網頁

星期三, 5月 13, 2015

“新泉香如故” 彈古奏今七回合

來自紐約的中國管樂三大金剛,包鍵、胡建兵、陳濤和紐約及本地樂手,翁慧、劉麗、周懿、蔡振起等人,日前在中華表演藝術基金會安排於新英格蘭音樂學院喬登廳 (Jordan Hall)演出的“新泉香如故”音樂會,讓出席者既讚樂音美妙,也嘆中樂推廣不易。
中華表演藝術基金會會長譚嘉陵指出,包鍵、胡建兵、陳濤等人組成的紐約北美中樂團,曾經兩度在波士頓推出中樂演奏會,從”荒漠錦堂-智化寺古音樂“ ”玄門步虛”,都大獲好評,這次的”新泉香如故“嘗試更大膽,帶聽眾從十六世紀中的傳統中國音樂,神遊穿梭進新譜曲目。
這場音樂會的主要策劃人胡建兵,畢業於中央音樂學院,現任北美中樂團團長,加入馬友友擔任音樂總監的”絲綢之路“樂團,已有十五年,今年二月才參加該團與紐約愛樂樂團在林肯中心慶祝”絲綢之路“樂團成立十五週年的三場演奏會。
胡建兵表示,過去這些年來,他一直記掛著老師胡志厚的諄諄教誨,也在演奏,創新之際,不斷創作新曲,想揉和中國傳統音樂與詩詞之美,給人新的感動。
這場音樂會由劉麗、陳濤以琴簫合奏古曲“普庵咒 ”,用撮音形成古刹聞禪的莊嚴肅穆氣氛,拉開序幕。
今年初獲新英格蘭音樂學院留校任教的古箏獨奏家翁慧,以一曲“林泉”,用樂音畫山水,讓聽眾感受流水淙淙的時而激盪,時而恬靜。
曾為百老匯音樂劇“鐵路之舞”,“功夫”配樂,當過歌劇院特約藝術家的周懿,在小樂隊伴奏中,以琵琶領奏了古曲“月兒高”,讓聽眾領會這演繹自明代嘉靖年間琵琶譜手抄本《高和江東》中著名的琵琶傳統大套文曲。
陳濤吹笛,翁慧彈古箏的“秋江夜泊”,則是陳濤創作,當晚在會上做世界首演的曲目,嘗試讓聽眾從音樂角度感受唐代詩人張繼那首 "楓橋夜泊"詩的意境。
胡建兵吹笙獨奏,在美國首演的“江南柳”,取材自詩人張先的同名詞作。
胡建兵作曲,包鍵吹管,翁慧彈古箏的“香如故”,這次也是在美國首演,取材自詩人陸游的“詠梅”。不少出席者,邊聽演奏,邊拿出節目冊來欣賞這首詞,"驛外斷橋邊,寂寞開無主。 已是黃昏獨自愁,更著風和雨。 無意苦爭春,一任群芳妒。 零落成泥碾作塵, 只有香如故“,彷彿步入古人世界。
音樂會的最後一首曲目,由劉麗以古琴領奏”憶故人“一曲。
會後,歷史學者暨樂評家陸惠風透露,一名在杭州大學教書,目前正在波士頓訪問的學者感嘆表示,想不到竟然在波士頓聽這麼好的中樂。
一名在會後到演奏者休息室,排隊向演奏者致意的女士也激動地向中華表演藝術基金會會長譚嘉陵表示,希望以後義務代做宣傳。她說,這麼好的中國音樂演奏,觀眾卻不夠多,實在太可惜了。

圖片說明:

      後排左起,胡建兵,包鍵,郭雅志,陳濤,前排右起,譚嘉陵,劉麗,周懿,翁慧等人會後合影。(菊子攝)

演奏家們最後合奏。(菊子攝)


演奏家們謝幕。(菊子攝)

