2/11/2012

Apple Worth More Than Google And Microsoft Combined

The Apple's stock soared past $490 per share on Thursday and is now hovering around $495.

Shortly after 3 p.m. on Thursday, the company's market cap was valued at $461 billion, according to Google Finance. This makes Apple slightly bigger than both Microsoft and Google combined. Currently, Microsoft's market cap sits close to $258 billion, and Google's is $199 billion.

Apple passed Microsoft in value back in May of 2010. At the time, the two companies were valued at $222 billion and $219 billion, respectively.

Apple Insider, which first pointed out Apple's surging market cap, wrote, "With AAPL stock north of $490, some Wall Street analysts on Thursday began increasing their price targets for the iPhone maker. Charlie Wolf with Needham & Company upped his estimate from $540 to $620, while Mike Walkley with Canaccord Genuity raised his target on AAPL shares even higher, to $665."

According to the company's earnings report, for the last three months of 2011 Apple's quarterly revenue was $46.33 billion, and its net profit was $13.06 billion for the quarter. The company's also reported that it currently had $97.6 billion cash on hand.

Microsoft reveals Windows on ARM details

Microsoft reveals details of Windows on ARM-designed controller chips.


WOA - Windows on ARM - is expected to compete with iOS and Android tablets, though Microsoft faces "huge hurdles" in successfully marketing the product, analysts warn.


The chips will run a version of the Windows 8 operating system (OS) in an effort to provide a common OS across devices . "In the home, in the office, and in your pocket," says Chris Green of Davies Murphy Group.


While files such as documents, spreadsheets, video and sound will be cross-platform compatible, applications written for other versions of Windows will pose a potential challenge to consumers in trying to make them work.


Despite the challenges however, "ARM chips are seen as the best solution we have in the world for mobile devices, because they strike that balance between power and performance," says Mr. Green.


Source: BBC News

Clarke aims to keep hold over India


Xavier Doherty has become an important player in
Australia's one-day side, says Michael Clarke 
Australia and India meet for the second time in the triangular series in Adelaide on Sunday. Already Australia are clear on top of the table after victories over India and Sri Lanka.
Australia have taken the opportunity to rest Michael Hussey, which should mean Peter Forrest will makes his debut at a venue he has enjoyed, at least in the longer format - he has two first-class centuries and an average of 65.14 at Adelaide Oval. Mitchell Marsh could provide some excitement if he is included. The captain Michael Clarke said after Friday's victory that while it was hard to change a winning side, it was also important to give opportunities to players, so Marsh and Forrest will both be firmly in the mix.
India are still searching for their first win over a Clarke-led side on this tour, their only victory over Australia having come in a Twenty20. The short turnaround for the hosts, who were due to arrive in Adelaide the night before the game, could work in India's favour.

Rooney's double steers United to victory over Liverpool, Chelsea loss to Everton


The second half scorers Wayne Rooney and Luis Suárez walk off 
at the interval of a fractious and controversial 2-1 win for
Manchester United against Liverpool 
Wayne Rooney scored to goals in the second half thriller to guide Manchester United to a 2-1 victory over Liverpool.
Just after the half time break Manchester United took the lead. Giggs swung a corner towards near post, where Henderson could only flick the ball of his head for unmarked Rooney who hammered in a volley from close range that gave Reina no chance.
Minutes later Rooney scored the second goal when Jay Spearing gave the ball away to Valencia who released a quick pass to Rooney. He hammered a left foot effort under Reina to make it 2-0.
After Luis Suarez's 81 minutes goal the got interesting again. Adam' free kick into the box bounced off Ferdinand's thigh and presenting Suarez with an easy chance to poke it past De Gea.
Luis Suarez had rejected Patrice Evra's handshake during the formal handshake before the start of the match. Patrice Evra extended his hand towards the man who abused him at Liverpool back in November and was thus banned for eight matches, but Suarez refused to accept the gesture.
“I couldn’t believe it,” said the Manchester United manager. “Luis Suarez is a disgrace to Liverpool Football Club. He should never play for them again.”
Steven Pienaar marked his return to Goodison Park by scoring the opener in a 2-0 victory over Chelsea.
The South African midfielder, back at Everton from Tottenham, scored after 5 mintes after the start when the ball looped into the Chelsea box from the toe of Frank Lampard, where Pienaar slammed it past the advancing Cech.
Denis Stracqualursi added a second, his first for Everton, in the second half. His right footed shot from the right side of the box went to the bottom right corner
Chelsea fans ran out of patience with their Portuguese coach in the second half when they chanted, "You don’t know what you’re doing."
Chelsea dominated the possession but could not create much chances. Fernando Torres clearly lacked the confidence. With one opportunity he headed over, with another he ran straight into Marouane Fellaini, appealing for a penalty. The home crowd booed the Spaniard's every touch.
Without John Terry, the defence continued to look vulnerable, taking unnecessary risks. Only Juan Mata posed a genuine attacking threat but just in the first half.

