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:''The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's [[Help:Using talk pages|talk page]] or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review|deletion review]]). No further edits should be made to this page.''
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The result was '''keep'''. <small style="color:#999;white-space:nowrap;text-shadow:lightgrey 0.3em 0.3em 0.15em;">&mdash; [[User:Coffee|<big style="color:#ffa439">Coffee</big>]] // [[user talk:Coffee|<span style="color:#009900;">have a cup</span>]] // [[WP:WWH|<span style="color:#4682b4;">essay</span>]] // </small> 20:31, 27 October 2012 (UTC)
===[[David Marchick]]===
===[[David Marchick]]===
{{REMOVE THIS TEMPLATE WHEN CLOSING THIS AfD|B}}


:{{la|David Marchick}} – (<includeonly>[[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/David Marchick|View AfD]]</includeonly><noinclude>[[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Log/2012 October 9#{{anchorencode:David Marchick}}|View log]]</noinclude>{{int:dot-separator}} <span class="plainlinks">[http://toolserver.org/~snottywong/cgi-bin/votecounter.cgi?page=Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/David_Marchick Stats]</span>)
:{{la|David Marchick}} – (<includeonly>[[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/David Marchick|View AfD]]</includeonly><noinclude>[[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Log/2012 October 20#{{anchorencode:David Marchick}}|View log]]</noinclude>{{int:dot-separator}} <span class="plainlinks">[http://toolserver.org/~snottywong/cgi-bin/votecounter.cgi?page=Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/David_Marchick Stats]</span>)
:({{Find sources|David Marchick}})
:({{Find sources|David Marchick}})
Insufficiently notable person. Fails [[WP:BIO]] in that he has not "received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject", and does not pass any sub-criterion such as [[WP:AUTHOR]] or otherwise achieve notability.
Insufficiently notable person. Fails [[WP:BIO]] in that he has not "received significant coverage in reliable secondary sources that are independent of the subject", and does not pass any sub-criterion such as [[WP:AUTHOR]] or otherwise achieve notability.
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*He was a partner at a big law firm, a lobbyist, and is now a director at a large asset management firm, which are useful things to be, but not germane for our purposes.
*He was a partner at a big law firm, a lobbyist, and is now a director at a large asset management firm, which are useful things to be, but not germane for our purposes.
*He's a member of the [[Council on Foreign Relations]], which is good but the Council does have 4,700 members.
*He's a member of the [[Council on Foreign Relations]], which is good but the Council does have 4,700 members.

In my view, his notability would hinge on one of these (quite slim) threads:
In my view, his notability would hinge on one of these (quite slim) threads:
# He co-wrote a published book (at 43 pages it's really only a white paper I would infer). It may (or may not) be erudite, but it's not very well-known and hasn't garnered any reviews that I could find. Fails [[WP:AUTHOR]] by a mile; one might consider it more of an academic paper, but Mr Marchick also fails [[WP:ACADEMIC]] by a big margin.
# He co-wrote a published book <s>(at 43 pages it's really only a white paper I would infer)</s>. It may (or may not) be erudite, but it's not very well-known <s>and hasn't garnered any reviews that I could find</s>. Fails [[WP:AUTHOR]] by a mile; one might consider it more of an academic paper, but Mr Marchick also fails [[WP:ACADEMIC]] by a big margin.
# He's published pieces in the ''Far Eastern Economic Review'', ''Financial Times'' and ''The Wall Street Journal'' (no refs given, but let's assume that that's true). The first is out of business but the latter two are important publications. I don't know what the articles were or how many, but there's no notability criteria for writing newspaper or magazine articles per se, except [[WP:AUTHOR]] which he doesn't meet.
# He's published pieces in the ''Far Eastern Economic Review'', ''Financial Times'' and ''The Wall Street Journal'' (no refs given, but let's assume that that's true). The first is out of business but the latter two are important publications. I don't know what the articles were or how many, but there's no notability criteria for writing newspaper or magazine articles per se, except [[WP:AUTHOR]] which he doesn't meet.
# Finally, one could say "Yes, he doesn't meet [[WP:BIO]] or any of its sub-criteria in any ''one'' activity, but he's done a little of this and a little of that and ''taken together'' he's notable". I wouldn't agree with that at all, this would be a new thing for the Wikipedia, and if we want to have a policy to confer notability on persons who are just generally somewhat accomplished, we ought to create [[WP:ACCOMPLISHED]] or something as a sub-criteria for [[WP:BIO]] (and be prepared to handle an awful lot articles for doctors, lawyers, business vice-presidents, local dignitaries, etc.). The community hasn't seen fit to do that and I'd not be favor of doing it here.
# Finally, one could say "Yes, he doesn't meet [[WP:BIO]] or any of its sub-criteria in any ''one'' activity, but he's done a little of this and a little of that and ''taken together'' he's notable". I wouldn't agree with that at all, this would be a new thing for the Wikipedia, and if we want to have a policy to confer notability on persons who are just generally somewhat accomplished, we ought to create [[WP:ACCOMPLISHED]] or something as a sub-criteria for [[WP:BIO]] (and be prepared to handle an awful lot articles for doctors, lawyers, business vice-presidents, local dignitaries, etc.). The community hasn't seen fit to do that and I'd not be favor of doing it here.
