khktmd 2015






Đạo học làm việc lớn là ở chỗ làm rạng tỏ cái đức sáng của mình, thương yêu người dân, đạt tới chỗ chí thiện. Đại học chi đạo, tại Minh Minh Đức, tại Tân Dân, tại chỉ ư Chí Thiện. 大學之道,在明明德,在親民,在止於至善。












Thứ Hai, 8 tháng 10, 2018

Where is this guy now?







Viet Super Scholar Gets 7th Degree At MIT

Denver Post
November 17, 1988
by The Associated Press


BOSTON -- Tue Nguyen did more than nibble from the tree of knowledge, he
made a feast of it.


Just nine years after arriving in this country with thousands of other Vietnamese boat people, Nguyen, 26, has earned his seventh degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a doctorate in nuclear engineering. The school says it thinks that is a record for MIT.

Nguyen told MIT's public relations office he earned the degrees "to get the most out of my time at MIT and out of my tuition."

He also said he isn't a partygoer.

The super scholar was in Burlington, Vt., this week preparing to start a job at IBM desiging technology for the manufacture of semiconductor devices.  He did not return telephone calls, but one of his fans back in  Cambridge was happy to talk about him.

"You're not likely to find another person like this very often," said nuclear engineering professor Sidney Yip, his doctoral adviser.

"He's a very quiet guy, very laid back," said Yip. "But, as you can imagine, deep down he has a lot of willpower."

Nguyen entered MIT in 1981. By taking up to 12 courses a semester instead of the normal MIT student load of four, he earned his first undergraduate degree in three years and finished up four more bachelor's degrees in one more year. He then began his graduate work.

He was so busy attending classes that he had difficulty doing his homework assignments, Yip said.

He holds bachelor's degrees in physics, in computer science and engineering, in electrical engineering, in mathematics, and in nuclear engineering. He got his masters degree in nuclear engineering in 1986 and finished work on his doctorate in nuclear engineering this fall.

But that was only what he learned at MIT. He also studied English in Texas and Chinese at Harvard, the latter being the language of his fiancee's family. Nguyen and two younger brothers left Vietnam in 1978.

His father, a retired government employee, and mother remain in Vietnmam with two other sons and a daughter.

After three days at sea packed into a small boat with 300 other refugees, the brothers arrived in Malaysia and spent nine months in a refugee camp. A church group rescued them by sponsoring their passage to Pasadena, Texas, where they moved in with relatives.

Nguyen enrolled at a junior college in the Houston suburb, mainly to learn English.

At 19, he entered MIT.




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