0 OPINION ..mk Tuesday, October 20, 1981. The Michigan Daily 9 Why are you reading the Daily? I wonder why you are reading the Daily right now. I don't read this paper anymore, and I work here. Reading the Daily this semester is like driving down a winding mountain road at 100 mph in dense fog: You know you're going to run into something at every turn. It may be a typo. Or a misspelled word. Or a grammatical mistake. Or a factual error. But Howard Witt day. Instead, I wish to discuss the nuts and bolts syntax of every story, the simple mechanics of writing. Or, put another way, why you will never learn how to write well by reading the Daily. Oh sure, the Daily has always been a haven for typos and factual errors. But the problem is especially acute this year. And the Daily's editors are to blame. We have a few editors who think spelling is just a funny game-it doesn't really matter whether you spell a word correctly, just as long as the story is interesting, they say. So readers are treated to "concensus," and "peak" in- stead of "peek," and "loose" instead of "lose," and "consistantly," to name a recent few. THERE ARE editors who think grammar is that nice old woman married to grandpa. So we get "As if holding down a full-time job and going to graduate school aren't enough . .." ("Aren't" should have been "weren't;" it's that silly thing known as the subjunctive voice.) There are editors who simply have no feel for the English language. Witness this sentence: "They're here, walking in clusters sporting blue, gold, and green, proud with the confiden- ce that God is on their side." And worst of all, the whole crop of editors is proud with the confidence that the Daily is a good newspaper.. They don't like to hear their paper criticized; they'll give you myriad excuses for any problem you can point out. "It takes too much time to find typos," they'll say. Or "if we worried about getting every sentence correct, we'd never put out a paper." Or the most popular: "We don't have enough staff mem- bers." THE DAILY'S NEWS staff is so aloof to criticism, in fact, that the business staff, desperately surveying the typoed ruins, has had to resort to public ridicule to try to solve the problem. Today marks the opening of the "Find the Typos in the Daily" contest. Whoever finds the most mistakes in today's paper will win a free dinner at a local restaurant or a t-shirt or an album.. This contest has outraged most of the news staffers and widened the traditional rift bet- ween those who write the news and those who sell the ads. In fact, there are enough conflicts between the various staffs of the Daily to provide fodder for an award-winning soap opera. But discussion of the Daily's viscera is not my intention here; I'm writing about what you, the average reader, see every day. LIKE THE LITTLE weather blurbs in the upper-right-hand corner of the paper. Can you remember a day when the Daily's weather has ever been correct? Oh yes, back on September 19 I think it was right. Do you know how the Daily gets its weather? At about 3 p.m., someone dials up the Detroit National Weather Service tape-recorded forecast. Up-to-the- minute accuracy-that's the Daily's policy. Here's a lead paragraph from a story in last Tuesday's paper: "The nine RAs and RDs who don't meet the 2.5 grade point average requirement will have until the end of the term to bring up their grades before being fired, housing officials decided yesterday." And what happens if they don't bring up their grades? Do they keep their jobs? HOW ABOUT THIS for a well-written paragraph: "To be found guilty of furnishing intoxicants to a minor, the defendant must sell the alcohol to a minor, and either the defendant knew he was selling to a minor or he did not make a diligent inquiry as to the age of the customer." Or here is a bit of wisdom from a recent Daily editorial: "Citizens have the right not only to print what they choose, but to have access to read what they choose." No, really? Can we say what we choose, too? What a great country we live in. Perhaps all my criticisms seem petty and nitpicking. Indeed, taken individually, they are-a newspaper, by virtue of its daily character, will always contain a certain num- ber of inevitable mistakes. Even The New York Times has typos. But taken as a whole, the Daily is a shoddier newspaper than most. Everything you see in this paper has been reviewed by twd editors-that's about the saddest comment I can make. MAYBE WHAT'S wrong with the Daily is what's wrong with most college students today: They don't know how to write. In each of my upper-level English courses this term, the professor had to spend half an hour reviewing basic English grammar after returning a writing assignment. And I don't mean anything so esoteric as dangling par- ticiples or split infinitives--of course college students can't