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*'''Keep'''. I am collecting what RSes exist about Marchik. Found this article in [https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B86iegI5pG5TTUN4RHlKVS1MeG8 Journal of Economic Literature, Vol XLV, 2007, pp. 1042–44] on his book; says it is really good. Also says it is 190 pages. Hosting that article per fair use to facilitate discussion. The jstor link is [http://www.jstor.org/stable/27646899]. There is a capsule review [http://www.cfr.org/business-and-foreign-policy/foreign-investment-national-security/p11146 here]. The book is cited in a report in the [http://cip.gmu.edu/archive/archive/2009_CFIUS_CIP_Update.pdf Journal of Homeland Security]. Per this [http://www.uscc.gov/bios/2007bios/07_05_24_25bios/marchick.php US government] site, the guy is on the US–China Economic and Security Review Commission. Sounds important. He testified before the [http://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Marchik.pdf US senate] on behalf of Carlyle group. Carlyle is the third-largest private-equity firm in the world, after TPG and Goldman, raising [http://www.peimedia.com/pei300 $40 billion] in 2011. The person they sent to the US Senate to speak on their behalf was Marchik. When they hired him, it was reported prominently in the [http://cip.gmu.edu/archive/archive/2009_CFIUS_CIP_Update.pdf Washington Post] and Financial times (pay link). His wedding, of all things, was covered in the [http://www.nytimes.com/1999/01/17/style/weddings-pamela-kurland-david-marchick.html New York Times Style section]. His book is the course material for a law course at [http://www.law.georgetown.edu/academics/academic-programs/graduate-programs/current-students/upload/National-Security-Law-and-the-Private-Sector-Fagan-and-Plotkin.docx Georgetown University]. And all this after completely ignoring his work as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State. A Google books search is returning so many hits it will take me awhile to winnow them and collect the information.
*'''Keep'''. I am collecting what RSes exist about Marchik. Found this article in [https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B86iegI5pG5TTUN4RHlKVS1MeG8 Journal of Economic Literature, Vol XLV, 2007, pp. 1042–44] on his book; says it is really good. Also says it is 190 pages. Hosting that article per fair use to facilitate discussion. The jstor link is [http://www.jstor.org/stable/27646899]. There is a capsule review [http://www.cfr.org/business-and-foreign-policy/foreign-investment-national-security/p11146 here]. The book is cited in a report in the [http://cip.gmu.edu/archive/archive/2009_CFIUS_CIP_Update.pdf Journal of Homeland Security]. Per this [http://www.uscc.gov/bios/2007bios/07_05_24_25bios/marchick.php US government] site, the guy is on the US–China Economic and Security Review Commission. Sounds important. He testified before the [http://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Marchik.pdf US senate] on behalf of Carlyle group. Carlyle is the third-largest private-equity firm in the world, after TPG and Goldman, raising [http://www.peimedia.com/pei300 $40 billion] in 2011. The person they sent to the US Senate to speak on their behalf was Marchik. When they hired him, it was reported prominently in the [http://cip.gmu.edu/archive/archive/2009_CFIUS_CIP_Update.pdf Washington Post] and Financial times (pay link). His wedding, of all things, was covered in the [http://www.nytimes.com/1999/01/17/style/weddings-pamela-kurland-david-marchick.html New York Times Style section]. His book is the course material for a law course at [http://www.law.georgetown.edu/academics/academic-programs/graduate-programs/current-students/upload/National-Security-Law-and-the-Private-Sector-Fagan-and-Plotkin.docx Georgetown University]. And all this after completely ignoring his work as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State. A Google books search is returning so many hits it will take me awhile to winnow them and collect the information.
:The various categories such as author, diplomat and so on are meant to be examples, not an exhaustive list every notable person has to fit into. The central notability guideline is non-trivial coverage in multiple, independent, reliable secondary sources. I have posted multiple, independent, reliable sources. Some can be thought primary, but the book reviews and other articles are secondary sources. Multi-faceted notability is notability for [[WP:GNG]] purposes. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 02:35, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
:The various categories such as author, diplomat and so on are meant to be examples, not an exhaustive list every notable person has to fit into. The central notability guideline is non-trivial coverage in multiple, independent, reliable secondary sources. I have posted multiple, independent, reliable sources. Some can be thought primary, but the book reviews and other articles are secondary sources. Multi-faceted notability is notability for [[WP:GNG]] purposes. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 02:35, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
:*Oh, OK, he (co-)wrote ''Foreign Investment and National Security'' which is 43 pages, but ''US National Security and Foreign Direct Investment'' is another entity, which is 190 pages. He is also only a co-writer on that. [[WP:AUTHOR]] does allow for "The person is regarded as an important figure or is widely cited by peers or successors" (he fails all the other [[WP:AUTHOR]] criteria by a lot. Is he an "important figure"? No, he's not. Is he widely cited by peers? He's not, as far as I can see. ("Important" and "widely" are subject to interpretation, but I think it's safe to say that Mr Marchik was not that type of author they had in mind when they wrote that clause. Now, there's a caveat, which I think is part of what you're getting at: if (let us say) only 20 people read his book ''but one of them was the Secretary of State and she based policy decisions on what he wrote'' then he could be arguably considered "important". It is in this and only this way that he could possibly be considered important as a writer, I think. So: ''did'' the State Department base policy on his writings? I'd like to see evidence of that. It's not something we can just assume. I'm even more skeptical since the review says "The economic analysis is very simple minded". (I'm not seeing the "says it is really good" beyond being well written; the review is mixed I'd say and makes it sound rather polemical more than anything ("The important thing to note is that the book has a strong message: allow free international investment flows... [and] minimize Congressional oversight..."). (Hmmmm where have I heard that before?)
