After cocaine bust, Kerry Katona gets involved in assault case

London, Aug 27 (ANI): Kerry Katona had yet another brush with the law when office staff called up the cops after she hurled a cup of tea over her accountant, it has emerged.

Accountant David McHugh has a criminal record as he had been jailed for fraud in 2004.

The bankrupt star is believed to have yelled at McHugh: “You’ve ruined my life.”

The Sun quoted an insider as saying: “She had been through her accounts and was raging. She went to his office to speak to him and was screaming and kicking off. Then she punched him in the face.

“David started yelling back so she grabbed a cup of tea and threw it in his face – and punched him in the chops again for good measure.”

It is reported that a fuming Katona drove away from McHugh’s office in Warrington, Cheshire, after the alleged attack.

McHugh immediately called up the cops informing them of the assault.

Four police officers soon arrived at Katona’s Wilmslow home and took her to the police station for questioning. She was released after nearly eight hours.

The source aid: “Kerry’s sick of people taking the mickey out of her, but she is supposed to be cleaning up her image – not getting banged up for beating people up.”

Interestingly it was only 48 hours earlier that the former Atomic Kitten had been cautioned by the police for possessing cocaine.

Another close aide said: “Kerry’s whole world is imploding.

“She was in pieces after the police grilled her for almost two hours on Monday and this is the last thing she needs.

“For the sake of her sanity and her children, she really needs to seek help. Her whole life is spiralling out of control.”

Katona was released on bail but she will have to appear before the cops once again for further questioning. (ANI)

Business consultant gets better performance out of naked office staff

London, Jul 2 (ANI): A business consultant, who was called in to help an ailing design and marketing company pull itself together, has managed to get the staff to perform better after he asked them to work naked.

David Taylor, a self-styled business psychologist, was enlisted by company onebestway, in Newcastle upon Tyne, after they were forced into six redundancies at the start of the credit crunch.

Taylor asked shocked employees to go naked for just one day to boost team spirit, and, amazingly, they agreed to go ahead with the daring Naked Friday idea.

“Inviting an organisation to go naked is the most extreme technique I’ve used,” the Sun quoted Taylor as saying.

“It may seem weird but it works. It’s the ultimate expression of trust in yourself and each other,” he said.

Despite some initial reluctance, nearly all the staff went totally starkers – except for one man, who wore a posing pouch, and one of two female workers, who kept on black underwear.

And front-of-house manager Sam Jackson, 23, was the only one to go fully naked.

“It was brilliant. Now that we’ve seen each other naked, there are no barriers,” Jackson said.

“We weren’t put under pressure. If we wanted to come in clothed or in our underwear, we could. But I love my body and wasn’t ashamed.

“We’re all beautiful, whether we’ve got big bodies or small ones,” Jackson, who suffers from cerebral palsy, added.

Managing Director Mike Owen, 40, said: “We’re either brave or mad. But I did tell everyone they didn’t have to do it – only if it felt right. As a creative company, we persuade our clients to be brave, and this was about taking on some of the braveness ourselves.” (ANI)

‘Most private colleges are money-spinning factories’

Bangalore, July 1 (IANS) The proposed oversight body for higher education is a “welcome development”, says Pushpa Bhargava, former vice-chairman of the Knowledge Commission. According to him, the present regulatory system is so inept that it is easy for anybody to set up a private professional college in India and fool regulators by hiring professors for three days.

“All you have to do is to rent a building, write to the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) for recognition, and then hire an ‘event manager’ – the same guy who arranges weddings and conferences,” Bhargava, a renowned biologist, told IANS.

The AICTE, which is the regulatory body for professional technical education, takes a couple of months to send its inspection team to see if the college has the required infrastructure, staff and equipment, he said.

“During that gap, the events manager obtains on rent everything from equipment, tables and chairs, office staff, books for a library and, of course, professors who can spare three days to be present in the building when the inspection team arrives,” Bhargava said.

“After that, recognition follows and the college is free to enrol students charging heavy tuition fees.” Most private professional colleges are money-spinning factories, he said.

“The going rental rate for a professor in Hyderabad a year ago was Rs.30,000 per day,” Bhargava said, adding that he came to know about this racket when an event manager “asked me to suggest names of professors who could come for three days and make Rs.90,000″.

Private engineering colleges in India account for over 80 percent of seats – a jump from 15 percent in 1960, according to data from AICTE. Nearly 50 medical colleges in the private sector have received recognition in the last six years.

The National Commission for Higher Education and Research (NCHER) proposed by the Yash Pal committee will replace AICTE, the Medical Council of India and about a dozen other professional councils and regulatory agencies including the University Grants Commission of which Yash Pal was once chairman.

Bhargava, who was founder director of the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, says the Yash Pal committee’s recommendations should be put into action promptly. The challenge, he says, is to find the right people to run the NCHER.

But renowned chemist C.N.R. Rao, former science adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, says he is not sure whether creating one more regulator at the top will revitalize the higher education system or make it just more bureaucratic.

It will be all right if the proposed NCHER stays an advisory body, he told IANS. But if it is going to take on the role of regulating the entire stream of educational sectors from agriculture and medicine to technology and law “it is going to become a huge elephant and unmanageable”.

Rao said he had already expressed his concerns to Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal and hoped to discuss with him the possible ramifications if the plan was implemented in haste.

Goverdhan Mehta, former director of the Indian Institute of Science and member of the Yash Pal committee, says the report released June 24 was the result of interactive meetings “with thousands of fellow academics and all stakeholders including private players”.

Now, a Japanese Buffet Restaurant where you pay-by-the-hour to eat!

Kuala Lumpur, Jan 14 (ANI): It is pay-by-the-hour at Tenji Japanese Buffet Restaurant in Mont Kiara.

If clients need an hour to eat their fill, then all they need to pay is RM29.90. And if they need another hour, they have to pay only another RM10.

In case, clients need four or five hours to satisfy their hunger, then they have to pay RM49.90 and they can stay for the entire lunch period, from 11.30am to 4pm.

The restaurant, which opened on Dec 12 with an investment of RM7.5 million, serves Japanese, Chinese and Western fare, including lobsters, giant prawns, lamb, soups, ice cream and fruit juices.

Asked how the restaurant could manage such an innovative price mechanism and provide a variety of food, its general manager, who only gave his name as Ren, said they just wanted to serve their customers well.

“The area has many office blocks, especially at Sri Hartamas, and office staff have only an hour’s lunch break,” The New Straits Times Online quoted Ren, as saying.

“Our RM29.90 buffet lunch is reasonable, something which we make possible by giving back to customers what we save from not spending on advertisements,” Ren added.

Ren, who received training in running buffet restaurants in Taiwan, said the promotion was first held between Dec 12-19 but met with a lukewarm response.

However, after that, the floodgates opened and they received hundreds of callers.

“We then decided to extend the promotion. Within the first month of operation, we have had 10,000 customers,” Ren said.

“Now on weekdays, we receive about 700 people and more than 800 on weekends when our clients bring their families. Of course, clients will have to book a week in advance for the next two weeks,” Ren added. (ANI)