lundi 27 avril 2026

King’s US visit ‘adjusted’ despite Washington shooting

Exclusive: Hermer insulted British war heroes | ‘Time has moved on, but our motto is as relevant as ever’
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Britain's most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Monday, 27 April 2026

Issue No. 428

Good morning.

British and American security teams worked through the night to ensure that the King and Queen’s state visit to the United States was safe enough to go ahead following the attempted shooting of Donald Trump, reports Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor. The King and Queen will arrive in Washington this afternoon as planned, despite a heightened security risk. We have the latest for you below.

Elsewhere, you may have noticed our new look above. It celebrates The Telegraph’s colourful history and bright future, and that From the Editor is Britain’s most popular daily newsletter with 850,000 readers. Read on for the story behind it, beautifully told by my colleague Christopher Howse.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers the chance to claim 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Exclusive: Hermer insulted British war heroes

How Labour destroyed Wales

Plus, Britain’s best regional cheeses to save from extinction

Email exclusive: 4 months for 25p per month

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage, from politics to international affairs.

 

King’s US visit ‘adjusted’ after gunman stormed Trump dinner

Donald Trump is escorted off stage by secret service agents after the attempted shooting

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

The King and Queen will land in Washington this afternoon, for the beginning of a state visit that was already fraught with difficulties.

The stakes are high. The King is supposed to be soothing the choppy waters between Donald Trump and Sir Keir Starmer over Iran; Epstein victims are calling on the royals to meet them; and there is the newly delicate matter of the Falklands.

Then someone tried to shoot Trump.

Palace staff, like the rest of Britain, woke yesterday to news that the US president and first lady were unharmed in the shooting, and that a lone gunman had been arrested at the annual White House correspondents’ dinner.

No wonder US and UK security services spent the night and following day locked in talks to determine whether the King and Queen’s visit could safely go ahead. They ruled that it could, and last night Buckingham Palace confirmed this in a statement.

There will be some modifications to the schedule, but none that the public will notice. Trump called the King ‘‘brave’’.

Security preparations are under way outside the White House ahead of the state visit

As of today, the real business of a state visit will begin. Can the King pull it off? It is the trickiest tour of his reign, but he does have decades of diplomatic experience to draw from. As a palace source told me this weekend: ‘‘It’s not his first rodeo.’’
Read the full story here

Go deeper with our full coverage:

Daniel Collings: Politicians must help the King save the ‘special relationship’

Latest updates: Trump responds to gunman’s motive: ‘I’m not a paedophile’

Visual reconstruction: By the time the US president realised what was happening, Vance had been swept to safety

Tim Stanley: Trump has dodged another bullet, but political violence is killing democracy

 

Time has moved on, but our motto is as relevant as ever

The Daily Telegraph building in Fleet Street

Telegraph journalists on the balcony of the Fleet Street building, on the newspaper’s final day there

Christopher Howse

Christopher Howse

 

The observant among you might have noticed that the masthead of this newsletter has changed. The Telegraph clock was an icon of Fleet Street, where this newspaper was once based. It was part of an ambitious Fleet Street redesign, a sign of the paper’s optimism for the future.

The grand marble-halled building was demolished and replaced with an even grander building in Art Deco style, with soaring giant pillars of Portland stone and decorative Egyptian elements. The Prince of Wales reopened the office in 1882.

In the centre of the fourth floor jutted out a stunning clock. There had been a clock there before, with the letters of the word Telegraph standing in for nine hours. Workmen with alarming confidence and no safety harnesses dismantled it in 1930 in favour of a huge clock mounted in a multicoloured, modern casing of blue, red, green and gold that outdid the most ambitious cinema design.

Workmen disassembling the Fleet Street clock

Workmen dismantle the clock outside the Daily Telegraph office in 1930

The new Telegraph clock stood for modernity and up-to-the-minute news. Fleet Street, running from St Paul’s Cathedral to the Law Courts, could set its activities by it. From the first edition, in 1855, we have relied on new technology. That accounted for The Telegraph, a “name we trust appropriate, from the sources of our special information”.

On April 19 1858, an engraved device appeared in the paper that still heads our leading articles: a pictorial celebration of the electric telegraph and the mysterious words: WAS · IS · & · WILL · BE.

These words meant that The Telegraph was rooted in history, devoted to current news and committed to future improvement: “We shall be guided by a high tone of independent action; we shall be bound to the fetters of no party; we will be fearlessly independent,” as it declared in its first edition.