:*Oh, OK, he (co-)wrote ''Foreign Investment and National Security'' which is 43 pages, but ''US National Security and Foreign Direct Investment'' is another entity, which is 190 pages. He is also only a co-writer on that. [[WP:AUTHOR]] does allow for "The person is regarded as an important figure or is widely cited by peers or successors" (he fails all the other [[WP:AUTHOR]] criteria by a lot). Is he an "important figure"? No, he's not. Is he widely cited by peers? He's not, as far as I can see. ("Important" and "widely" are subject to interpretation, but I think it's safe to say that Mr Marchik was not that type of author they had in mind when they wrote that clause.) Now, there's a caveat, which I think is part of what you're getting at: if (let us say) only 20 people read his book ''but one of them was the Secretary of State and she based policy decisions on what he wrote'' then he could be arguably considered "important". It is in this and only this way that he could possibly be considered important as a writer, I think. So: ''did'' the State Department base policy on his writings? I'd like to see evidence of that. It's not something we can just assume. I'm even more skeptical since the review says "The economic analysis is very simple minded". (I'm not seeing the "says it is really good" beyond being well written; the review is mixed I'd say and makes it sound rather polemical more than anything ("The important thing to note is that the book has a strong message: allow free international investment flows... [and] minimize Congressional oversight...").) (Hmmmm where have I heard that before?)


::Stuff like "is on the US–China Economic and Security Review Commission. Sounds important." leave me pretty cold, actually. I mean everybody does ''something''. Is he more "important" than (let us) the Director for New York State Operations for UPS? He's not. After all, UPS is a large and very famous company that is a very key part of the communications infrastructure of the United States. And New York is big; as big and rich as the Netherlands and a lot bigger and richer than Sweden or Greece. It's a very important job, and how well he does it materially affects the economy of New York State and the lives of its many citizens. Not to mention that he has supervisory authority over thousands of employees and responsibility for a multi-million dollar budget. Far, far more important than Marchick and this is not even arguable I don't think. The problem is, if he's in, so is the director of California operations, and Texas, and so on, and then you have his boss (Vice-President for Northeast Operations) and of course the CEO and CFO and CTO and board chairman and probably a bunch of people, so you've talking several score people just for UPS. Do we want to go down this path? Maybe we do, but if so why has no one written this into any policy?
::Stuff like "is on the US–China Economic and Security Review Commission. Sounds important." leave me pretty cold, actually. I mean everybody does ''something''. Is he more "important" than (let us say) the Director for New York State Operations for UPS? He's not. After all, UPS is a large and very famous company that is a very key part of the communications infrastructure of the United States. And New York is big; as big and rich as the Netherlands and a lot bigger and richer than Sweden or Greece. It's a very important job, and how well he does it materially affects the economy of New York State and the lives of its many citizens. Not to mention that he has supervisory authority over thousands of employees and responsibility for a multi-million dollar budget. Far, far more important than Marchick and this is not even arguable I don't think. The problem is, if he's in, so is the director of California operations, and Texas, and so on, and then you have his boss (Vice-President for Northeast Operations) and of course the CEO and CFO and CTO and board chairman and probably a bunch of people, so you've talking several score people just for UPS. Do we want to go down this path? Maybe we do, but if so why has no one written this into any policy?


::Similarly, he had a desk job in the State Department (I don't know the department's table of organizations, but I think it likely there are hundreds of people there at his level, and if not then certainly several score). This really does count as nothing (and by that I don't mean that he's a ''worthless person'', just that this means nothing as regards the ''Wikipedia'' notability standards).
::Similarly, he had a desk job in the State Department (I don't know the department's table of organizations, but I think it likely there are hundreds of people there at his level, and if not then certainly several score). This really does count as nothing (and by that I don't mean that he's a ''worthless person'', just that this means nothing as regards the ''Wikipedia'' notability standards).