衛福部長蔣丙煌在「普羅維敦斯紀事報」發表全民健保專文

衛福部長蔣丙煌在「普羅維敦斯紀事報」發表全民健保專文

中華民國104512
我國衛生福利部蔣丙煌部長511日在羅德島州第一大報「普羅維敦斯紀事報」(Providence Journal)發表專文,盼在世界衛生大會召開前夕,與美國及全球讀者分享我國全民健保之成功經驗與未來挑戰。
68屆「世界衛生大會」(World Health Assembly)將於5月中旬在瑞士日內瓦舉行,蔣部長將於518日代表我國出席,此為我國第7度以觀察員身分參與該會。
蔣部長於專文中指出,台灣的醫療服務系統因提供國人方便且高品質的醫療照護服務,而獲得全球肯定。我國超過99%的國民納入健保,約93%的醫療院所與健保特約。此一成果獲得高達80%的民眾肯定。
蔣部長表示,台灣健保的財源籌措並非一帆風順,健保開辦的第4(1999)開始,健康保險局即面臨嚴竣的財務壓力,除健保局升格為健康保險署外,二代健保於2013年實施後,因投資所得增加及課徵非薪資收入2%的補充保險費,終於轉虧為盈。
專文指出,台灣全民健保為單一保險人制度,可有效地將最新的資訊科技整合於服務中,達到行政費用低,管理效率高之效果。其中較重大的措施包括採用健保IC卡、醫院申報及支付系統全面自動化、雲端藥歷系統上線及2014年實施的健康存摺等。
蔣部長強調,現今低生育率及人口老化已成為全球趨勢,台灣也不例外,預測至2060年時高齡人口將超過40%。屆時台灣的老化速度將為全球第一,而日益減少的工作人口須負擔與日俱增的高齡人口醫療費用,將是台灣社會面臨的新挑戰。
因此,蔣部長指出,減緩人口老化速度、促進國人健康、維繫健保財務穩健,以確保健保永續經營,將是台灣未來努力的目標。
普羅維敦斯紀事報發行量約15萬份,為羅德島州最大報紙。

AG HEALEY ANNOUNCES GRANT OPPORTUNITY FOR SUMMER YOUTH JOBS

AG HEALEY ANNOUNCES GRANT OPPORTUNITY FOR SUMMER YOUTH JOBS
$300,000 in Grants Recovered from Health Care Settlements Will Fund 200 Summer Jobs that Promote Physical Activity and Wellness

BOSTON – Aimed at providing underserved youth with opportunities for both employment and health and wellness, Attorney General Maura Healey today announced funding for an estimated 200 summer youth jobs across Massachusetts cities and towns, public school districts, and non-profit organizations.
“Giving kids the opportunity to work in their communities helps keep them off the streets in the summer months and offers them the chance to challenge themselves in new and different ways,” said AG Healey. “By focusing these grants on jobs in health and wellness, we can also help tackle the issue of obesity levels among children. These grants will enable municipalities, schools districts and nonprofits in Massachusetts to address a variety of challenges facing our youth.”

The Summer Youth Jobs Grant Program is funded with $300,000 recovered by the AG’s Office from consent judgments against pharmaceutical companies Johnson & Johnson and GlaxoSmithKline. Beyond increasing youth employment, funding will also promote physical fitness and wellness activities for Massachusetts youth.
Between 2000 and 2014, the teen employment rate has dropped to 30 percent from 45 percent. Additionally, research shows that the average American child watches about 35 hours of television a week, an increase of more than two hours per week since 2009 and a 12 percent increase over the last nine years.

Examples of youth jobs that could receive funding include, but are not limited to:
·         Working as a coach, team leader, or mentor for a pre-existing sports-related activity for youth of documented low socio-economic status;
·         Assisting with a sports or physical fitness program;
·         Working as a teacher or teacher’s assistant for an exercise or physical fitness class for youth or senior citizens; and/or
·         Participating in community gardening efforts to grow fresh produce for food banks.

Grant awards are available to fund youth employment from July 6 to August 28. Interested applicants can visit the Attorney General’s website, www.mass.gov/ago/grants, for additional information and for application instructions. The deadline to apply for the Summer Youth Jobs Grant Program is 4 p.m. on May 28. 