These are qualities that matter to this day, so it felt fitting to celebrate them at the top of From the Editor, our biggest newsletter – and Britain’s most popular.
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Opinion

Liam Halligan Headshot

Liam Halligan

We’re on the brink of a global recession, but it’s not Iran we need to worry about

A 2008-style collapse is on the cards, yet spiralling food and energy costs are not to blame

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tom Tugendhat</span> Headshot

Tom Tugendhat

Hermer and Starmer’s sinister legal cult has rotted our democracy

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">Zoe Strimpel</span> Headshot

Zoe Strimpel

Fat jabs for all will herald an epidemic of smugness

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In other news

Your Sport Briefing

Sabastian Sawe

Sabastian Sawe crosses the finish line in a time of 1hr 59min 30sec

Your essential reads

Exclusive: Hermer insulted British war heroes

Lord Hermer has long insisted there is no tension between his past work as a human rights barrister and his current role in Government. However, an email from 2014 buried in a cache of 25,000 legal documents reviewed by this newspaper pushes that claim to its limit.

In the email, the man who is now Attorney General responds to the revelation that his clients, a group of Iraqis suing the Ministry of Defence, are Islamist militiamen who falsely claimed British troops had murdered civilians, by criticising the army.

Writing to a junior solicitor facing press criticism for her role in the case, he urges her to focus on the “much more important big picture”. “[Y]our hard work, dedication and ability are outstanding and have made a real difference to people’s lives – that is not something that Forbes, Neil Garnham or his clients can ever say,” he says. Here, we reveal why this line now threatens to haunt Lord Hermer.

Continue reading

 

Police officers Simon Vandepeer (left) and Zachary Stimson. As anti-Semitism rises, they know they have a vital role

Behind the scenes with Met Police hunting synagogue arsonists

On a quiet north London street, outside a Jewish primary school preparing for the Sabbath, police are no longer responding to ordinary incidents but to the grim new reality of “violence as a service”. After a suspected hostile reconnaissance outside the school, The Telegraph joined Metropolitan Police officers on Operation Compertum – an unprecedented surge deployment launched after a string of firebombings on Jewish sites.

Continue reading

 

How Labour destroyed Wales

Wales was once Labour’s heartland, writes Annabel Denham, our Senior Political Commentator. Now, after decades of devolution, higher spending and worsening outcomes in health, education and jobs, that bond is breaking. In Port Talbot and beyond, boarded-up high streets and economic decline are fuelling a political revolt. As Reform surges and Labour slumps, Britain’s oldest electoral fortress may be on the verge of collapse.
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For daily insight from Annabel Denham and Allister Heath on the biggest political stories, sign up to our Politics newsletter here

 

Anders Fernstedt, a homeless Swedish man who camps out on the building’s portico, is the only occupant of Rutland Gate

The £210m ghost house that’s a monument to foreign money gone wrong

London’s garden squares remain among the capital’s treasures, writes Michael Mosbacher, our Deputy Comment Editor. However, tucked beside Hyde Park, one of the city’s most expensive homes has become a symbol of absentee global wealth. Once sold for £210m million, 2-8a Rutland Gate now stands empty, decaying and bizarrely occupied only by a homeless artist.

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Learning to drive is Britain’s biggest rip-off

Finally binning the L-plates is one of early adulthood’s great moments, but many young Britons are stuck in first gear, as the costs of getting a licence pile up. Then there’s fuel inflation, and the excessive delays now faced by would-be drivers – who can wait up to six months to sit a practical test. The result is a hellish traffic jam, with predictable effects for the British economy. Matthew Bell maps out the data.

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Britain’s best regional cheeses to save from extinction

The supermarket shelves might be drowning in mild cheddar, but seek out a more complex, farmhouse version and the options are far more scarce. Cheddar is suffering the same fate as other traditional British cheeses, writes Tomé Morrissey-Swan. That is: you can count the number of producers, once in the thousands, on your fingers. Those who remain tell me they fear for the future of their hard cheeses, which are losing out in the popularity stakes to alpine styles and funky washed-rind numbers. To save them, we must eat them. Or else Britain’s cheesemaking heritage will be reduced to crumbs.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

Nine wedding guest style dilemmas solved by our fashion editor

From multi-wedding outfits to Pantone-precise colour codes, Telegraph readers share their fashion conundrums for that all important day

Wedding season can present a minefield of fashion dilemmas. We asked Telegraph readers for their worries, from budgets to body confidence, confusing themes to the fear of frumpiness. Caroline Leaper, our Deputy Fashion Director, has assembled a stylish survival guide to nine very specific wedding wardrobe challenges, proving that elegance needn’t mean surrendering personality.
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sign up to our Fashion and Beauty newsletter here

 

Caption competition with...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello. We’ve got this George and the Dragon inspired cartoon above ready for you to caption. Please submit your answers here as usual.