be expected to know about those. I mean "it's" versus "its" and "their" versus "there." So maybe, if I can take a moment to insult your intelligence, you continue to read tht Daily because you don't even notice the mistakes. And maybe virtual illiterates flock to work at the Daily because they see virtual illiteracy upon its pages. "Hey, I can do that," they boast. I guess in the end you could say I'm kind QJ disgusted. I can get this paper for free, because I work here. I can't imagine why you pay money for it. Witt's column appears every Tue sday. 0 a it's going to be something. And you'll hit it in practically every story. Soiny question is, Why drive through all that? It's a much smoother trip in the Free Press or The Ann Arbor News. I'M NOT EVEN going to try to address the Daily's coverage (or lack of it) in this column. Questions like "Why does the Daily fail to cover a speech by noted '60s radical Bernadine Dohrn?" or "Why does the Daily fail to cover a major international bicycle race held in the heart of campus?" are better left for another Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan AT THE INAUGURATION OF POLAND \A\JUCIECH S NE\N JwRuZELSK I CoMMUAPiST PAFRT LEADER,) I .I Vol. XCII, No. 35 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 AND DO 1QU 5W EA R Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Mubarak' A NWAR SADAT had many admirable qualities as leader of his country. His efforts and willingness to compromise at Camp David in the quest for a lasting peace in the Mideast will be remembered for generations as one of the greatest accomplishments in our time. But there was another side of Sadat that refused to compromise and almost invariably preferred confron- tation to negotiation. It was this ten- dency that Sadat exercised in some of his domestic policies. During the last days of his life, Sadat continued his fierce and often brutal crackdown on his political opponents; chiefly religious extremists, including the Moslem fundamentalists who later took his life. Sadly, his successor, Hosni Mubarak, has vowed to continue promoting-almost indiscrimi- nately-Sadat's policies, both the good and the bad. In the two weeks he has been in office, Mubarak has arrested hundreds, maybe even thousands, of his government's op- ponents, who are again primarily religious extremists. Promising to deal "ruthlessly" with his opponents, Mubarak, with a zeal unknown even to Sadat, dispatched security squads to arrest still more dissidents. Ironically, Mubarak is executing the roundup all in the name of promoting stability. And, from a ruthlessly pragmatic point of view, this assertion might seem reasonable enough. Mubarak and his supporters argue that since Egypt is in the midst of a s crusade dangerous crisis, special measures-even the most flagrant violation of civil liberties-are justified to prevent greater instability and anarchy. Not a bad argument if the crackdown could be excused as an exceptional and very temporary means of restoring order. But the irony of Mubarak's policy of suppression is that in the long run, his hardline approach may well condemn Egypt to violent instability. Though throwing most of one's op- ponents in jail might seem like a good short-run solution, in fact it often only serves to strengthen the opposition. It persuades moderates to become op- ponents, and pushes opponents to em- ploy increasingly radical measures in their,' fight against the government. Further, the crackdown will provide a focus around which elements of the radical left and radical right can unite in opposition. In the end, Mubarak's imprisonment of his radical opposition may generate so much more op- position that he may ensure the down- fall of his own government, thus throwing the entire region into dangerous instability. Left on their own, the Egyptian government's opponents are probably too divided and not strong enough to topple Mubarak. But Mubarak's crusade may solidify the factions of his opposition and doom his own regime. Mubarak should be commended for his dedication to the foreign policy goal of his predecessor, a real peace in the Mideast. But his equal dedication to Sadat's misguided and blatantly unjust domestic policies is dangerously short- sighted. TO 0D 0 TELLC l"I U AID STUPID I 'EAR ? R/1VlO .HlICAN~ tDlL~I NJHATEVER 1 MATTER 110 z DO. J/ to GRANTS, N.M.