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:*'''Comment''' — Which one? Even if in spirit, not letter? I've edited the article to remove cites to press releases and several [[WP:PRIMARY|primary sources]] that are unsuitable to indicate any particular importance or appropriate overall [[WP:WEIGHT|weight]] for the claims asserted. There are still some rather grand claims that rest on crap sources such as [[WP:BLPSPS]] and (likely more) press release material. At this point, I think a good, hard look at [[WP:42]] is in order. [[User:JFHJr|JFHJr]] ([[User talk:JFHJr|㊟]]) 16:31, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
:*'''Comment''' — Which one? Even if in spirit, not letter? I've edited the article to remove cites to press releases and several [[WP:PRIMARY|primary sources]] that are unsuitable to indicate any particular importance or appropriate overall [[WP:WEIGHT|weight]] for the claims asserted. There are still some rather grand claims that rest on crap sources such as [[WP:BLPSPS]] and (likely more) press release material. At this point, I think a good, hard look at [[WP:42]] is in order. [[User:JFHJr|JFHJr]] ([[User talk:JFHJr|㊟]]) 16:31, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
:*'''Request re-listing''' so that a clearer consensus might emerge. [[User:JFHJr|JFHJr]] ([[User talk:JFHJr|㊟]]) 19:19, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
:*'''Request re-listing''' so that a clearer consensus might emerge. [[User:JFHJr|JFHJr]] ([[User talk:JFHJr|㊟]]) 19:19, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
*'''Delete'''. Coverage of him has been [[WP:ROUTINE]] announcements about hirings, minor quotations in articles and his wedding announcement. These must not be considered in a notability discussion. A search turned up nothing beyond that. I find no significant coverage of the man himself. Hence it fails the [[WP:GNG]] requirements and other more specific criteria for authors already discussed above. Some people arguing keep say that his status as an executive at Carlyle Group confers notability upon him; yet notability cannot be inherited from an organization. See [[WP:ORGIN]]. Therefore this argument fails. His book has not been widely reviewed or taken notice of. He may have testified before the Senate, but I find no secondary reports on the testimony. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 07:09, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
*'''<s>Delete</s>Keep'''. Coverage of him has been [[WP:ROUTINE]] announcements about hirings, minor quotations in articles and his wedding announcement. These must not be considered in a notability discussion. A search turned up nothing beyond that. I find no significant coverage of the man himself. Hence it fails the [[WP:GNG]] requirements and other more specific criteria for authors already discussed above. Some people arguing keep say that his status as an executive at Carlyle Group confers notability upon him; yet notability cannot be inherited from an organization. See [[WP:ORGIN]]. Therefore this argument fails. His book has not been widely reviewed or taken notice of. He may have testified before the Senate, but I find no secondary reports on the testimony. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 07:09, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
**Changed to keep based on additional sources found by Uzma below that clearly demonstrate notability under [[WP:GNG]]. It's crystal clear now. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 18:04, 27 October 2012 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' I'm neutral on this because it seems like there is a potential for this page to develop, but as it stands I see no point of notability that justifies the page. Finding references to him is one thing - but what is he notable for? Why does WP require an entry on him?
*'''Comment''' I'm neutral on this because it seems like there is a potential for this page to develop, but as it stands I see no point of notability that justifies the page. Finding references to him is one thing - but what is he notable for? Why does WP require an entry on him? <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Fireflo|Fireflo]] ([[User talk:Fireflo|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Fireflo|contribs]]) 11:13, 19 October 2012 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
*'''Comment''' Looks like nom is stuck on the "is he an author," "is he a diplomat" questions. Notability is simply non-trivial (not necessarily in-depth) coverage in multiple independent, reliable, third-party sources (see [[WP:BASIC]]), with sources sufficient to provide enough material for a start-class article. Marchick meets that, and that is all that is relevant to this Afd. There isn't a need for in-depth coverage in a single place; multiple references which together provide enough material is good. In this case that does exist. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 13:54, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
**The guidelines do require some in-depth coverage; the [[WP:GNG]] say "significant coverage" that addresses the subject "directly and in detail," not trivial coverage. [[WP:BASIC]] speaks of "non-trivial" coverage. I do not see any real difference between "in-depth" and "significant" coverage. Perhaps you could argue that coverage is significant but not in-depth if it is composed of passing mentions in a wide variety of reliable sources, which may accord with [[WP:BASIC]]. And yet in my view these qualify as "trivial coverage of a subject by secondary sources," which "may not be sufficient to establish notability". If you have evidence of significant coverage beyond the routine (wedding announcements and job moves are routine, I think, as are quotes in articles that don't focus on him) please let me know and I'll change my vote. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 17:18, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
***The NY Times coverage is not a "wedding announcement"; it is coverage by a newspaper reporter in the style section. The book review is in a journal (Journal of Economic Literature), and yes, authors do inherit notability from books (inherited notability doesn't work just the other way around, from author to book). The book is used in a law course in a university, as noted above, and that counts. His coverage in Washington Post and Financial Times are about his appointment at Caryle; they are not in-depth but neither are they trivial. Taken together (there are more hits on Google search related to the Senate testimony, by the way) they provide sufficient non-trivial, reliable, third-party coverage for a start-class article. The nom's rationale, that the person has to be an expert at something and not some kind of a jack-of-all-trades, is not the WP criterion for notability of people. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 18:33, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
****I have to disagree about the wedding announcement; in my view, that's what it is. The NYT publishes wedding announcements of people it considers notable enough for wedding announcements, including lots of lawyers, bankers, politicians, etc. I don't think the NYT's judgment of the notability of his wedding is anything beyond trivial coverage. It's not even as detailed as many other wedding stories published by the paper. See [http://www.nytimes.com/pages/fashion/weddings/index.html here] for the section, and plenty more of this. To take a random example, does [http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/14/fashion/weddings/hannah-meyers-joseph-abrams-weddings.html?ref=weddings this article] qualify Hannah Meyers, an intelligence researcher at the New York Police Department, as in any way notable? I know you're not asserting that the wedding announcement alone makes Marchick notable, but I would argue that it's so trivial that it ought to be ignored. See [[WP:ROUTINE]], although that applies to events, not people. Second, where does it say in [[WP:AUTHOR]] that an author inherits notability from his/her books? I sometimes stupidly miss things, but I can't find this. Is it in a different guideline? The coverage about his appointment at Carlyle is routine and doesn't rise to the level of significant, in my view, even in combination with other trivial sources. Journalists are more or less forced to cover these things. Carlyle is a major company, and Marchick is in an executive position. I'd draw a distinction between this kind of coverage (based on a press release from Carlyle, no doubt) and the sort of non-trivial coverage where an journalist at a reliable publication decided independently that Marchick was worth profiling, doing a story about, etc. If our interpretation of the standards is too lax, we'll set a precedent where pretty much any minor executive at a large company warrants an article, because most of them have been the subject of such routine comings-and-goings articles. Having said this, I'm still willing to change my vote if something that treats the subject in a significant way turns up. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 20:42, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
*****I can't answer the [[WP:OSE]] arguments. As to an author inheriting notability from a book, check [[WP:AUTHOR]]; a notable author is one who writes notable books. Note the book is a text for at least one course at a reputed institution. It has a major review (debating what the review says is not an Afd discussion). If you go to books.google.com and search, you will see mentions to Marchik in [http://books.google.com/books?id=HjO1mkyoMagC&pg=PA101] (Palgrave MacMillan), [http://books.google.com/books?id=0kmvyB8PuFUC&pg=PA267] (W.W. Norton), [http://books.google.com/books?id=vqjWWs9FDFwC] (Kluwer Law: pages 51, 168, 169), [http://books.google.com/books?id=-B_7n0jOJggC&pg=PA83] (Edward Elgar: page 57 in biblio and a bunch of other pages, check with a search), [http://books.google.com/books?id=4tHEFuaKaCAC] (Peterson Institute for International Economics, pages 192, 200, 202), [http://books.google.com/books?id=mhcWghgCx2kC] (Edward Elgar), [http://books.google.com/books?id=z3fGsUG97AoC&pg=PT254] (Yale University Press), [http://books.google.com/books?id=k-GPxGMy8qMC&pg=PA146] (Cengage learning—a textbook in its 13th edition, clearly instructors are using it to teach) and still more, too numerous to mention here. If an author's work is notable, the author is notable per [[WP:AUTHOR]]. Considering that he is also many other things, and considering RSes have covered his work in those fields (appointment to Carlyle, a previous house testimony here at a reliable third-party source, [http://web.wmitchell.edu/lawraza/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/FINAL-FINSA-for-Publication.pdf William Mitchell College of Law publication]) he passes our notability threshold. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 21:33, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
******With regard to the [[WP:OSE]] argument, I'm only attempting to show that these wedding announcements cover insignificant, non-notable people. This doesn't necessarily mean that Marchick himself must be non-notable; only that these announcements themselves don't mean much in those terms. In other words, I am not saying "other people who are covered by wedding announcements don't have wikipedia articles, so Marchick shouldn't either," which would be a [[WP:OSE]] argument. Rather, I'm saying simply that Marchick's announcement ''itself'' can't be taken seriously when considering notability because it's trivial and fits in the context of other trivial coverage of weddings. I don't think this should be controversial, although as always I could be wrong. As to the [[WP:AUTHOR]] argument, I accept as a given that the book in question is notable based on your sources (although this probably tenuous given the [[WP:BK]] requirement for ''multiple'' and ''non-trivial'' coverage, which could be argued against here, and it is only taught in one institution as far as we know, while the requirement is "the subject of instruction at multiple grade schools, high schools, universities or post-graduate programs"). But as I said, I leave that aside for now and accept that it's notable. Marchick has written one notable book. We agree on that, right? Now, where in [[WP:AUTHOR]] do I get to the part where this one notable book makes the author notable? I'll go through the criteria. First, "The person is regarded as an important figure or is widely cited by peers or successors." Do the smattering of references we find in a Google Books search constitute "widely cited"? I argue that they don't, but this is a judgment call. I could only find 50-odd non-duplicative citations of Marchick in books (as opposed to magazines) in a search. I don't think this shows he is regarded as an important figure or is widely cited by