Alfred and Emily by Doris Lessing


I think my father's rage at the trenches took me over, when I was very young, and has never left me. Do children feel their parents' emotions? Yes, we do, and it is a legacy I could have done without. What is the use of it? It is as if that old war is in my own memory, my own consciousness.

In this extraordinary book, the 2007 Nobel Laureate Doris Lessing explores the lives of her parents, each irrevocably damaged by the Great War. Her father wanted the simple life of an English farmer, but shrapnel almost killed him in the trenches, and thereafter he had to wear a wooden leg. Her mother, Emily, spent the war nursing the wounded in the Royal Free Hospital after her great love, a doctor, drowned in the Channel.

In the fictional first half of Alfred and Emily, Doris Lessing imagines the happier lives her parents might have made for themselves had there been no war; a story that begins with their meeting at a village cricket match outside Colchester. This is followed by a piercing examination of their relationship as it actually was in the shadow of the Great War, of the family's move to Africa, and of the impact of her parents' marriage on a young woman growing up in a strange land.

"Here I still am," says Doris Lessing, "trying to get out from under that monstrous legacy, trying to get free." Triumphantly, with the publication of Alfred and Emily, she has done just that.

The Changing Face of Cuba's Tourism Industry


Tourism in Cuba is on the way up thanks to lifted travel restrictions and changing policies. 2.7 million travelers visited the country last year. 2012 is expected to be even more successful.

When it comes to alternative holiday destinations, one country that is on the rise is Cuba. Although their tourism industry has been in decline for a number of years, changes – both to the country itself and to global tourism as a whole – have meant a steady increase. This resulted in 2011 being the best year yet for Cuban tourism with 2.7 million visitors in 2011 and they hold high hopes for 2012.

Cuba has been an area many people have been wary of ever since the revolution of 1959. Prior to this event, it was favored by America as a gambling resort, but it has only been in recent years that its citizens have returned to the island.

This change came after President Obama lifted travel restrictions, in 2009 he lifted the embargo on Cuban-Americans and in 2011 all other Americans were allowed to visit again. The relationship between the two nations is improving as is seen with the agreement to end the exclusion of Cuba from the Organization of United States. As a result American tourism to Cuba is booming, 375,000 Cuban-Americans alone are said to have visited in 2010 and many others can be seen on the streets of Havana, although it is said up to 30,000 were already visiting illegally each year.
(Source: Tourism-Review)

The Sixth Sense (1999)


The Sixth Sense is a 1999 psychological thriller film written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. The film tells the story of Cole Sear , a troubled, isolated boy who is able to see and talk to the dead. Bruce Willis plays a child psychologist who tries to help the boy deal with his gift. The twist ending is the best part of this movie.

Dr. Malcolm Crowe (Bruce Willis), a child psychologist in Philadelphia, returns home one night with his wife, Anna Crowe (Olivia Williams), after having been honored for his work. She says that everything in the world is second to his job including her. The two then discover that they are not alone; a young man appears brandishing a gun. He says that he does not want to be afraid anymore and accuses Crowe of failing him. Crowe recognizes him as Vincent Grey, a former patient whom he treated as a child for hallucinations. Grey shoots Crowe in the abdomen, and seconds later kills himself with the gun.

The next autumn, Crowe begins working with another patient, nine-year-old Cole Sear (Haley Joel Osment), who has a condition similar to Vincent's. Crowe becomes dedicated to the boy, though he is haunted by doubts over his ability to help him after his failure with Vincent. Meanwhile, he is also very worried that his relationship with his wife is beginning to end due to his dedication to his work.

The film established Shyamalan as a writer and director, and introduced the cinema public to his traits, most notably his affinity for surprise endings. The film was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

Imperial China Stirs Jason Wu at New York Fashion Week



Designer Jason Wu brought the mystery of the Forbidden City to New York fashion week on Friday with a fall-winter collection inspired by his Chinese heritage and 1930s Hollywood glamor.

