Oh, golly. I've just received a fundraising letter from a university---with an internationally respected publisher attached, too.
It's entitled "Oxford Thinking. And Doing." and the punctuation only gets worse. There are nine pages of captioned pictures which have full stops at the end of all, and only, those phrases which aren't actual sentences. There's a letter signed by the V-C telling me "We are becoming one world. Our world."
Among all this horrorshow syntax the opening sentence of the letter, "Today, the defining struggle in the world is between relentless growth and the potential for collaboration" is almost invisible, but deserves honorable mention for tendentious vacuity.
Surely, surely, decent grammar is one of the first requirements for professional curmudgeon-squeezers?