A Lamb Basting
A few weeks
ago my daughter was awarded a PhD from an Australian university, so I did what
a lot of proud parents would do: I
submitted an announcement of the achievement to the local paper. In the announcement was some background to
the doctorate, including her two prior degrees, so you can imagine my
consternation, when the article appeared in print, to read that she had not in fact
earned a master’s degree at Oxford, as I had supposed, but a baster’s
degree. My wife and I had been telling
friends and family that she had been fooling with nano-particles and the like, but
it seems that actually the most expensive part of her post-secondary education
was spent honing her skills with gravies, broths, and bouillons. Who knew?
It makes
one wonder what treatment others’ significant life milestones receive in this
paper:
“Franz and
Lisette (now Mr. and Ms. Dayte-Pitt) were marred Saturday in a lavish outdoor
ceremony at Quingling Park, overlooking the Puget Sound. Said the pride, ‘It made our bedding so
special to have all of our friends there to participate with and encourage
us.’ The deception followed immediately
at the same location...”
Or, “Come
Monday, there will be a notable vacancy at the county Superior Court—the
honorable Milo Q. Floozle called it a careen on Friday, hanging up his judicial
ropes and embarking on a well earned retirement. Although he spent more than 20 years as a deputy
persecutor with the county, it was his seven years on the wench at the Superior
Court that gave judge Floozle the most satisfaction...”
Or how
about, “Alfred R. Stellenbosch entered peacefully into rost with the Lard,
surrounded by his family, including his daughter, who had just arrived after
being awarded a taster’s degree from Harvard.”
I am sympathetic
to the plight of small-market journalism; I seem to hear weekly predictions of
its imminent demise. But that sympathy
is tempered when I discover that my own local paper is so careless in running a
simple “local student makes good” piece, turning what should be a proud
announcement into an object of derision—“Ha ha!
A baster’s degree!” This
carelessness is even harder to excuse when, as in this case, all the editor had
to do was cut and paste the scrupulously proofread announcement that was
submitted electronically. After an
experience like this, what faith can I have in the accuracy of the paper’s more
challenging articles, which require reporters to go out, ask questions, check
facts, and write up the stories from scratch?