Transylvania is welcoming a multitude of new faculty and staff this year. There are a total of five new professors this semester, and over the next month The Rambler will be introducing each of them to the campus. This is a way for the members of Transylvania to become familiar with the new professors as well as to truly welcome them to the Transy community.
Although Stephen Johnson, Assistant Professor of Physics, is new to the Transylvania faculty this year, he is not entirely new to the university. Johnson attended Transylvania and graduated in 2004, as did his wife.
During his time as a student, Johnson had both current physics professor Jamie Day and retired professor Rick Rolfes. Johnson explained that both professors, along with the rest of the Transylvania faculty, impacted the person and educator he is today.
“As much as I lived in BSC (Brown Science Center) at the time, I still loved so many classes in Haupt that I had over there with various English professors. I think the sum total of all of those has really shaped me into who I am now,” said Johnson.
Like many current students, when Johnson first started school at Transy, he was unsure of what he was majoring in. He remembers taking a physics class first semester and actually not doing very well on the first test.
“It was a wake-up call,” said Johnson. “I thought to myself, ‘I can do better than that.’”
So Johnson pushed himself harder and kept taking more physics classes and realized he truly enjoyed the subject. Johnson encourages any current student that is interested in the subject, but might be struggling, to try and pursue it anyway.
“It’s going to be a challenge, but if you really enjoy it, then work hard at it and come see me and come see Dr. Day and we’ll work with you to help you understand it,” said Johnson.
Something that mirrors this advice is a sign in Johnson’s office that says “Physics: No Pain, No Gain.” The sign was previous professor Rick Rolfes’s, but Johnson decided to keep it because of the message it could teach students.
“I thought about taking it down or maybe moving it, but you know I think there’s actually some truth in that so I’m going to leave it,” said Johnson. “Not to scare students, but to make people realize that physics is one of those things that to most people, myself included many times, it doesn’t just come extremely intuitively. You got to put in the work to do well.”
After graduating from Transy, Johnson continued on to graduate school at Vanderbilt University. Johnson explained that while there he did research in applied optical physics and laser material interaction and studied “how light, and specifically infrared light, interacts with polymer systems and organic molecules.” He received his Ph.D. in physics in 2008.
Once he received his Ph.D., Johnson worked on his postdoctoral at the University of Kentucky and focused his research in nanophysics and graphene. Afterwards, he started working at a nanotech company in Lexington. Johnson worked there from 2010 to 2016, but knew he wanted to teach eventually.
“As much as I liked doing that type of fast-paced, cutting-edge research, I just realized I wanted to come back to academics. I guess I’m an academic at heart,” said Johnson. “The one thing I like about academics in general, and I think Transy really epitomizes this, is it’s just a learning environment.”
Johnson described his favorite thing about campus so far as “interacting with the students and knowing that I’m teaching them something and that they’re learning something.”
“It’s a great feeling, it really is,” he said.
McConnell standing by Trump reveals larger ‘straight ticket’ problem
A recording from 2005 has just recently surfaced, and it includes the Republican Presidential nominee, Donald Trump, using extremely explicit terms describing him “pushing” himself on women.
Trump has been accused of being a misogynist many times over, and this video just confirms it. These comments, from a presidential candidate, discredit him completely. Trump released an apology where he stated that the comments he made do not “reflect” the man he is today in any way. This is ridiculous; just because this was captured over a decade ago does not excuse Trump for his actions. He claims that this story is just a “…distraction from the important issues we are facing today.”
One important issue that we are facing today, Mr. Trump, is oppression of women in modern society. There is never a time when a woman should be objectified and talked about in such a disgusting way. It is simply inexcusable. I was very surprised that Trump apologized at all, but apologizing and then immediately denouncing the act as unimportant does not help anything. A presidential nominee should never act like this.
Luckily, some important GOP members have realized this. Here is a list of some GOP members that have decided to hold Trump accountable:
For some of these members, the leaked video was the last straw. They all have their opinions on Trump and they have decided that he is not fit for the presidency. What is interesting is that their opinions are very similar to a certain senator’s opinions; however, this senator is still for Trump:
Mitch McConnell is a six-term senator from Kentucky, and he has been a major leader within the senate for decades. After seeing the video, McConnell had this to say:
Currently, even after denouncing Trump’s various comments numerous times, he is still going to back the Republican nominee. This brings up a more serious problem rampant in today’s politics. People are voting for parties rather than candidates, especially in national elections.
In Kentucky, we are historically represented by Republicans at the national level but we usually vote Democrat in state elections. This year we elected a Republican governor, Matt Bevin, and it has really clarified the problem.
Kentucky has around 500,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans, according to this Voter Registration Report from 2014, but Republicans tend to be more well represented. Why is this? Well there is no way to really know exactly why, but I would say that voter apathy, conservative democrats and republicans voting “straight ticket” has a lot to do with it.
Voting for a party rather than a candidate can have a serious effect. Kentucky is a perfect example of this. Say what you will about Jack Conway, but Matt Bevin was definitely not what you’d call the best choice. He attacked education and the arts openly and immediately created controversy as soon as he was elected. He has repeatedly abused his power, he has abolished the University of Louisville’s entire Board of Trustees for a problem that could have been easy fixed through a judicial process and tried to cut funding from state universities (this action was recently overturned due to a legal ruling against Bevin’s plan).
This idea of just voting for someone because of their party is a serious issue, it has seriously hurt Kentucky and Kentuckians. And if, after this latest controversy, McConnell does not do something, it will seriously hurt our nation.
McConnell simply deciding to not vote for Trump is admittedly not going to change a whole lot, but I think that if the Majority Leader of the U.S. Senate were to openly declare that his vote was not going to Trump, I think many GOP members that are on the fence would be more likely to follow suit.
I am not trying to prove that Trump is a very poor choice for President. Many people have done that for me already, including both Senator McConnell and Trump himself. I just ask that McConnell realize that this country is a democracy, a democracy run by good individuals who want to make America a better place, and not a collection of political parties.
If you wish to express your concerns for where the Kentucky vote will go during the presidential election, you can contact Senator McConnell here. Politicians are here to serve you, so please let them know what you are thinking.