourced, so I've added the tag. It can be removed when they're mostly (ideally all).— DroEsperanto (talk) 08:28, 8 September 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Split

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I'd like to split the article up into multiple pages: faculty, presidents, and alumni. Lab school people can go to List of University of Chicago Laboratory Schools people. Fictional people should mostly be deleted IMHO per WP:TRIVIA, but I'd be willing to hear an argument for the other side, and if it existed would go to their corresponding pages (alumni, faculty, etc.). Most of the Board people are red links and should probably go, too; perhaps the notable ones could go together with the presidents on a List of University of Chicago administrators page. This page would then be preserved as a disambiguation page to the different lists, like List of MIT people. Any thoughts?— DroEsperanto (talk) 22:36, 15 September 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Silence = consensus, so I'm going ahead and making the split.— DroEsperanto (talk) 23:52, 15 December 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Posting this here in case anyone wants to put it back in at some point in the future:— DroEsperanto (talk)

==Fictional Characters== The following is a list of fictional characters associated with the University of Chicago. Only characters who are integral to their respective films or books are listed. * Chain Reaction: Eddie Kasalivich (Keanu Reeves), undergraduate student at the University of Chicago. The entire film is about fictional nuclear fusion research at the University of Chicago. * Chasing Vermeer: Petra and Calder, two junior detectives at the University of Chicago Laboratory School. * The Core: Dr. Josh Keyes (Aaron Eckhart), professor at the University of Chicago. * Forever Knight: Nick (Geraint Wyn Davies) living in 1954 Chicago as Professor Nicholas Girard, professor at the University of Chicago. * The Fugitive: Richard Kimble (Harrison Ford), attended University of Chicago, researches in medical library in film.[1] * The L Word: Jenny Schecter (Mia Kirshner), introduced as a recent graduate of the University of Chicago in the pilot episode. * The Lake House: Dr. Kate Forster (Sandra Bullock) is a graduate of the University of Chicago and is employed by the University of Chicago Hospitals. * Law & Order: Executive Assistant District Attorney Jack McCoy is a graduate of the University of Chicago. * Manhunter and Red Dragon: Dr. Sidney Bloom, introduced in both films as a psychiatry expert from the University of Chicago. * My Best Friend's Wedding: Kimberly Wallace (Cameron Diaz), an architecture major at the University of Chicago (no such major exists at the University of Chicago). * Proof: Hal (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Robert (Anthony Hopkins), a student at the University of Chicago and a mathematics professor there, respectively. * Raiders of the Lost Ark and subsequent Indiana Jones films: Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford), undergraduate student at the University of Chicago who eventually became an archaeology professor there. * Rope: Brandon Shaw, based on University of Chicago graduate Nathan Leopold (Ph. B. 1923) of the infamous duo Leopold and Loeb. * Runaway Jury: Lawrence Green (Jeremy Piven), the plaintiff's jury consultant who graduated from the University of Chicago with a psychology degree. * Stargate SG-1: Dr. Daniel Jackson (Michael Shanks), a graduate of the University of Chicago. * Syriana: Bryan Woodman (Matt Damon) is a graduate of the University of Chicago. * Torn Curtain: Michael Armstrong (Paul Newman), University of Chicago physics professor. * Two for the Road: Mark Wallace (Albert Finney), studied "virgin detection" at the University of Chicago. * V.I. Warshawski : V.I. Warshawski (Kathleen Turner), eponymous hero of the detective stories, went to University of Chicago Law School.[1] * Whatever Works : Boris Yelnikoff (Larry David) and his former wife went to the University of Chicago * What's Up, Doc?: Judy Maxwell (Barbra Streisand), studied "general semantics" at the University of Chicago. * World of Darkness: (Dr. Ebenezer Darkov) - Professor of Philosophy and parapsychology in the popular series of novels based on the world of darkness universe written by celebrated author, (Gavin Carville) * When Harry Met Sally...: Harry Burns (Billy Crystal) and Sally Albright (Meg Ryan), University of Chicago undergraduate students who met at the University gates. * X-Men: Kitty Pryde (Ellen Page in X-Men 3), attended the University of Chicago in an attempt to give herself a "normal life."

I'll add consensus to this effort. I worked on this page a year or so back. I like the new split structure. There is still a lot of referencing that needs to be done. Dkriegls (talk) 02:15, 2 April 2010 (UTC)[reply]

References

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  1. ^ a b Recchie, Benjamin. That's sθ Maroon. University of Chicago Magazine, Nov-Dec 2009 p. 80

List of University of Chicago Laboratory Schools people

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List of University of Chicago Laboratory Schools people shouldn't be in List of University of Chicago people. The Laboratory Schools alumni are not the alumni of the University of Chicago. Those who have completed Bachelor's, Master's, or PhD at the University of Chicago, or taught at the university should be included; hence, it is sensible to include lists of alumni and faculty. Ber31 (talk) 04:06, 13 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]