Bank staff begin 72-hour march to Mumbai

Thousands of citizens along with employees of Pen Urban Cooperative Bank from Maharashtra’s Raigad district Sunday started a march to chief minister’s bungalow in Mumbai to press for their demands.

As a part of the ‘Save Pen’s Bank’ movement, depositors, employees and account holders of the bank from Pen town of the district started the 72-hour march to Mumbai. The movement was supported by the All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA) and the Maharashtra State Bank Employees Federation.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in September last year imposed stringent restrictions and passed an order for the closure of 18 branches of the Pen Bank. Despite this the bank was said to have released loans for over Rs.500 crore to non-existing account holders without verification of documents.

The RBI, in October last year, imposed a penalty of Rs.1 lakh as the bank failed to satisfactorily respond to a show cause notice.

“The 72-hour march will culminate at Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan’s residence where a delegation of bank representatives will meet and apprise him of the situation,” said Vishwas Utagi, general secretary of AIBEA.

“Several employees have lost their jobs and thousands of depositors and account holders have lost their money due to many scams by the bank’s chairman and directors,” he added.

In November last year, bank chairman Shishir Dharkar, his wife and six others were arrested in connection with another scam related to gold export worth Rs.480 crore.

The pen may be mightier than the keyboard for schoolkids

Washington, September 17 (ANI): It may not be wrong to say that the pen is mightier than the keyboard, for a new study on schoolchildren so suggests.

Virginia Berninger, a University of Washington professor of Educational Psychology, looked at the ability of second, fourth, and sixth grade children to write the alphabet, sentences, and essays using a pen and a keyboard.

“Children consistently did better writing with a pen when they wrote essays. They wrote more and they wrote faster,” said Berninger.

The researcher further said that only for writing the alphabet was the keyboard better than the pen.

Results were mixed for sentences.

However, when using a pen, the children in the three grade levels produced longer essays and composed them at a faster pace.

The study also showed that fourth and sixth graders wrote more complete sentences when they used a pen, and that this ability was not affected by the children’s spelling skills.

The research also showed that many children don’t have a reliable idea of what a sentence is until the third or fourth grade.

“Children first have to understand what a sentence or a complete thought is before they can write one. Talking is very different from writing. We don’t talk in complete sentence. In conversation we produce units smaller and larger than sentences,” Berninger said.

She, however, added: “We need to learn more about the process of writing with a computer, and even though schools have computers they haven’t integrated them in teaching at the early grades. We need to help children become bilingual writers so they can write by both the pen and the computer. So don’t throw away your pen or your keyboard. We need them both.”

She further said: “We need more research to figure out how forming letters by a pen and selecting them by pressing a key may engage our thinking brains differently.” (ANI)

Jimmy Page snubs autobiography plans

London, September 9 (ANI): Rock legend Jimmy Page has left many fans disappointed after snubbing plans to pen an autobiography.

The Led Zeppelin star recently made the revelation at friend Gary Kemp’s book launch.

“I’ve had so many offers over the years but I’m not interested,” the Daily Express quoted him as saying.

“I wouldn’t know how to go about it,” the 65-year-old guitarist added.

Page further tagged most books on the Seventies rock group as “a load of old rubbish”. (ANI)

Lady GaGa says she’s happy being single with her vibrator!

London, Sept 5 (ANI): Popstar Lady Gaga has revealed that her hectic schedule might give her little chance of finding a new man.

However, ‘Poker Face’ hitmaker admits she is finding other ways to relieve the tension of being a single girl.

“I am single and a workaholic and very lonely,” the Sun quoted her as saying.

“But I’m good. Me and my vibrator are very happy,” she added.

Meanwhile, Michael Bolton has teamed up with the 23-year-old singer as she helped pen songs for his forthcoming new album. (ANI)

50 things that are being killed by the Internet

London, Sep 4 (ANI): The Internet has been touted as one of the most useful tool for the last two decades, and has had a huge impact on our lives, but along with its benefits, the World Wide Web has also had some negative impacts on people.

While tasks that once took days can be completed in seconds, traditions and skills that emerged over centuries have become redundant.

The Telegraph has compiled a list of 50 things that are in the process of being killed off by the web and other tools of modern communication, from products and business models to life experiences and habits.

