David Gerard wrote:
On 24/09/06, Constantine Evans constantine@evanslabs.org wrote:
Note that notability is not the policy. Verifiability is. Even if a school is notable "by default", as some claim, if there is no verifiable information about it, there should be no article.
Correct.
"I can prove, by breathtaking querulousness, that the school in my front room fit that rule." "Well done. Cookie for you! Third-party verifiability? No? So sad."
So, the current situation is that http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seneca_Falls_%28town%29%2C_New_York
contains the following completely out-of-context and unverified and unverifiable paragraph:
"Private education
Finger Lakes Christian School is a private Pre-K-Grade 12 school located in Seneca Falls, New York. It shares the building with the 1st Baptist Church. The current principal is the Rev. Scott Van Kirk. The school was established in 1991. Linked to The First Baptist Church of Seneca Falls, its aims were to offer an alternative for Christian children. The school has about 75 students. Its admission policy is that at least one parent or guardian must be a born-again Christian. As well as the general curriculum, pupils at the school attend Bible classes twice a week, and students have devotional meetings with their teachers or a Pastor at least weekly and have a weekly Chapel service."
I would go in and simply delete it myself and insist that it not be added back until someone finds a source better than the school's own homemade website, but I don't want to be seen as creating *actual policy* in this area by my edits.
I'm just saying.
--Jimbo