peers. The second criterion, "The person is known for originating a significant new concept, theory or technique," hasn't been asserted or shown to be true, so I'll assume for now that this doesn't apply. The next criterion says "The person has created, or played a major role in co-creating, a significant or well-known work, or collective body of work, that has been the subject of an independent book or feature-length film, or of multiple independent periodical articles or reviews." First, I would argue that this book is not significant nor well-known. Second, even if it were significant and well-known, it has not been shown to be the subject of a book, a film or multiple independent periodical articles or reviews. One review has been cited; no others seem to exist. So it must fail this criterion barring new evidence that shows otherwise. The third criterion says "The person's work either (a) has become a significant monument, (b) has been a substantial part of a significant exhibition, (c) has won significant critical attention, or (d) is represented within the permanent collections of several notable galleries or museums." His work plainly has not "become a significant monument". This seems to apply more to visual artists who put on exhibitions, etc. The final criterion applies to academics, which is outside the scope of this discussion unless someone would like to go through the academic notability requirements as they apply to Marchick. To sum up, as far as I can tell, the assertion that an author is notable for their work under [[WP:AUTHOR]] is true to a degree. But I don't think this particular author's work is itself notable enough to make the author notable on a reading of the guidelines. The house testimony also isn't convincing to me as evidence of notability, as discussed earlier. Saying that it's given substantial coverage in the [http://web.wmitchell.edu/lawraza/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/FINAL-FINSA-for-Publication.pdf William Mitchell College of Law publication] doesn't do it for me. He's discussed in passing in a ''footnote'' on page 2, unless I'm missing something. This is clearly trivial coverage if there ever was such a thing. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 06:55, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
*'''Comment'''. I oppose relisting. The thread has already run for 12 days, which practically means it has been relisted once. There is sufficient discussion, and sufficient information unearthed, to decide for good. Deletion is not necessarily based on consensus, it is based on policy and guidelines. One doesn't relist just because there was a lengthy discussion; an Afd tag has real consequences: it scares editors off the page (why put in what could vanish tomorrow), and it leaves readers with a vague idea there is something not fine with the subject. There isn't anything stuck here, since we don't need a consensus to decide an Afd. Here are the sources collected in one place: [https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B86iegI5pG5TTUN4RHlKVS1MeG8 Journal of Economic Literature, Vol XLV, 2007, pp. 1042–44, an in-depth review of his book], [http://www.cfr.org/business-and-foreign-policy/foreign-investment-national-security/p11146 here], [http://cip.gmu.edu/archive/archive/2009_CFIUS_CIP_Update.pdf Journal of Homeland Security, citation to book], [http://books.google.com/books?id=HjO1mkyoMagC&pg=PA101] (Palgrave MacMillan), [http://books.google.com/books?id=0kmvyB8PuFUC&pg=PA267] (W.W. Norton), [http://books.google.com/books?id=vqjWWs9FDFwC] (Kluwer Law: pages 51, 168, 169), [http://books.google.com/books?id=-B_7n0jOJggC&pg=PA83] (Edward Elgar: page 57 in biblio and a bunch of other pages, check with a search), [http://books.google.com/books?id=4tHEFuaKaCAC] (Peterson Institute for International Economics, pages 192, 200, 202), [http://books.google.com/books?id=mhcWghgCx2kC] (Edward Elgar), [http://books.google.com/books?id=z3fGsUG97AoC&pg=PT254] (Yale University Press), [http://books.google.com/books?id=k-GPxGMy8qMC&pg=PA146] (Cengage learning—a textbook in its 13th edition, clearly instructors are using it to teach), [http://cip.gmu.edu/archive/archive/2009_CFIUS_CIP_Update.pdf Washington Post] and Financial times (pay link), [http://www.nytimes.com/1999/01/17/style/weddings-pamela-kurland-david-marchick.html New York Times Style section], book as the course material for a law course at [http://www.law.georgetown.edu/academics/academic-programs/graduate-programs/current-students/upload/National-Security-Law-and-the-Private-Sector-Fagan-and-Plotkin.docx Georgetown University]. That coverage, largely non-trivial (a footnote is not trivial since it is a citation and one should look at the cited material to see the coverage), meets [[WP:BASIC]], which asks for reliable, third-party, non-trivial coverage, and nothing else. Relisting is when sufficient discussion has not occurred, not when there is lack of consensus. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 14:53, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
:*Without actual relisting, this transclusion does not appear on the AfD today list. Listing thus increases the chances of neutral, informed !votes. [[WP:NODEADLINE|What's to fear? There's no rush]]. [[User:JFHJr|JFHJr]] ([[User talk:JFHJr|㊟]]) 01:42, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
:**Agreed -- relist and get fresh eyes. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 06:55, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
::I agree to relist, seems this is stuck in the middle and fresh eyes will help. [[User:Hell in a Bucket|Hell In A Bucket]] ([[User talk:Hell in a Bucket|talk]]) 14:11, 20 October 2012 (UTC)

:<span style="color:#FF4F00;">'''[[WP:RELIST|Relisted]] to generate a more thorough discussion so a clearer consensus may be reached.'''</span><br />
:<small>Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, [[User:Joe Decker|j⚛e decker]][[User talk:Joe Decker|<sup><small><i>talk</i></small></sup>]] 21:42, 20 October 2012 (UTC)</small><!-- from Template:Relist -->
<hr style="width:55%;" />
*'''Further comment''' from nominator. To summarize from this point, I think the following is probably true and more or less established:
**Subject probably does does not meet the general [[WP:GNG]] or [[WP:BIO]] criteria (this is arguable, depending on how you parse various clauses, but probably true IMO). That's OK, there are other sub-criteria we can then look at.
