Telegraph newspaper online – UK – News feed

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Telegraph screen shotThe Telegraph is an established British news-paper that offers a multitude of news. Covering basically all main categories available like sports, arts, politics etc.

We’ve been collecting some of their feeds on this page starting with their main news. If you want to visit their main frontpage you can use this link:
|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

  • David Cameron tells business leaders Coalition is not anti-business - The Prime Minister has tried to reassure company bosses that there is no "anti-business agenda" ahead of a parliamentary debate in which MPs are expected to demand another tax on bonuses.

  • 'Time-bomb' of unemployed young - Youth unemployment is a "time-bomb" set to cost the Exchequer £2.9bn a year from 2013 - the entire annual budget for Jobcentre Plus - and rob the economy of £6.3bn a year in lost output, a study revealed.

  • One in ten local authorities to increase council tax - One in ten local authorities is defying the Government and planning to increase council tax, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

  • Divorced fathers might not get equal time with their children after a divorce, Ken Clarke says - Giving divorced and separated fathers stronger rights could be 'dangerous', Justice secretary Ken Clarke has said.

  • Qatada back on the streets within days - Abu Qatada, the radical Islamic preacher once described as Osama bin Laden's "right hand man in Europe", will be back on the streets within days after being granted bail.

  • New-style 'nappy curriculum' will damage childhood - Children's development is undermined by relentless focus on assessments and targets in nurseries, experts warn.

  • Britain had to plead with US to take part in Iran flotilla - Britain was forced to plead with the US to take part in the flotilla challenging Iranian power in the Gulf after American commanders decided the Royal Navy had nothing to contribute to the mission.

  • More snow could hit Heathrow over weekend - More snow is forecast to hit Heathrow airport and many parts of Britain over weekend just as the half term getaway begins.

  • Create press watchdog with power to strike off journalists, says editor - Journalists should be certified by an independent regulator with the power to strike them off if they transgress, the editor of the Daily Mail suggested to the Leveson inquiry.

  • Ring cycle of the west - Telegraph View: Swindon: The Opera puts the Wiltshire town centre stage.

  • The Telegraph, Top news

  • Scotland referendum: We need a poetry of the Union to defeat Salmond's freedom shtick - The Tories are the natural romantics of the Union and should be supplying the passion to hold us together, says Graeme Archer.

  • Fred Goodwin: a modern-day knight made to suffer a medieval punishment - Fred Goodwin should challenge the judgment of David Cameron's kangaroo court, argues Charles Moore.

  • Alex Salmond: will disgraced Lords now be stripped of honours? - Scottish First Minister suggests other bankers involved in financial crisis and convicted peers should lose titles.

  • Ed Miliband: cabinet of millionaires will not fight soaring City bonuses - Affluent backgrounds of Cameron and cabinet put them in "worst position" to curb soaring bonuses for bankers, says Labour leader

  • Fred Goodwin: decision to strip knighthood was result of 'anti-business hysteria' - Decision to strip former RBS chief executive Fred Goodwin of knighthood criticised by leading business figure.

  • Fred Goodwin is shredded: former RBS boss stripped of knighthood - 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.

  • Former RBS chief executive Fred Goodwin stripped of his knighthood - Disgraced former RBS boss degraded honours system says Cabinet Office, as David Cameron claims it was "right decision".

  • Vince Cable: footballers deserve lavish pay, bankers don't - Business Secretary Vince Cable says failure in football is "severely punished", while the City "rewards mediocrity".

  • Man arrested in connection with prison van escape of John Anslow - 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.

  • Executive pay is 'unjustifiable', says City superwoman Nicola Horlick - City investment 'superwoman' Nicola Horlick has said it was wrong for executive pay to increase when company profits have struggled.

  • The Telegraph, Science news

  • Union accuses MoD over science spending - The Ministry of Defence could risk another incident like the Nimrod air disaster by allowing investment in science and technology to fall, a union claims.

  • Mars too dry for life - Life could not exist on the surface of Mars because the planet has experienced a 600 million year "super-drought", scientists claim.

  • Men more generous in company of attractive women - Men become more generous when attractive women are around because they want to impress them, a study claims.

  • Fourth potentially habitable planet discovered - A fourth potentially habitable planet outside our solar system - about 22 light-years from Earth - with temperatures that could support water and lifen has been discovered by international astronomers.