These things are:

1. The art of polite disagreement

2. Fear that you are the only person unmoved by a celebrity’s death

3. Listening to an album all the way through

4. Sarah Palin

5. Punctuality

6. Ceefax/Teletext

7. Adolescent nerves at first porn purchase

8. Telephone directories

9. The myth of cat intelligence

10. Watches

11. Music stores

12. Letter writing/pen pals

13. Memory

14. Dead time

15. Photo albums and slide shows

16. Hoaxes and conspiracy theories

17. Watching television together

18. Authoritative reference works

19. The Innovations catalogue

20. Order forms in the back pages of books

21. Delayed knowledge of sporting results

22. Enforceable copyright

23. Reading telegrams at weddings

24. Dogging

25. Aren’t they dead? Aren’t they gay?

26. Holiday news ignorance

27. Knowing telephone numbers off by heart

28. Respect for doctors and other professionals

29. The mystery of foreign languages

30. Geographical knowledge

31. Privacy

32. Chuck Norris’s reputation

33. Pencil cricket

34. Mainstream media

35. Concentration

36. Mr Alifi

37. Personal reinvention

38. Viktor Yanukovych

39. The insurance ring-round

40. Undiscovered artists

41. The usefulness of reference pages at the front of diaries

42. The nervous thrill of the reunion

43. Solitaire

44. Trust in Nigerian businessmen and princes

45. Prostitute calling cards/ kerb crawling

46. Staggered product/film releases

47. Footnotes

48. Grand National trips to the bookmaker

49. Fanzines

50. Your lunchbreak (ANI)

Author of Winnie the Pooh sequel releases preview ‘exposition’

London, Sept 4 (ANI): Author David Benedictus is set to pen the first sequel of AA Milne’s ‘The House at Pooh Corner’, more than 80 years after the original.

He released an exposition previewing the characters’ thoughts on the forthcoming book, reports the Telegraph.

Pooh and Piglet, Christopher Robin and Eeyore were last seen in the Forest – oh, can it really be eighty years ago? But dreams have a logic of their own and it is as if the eight years have passed in a day.

Looking over my shoulder, Pooh says: ‘Eighty is a good number really but it could just as well be eighty weeks or days or minutes as years,’ and I say: ‘Let’s call it eighty seconds, and then it’ll be as though no time has passed at all.’

Piglet says: ‘I tried to count to eighty once, but when I got to 37 the numbers started jumping out at me and turning cartwheels, especially the sixes and nines.’

‘They do that when you’re least expecting it,’ says Pooh. “But are you really going to write us new adventures?” Christopher Robin asks. “Because we rather liked the old ones.”

“I didn’t like the ones with the Heffalumps in,” adds Piglet, shuddering.

“And can they end with a little smackerel of something?” asks Pooh, who may have put on a few ounces in eighty years.

“He’ll get it wrong,” says Eeyore, “see if he doesn’t. What does he know about donkeys?”

Of course Eeyore is right, because I don’t know; I can only guess.

But guessing can be fun too.

And if occasionally I think I have guessed right I shall reward myself with a chocolate biscuit, one of those with chocolate on one side only so you don’t get sticky fingers and leave marks on the paper, and if sometimes I am afraid that I have guessed wrong I shall just have to go without.

“We’ll know,” says Christopher Robin. “We’ll help you get it right if we can.”

And Pooh and Piglet smile and nod their heads, but Eeyore says: “Not that you are likely to. Nobody ever does.” (ANI)

New computer program studies handwriting to detect liars

Washington, Aug 29 (ANI): While experts have long been trying to use handwriting as a tool in forensic labs or their personality traits, researchers have now developed a computerized tool that can measure handwriting characteristics more effectively, making it greatly useful in lie detection.

Headed by Gil Luria and Sara Rosenblum at the University of Haifa, the researchers utilised a computerized tablet that measured the physical properties of the subject’s handwriting, which are difficult to consciously control (for example: the duration of time that the pen is on paper versus in the air, the length height and width of each writing stroke, the pressure implemented on the writing surface).

And they have found that these handwriting characteristics differ when an individual is in the process of writing deceptive sentences as opposed to truthful sentences.

The handwriting tool has the potential to replace, or work in tandem, with popular, verbal-based lie detection technology such as the polygraph to ensure greater accuracy and objectivity in law enforcement deception detection.

Besides, polygraphs are often intrusive to the subject and sometimes inconclusive.

Thus, the handwriting tool provides ease and increased accuracy over common, verbal-based methods.

The study appears in an upcoming issue of Applied Cognitive Psychology. (ANI)

Our nostrils share a ‘smelly’ rivalry

Washington, Aug 21 (ANI): Our nostrils may look like a happy pair, but according to a new study, when they pick up conflicting scents, the nose holes become deadly rivals.

