Rather than putting her off Ms Foulston then 19 decided to drop out of her maths degree course and concentrate on turning
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Rather than putting her off, Ms Foulston, then 19, decided to drop out of her maths degree course and concentrate on turning Brands Hatch into a profit-making business.As such, she has run into a wall of testosterone. "It's clearly a very male-dominated industry - in the pit lane and the paddock particularly. But there are a lot of woman working in the marketing and administration of the sport," she says.Her life revolves around her business, and she is happy to remain single. She was briefly married to her helicopter instructor, Craig Sargeant, but they split up in 1994 after less than a year.When she took over Brands Hatch it was "fairly run down", she says.
Since then the headquarters and conference centre, named after her father, were built for pounds 2.6m New pits were built at a cost of pounds 2.9m. A deal with BMW gave the Nigel Mansell driving school 40 new saloons. Renegotiation of television coverage meant the company stopped paying for coverage and instead received an income of pounds 100,000 a year.And with her company now making over pounds 2m a year in profit, she clearly sees herself as the winner.John Willcock. Mark Morrison, the soul singer who brought us Moan and Groan and Horny was feeling slightly less energetic yesterday after he was told he faced a jail sentence for threatening a police officer with an electric stun gun. Morrison, 24, who has had five Top 10 hits including a number one last summer, was convicted of the charges which related to an incident outside a 24-hour supermarket in west London last October as he returned home with friends at 4.30am, after an evening spent nightclubbing. Plain-clothes police officers initially believed he had been planning a robbery and moved to arrest him as he left the shop and walked towards his chauffeur- driven Mercedes.Detective Constable John Cushion told the court Morrison turned to him, raising his right hand which was holding the stun gun."I feared he was going to fire the gun into my body and I hit him on the head with my radio," said the officer.
"He was trying to use the gun on me but I struggled with him and prevented it."Morrison admitted to Marylebone Magistrates Court in west London that he had possessed the illegal stun gun, which he bought in the US for his own protection. It can deliver a charge of 23,000 volts, causing "involuntary muscle contraction, pain, shock, a loss of balance and mental confusion".The singer denied using threatening behaviour and said he feared for his life. He felt "insulted" and "disrespected" after being accused of robbery.Stipendiary magistrate David Kennett-Brown told the pop star: "These very serious offences can only be properly dealt with by way of a custodial sentence." Sentencing was adjourned until 14 May. Leaving court amid a posse of minders, a pair of celebrity sunglasses could not hide his tears.Maybe Morrison's recent stage performances were tempting fate. They involved him brandishing handcuffs, backed by female dancers clad as mini-skirted policewomen Matthew Brace. First-time mothers planning a home birth are at high risk of ending up in hospital because of complications during labour, a study has found.