-Lee Pittard left New Mexico state gover- nment five years ago at age 27 to make his fortune building houses and shopping centers in the uranium boom town of Grants. These days, he still is building-in the oil boom region of southeast New Mexico. Ignacio Salazar, who im- migrated to Grants from Mexico in 1967 and founded an ex- ploratory drilling business with his brothers, still is drilling-for carbon dioxide in northeast New Mexico. Dave Zerwas, insurance agent and ex-mayor of Grants, planned to cash in on the boom with a sub- division of more than 77 homes. Today, his Western Terrace development, its streets laid out, fire hydrants in place, and utility cables laid underground, has somewhat fewer than its planned number of houses-two. , 'Grants, the proud "uranium capital of the world," is still in a depression. Over the past two years, 25 mines have closed, and of the 26 that remain open, at least three are on reduced work schedules and produce only small amounts of uranium for stockpiling. Several others will close in 1982, adding to an estimated 2,500 jobs already lost in the Grants area, where the population has dropped from 15,000 to 12,500. Government statistics and the opinions of outside experts give little ground for optimism. Nevertheless, townspeople here confidently predict a re-boom. "I think Reagan is for the uranium industry, and it is just going to take a little while," said Martin Allex, the city government's director of accounting. "This town's going to make it. Uranium. is going to come back." Paul Robinson, executive director of an Albuquerque-based environmental protection The uranium boom fizzles out' By Peter Katel 1 l t r 1 .. ..._ ,a_...__ _.,:. a faint echo of that criticism. Lee Pittard says that Hobbs, the oil boom town where he now does most of his business, is helped more by oil companies than Grants is by uranium firms. A uranium company executive tacitly acknowledged that his in- dustry has some unmet respon- sibilities to the town. But Steve Mooney, executive vice president of Gulf Mineral Resources, a division of Gulf Oil now developing the world's deepest uranium mine at Mt. Taylor near Grants, said: "There just hasn't been the kind of profit structure that would allow (uranium) com- panies to do some of the things they would like to do." When the uranium industry began, the U.S. government was its sole customer, under long- term contracts that provided a comfortable return to the sup- pliers. Then in the 1960s the government curtailed buying, stopping altogether in 1970. The uranium industry-and Gran- ts-suffered for a few years. But shortly after, with nuclear power seen as the wave of the future, the market started to boom. In April 1976 the price of uranium reached $40 a pound. In uranium producers, "there was probably some over-optimism about the uranium market." The rest of the nuclear industry made the same mistake, he added. Though the price of uranium failed to rise after 1976 in real dollar terms, and then dropped in the wake of the 1979 Three Mile Island disaster, "the uranium in- dustry kept gearing up and it's almost as if the sellers totally took their eyes off the customers," said, one professional uranium watcher and nuclear power advocate. And when the market- fell, Grants bled. The, public school system already has laid off 25 teachers and 20 aides and' custodians, as enrollment dropped from the peak of 5,900 in 1978-79 to less than 5,200 this year. Businessmen say that bankruptcies are com- mon. Suppliers have tightened credit terms on the surviving en- terprises. There is an apartment vacancy rate of more than 30 percent, compared to 9.2 percent one year ago. Though there is talk in Grants of broadening the town's economic base, nothing yet has come of it. August that the uranium industry can turn around in five years. The Grants Daily Beacon called that forecast "bad news," but the real picture may be even worse. The overall consumption of electricity in the United States hastrisen only two to three per- cent a year since the 1973-74 oil embargo. For decades, before, the annual growth rate had been seven percent. That is one reason why utilities have been can- celling nuclear reactor construc- tion orders. In 1973, according to the Department of Energy, 25 new reactors were ordered. In 1979 and 1980 the number was zero. In addition, he said, foreign uranium is cheaper. As for uranium purchases by gover- nment for military uses, White said, such buying "is zeroeand likely to be zero." The gover- nment has stockpiled 50,000 tons of uranium, and military uses require amounts far smaller than civilian reactors. The effects of one-industry dependence are easily visible in a town as small as Grants. They become crystal clear when one looks at its individual citizens. Margarito Martinez, a uranium miner for 20 years and a coal miner for -22 years before that, said he doesn't worry about him- self in the event of the industry shutting down completely in Grants. He owns his home free and clear and has no debts. But there is the matter of his 25-year-old son, a miner for Kerr-McGee. "I want him to stay here. He wants to," Martinez said. "I am concerned about it--after all, I'm the one that sold him on the in- dustry. He could have gone to college. That's the only thing I feel bad about." , ._ s a.t t n rr}nJ ' i AM