The study, published online in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, explains that when the nose encounters two different scents simultaneously, the brain processes them separately through each nostril in an alternating fashion.

The finding by researchers at Rice University in Houston is the first demonstration of “perceptual rivalry” in the olfactory system.

“Our discovery opens up new avenues to explore the workings of the olfactory system and olfactory awareness,” said Denise Chen, assistant professor of psychology, who coauthored the research paper with graduate student Wen Zhou.

For the study, 12 volunteers sampled smells from two bottles containing distinctively different odors. One bottle had phenyl ethyl alcohol, which smells like a rose, and the other had n-butanol, which smells like a marker pen.

The bottles were fitted with nosepieces so that volunteers could sample both scents simultaneously-one through each nostril.

During 20 rounds of sampling, all 12 participants experienced switches between smelling predominantly the rose scent and smelling predominantly the marker scent. Some experienced more frequent and drastic switches than others, but there was no predictable pattern of the switch across the whole group of volunteers or within individuals.

Chen said this “binaral rivalry” between the nostrils resembles the rivalry that occurs between other pairs of sensory organs.

When the eyes simultaneously view two different images-one for each eye-the two images are perceived in alternation, one at a time. And when alternating tones an octave apart are played out of phase to each ear, most people experience a single tone that goes back and forth from ear to ear.

In the laboratory setting in which each nostril simultaneously received a different smell, the participants experienced an “olfactory illusion,” she said.

“Instead of perceiving a constant mixture of the two smells, they perceive one of the smells, followed by the other, in an alternating fashion, as if the nostrils were competing with one another. Although both smells are equally present, the brain attends to predominantly one of them at a time,” the expert added.

“The binaral rivalry involves adaptations at the peripheral sensory neurons and in the cortex,” Chen said.

“Our work sets the stage for future studies of this phenomenon so we can learn more about the mechanisms by which we perceive smells,” the expert said.

In binaral rivalry, the tug-of-war between dominance and suppression of the olfactory perception exists only in the mind of the person who smells the odors, while the physical properties of the olfactory stimuli remain unchanged, Chen said. This gives humans the rare opportunity to dissociate olfactory perception and physical stimulation. (ANI)

Pulse Smartpen – Smartpen – Livescribe Pulse Smartpen Tidbits – Livescribe Pulse Smartpen – Livescribe pens – Handwriting Recognition Service for Mac Comes to Device – Classrooms Go High-Tech to Engage Students

Pulse Smartpen | Smartpen | Livescribe Pulse Smartpen Tidbits | Livescribe Pulse Smartpen | Livescribe pens | Handwriting Recognition Service for Mac Comes to Device | Classrooms Go High-Tech to Engage Students

The Livescribe smartpen recognizes handwritten marks through a camera inside its tip that focuses on a minute pattern of dots printed on paper. It captures over 100 hours of audio through a built-in microphone and plays audio back through a built-in speaker or 3D recording headset. Files are uploaded from the pen to a computer using a USB connection. The technology will be much more affordable and portable than previous products used for this purpose – students can just put it in their backpacks with the rest of their books and notebooks.

Van Schaack and Miele will be using a prototype of the Livescribe smartpen and a Sewell Raised Line Drawing Kit, a Mylar-like film that is deformed when a student writes on it with a pen, creating raised drawings. Students will be able to touch a hand-drawn figure with their smartpen to hear audio explanations of its features.

As for other uses of the smartpen, Van Schaack believes the possibilities are endless.

“It really is a new computer platform – it includes most of the technology found in a typical laptop, but gets its information from handwriting rather than from a keyboard and mouse,” Van Schaack said. “One of the most immediate uses of it that I see will be for college students. It will allow them to spend more time listening in class while taking more of an outline form of notes. Later, when they are reviewing their handwritten notes, they can tap within them to hear what the professor was saying when they wrote a particular note, giving them the opportunity to annotate them for accuracy and additional detail.”

The smartpen is expected to hit stores during the first quarter of 2008 at a cost of less than $200. Livescribe interactive notebooks will run about the same price as a good quality notebook from a college bookstore.

For more information about the smartpen visit on : http://www.livescribe.com

For video of Van Schaack and the smartpen click here

Source: Melanie Moran
Vanderbilt University

Visually impaired bamboo artist enables others for self-reliance

Gangtok, July 15 (ANI): A visually impaired bamboo artisan in Sikkim imparts training to many other disadvantaged people like him and help them gain self-reliance in life.

