The Telegraph is an established British news-paper that offers a multitude of news. Covering basically all main categories available like sports, arts, politics etc.
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|Telegraph newspaper online|
Otherwise just browse this page. And if you find an article of interest you’re welcome to click the title in order to read the rest of the post at The Telegraph’s home site.
The Telegraph, UK news
- Universities are being forced to "dumb down" standards of maths because of the sheer number of children leaving school with poor numeracy skills, according to research.

- In his job as a painter and decorator, Matt Topham has seen many beautiful homes. Now he will be able to buy one himself after he and his fiancée won more than £45 million on the lottery.

- Most UK journalism is in the public interest, just as most doctors are not like Harold Shipman, Lord Justice Leveson says.

- Families could be given tax breaks for hiring cleaners and cooks to help at home, under a scheme to be considered by ministers.

- Elderly people should be encouraged to go back to work and move into smaller homes, one of David Cameron's key advisers has said, as Prime Minister discusses radical plans on retirement during an official visit to Sweden.

- Telegraph View: It is heartening to find that 30 million tourists pay to come to Britain.

- When Kenneth Clayton was invited to photograph the Queen and her young family two months after her accession to the throne, he was sworn to secrecy.

- A drug commonly used to fight skin cancer could start to reverse Alzheimer's disease in a matter of hours, a laboratory study indicates.

- Britain's economic reputation is at risk because of hidden debts caused by the Private Finance Initiative adding up to £13,000 per taxpaying household, experts said last night.

- Forcing companies to appoint more female directors by law could "backfire" against the Government, a top businesswoman warned last night.

The Telegraph, Top news
- The Tories are the natural romantics of the Union and should be supplying the passion to hold us together, says Graeme Archer.
- Fred Goodwin should challenge the judgment of David Cameron's kangaroo court, argues Charles Moore.
- Scottish First Minister suggests other bankers involved in financial crisis and convicted peers should lose titles.
- Affluent backgrounds of Cameron and cabinet put them in "worst position" to curb soaring bonuses for bankers, says Labour leader
- Decision to strip former RBS chief executive Fred Goodwin of knighthood criticised by leading business figure.
- Whitehall committee of senior civil servants rules that Fred 'The Shred' Goodwin was an "exceptional case", stripping former bank boss of knighthood despite him not having been convicted of criminal offence.
- Disgraced former RBS boss degraded honours system says Cabinet Office, as David Cameron claims it was "right decision".
- Business Secretary Vince Cable says failure in football is "severely punished", while the City "rewards mediocrity".
- Detectives hunting an "extremely dangerous" murder suspect who escaped from a prison van following a "well-orchestrated armed ambush" have arrested a man in connection with the incident.
- City investment 'superwoman' Nicola Horlick has said it was wrong for executive pay to increase when company profits have struggled.
The Telegraph, Science news
- People with simple names enjoy quicker career advancement because hard-to-pronounce names inspire negative reactions from superiors, a study has found.

- Russian scientists reach Lake Vostok after 20 years of drilling into ice.

- Time Team has been thrown into disarray after Mary-Ann Ochota became the second presenter to leave the Channel 4 archaeological programme.
- A rare meteorite that could help unravel the mysteries of Mars has been acquired by the Natural History Museum in London.
- The imminent closure of the Forensic Science Service will lead to more miscarriages of justice, according to a survey of experts in the field.
- Shipping noise causes chronic stress to whales, a landmark study has concluded.
- It is something long believed but never proved, but now scientists are aiming to establish whether birdsong really does cheer us up.
- Sharing the wealth is so ingrained that people may prefer the economy to crumble rather than allow 'greed' to succeed. Roger Highfield explains.
- Frustrated by glacial progress, the US has turned to physicists to fight the disease, reveals Paul Davies.
- Soldiers could control weapons systems simply by using their minds, British scientists have suggested.
The Telegraph, Latest Blogs
The Telegraph, Digital life
- Facebook and similar sites encourage banality, boasting and boring banter, says Bryony Gordon.

- The FBI has published its investigation into the background the late Apple founder Steve Jobs - and it appears he was not the most popular of men.

- Apple to announce iPad 3 in first week of March, it is claimed.

- A file compiled by FBI on Apple founder as he was considered for "sensitive" job in White House is released online.

- London has topped the illegal downloads charts in 2011, with Adele becoming the most pirated artist of last year, according to a new study.

- Google's Drive, the search giant's answer to Dropbox and Apple's iCloud, is likely to launch in the next few weeks, sources say.

- A photo that appears to show the back of an iPad 3 has ignited rumours about Apple's next tablet.
- A photo that appears to show the back of an iPad 3 has ignited rumours about Apple's next tablet.

- When your friends appear to be sponsoring baby photos, you know something is wrong with social media advertising, writes Emma Barnett.

- At a fair for kinetic art in London, John O' Ceallaigh makes a bemused subject for an emotionally inconsiderate robotic artist.

The Telegraph, Arts
- On the anniversary of Angela Carter's death, her friend Susannah Clapp tells Edmund Gordon that the novelist's fantastical creations were modelled on the people she knew.

- Philip Womack finds the spirit of Homer at a reading of Alice Oswald's poem, Memorial.

- German actress Diane Kruger talked about her latest film, a sumptuous period drama set during the French Revolution at the opening of the 11 day festival in Berlin.

- You certainly couldn't accuse Keira Knightley of being in any way cowed by the material in A Dangerous Method, writes Tim Robey.

- Rolling Stones Mick Jagger features on the hit new Will.I.Am single, T.H.E. (The Hardest Ever).

- Vicki Power previews the return of Big Fat Gypsy Weddings, which explores the lives of modern British and Irish travellers.

- This all-black Waiting for Godot touches the bleakly funny heart of the piece, writes Dominic Cavendish.

- Only one band on the bill got full approval from the crowd, writes Matthew Magee

- A disfigurement charity has called for Jeremy Clarkson and the BBC to apologise after the Top Gear presenter compared the shape of a new car to "people with growths on their faces".

- American artist Karen Eland paints pictures with beer instead of paint.

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