**Subject does not meet any criterion of [[WP:DIPLOMAT]] or [[WP:ACADEMIC]]. This seems fairly well established I think.
**There is no [[WP:ATTORNEY]], [[WP:LOBBYIST]], [[WP:EXECUTIVE]], [[WP:CONSULTANT]], or [[WP:OFFICIAL]] (possibly there should be). If there ''were'', it's very doubtful Marchick would meet them -- he's done all these things, but not been at the very top in any of them.
**He ''does'' arguably meet criteria #1 (and only #1) of [[WP:AUTHOR]] "The person is regarded as an important figure or is widely cited..." He co-wrote one book, ''[http://www.amazon.com/National-Security-Foreign-Direct-Investment/dp/0881323918 U.S. National Security and Foreign Direct Investment]''. A number of books do cite this book. And [http://bookstore.piie.com/book-store/3918.html here] you'll see [[Brent Scowcroft]] calling it "very important", [[Larry Summers]] calling it "an insightful analysis", and [[Bill Emmott]] strongly recommending it. It did get a full review in the ''[[Journal of Economic Literature]]''. (Incidentally his co-author, [[Edward M. Graham]], is probably a lot more notable.)

::[[WP:AUTHOR]] criterion #1 is kind of vague, but it is a valid criterion. We do have articles on writers who wrote basically one book ([[Malcolm Lowry]] and (sort of) [[Henry Roth]] for instance). I can't really rate ''U.S. National Security and Foreign Direct Investment'' up with ''[[Under the Volcano]]'' or ''[[Call It Sleep]]'', though, and only being a '''co'''-writer bothers me quite a bit. (FWIW the other author, [[Edward M. Graham]], is probably a lot more notable.)
**There ''is'' sufficient material to write at least a brief article (primary sources can be used for this, judiciously) so this is not a deal-killer.
**Finally, the point that he doesn't meet [[WP:DIPLOMAT]] or [[WP:ACADEMIC]] or [[WP:ATTORNEY]] or [[WP:LOBBYIST]] or [[WP:EXECUTIVE]] or [[WP:CONSULTANT]] or [[WP:OFFICIAL]] (and assuming he doesn't meet [[WP:AUTHOR]]) but can at least be ''considered'' under each of them, and this has some bearing, is reasonable. I don't agree with that but it's not unreasonable.

:It's a tough question and kind of on the bubble. '''Moving''' [[David Marchick]] to ''[[U.S. National Security and Foreign Direct Investment]]'' might well be the best solution. We could still include a paragraph on Marchick, and this would give the opportunity to include a paragraph on the probably more notable [[Edward M. Graham]]. (I'd be willing to do the work if this course is taken.) [[User:Herostratus|Herostratus]] ([[User talk:Herostratus|talk]]) 01:36, 22 October 2012 (UTC)
<hr style="width:55%;" />
**This is academic, really, but if we were all in agreement that he didn't meet the [[WP:GNG]] requirement (I don't think this is the case), but at the same time agreed that he did meet [[WP:AUTHOR]] or some other sub-guideline (also not the case), would this person be notable? I was under the impression that GNG overrides the other guidelines. In other words, you can't not meet the GNG criteria but still be notable, and the sub-guidelines are attempts to clarify how articles on specific people and subjects qualify under the GNG. Am I incorrect on this? --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 03:03, 22 October 2012 (UTC)
::::[[WP:GNG]] specifies inclusion criteria, not exclusion criteria (check the wording at the top of [[WP:NOTABILITY]]: "A topic is presumed to merit an article if it meets the general notability guideline below, and is not excluded under What Wikipedia is not. A topic is also presumed notable if it meets the criteria outlined in a subject-specific guideline listed in the box on the right."). On the right, in this case, is [[WP:BASIC]] and, if that is not met, [[WP:AUTHOR]] and so on. For some odd reason, for academics, politicians and business people there is usually more resistance than for actors, musicians, educators and the like. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 03:49, 22 October 2012 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for the clarification. It seems to me from this that something can be notable under [[WP:GNG]] or any of the other listed guidelines. So GNG does not in any way "override" the subject-specific guidelines. I get your point about the criteria being inclusion criteria, but to me that also implicitly makes them exclusion criteria. By defining what is notable, you also by necessity are defining what is not notable (everything else). But I agree of course that it's a set of inclusion criteria and doesn't explicitly talk about what's excluded. I haven't noticed that there's more resistance to notability for businesspeople, academics and politicians, but if there is and it's not justified, perhaps it'd be worthwhile proposing a revision to the guidelines that would make it easier to establish notability for people like this. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 18:06, 22 October 2012 (UTC)
*'''Delete''' as failing [[WP:GNG]] due to insufficient in depth coverage in independent sources. [[User:Stuartyeates|Stuartyeates]] ([[User talk:Stuartyeates|talk]]) 22:18, 26 October 2012 (UTC)