Chinese Management in a Global Context Call for Submissions

Chinese Management in a Global Context

Call for Submissions

A Special Issue of China Media Research


This special issue (CMR-2016-04) invites scholars from across disciplines to examine the Chinese management in a global context. The rapid development of the Chinese economy as well as the internationalization of Chinese firms in recent decades has warranted an opportunity for scholars to examine, refine, and develop a set of systematic knowledge regarding Chinese management from indigenous, non-Chinese (e.g., Western), and/or ambi-cultural perspectives. Papers dealing with the test or explication of principles, theories, or methods of Chinese management from different cultural or contextual aspects using qualitative and/or quantitative research methodologies are invited. Submissions must not have been previously published nor be under consideration by another publication. We’ll accept the extended abstract (up to 1,000 words) of the paper at the first stage of the reviewing process. Please email Word attachment of the extended abstract to the guest editors, Dr. Guo-Ming Chen and Dr. Tony Fang at and gmchen@uri.edu and tony.fang@sbs.su.se, respectively. All submissions must be received by October 1, 2015. The complete manuscript must be received by March 25, 2016 after the extended abstract is accepted. Accepted manuscripts should be prepared in accordance with APA style and should not exceed 8,000 words (including references). Please visit http://www.chinamediaresearch.net for more information about the quarterly journal of China Media Research. For inquiry, please contact Dr. Guo-Ming Chen at gmchen@uri.edu.

Governor Baker Names MassDOT Chair and Final Board Appointment

Governor Baker Names MassDOT Chair and Final Board Appointment

BOSTON – Governor Charlie Baker today announced the administration’s remaining appointment to the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) and designated Ruth Bonsignore as the Chair of the MassDOT Board. Former Commissioner of Public Works and Parks for the City of Worcester, Robert Moylan, Jr. will join Secretary of Transportation Stephanie Pollack, Bonsignore and the five additional appointments named by Governor Baker last week, on the MassDOT Board.

“Robert joins a group of experts with tested experience and knowledge in their respective fields to begin the fresh start needed to lead the Commonwealth’s transportation initiatives,” said Governor Baker. “From the Registry to our highways, this group is tasked with enormous responsibility.  The MBTA panel uncovered monumental challenges in the aftermath of this harsh winter, and I look forward to this new board under Ruth’s leadership expanding and working alongside our proposed Fiscal Management and Control Board as we strive to do better than the status quo with our transit systems which left riders stranded and tax dollars squandered.”

“Worcester has benefitted tremendously from Bob’s decades of service and commitment to improving infrastructure and development,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “We look forward to having his energy and expertise alongside the new members and chair of the MassDOT Board and Secretary Pollack during what is a critical time for reforming the MBTA and improving the overall level of customer service for the Commonwealth’s traveling public.”

Yesterday, Governor Baker and Secretary Pollack testified in front of the legislature’s Joint Committee on Transportation in support of the administration’s MBTA reform legislation, “H.3347 An Act for a Reliable, Sustainable MBTA.” The recommendations for the legislation were developed by Governor’s special MBTA review panel of transportation experts to evaluate the structural and operational problems exposed by a harsh winter and the resulting impairment of the MBTA’s ability to reliably serve its customers.  The Panel’s report, Back on Track:  An Action Plan to Transform the MBTA, was released on April 8.

The legislation establishes a Fiscal Management and Control Board (FMCB) and Chief Administrator to oversee the MBTA’s operations and finances through 2018 and includes reforms to improve the MBTA’s transparency, performance management, budget planning and procurement processes. It also reconstitutes the terms and structure of the MassDOT board to be chaired by the Secretary of Transportation and includes 11 members which will consist of representation by communities served by the MBTA and a regional transit authority.

The MassDOT board is comprised of seven (7) members appointed by the Governor with one designated as the chair.  Each member is required to fulfill a specific criteria with expertise in transportation, finance and engineering.  The Secretary of Transportation also serves on the board.  The MassDOT board serves as the governing authority for both the MassDOT and the MBTA and oversees the following: Highway, Mass Transit, Aeronautics, the Registry of Motor Vehicles (RMV), the Office of Planning and Programming and the Office of Performance Management and Innovation.


About the MassDOT Board Members:

Ruth Bonsignore (Chair) has over 30 years of professional consulting experience in transportation planning and design, systems analyses and operations, and policy for federal, state and regional public agencies and private sector clients throughout the east coast. Ruth earned her B.S. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from University of Massachusetts and her Master’s in Transportation from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Most recently, Ms. Bonsignore served as Senior Vice President and Transportation Practice Area Leader at the Massachusetts-based consulting firm VHB/Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc.