The 37-year-old Chandra Singh Gurung is one of the visually challenged workers offering training to enthusiastic artists under Directorate of handloom and industry in Cane and Bamboo crafts.

Gurung is a master bamboo and cane artist. He has been working in the bamboo and cane unit of the Directorate of Handicrafts and Handlooms for over a decade and has set an example of self-reliance.

The principal handicrafts of the region include basketwork, cane furniture, bamboo flower, mats and woodcarvings. The items which are made include stools, flowers, pen stands, picture frames, baskets, dust bins, beer mugs, hair clips and butterfly wall decoration.

Having learnt the art of Moda making (cane or bamboo stools) at the Kalimpong Salvation Army Institution, the Braille matriculate Gurung joined the Directorate as an artisan in 1986.

He tells that Government has opened many schemes for the people like him where they could learn the art as per their talent.

“Indian Government has opened many schemes for the people like us. I’m doing this cane and bamboo work in Sikkim. Others can go in for light engineering while still others can take up physiotherapy as per their talent,” said Gurung.

Every ‘moda’ Gurung makes sells at anything between 9.24 dollars to 10.27 dollars a piece.

Gurung is today not just a worker but a trainer as well and has trained jail inmates at the state prison in Rongyek, near Gangtok.

Namrata Thapa, directorate of Handicraft and Handloom Industry, Sikkim said that in this institute the students could earn while they learnt.

“This is the institute where we are providing employment opportunities to the physically handicapped people as far as possible not only the employment opportunities but we are giving them training in different crafts also as per their aptitude in their fields that they are interested to pursue,” said Thapa. By Tashi Pradhan(ANI)

Katy Perry promises to get ‘nasty’ in new album

Washington, July 15 (ANI): American singer/songwriter Katy Perry has promised to get “nasty” in her new album, following her fight with Brit singer Lily Allen.

Perry, 24, said that she would be airing the opinions she previously kept suppressed, sparking speculation that it could include her feud with the British artist.

“It’s just going to be completely packed with what you want to hear about what I think,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

“Everyone asks me, ‘What do you think about this? What do you think about that? And about this person?’ I don’t really comment about that in public but I take it to the pen and I get nasty,” she added. (ANI)

Britney ‘ropes in Aussie songwriters to pen No1 single’

London, July 15 (ANI): Britney Spears has reportedly roped in Australian songwriters behind the success of Kelly Rowland and David Guetta’s June chart-topper ‘When Love Takes Over’ to pen a No1 single for her.

The pop singer, presently trotting the globe for her ‘Circus’ tour, was said to have asked hit-making twins Olivia and Miriam Nervo, to ink her next smash.

“Britney previously worked with Olivia and Miriam for her Blackout album though the tracks didn’t make the cut,” The Sun quoted a source as saying.

“But their success with Kelly has caught her attention again and she wants to give it another go to see what they can come up with,” the source added. (ANI)

Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe is a poet too

London, July 11 (ANI): There’s more to Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe’s creative aspects than just acting, the teenage heartthrob is also a published poet, it has emerged.

Four poems written by the 19-year-old actor have been published in an underground fashion magazine, under the pen name Jacob Gershon.

Radcliffe’s pseudonym- Jacob Gershon- is a combination of his middle name, and the Jewish version of his mother’s maiden name, Gresham.

But the young star disclosed the secret in an interview with the Guardian.

“I didn’t want to publish it under my name. It’s the kind of thing I look back on and just think, ‘Ahhh!’” the Telegraph quoted Radcliffe as saying.

“As an actor, there is room for a certain amount of creativity, but you’re always ultimately going to be saying somebody else’s words.

“I don’t think I’d have the stamina, skill or ability to write a novel, but I’d love to write short stories and poetry, because those are my two passions. There is an art to a short story.

“I love Raymond Carver, and Chekhov – without making myself sound more highbrow than I am! When I don’t write in form and metre, I become unbearably self-indulgent. It’s what Robert Frost said: free verse is like playing tennis with the net down,” he added.

The verses are about infidelity, Pop Idol and Kate Moss’ former boyfriend- singer Pete Doherty.

The collection of his poems was published in November 2007 in Rubbish magazine-an annual publication with a circulation of 3,000, which describes itself as “a playful platform for fashionable people”. (ANI)

Nanomaterials can serve as effective tools for cleanup of contaminated sites

Washington, July 9 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have determined that nanomaterials can serve as effective and economically viable tools for the cleanup of contaminated sites.