Born in Taiwan and raised in Canada and the United States, 29-year-old Wu famously designed the gown First Lady Michelle Obama wore to the January 2009 balls that accompanied the inauguration of her husband Barack Obama as president.


But his collection on day two of Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week reflected a growing personal interest in his Chinese roots, with a touch of Marlene Dietrich in "Shanghai Express" thrown in for good measure.

He credited a voyage of discovery back to Asia with his father 18 months ago for stirring his imagination.

"I was born Chinese, but I had not been back in my country for so long," he told AFP backstage."My dad took me to see an exhibit on the Chinese Qing Dynasty warriors and I was so taken by the subject that I thought it was important for me to go back to my roots," he added.

Beyonce And Jay-Z Unveil First Blue Ivy Carter Photos


On Friday, February 10, Jay-Z posted the first photos of his and Beyoncé's daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, on his Life + Times website.

The rapper and his superstar wife are seen in the photos holding the newborn in a series of photos. In the first large photo, we see the baby swathed in a polka-dot wrap sleeping. In the remaining images, she has her eyes wide open and is being held by her beaming mother, and in another, her back is to us while she's being held by her smiling father.



There's a note that reads: "We welcome you to share in our joy. Thank you for respecting our privacy during this beautiful time in our lives. The Carter family."

The baby-picture reveal is just the latest Blue Ivy news. On Thursday, it was confirmed that the high-profile couple filed an application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to trademark Blue Ivy's name. The patent is intended to prevent the use of their daughter's name by non-related parties. The application was filed by Beyoncé's company, BGK Trademark Holdings, and is currently pending. The Washington Post reported that it will likely get approved, considering that parents are legally authorized to trademark the names of minor children.


(Source: Mtv)

My precious!

By Sarah Mahmood

A falling out with a friend set me thinking and it all came to down to this: about how life is too short for any form of hatred, misunderstanding or conflict to be given importance; about how relationships should be valued and given their due and about how every human being must be respected for their uniqueness in one's life.

It's sad really how many of us are more concerned about trifling matters that somehow have a not-so-trifling impact on what's much more important - our emotional well being. We tend to overlook the niche that everyone has carved out in our lives, and the lamp that glows from within.

So, without indulging into the longwindedness of it all, this is what I have to say: give others the respect that a human being commands without lowering yourself beyond the aforementioned level! Happy Pensiving!

German Court says Samsung Can Sell Reworked Tablet



Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's reworked tablet PC does not look like a copycat version of the iPad, a German court said, affirming a preliminary assessment and dealing another legal blow to Apple Inc.

Apple is fighting several rival makers of smartphones and tablet PCs in courts worldwide over intellectual property.

Samsung changed the design of its Galaxy Tab 10.1 for the German market -- naming it Galaxy Tab 10.1N -- to get around a sales ban imposed by a court in September, and Apple challenged the new version.

The state court in Duesseldorf said on Thursday there were "clear differences" between the Galaxy Tab 10.1N and the iPad.

Apple's battle with Samsung, whose tablets are based on Google Inc's Android software, has been especially bitter, with the Galaxy devices seen as among the biggest challengers to Apple's mobile products.

In a global intellectual property battle, Apple has claimed the Galaxy line of mobile phones and tablets "slavishly" copied the iPhone and iPad and has sued the Korean company in the United States, Australia, Japan and Korea as well as in Europe.

Since then, several countries including the Netherlands, the United States and Australia have decided to allow Samsung to sell the Galaxy tablet.

Samsung, which is Apple's supplier as well as a competitor, has been trying to have the ban on sales of the original Galaxy Tab in Germany overturned while also seeking other means to fight Apple. The ban was upheld by a court last week.

Samsung has counter-sued Apple in Germany, claiming infringements of mobile technology patents. A court in Mannheim has ruled against Samsung in cases concerning two of the patents and is due to decide on a third on March 2.

(Reuters)

Apple in Talks on iTV with Canada Telecoms


Apple Inc. is in talks with Canada's two biggest telecom companies about becoming partners in the launch of iTV, a device combining features of the wildly popular iPad tablet with those of a television set, a newspaper reported on Tuesday.

Rogers Communications and BCE, parent of Bell Canada, are already testing the device in their labs, Canada's Globe and Mail newspaper reported, citing an unnamed source.

Cupertino-based Apple has neither confirmed nor denied speculation that it was working on iTV, which the industry believes would involve a new device enabling a user to buy and view licensed content, along the lines of the iTunes model.