Robert Moylan, Jr. served the last 21 years as the Commissioner of the Department of Public Works and Parks for the City of Worcester, overseeing a $90 million operating budget, $45 million capital budget and 400 employees responsible for the city’s water, traffic, maintenance, waste, engineering and recreational activities. During that time he was selected as a Top Ten public works official from over 26,000 public works professionals. Prior to his appointment as Commissioner, Moylan held various other technical and managerial roles in the Department. Moylan is a Registered Professional Engineer and Land Surveyor, receiving a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from the University of Massachusetts in addition to postgraduate work at Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

Dominic Blue is the Vice President and Assistant General Counsel at Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company and a previous member of the Mass DOT board.  Prior to his current position, Blue gained nine years of legal experience at two firms in Boston where he represented and advised numerous companies, funds, and government organizations.  He has been involved in his community through leadership roles on associations and boards in the Commonwealth, most recently as a board member of the Greater Springfield YMCA. Blue received his M.B.A. and J.D. from Boston College in 2002.

Brian Lang currently serves as President of UNITE HERE Local 26, Boston’s hotel and food service union.  Lang has spent a total of seventeen years representing the union’s 7,000 members, starting as organizing director and eventually being elected as president in 2011.  Before joining the UNITE HERE Local 26 team, Lang was already involved as a community organizer for SEIU Local 285.  His previous work experience as a meatpacker and a bellman has given Lang a strong understanding for the needs of hotel and food service employees that he uses to advocate for workers’ rights.

Steve Poftak is executive director of the Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston at Harvard Kennedy School.  Poftak was Director of Research and Director of the Center for Better Government at the Pioneer Institute for Public Policy Research.  He has led research projects and authored a number of papers on transportation policy, government efficiency, municipal finance, and job creation.  Previously, Poftak worked at the Commonwealth's Executive Office for Administration and Finance, where he managed the $1.3 billion capital budget, prepared the state's quarterly cash flow reporting, and monitored non-tax revenue receipts.

Betsy Taylor is Director of Finance and Treasury at Massachusetts Port Authority , where she has  played a critical role in budgeting, financial planning, treasury management, and project financing for over 35 years.  In her current role, Taylor established the Massport Treasury Department, prepared major authority-wide financing strategy, and led Massport’s re-entrance to the bond market.  She previously worked in budget management and administration at University of Massachusetts, Smith College, and Lesley College.  Taylor earned her BA graduating cum laude from Oberlin College, and her MBA from Stanford University.

民主黨聲稱共和黨支持廿六州起訴奧巴馬

民主黨聲稱共和黨人起訴奧巴馬,以阻擋可負擔醫保法之後,現在又再起訴他,以阻擋移民法。昨天有113名共和黨籍國會議員支持正在起訴奧巴馬總統的美國廿六州。美國沒有其他任何一名總統面對過這種程度的盲目憎恨。

BREAKING: REPUBLICANS BACK LAWSUIT AGAINST OBAMA
 
FIRST: The Republicans sued President Obama to block his Affordable Care Act.

NOW: The Republicans are suing President Obama to block his immigration action.

Yesterday, 113 Congressional Republicans backed TWENTY-SIX states who are SUING President Obama. No other president has EVER faced this level of blind hatred.

President Obama needs an ENORMOUS surge of grassroots support behind him today.

僑營臺灣美食餐廳評選活動,熱情邀約業者報名參加

僑營臺灣美食餐廳評選活動,熱情邀約業者報名參加

僑務委員會長久致力於規劃辦理國內外各類型美食相關課程或巡迴講座,提供海外僑營業者之餐飲培訓、經營管理、諮商輔導,以扶植僑營餐飲事業持續向上外,對於臺灣美食國際化之推動不遺餘力,期使臺灣美食之海內外網絡連結更加緊密。

海外僑民努力經營的餐飲服務業發展歷史悠久、成果豐碩,儼然成為僑社聯誼及交流活動的重要平臺及推廣臺灣美食的重要據點與資產。為持續提升僑營美食業者海外經營水平與能量,策動海外僑營美食業者提供水準以上的臺灣優質美食,僑務委員會自2013年開始積極推動「僑營臺灣美食餐廳評選」,並輔以僑營臺灣美食標章的授予,讓國際友人及僑民更容易識別具優質臺灣風味美食的店家。