The research is detailed in new review article appearing in Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) co-authored by Dr. Todd Kuiken, a research associate for the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies (PEN).

It provides an overview of current practices; research findings; societal issues; potential environment, health, and safety implications; and possible future directions for nanoremediation.

According to Dr. Todd Kuiken, “Despite the potentially high performance and low cost of nanoremediation, more research is needed to understand and prevent any potential adverse environmental impacts, particularly studies on full-scale ecosystem-wide impacts. To date, little research has been done.”

Supplemental material published with the EHP review identifies 45 sites where nanomaterials have been used for soil and groundwater remediation, covering seven countries and 12 US states.

Most of the materials discussed are a form of nano-scale zero-valent iron that are injected into the ground in a slurry which provide a reducing environment that enables the breakdown of contaminants.

To coincide with the release of the EHP article, PEN has for the first time made publicly available an interactive, online map of global nanoremediation sites.

The map shows which nanomaterials have been used where and includes detailed information on the contaminants treated and the nature of the treatment.

It provides a unique source of information on the intentional release of nanomaterials into the environment to treat contaminated ground and water. (ANI)

Two Chinese writers pen ‘instant biography’ of Michael Jackson

New Delhi, July 6 (ANI): Two Chinese writers worked continuously for 48 hours to produce an “instant biography” of late King of Pop Michael Jackson.

The 130,000-word book, titled ‘Moonwalk in Paradise’, has been written by Jiang Xiaoyu and Xing Han, and published by Chinese publishing house Xiandai.

A story published by the China Youth Daily suggests that the two writers, who have never met Jackson, have simply written the story from their “accumulated knowledge about the king of pop,” reports the China Daily.

“Though it is hard to tell how big the market for instant books is in China, I am sure we have done a nice job on quickly responding to market needs,” said Zang Yongqing, the general editor of Xiandai.

Jiang, who has written blogs and reviews about the pop icon, said that he hoped his book would help Chinese fans find a better way to relieve their pain.

“I am not only a music critic but also a fan of the King of Pop, so I understand what fans really need,” he said.

However, Zhao Xin, a PhD student of literature at Beijing Normal University, said that “authenticity and accuracy” should be the cornerstones of a biography.

“The writers might infringe on copyright if they never had the chance to interact with the subject,” he said.

More than 10 Chinese publishing houses are also planning to launch instant books about Jackson. (ANI)

Debt ridden Jackson ‘feared being killed if he didn’t perform London gigs’

London, June 27 (ANI): Michael Jackson was reportedly in constant fear about his mounting debts and worried about his comeback concerts in London, telling friends: “If I don’t tour they’ll kill me.”

The King Of Pop’s increased drug dependency was said to have begun taking its toll on the singer’s mental and physical health days before he died on Thursday.

Jackson, who was almost bankrupt at the time of his death, was claimed to have suffered further exhaustion stemming from rehearsals for his 50 show concerts, which were due to begin at O2 arena on July 13.

” Michael was convinced that if he didn’t perform in London he would die. He would say, ‘They will kill me’, but no one ever really understood who he was talking about. He seemed paranoid,” The Sun quoted a source as saying.

Another source close to him added: ” There were serious concerns for his mental health near the end – so much so that he was seeing a psychiatrist.

“He said he was being pushed into a corner and had an irrational fear that he would die or be killed if he didn’t perform in London. He kept saying that he had to do the concerts because he owed too much money.

“But all the time he was saying these things, his body was starting to shut down as he became more and more dependent on drugs.

“His friends say he signed his death warrant when he put pen to paper for the O2 shows. He wasn’t up to it physically or mentally.”

Jackson, 50, was speculated to have suffered a cardiac arrest due to a fatal dose of prescription drugs but medics are yet to determine the cause of his death. (ANI)

Britain considered dropping millions of poisoned darts on German troops in final stages of WW II

London, June 26 (ANI): During the final stages of the Second World War, Britain considered dropping millions of poisoned darts packed into bombs and released from the air on German troops with the potential to kill or incapacitate anyone within 10,000 sq yds, according to released secret files.

Created by British and Canadian scientists, the designs show three different types of dart. One looks like a fountain pen, the others like a flat penknife. The Singer sewing machine company was even approached to “unwittingly” provide needles for the weapon.

Records show that they were tested on sheep and goats in Canada to establish the effectiveness of dropping the projectiles from high and low altitudes, The Times reported.