Even so, the company's late co-founder Steve Jobs revealed to biographer Walter Isaacson he was interested in reinventing the television set. "I finally cracked it," he told Isaacson in his book "Steve Jobs."

The Globe and Mail on Tuesday reported that Apple is eager to find Canadian partners with Internet and wireless experience.

"They're not closed to doing it with one or doing it with two," a source familiar with the talks told the newspaper. "They're looking for a partner. They're looking for someone with wireless and broadband capabilities."

Rogers and BCE offer telephone, Internet and television services to Canadian customers, and both own content that could be featured over an iTV service.

(Reuters)

Lower-than-expected tuition fee reductions anger students


Only half of South Korea’s universities have met an end of January deadline to notify the authorities of their tuition fee levels for 2012, with the majority falling far short of the 15% fee reductions asked for by the government. The lower-than-expected fee reductions have prompted fears of renewed student protests.

Only 186 universities and colleges, or 55% of South Korea’s 337 institutions, had notified the Korea Student Aid foundation by the 27 January deadline, the Korea Student Aid Foundation said.

On 19 January the foundation said that of the 110 institutions that had announced their plans by that date, only two would reduce fees by more than 5% while approximately one in six institutions would lower fees by 3% to 5%.

The Association of Korean University Students said this week that the recently announced fee reductions were unacceptable and that it would ensure tuition fees were a prominent campaign issue in the April general election.

It said it would call on students to vote for national assembly candidates who push for the 50% tuition fee cut students have been demanding.

Cuts of 50% in tuition fees received added impetus this month when the mayor of Seoul, Park Won-Soon, ordered the city authorities to halve the fees at Seoul’s municipal university, in line with his own election pledge.

Although a 5% reduction is what the university presidents’ organisation, the Korean Council for University Education, had said was realistic, it is well below the 15% fee reduction promised by the government for this year after major student protests in May and June last year, the foundation said.

The government had promised it would cut fees in stages, reducing them by 30% by 2014, after students demanded a 50% fee reduction.

The government’s 15% reduction target for 2012 was backed by the Board of Audit and Inspection last year after an investigation into the financial management of 113 universities.

The BAI said that fees could be cut on average by 15% if irregularities and ‘accounting tricks’ were removed as some universities inflated their expenditure estimates in order to justify higher fees.

It said institutions, public and private alike, had habitually manipulated their accounts over the past five years to justify steep rises in tuition expenses, with creative accounting producing some 655.2 billion won (US$580 million) in “inappropriate income” over the last five years, amounting to some 18.7 million won (US$16.6 million) in extra fee income on average each year.

According to some student groups, universities have also been boosting their cash reserves in advance of the fee announcements.

Students have also said they will launch a campaign for public universities to refund so-called ‘student support fees’ after the Seoul central district court ruled last week that there was no legal basis for such levies – amounting to 85% of revenues from tuition fees – to be included in tuition fee levels. Most of the ‘support fee’ income is used for capital costs and expansion of buildings and facilities.

The court ordered eight public institutions to repay 100,000 won to each of the 4,219 students who had brought the action against ‘support fees’

If the ruling is upheld by the supreme court, public institutions will have to repay some 13 trillion won to students and alumni.

In November the government also announced that 1.5 trillion won (US$1.3 billion) would be set aside in the 2012 budget for measures to reduce the heavy tuition fees burden on students, including a national scholarship scheme for students from low-income families, decreasing their tuition fees by around 22%.

Universities that did not reduce fees would not be able to benefit from the new scholarship scheme, the government said.

A number of universities have protested that government pressure on fees has violated their financial autonomy.

www.universityworldnews.com

Anti-obesity ads could stigmatize kids

An ad campaign started by an Atlanta-based children's hospital featuring images of overweight kids "carries a great risk of increasing stigma", says Alan Guttmacher, a child health expert at the National Institutes of Health.

























Such childhood stigma "can reinforce unhealthy behaviours" as well as pose "risks to the psychological health" of obese kids, Dr. Guttmacher said in a letter to fat activist Shannon Russell.


Those behind the advertising however are defending the campaign.


"We saw the problem as something that we should take some responsibility for, and something that we had to fix," says Mark Wulkan from Children's Healthcare of Atlanta.
"When we looked at how do you get that awareness, really the most effective means are to use techniques that some might say are controversial," Dr Wulkan said.
"Our intent was never to stigmatise the children," he added.




