The result was keep. Cirt ( talk) 00:23, 10 February 2010 (UTC) reply
While University of Miami ( | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) was going through a GA review, Racepacket ( talk · contribs) decided that based on the feedback he received, the UM Business School required its own article based on the fact that a chunk of the UM article focused on magazine rankings stating that the UM Business School was #X amongst other business schools. I redirected it back to the main UM a total of 3 times, but Racepacket continues to undo my redirect and say that "[I] should not delete the page, if [I] want it gone [I] should send it to AFD". So here I am.
Of the various references utilized for the article, 11 of them are published by the Business School (located on the Business School's website). Another four are "UM's Business School is #X according to this magazine" references. The other references are two non-trivial mentions in news papers and another is a reference at GradSchools.com to show that you are awarded an MBA by graduating from UM's Business School.
Compared to the other divisions of the University of Miami, I don't find this one any more notable than say the College of Arts & Sciences (the largest at UM), the School of Communication, or the Frost School of Music (which has an article that I have no opinion on, but should probably go too).
All in all, the Business School is just a building on the UM campus that only has a page on Wikipedia because Racepacket has it in his mind that the main University of Miami article must be promoted to GA through any means possible because there is no WikiProject for the University to organize such an endeavor. The forking of content is certainly not necessary, especially when the article reads like an advertisement (the "boosterism" that Racepacket has been saying he is trying to avoid).— Ryūlóng ( 竜龙) 21:09, 3 February 2010 (UTC) reply