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WORDS | ‘AMERICAN RAGE’

Casual observers and hardened political pros alike came away from the 2016 presidential campaign thinking it was the most nasty showdown in American history, thanks to the talk of “Lock her up!” tiny hands and JFK assassination conspiracies.

Cornell Clayton
Clayton

In reality, the harsh tone and incredible accusations thrown around by candidates are part of the country’s long, maybe not-so-proud history, according to Washington State University political science professor Cornell Clayton. He explores the good, the bad and the ugly of American politics as part of the Humanities Washington speakers bureau, and will be in Spokane on Wednesday to lecture on “American Rage: Division and Anger in U.S. Politics.”

“What I think is a bit distinctive about today’s political period,” he says, “is not only are we polarized and deeply divided over issues, but we have remained so over a long period of time. If you go back to 1968, we’ve had a long period of elections that were extremely contested.”

Close elections and divided government, both common for the past 40 or so years, leads to the inability of government to function, dismaying Americans on both sides of the aisle, says Clayton.

“The government can’t address important social, economic and political issues,” he says. “That gridlock is so frustrating for Americans that they’re willing to reach for a strongman, populist demagogue like a Donald Trump.”

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Inlander

‘Crazy’ in politics subject of museum lecture Friday

Political sound and fury, and even where politics gets a little crazy, is the subject of a lecture at 7 p.m. Friday at the Moses Lake Museum & Art Center, 401 S. Balsam St.

Washington State University professor Cornell Clayton will talk about “Crazy Politics: Populism, Conspiracy Theories and Paranoia in America.” Admission is free.

The lecture is sponsored by the museum and Humanities Washington.

Clayton said populism and political paranoia are two separate strands of thought, but “they are related in some ways.” Both have deep historical roots in U.S. politics.

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The Columbia Basin Herald

Local scientists don’t know if EPA freeze will hamper their research

The Trump administration’s freeze on Environmental Protection Agency grants and contracts is frustrating local agencies that don’t know what to expect. For scientists at Washington State University’s Vancouver campus, it could mean a difference of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Gretchen Rollwagen-Bollens
Rollwagen-Bollens

Environmental science professor Gretchen Rollwagen-Bollens is the head of the aquatic-biology lab. She and other scientists recently applied for a $760,000 grant to study toxic algae blooms. The research could help keep local lakes from being closed because the waters are too poisonous to play in or drink.

The scientists don’t have any idea if the freeze includes that proposal.

“If our proposal doesn’t get funded, it doesn’t mean we have to close up shop and go home, but it is a major resource to support undergrads, our graduate students, to support our technical staff,” Rollwagen-Bollens said.

The grant money pays grad and undergrad students wages for their research work.

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Pullman community brainstorms bus stop enhancements

Local city officials, student engineers, artists and designers are paying attention to Pullman’s bus stops and brainstorming ways to make them a vibrant reflection of the city.

Squeak Meisel
Meisel

“Essentially we want to make a beacon in the community,” said Squeak Meisel, chair of the Fine Arts Department at WSU.

“Pullman transit bus stops are not engaging or attractive,” said Wayne Thompson, Pullman transit manager.

Members of the public attended the meeting with Thompson and WSU students in fine arts, engineering, and design and construction.

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Moscow-Pullman Daily News

 

Academics fear Trump administration will chop science, arts, humanities funding

The Trump administration appears ready to eliminate the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts, and uncertainty also looms over the future of scientific research, leaving many academics at Washington State University and elsewhere scrambling to understand how the new presidency will impact publicly funded research.

Greg Yasinitsky
Greg Yasinitsky

Music professor Greg Yasinitsky, a renowned saxophonist who leads the WSU School of Music and plays for the Spokane Symphony, said he can’t comprehend why Trump would eliminate the NEA, which offers financial support to artists, symphonies, museums, theater houses and dance companies across the country.

The NEA and NEH each operate on just $150 million annual budgets, representing a tiny sliver of the multi-trillion-dollar federal budget. Yasinitsky fears that Trump’s cost-cutting zeal could have a chilling effect on the fine arts.

Cornell Clayton
Clayton

Cornell Clayton, a political science professor and director of WSU’s Foley Institute for Public Policy and Public Service, said the endowments are also valuable resources for K-12 schools and communities in “middle America.”

“Talk to any rural librarian,” Clayton said. “These kinds of grants are what allow them to bring exhibits and other things to rural communities.” » More …