::If a subject passes [[WP:BASIC]] the [[WP:GNG]] or [[WP:AUTHOR]] or any other criterion is irrelevant except for the exclusions of [[WP:NOT]]. This subject passes [[WP:BASIC]] and is not excluded by [[WP:NOT]]. [[User:Churn and change|Churn and change]] ([[User talk:Churn and change|talk]]) 22:33, 26 October 2012 (UTC)
*'''Keep''' - The closer may be wondering why the back and forth over a seemingly short article. A likely purpose of the article's posting on 1 June 2010‎ was to bring to light (to out) that Marchick was "a lobbyist for the Halliburton Corporation during the series of controversies that involved the company during the Iraq War,"[http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=David_Marchick&oldid=365428360] which may affect his current position as Carlyle Group managing director for external affairs (which requires external support of the public and a good public image). I seem to recall there was a trend in outing such people within Wikipedia a while back. However, motives aside, the topic clearly has received significant coverage in [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable sources]] that are [[Wikipedia:Independent sources|independent]] of David Marchick as established by Churn and change and his bio shows a career that will be covered by reporters.[http://www.carlyle.com//about-carlyle/team/david-m-marchick]. Starting from 1998 through 1997, we get: {{quote|text=Marchick graduated from the [[University of California, San Diego]] in 1988.<ref name="Science">{{cite news|page =A5 |newspaper = [[Sacramento Bee]] |date =May 28, 1988|section = Main News|title = UC San Diego Outgrowing Its Science-Only Reputation |author =John Lynn Smith |url = |no-tracking=yes}}</ref> While at the University, Marchick was the [[student body president]].<ref name="Science"/> In 1991, Marchick served as a policy analysts in the International Business and Economics program at the [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]], a [[bipartisan]] [[Washington, D.C.]], [[Foreign policy of the United States|foreign policy]] [[think tank]].<ref>{{cite news|page =6A |newspaper = [[Journal Of Commerce]] |date =January 2, 1991|section =EP |title =Three's a Crowd in Trade Talks |author =Sam Armstrong |url = |no-tracking=yes}}</ref> Two years later, when he was 26, Marchick became the deputy director of presidential correspondence for then then newly elected U.S. President, [[Bill_Clinton#First_term.2C_1993.E2.80.931997]].<ref name ="Generation">{{cite news|page =A1 |newspaper = [[Washington Times]] |date =March 7, 1993|section =A |title =Generation lapse Untested youth core of White House staff |author = George Archibald|url = |no-tracking=yes}}</ref> As a "highly paid [[Bill Clinton|Clinton]] aide ", Marchick's January 20, 1993 starting of $32,000 rose to $55,000 two months later.<ref name ="Generation"/> In May 1996, Marchick change his job from being an aide to [[United States Secretary of Commerce]] [[Mickey Kantor ]] to that of a deputy assistant secretary for trade development.<ref>{{cite news|page =A21 |newspaper = [[Washington Post]] |date =May 17, 1996|section =A Section |title =Out Of The Norm: A New King Of Quotes' |author =Al Kamen |accessdate =October 27, 2012|url =http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-785430.html |no-tracking=yes}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|page =B2 |newspaper = [[Akron Beacon Journal]] |date =November 23, 1996|section =Business |title =Bosnia Seeks Help In Rebuilding Economy One Year Has Passed Since Dayton Accord Signed |author =James Hannah |url = |no-tracking=yes}}</ref> As deputy assistant secretary, Marchick traveled to [[Japan]] to monitor progress related to a [[Chevrolet#International_operations|1995 bilateral agreement]] on auto and auto parts between the United States and Japan.<ref>{{cite news|page = |newspaper = [[Kyodo News|Japan Economic Newswire]] |date =January 24, 1997|section = |title =U.S. officials to visit Japan to monitor auto accord |author = |url =}}</ref>}}
<references/>
:From 1997 through 2012, there is plenty of reliable source material from which to develop a stand alone article on the David Marchick topic. Meets [[WP:GNG]]. Keep. -- [[User:Uzma Gamal|Uzma Gamal]] ([[User talk:Uzma Gamal|talk]]) 16:06, 27 October 2012 (UTC)
::Thanks for doing all this research. I've changed my !vote to Keep based on it. Perhaps one day you'll educate us all on the secrets of this wizardry, given that it seems some of these aren't available online. It'd be great if there were new ways and other places we could search for sourcing, unless it's the case that I simply didn't look deeply enough at the results in the usual places. --[[User:Batard0|Batard0]] ([[User talk:Batard0|talk]]) 18:07, 27 October 2012 (UTC)
:''The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's [[Help:Using talk pages|talk page]] or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review|deletion review]]). No further edits should be made to this page.'' <!--Template:Afd bottom--></div>

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