Documents released by the National Archives under the Freedom of Information Act include letters and notes collected over four years that demonstrate how close the British Government came to deploying the deadly darts.

Listed as “Top Secret”, it was written by an official from Porton Down, in Salisbury, which was then a government research centre for chemical and biological weapons. Scientists were working on the initiative with their counterparts at Suffield, a similar site in Canada.

The teams explored the most effective poison for the dart, comparing variations of urethane that caused death within 30 minutes with another substance, referred to only as “X” that killed its victim within 24 hours, The Times reported.

Sheep and goats were again used in the tests, showing that the poison induced muscle twitching, salivation, sweating, defecation and retching. The pulse rate slowed and blood pressure fell as the animals collapsed and died.

Death would occur if a dart stayed in the body for more than 50 seconds. If it was taken out sooner, the victim might suffer a temporary collapse. (ANI)

Rising GOP star Sanford admits being unfaithful to wife

Washington, June 25 (ANI): South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, who rose through the Republican ranks over the past decade, from congressman to governor to potential 2012 presidential candidate, has tearfully admitted having an affair with an Argentine pen pal, diminishing his future GOP chances.

Sanford, after pulling off a bizarre vanishing act this week, reappeared on Wednesday to admit that he was having an affair that involved secret visits with his mistress in Argentina.

South Carolina’s Governor arrived home from a secret six-day trip to Buenos Aires to tearfully admit he has been having an affair with an Argentine pen pal.

“I spent the last five days of my life crying in Argentina,” Sanford said at an extraordinary, rambling press conference in Columbia, S.C.

Sanford, who was until this week one of the GOP’s most promising rising stars, resigned as chairman of the Republican Governors’ Association but did not step down from his job running South Carolina.

His staff initially told reporters that he had left town on Thursday to go hiking on the Appalachian Trail, but the Governor returned on Wednesday morning on a flight from Argentina.

“I’ve let down a lot of people. That’s the bottom line. I’ve been unfaithful to my wife,” Fox News quoted Sanford, as saying.

E-mails obtained by The State, a South Carolina newspaper, capture deeply personal exchanges between the Governor and the woman, whom the newspaper called only by her first name, Maria.

“My heart cries out for you, your voice, your body, the touch of your lips, the touch of your finger tips and an even deeper connection to your soul,” Sanford wrote in one of the e-mails, dated last summer.

The newspaper said a McClatchy correspondent reached Sanford’s mistress, but she declined to be interviewed.

Sanford’s wife, Jenny, who apparently had known about the affair for five months, had asked him to leave home two weeks ago and to stop talking to her and their children. In a written statement, she said the couple needed a trial separation, but that her husband had since “earned a chance to resurrect our marriage.”

The Governor apologized profusely to his family, his staff and the people of South Carolina. He said he’s let down his four sons in a “profound way,” though he said his wife had known about the affair for five months and they were trying to work through it. (ANI)

Kylie Minogue ‘ropes in Girls Aloud songwriters for comeback’

London, June 23 (ANI): Kylie Minogue has reportedly roped in songwriters behind the success of Girls Aloud for her big comeback.

The Aussie singer was said to have asked hit-making duo Xenomania, who helped the all girls band score 20 consecutive Top Ten singles, to pen smashes for her next album.

“Kylie has been a huge fan of Xenomania for ages,” The Sun quoted a source as saying.

“With the girls off pursuing solo plans before their next album, she feels the time is right to work with the team who provided them with such staggering success,” the source added.

Xenomania, producers Brian Higgins and Miranda Cooper, previously teamed up with Kylie on her 2005 single Giving You Up, which grabbed the No 6 spot in the charts.

The source added: “Kylie wants to come back with a bang. Her last album, X, sold quite well but it wasn’t the triumphant return to form many people hoped for.

“By working with Xenomania she hopes she can create a really coherent album which will connect her right back to the pop market.” (ANI)

Unlucky-in-love Kanye West plans to pen ‘How to Date the Wrong Way’!

Washington, May 28 (ANI): Hip-hop superstar Kanye West is so unlucky in love that he’s planning to write a book on bad dating.

West, who refuses to confirm reports of split with model Amber Rose, admits he’s a hopeless romantic and ends up making the wrong moves every time he falls in love, reports Contactmusic.

West tells Us Weekly magazine, “I could write a book on bad dating… How to Date the Wrong Way by Kanye West. Here’s how you can really mess up.”

The Stronger hitmaker was previously engaged to fashion designer Alexis Phifer, but the couple split in 2008 after six years together. (ANI)