A meeting with the unknown

After more than two decades of drilling, Russian scientists have reached the pristine surface of a gigantic freshwater lake - Lake Vostok in Antarctica - and what they find there could change everything.The vast depths of Lake Vostok could hold life from the distant past, or clues to the search for life on other planets.It may allow a glimpse into microbial life forms that existed before the Ice Age, or precious evidence of what conditions must be like on the ice-crust moons of Jupiter and Saturn, or under Mars' polar ice caps - and whether life could survive there.
The project, however, has drawn strong fears that 60 metric tons (66 tons) of lubricants and antifreeze used in the drilling may contaminate the pristine lake, which is roughly the size of Lake Ontario in Canada.The Russian researchers have insisted that the bore would only slightly touch the lake's surface and a surge in pressure will send the water rushing up the shaft where it will freeze, immediately sealing out the toxic chemicals.

Ten Research Grants By RCSA To Universities

Research Corporation for Science Advancement (RCSA), celebrating its 100th Anniversary in 2012, today announced the 10 liberal arts colleges in the United States that have received the most research grants from the foundation in its history. All colleges are members of the Annapolis Group, a coalition of liberal arts colleges.

RCSA, the nation’s oldest foundation devoted wholly to science, is a major funder of undergraduate research involving early-career faculty and students, and its grant awards are, therefore, a reflection of a college’s commitment to undergraduate research and its role in science education.

“Liberal arts colleges play a disproportionately large role in the education of future scientists,” said RCSA President Jim Gentile. “We highlight these 10 colleges, because the number of research grants that they have received from RCSA through a highly competitive process underscores the strength of their commitment to science education in the liberal arts arena.”

The 10 colleges are:
  • Hope College – Holland, MI (64 research grants)
  • Williams College – Williamstown, MA (64)
  • Amherst College – Amherst, MA (63)
  • Carleton College – Northfield, MN (63)
  • Reed College – Portland, OR (59)
  • Occidental College – Los Angeles, CA (57)
  • Wellesley College – Wellesley, MA (50)
  • Pomona College – Claremont, CA (50)
  • Swarthmore College – Swarthmore, PA (49)
  • Franklin and Marshall College – Lancaster, PA (47)

Research Corporation for Science Advancement (www.rescorp.org) – formerly known as Research Corporation – was founded in 1912 and is the second-oldest foundation in the United States (after the Carnegie Corporation) and the oldest foundation devoted wholly to science. Research Corporation is a leading advocate for the sciences and a major funder of scientific innovation and of research in America’s colleges and universities.

Click here for the original source.

Wales to check smoking in car with kids

The Welsh government is leading a campaign to stop smoking in car when children are travelling.


Depending on the outcome, the government will consider possible banning of the act after the three-year-campaign.


"Exposure to these chemicals puts children at risk from a range of conditions, including sudden infant death syndrome and asthma," says Dr Tony Jewell, chief medical officer for Wales.


"There is robust evidence that the level of toxic chemicals is very high in cars, even with a window open. The Fresh Start Wales campaign aims to make people aware that smoking in cars is dangerous for their passengers, particularly children."


Meanwhile, Mr. Clark of tobacco lobby group Forest disagrees that "that they're poisoning children" but supports the campaign.


"I think it's important to encourage parents not to smoke in a car where small children are present out of consideration for the child if nothing else."
"We think that (the ban) would be a step too far and totally unnecessary," he added.


Source: BBC News

Fine for Frisbee throwers on LA Beaches

Throwing Frisbees on Los Angeles beaches has been prohibited. Anyone who goes against the rule will be fined up to $1,000. The penalties will be enforced during the peak summer months against anyone who tries to "cast, toss, throw, kick or roll any ball, tube or light object, other than a beach ball or beach volleyball, upon or over any beach". It is meant to protect the people from getting hit.

Headline Feb 11, 2012 / Three Super Contagious Diseases



"Three Super Contagious Diseases"
Fear - Greed - Individualism




Let me attempt a perspective for you: Over 50% of the misery and evil that you see in this world stems directly from these three diseases. All are highly contagious and their timing unpredictable. And the life aberrations produced by them are equally devastating and unpredictable, both as to duration and degree. If ever there was a true and realistic study of these three, starting revelations would emerge .

But before we go any farther, we must stop and thank "World Student Society of Computers, Internet and Wirless"- WssciW - lovingly named !WOW! for their splendid research.

Therefore, always be conscious and try anticipating the arrival and departure of these diseases. If you succeed you will save yourself from immeasurable misery and problems. Adam Smith, the father of Capitalism perceived his philosophy somewhat along these lines:, "What kind of a society isn't structured on greed? The problem of social organizations is how to set up an arrangement under which greed will do least harm". But this is theory!