今年度「僑營臺灣美食餐廳評選」於美國紐約、芝加哥、洛杉磯、舊金山、休士頓、華盛頓、西雅圖、亞特蘭大、波士頓、邁阿密及加拿大多倫多和溫哥華等12大區域推動辦理。當中,國內外評審團隊將針對:餐廳之菜餚、環境、服務等指標,透過實地評選的方式評選出僑營臺灣美食餐廳。而通過評選的僑營臺灣美食餐廳,除將獲頒僑營臺灣美食標章外,亦能獲得相關後續行銷輔助及經營輔導資源。

活動報名受理時間為即日起至2015614日止,歡迎經營滿1年備有固定店面或座位,且店中有提供臺灣美食之僑營餐館報名參加。詳細活動報名內容及申請須知下載請見:僑委會全球資訊網 http://www.ocac.gov.tw/、全球僑商服務網http://www.ocbn.org.tw/或僑營臺灣美食餐廳網 http:// www.gourmettw-oqr.com/

星期二, 5月 12, 2015

曲建民獲聘為塔芙茨大學工學院院長

轉載自塔芙茨大學校刊

Jianmin Qu Named Dean of Engineering at Tufts

经过国际范围内的公开选拔,出生于中国的华裔科学家曲建民教授受聘担任Tufts新一任工学院院长。

据公开资料显示,曲建民教授1982年毕业于吉林大学数学力学系,1987年在美国西北大学理论与应用力学专业获得博士学位,导师为国际著名力学家,美国科学院与工程院院士J. D. Achenbach博士。

曲建民教授拥有丰富的科研管理及教学经验,他自1989年起在美国佐治亚理工大学机械工程学院任教,1999年起任正教授,2007年起任副院长。2009年起任美国西北大学工学及应用科学院讲席教授、土木与环境工程系主任。曲建民教授曾任北京大学长江学者讲座教授。

在担任西北大学土木与环境工程系主任的数年里,曲建民教授将教职数量提升了25%,学生录取数量增加了30%,并将该系在USNews的排名从上任初的18位提高到14位。点击“阅读全文”可查看TuftsNow对其进行的专访。

Because society’s problems are so complex, science today has to be interdisciplinary to have impact, he says
Jianmin Qu
“To be a successful engineer nowadays, you need to know more than your engineering discipline,” says Jianmin Qu. Photo: David Johnson
May 12, 2015
reddit  
Jianmin Qu, a skilled academic leader whose research in theoretical and applied mechanics has led to safer airplanes, among other advances, has been appointed dean of the School of Engineering at Tufts University.
Qu, currently Walter P. Murphy Professor and chair of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Northwestern University, was named to the deanship after an international search. He will start his new job on August 1, succeeding Linda Abriola, who is stepping down after 12 years to return to the faculty.
During nearly three decades in academia, Qu has built a reputation as an accomplished scientist and an exceptional teacher, mentor and engineering leader at Northwestern and the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is the co-author of two textbooks, including Fundamentals of Micromechanics of Solids (Wiley, 2006), which is still used at universities around the world.
Qu says he is excited about “the opportunity to do something special and make a difference in engineering education at Tufts.” One of the reasons he chose Tufts, he says, is the strong relationship between the School of Engineering and the School of Arts and Sciences.
“I’ve always believed that engineers shouldn’t be just engineers. The liberal arts should be a prerequisite for everything,” he says.
“To be a successful engineer nowadays, you need to know more than your engineering discipline. Society and its problems are so complex that engineers have to go beyond the bounds of a classical engineering education,” Qu says. “If you want to make advances in engineering or science today, it has to be interdisciplinary to have impact, because society’s problems are interdisciplinary. Engineers have to know about politics, law, public policy, culture.”
“As a talented academic leader and scientist, Dr. Qu is well-positioned to lead the school at a time when the demand for accomplished, creative engineers will only continue to grow,” says Tufts President Anthony P. Monaco. “His deep understanding of the synergistic relationship between the disciplines in the sciences and the liberal arts also reflects what has long been a signature strength of this university.”
After receiving a B.S. in mathematics from Jilin University in China, Qu came to the United States for graduate study, earning M.S. and doctoral degrees in theoretical and applied mechanics from Northwestern. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania for two years before joining the mechanical engineering faculty at Georgia Tech in 1989. He was promoted to full professor in 2000 and also served as associate chair and interim chair of mechanical engineering before returning to his alma mater in 2009.
“Professor Qu’s strength as a researcher is only part of what makes him so well-suited to serve as dean,” says Provost David Harris. “During his five years as chair of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern, he led an effective strategic-planning initiative and was instrumental in recruiting and retaining talented faculty.” Harris noted that Qu is highly regarded by the faculty in his department and was reappointed to serve a second term as chair.