  • Far side of the moon filmed by Nasa spacecraft - Rare and spectacular video footage of the far side of the Moon has been captured by a Nasa spacecraft.

  • Nasa video casts light on dark side of the Moon - A camera aboard a Nasa spacecraft has beamed back pictures of the far side of the Moon, which is hidden from Earth.

  • Mind-reading device could become reality - A device which reads the thoughts of brain-damaged patients could become a reality, scientists claimed, after proving they could tell what someone was hearing just by decoding their brain waves.

  • Complementary medicine courses in universities: how I beat the varsity quacks - The teaching of complementary medicine has no place in British universities, says David Colquhoun.

  • Supportive mothers could boost children's brain power - Supportive mothers could boost their children's memory and brain power at a young age, according to a new study.

  • Elephants took 24m generations to get this big - Elephants took 24 million generations to get to their current size, a study has shown.

  • The Telegraph, Latest Blogs

    The Telegraph, Digital life

  • World's fastest lift will travel 3,281ft a minute - Japanese company Mitsubishi has developed technology to create the world's fastest lifts, capable of travelling in excess of 3,281 feet a minute.

  • Facebook mobile adverts 'expected in March 2012' - Facebook users accessing the site via a mobile phone will soon be greeted by adverts, says a report.

  • Talking CCTV cameras to be turned off - Camden Council has said its new generation of talking, closed-circuit TV cameras were 'activated by mistake' and will have their voices turned off.

  • Fake Cormac McCarthy account fools Twitter founder - A Cormac McCarthy Twitter account, set up in the name of the reclusive novelist, has been revealed as a fake, after fooling Jack Dorsey, the co-founder of the microblogging service.

  • Charles Dickens gets Google doodle - Charles Dickens, who was born on 7 February 1812, has his 200th anniversary commemorated in a new Google doodle

  • Super Bowl finale sets Twitter record - In the final three minutes of last night's Super Bowl, a new Twitter record was set for the highest amount of tweets sent per second during a sports match.

  • New talking CCTV cameras 'belong in a police state' - A new generation of closed-circuit TV cameras that automatically warn users to leave have been condemned by privacy campaigners as only acceptable in a 'police state'.
  • New talking CCTV cameras 'belong in a police state' - A new generation of closed-circuit TV cameras that automatically warn users to leave have been condemned by privacy campaigners as only acceptable in a 'police state'.

  • A replacement for Google Desktop? - How can I search the contents of my computer once Google Desktop is discontinued?

  • Kindle Fire owners 'less satisfied' than Apple iPad owners - Amazon Kindle Fire owners are less satisfied than those who own an Apple iPad, according to a new survey.

  • The Telegraph, Arts

  • The Diamond Queen, BBC 1, review - Serena Davies reviews the opening part of The Diamond Queen, a BBC One documentary which celebrates the 60 year anniversary of the Queen's accession to the throne

  • Ring cycle of the west - Telegraph View: Swindon: The Opera puts the Wiltshire town centre stage.

  • February Family Book Club: Angie Sage's Magyk - Magyk is the first volume in Angie Sage's arithmetically auspicious Septimus Heap series.

  • Gerhard's off the Richter scale - Works by Gerhard Richter, now considered the world's greatest living painter, look set to dominate at London's forthcoming contemporary art sales.

  • Christie's and Sotheby's reveal sales information for 2011 - Colin Gleadell looks at the latest in the art market, including a pair of Victorian taxidermy chihuahuas which far exceeded Christie's estimates .

  • London Philharmonic Orchestra, Festival Hall, review - An all-Bruckner concert made for a tremendous experience, says Ivan Hewett

  • Charles Dickens - the 'abuser' of women? - Miriam Margolyes says Dickens behaved like 'an abuser' in a provocative and humorous new book.

  • Radio review: Broadcasting House, Radio 4, and last week's highlights - Gillian Reynolds on her newfound love for Radio 3, and other radio highlights from the past week.

  • Dolores O'Riordan: 'I was famous but I just felt so isolated' - Dolores O'Riordan remembers a downhill slide with the Cranberries,1994

  • Will the real Cindy Sherman please stand up? - Her self-portraits sell for millions and have made her a superstar of the art world, so why does photography's master of disguise crave anonymity?

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