All three diseases are inter wound and feed of each other and thus set in motion a vicious cycle. For it maybe worthwhile to remember  that these beget trappings. And the more trappings the lesser the freedom. And on the platform of freedom stands fulfillment , one major prerequisite of happiness.

Only Oscar Wilde could have summed up these three diseases with such brilliance: "We are all in the gutter , but some of us are looking at the stars!!!?".

Goodnight!

SAM Daily Times - Voice of the Voiceless

Student Today / Geordie Stewart


Scots student is youngest to climb highest peaks on seven continents.

A STUDENT happens to be the youngest Scot ever to climb the highest peaks on the seven continents of the world.
It is a record since 2011, when Geordie Stewart, 21, reached the summit of Mount Everest.
It took him four years to complete the Seven Summit Challenge.
At the age of 18, he climbed the first peak, Aconcagua, in South America.

Great Women of the Great Lakes Bay Region

Central Michigan University student-athlete and leadership scholar Liesel Toth of Victor, N.Y. has been recognized by the Graff Chevrolet dealership in Bay City and Saginaw Valley State University Athletics as one of four student female leaders being honored as a “Great Women of the Great Lakes Bay Region.”

The “Great Women” program was created to “draw attention to local women for their extraordinary commitment of time, talent and experience in a meaningful way to advancing Bay, Isabella, Midland and Saginaw counties.”

“I was very honored and blessed when I received the nomination,” Toth said. “Knowing that I have been recognized for giving back makes me realize how much more I can do for those in need.”

CMU dean of students Tony Voisin nominated Toth for her commitment to the CMU community and being a leader. Through her involvement as a volunteer in elementary schools, camps, clinics and other CMU athletics-sponsored events, Voisin sees Toth as a “great representative of a well-rounded student-athlete at CMU.”

Executive manager of Graff Chevrolet Lisa Kusey-Rechsteiner says that though this is the first year women of the Great Lakes Bay region are being recognized, women like Toth are role models for making our community a better place.

“The recipients of this award are most likely women that you will not find much written about because that is not their motive, but once you read their story you will see how vital they are to our Great Lakes Bay Region,” Kusey-Rechsteiner said. “Without their accomplishments we would not be moving in a forward direction. For that, they deserve to be recognized.”

Toth is a senior at CMU studying health fitness and rehabilitation. She is captain of the CMU soccer team and was selected as the Mid-American Conference Defensive Player of the Year and first team all-conference in 2011. Toth will graduate in May and has enhanced her academics by completing the Leadership Institute training and development.


Read article at the original source.

Louise Gunning appointed president of Executive Board UvA and HvA

Prof. Louise Gunning-Schepers has been appointed president of the Executive Board of the University of Amsterdam (UvA) and the Hogeschool van Amsterdam, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (HvA) by the Supervisory Boards of the two institutions. The appointment is effective as of 1 April 2012.

Gunning is currently president of the Health Council of the Netherlands and University Professor of Health and Society at the UvA. She is an experienced executive and knows the UvA well. She previously served as chair of the Board of Directors of the Academic Medical Center (AMC-UvA) and as dean of the UvA’s Faculty of Medicine.

The Executive Board is responsible for the general management of the UvA and the HvA. The joint Board, which is the result of a staff merger, further comprises Professor Dymph van den Boom (Rector Magnificus UvA), Dr Jet Bussemaker (Rector HvA) and Mr Paul Doop, MSc (Vice-President). Gunning succeeds Dr Karel van der Toorn, who resigned as president on 4 July 2011. Paul Doop has been serving as acting president in the interim.

Gunning (1951) obtained her PhD from Erasmus University. She has worked as a researcher at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and Erasmus University, and as a policy official at the Dutch Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports. In 1991 she was appointed professor of Social Medicine at the UvA. From 1995 to 1997 she was a member of the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy. Since 1997 Gunning has been a member of the Board of Directors of the AMC-UvA and vice-dean of the AMC-UvA. In 2001 she was appointed chair of the Board of Directors of the AMC-UvA and dean of the Faculty of Medicine at the UvA. Since 1 September 2010 she has been president of the Health Council of the Netherlands, the independent body that advises the Dutch government and parliament on scientific policy. She is simultaneously University Professor of Health and Society at the UvA. Upon her departure as chair of the Board of Directors of the AMC-UvA in 2010, she was awarded the the Officer in the Order of Orange-Nassau honorary medal.

Read article at the original source.