The Rewards of Academic Administration

“I get a lot of satisfaction from academic administration,” Qu says, “because it gives me the ability to help others, faculty and students. It has made my career more interesting and exciting.”
As department chair, he has grown the faculty more than 25 percent and increased student enrollment more than 30 percent. The department’s ranking in U.S. News & World Report rose from number 18 in 2009 to number 14 this year.
Teaching and mentoring have been important in his career. Qu says the relatively small size of Tufts School of Engineering “is an advantage for undergraduate education here. It really is personalized education,” he says, because the small student/faculty ratios give students more opportunities to work closely with faculty.
“I believe experiential learning in an intimate setting is the best way of educating young people,” Qu says. “Engineering education is not just about learning technology and techniques.” He is the recipient of a number of teaching awards, including the Ralph R. Teeter Education Award from the Society of Automatic Engineers and the Lilly Teaching Fellowship from the Lilly Endowment. He has guided the work of 30 Ph.D. and 27 M.S. students and 14 postdocs.

Teaching and Research: Natural Companions

Teaching and research, he says, are natural academic companions. “The best researchers are usually the best teachers—and vice-versa—because they are passionate about their subject matter.” Faculty who are doing seminal work in their fields “bring frontier problems into their classrooms,” he says, and students benefit from getting to think about and work on those advanced concepts.
The incoming dean’s own research focus, theoretical and applied mechanics, is based on a breakthrough that occurred more than 300 years ago—Isaac Newton’s laws of motion.
Qu’s findings have advanced our understanding of how dissimilar materials can be put together to create higher-performing ones, such as the fiber-reinforced composites used to build the deck on your house and the pipelines that transport natural gas hundreds of thousands of miles. His work in microelectronic packaging has contributed to the development of more reliable cell phones and computers.
He says he is especially proud of his research in what is known as ultrasonic nondestructive evaluation—a type of analysis used to detect flaws or damage in a structure, such as an airplane wing or an engine component. Much like an orthopedist uses ultrasound to evaluate a balky knee, Qu has advanced the nondestructive evaluation technology so the tiniest crack or flaw can be detected in an airplane fuselage or a nuclear reactor, for example. “To be able to detect damage much earlier is a paradigm change,” he says.
He also has conducted research in electro-chemo-mechanics, which examines the relationship between electrical, chemical and mechanical properties in materials and how one property can be changed by manipulating another. His findings have led to the development of more efficient energy conversion and storage devices, such as fuel cells and batteries.
Over the past decade, Qu has been the principal investigator on more than $16 million in research projects funded by the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Office of Naval Research, among others. His publications have been cited more than 6,000 times.
He is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and a past member of the board of directors and treasurer of the Society of Engineering Sciences. He serves on the editorial boards of Acta Mechanica, the International Journal of Computational Methods and the International Journal of Modern Mechanics. He will chair the 18th U.S. National Congress of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, which will take place in Chicago in 2018.
Qu inherits a school that has grown in size, stature and selectivity in recent years. For the undergraduate class that will begin their engineering education this fall, there were 3,677 applicants for 200 spots, with an acceptance rate of 15 percent. The school has 150 full- and part-time faculty teaching 800 undergraduate students and 600 graduate students pursuing bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees.
Karen Bailey can be reached at karen.bailey@tufts.edu.
- See more at: http://now.tufts.edu/articles/jianmin-qu-named-dean-engineering-tufts#rd