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Your say

Quit while you’re ahead

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
There was a time when I would have been deeply unimpressed by Sophia Money-Coutts’s suggestion that dinner parties should end at 10.30pm, American-style. For me, long, rambling evenings round the table were one of life’s great joys, during which no wine cork should ever be reunited with its bottle.

That changed, mysteriously enough, with the arrival of my daughter, an alarm clock without a snooze button. Now, on the rare occasions when my wife and I go out together, the babysitter’s fee ensures that we’re back at what I would once have considered an utterly risible hour. When people linger at ours, we find ourselves deploying such subtle hints as fishing my pyjamas out of the laundry pile.


 

I’ve enjoyed readers’ responses to Sophia’s piece. “Overstaying was one of my mother’s bêtes noires,” wrote Martin Watkins. “She lamented that the ‘set’ times for guests to leave a formal meal were largely forgotten by the late 1960s. She said that the agreed times, pre-war, were 2.45pm for luncheon and 10.45pm for dinner.

“She also observed that, for those lesser mortals who didn’t know the rules, a hostess’s ultimate recourse was to say in icy tones: ‘Would you like a lemonade?’”


 

Peter Sharp added: “My dad used to say that the best time to leave a dinner party is when you still wonder whether you’ve left too early, not when you’re in a taxi regretting you left too late. He also used to say that nothing good happens after midnight. I spent my twenties and thirties proving him wrong, and my forties and fifties discovering that he was merely early with the evidence.”


 

Anna Wareham, however, put in a word for the night owls: “Oh, but the world in general expects those of us who wake late to adapt relentlessly, demanding that we get up in the middle of the night.”


 

Douglas Chirnside, writing from the States, confessed that he missed “the British way. Here in California we are frequently home from dinner at 7.50pm. If you are not an evening person and flake at 10pm, don’t host a dinner party – opt for weekend brunches or lunches. If you cast your dinner party well, no one will want to leave, but guests will also judge when the time is right.”

How’s your dinner-party stamina? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Morning quiz


Homeowners in Coventry have been left furious after an 8ft parcel locker was installed just metres from their front doors. What do they claim it prevents them from doing?

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was LATERALLY. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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dimanche 26 avril 2026

Shots fired as gunman ‘targets Trump’

David Jason: ‘An Only Fools return? Let’s go for it’ | Why the modern world is making us more stupid
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Sunday, 26 April 2026

Issue No. 427

Good morning.

In breaking news overnight, a gunman stormed a security checkpoint at a celebrity-laden event attended by Donald Trump. The president was dramatically rushed off stage after several shots rang out at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner at the Washington Hilton. Connor Stringer, our Chief Washington Correspondent, was in the room and brings you what he saw and heard below.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers the chance to claim 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

The death of British industry

David Jason: ‘An Only Fools return? Let’s go for it’

Plus, why the modern world is making us more stupid – and how to protect your brain

Email exclusive: 4 months for 25p per month

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage, from politics to international affairs.

 

I was in the room: the night lax security let a gunman get close to Trump

Donald Trump posted a picture he claimed was of the alleged shooter

Connor Stringer

Connor Stringer

Chief Washington Correspondent

 

The US marine band had just broken into song when the first thud rang out.

A dull crack sliced through the laughter and police chatter at the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner, which had been packed full in anticipation of Donald Trump’s return to the event.

Before anyone had time to realise what had happened, an army of black tie-clad secret service agents leapt to their feet, scrambling across tables and sending wine bottles flying every which way.

“Get down!” they screamed, as they clambered over chairs and white table cloth-covered tables towards the US president, who had been rushed off stage, along with the first lady, by his close protection detail.

Trump is evacuated after gunshots fired

The cause of the panic soon became clear. A gunman armed with “multiple” weapons had charged through the main security checkpoint on the ground floor of the Washington Hilton. His target? The US president.

Journalists’ faces were lit by their phone screens as they rushed to file news lines on the attack, while on their knees beneath tables. Some hid under the table cloth while others stood on their feet eager to film the chaos that was unfolding.

Dr Mehmet Oz, who leads the US government’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, leaned in as he was moved towards the exit by secret service. “Shots,” he told me, before being ushered out of the ballroom.

By now, heavily armed officers in tactical gear and armed with AR-15 rifles lined the stage where the president had sat moments before, scanning the room for signs of suspicious movement.

Journalists began to rise to their feet. Phones to their ear, they began calling in to their respective news desks, describing the chaos that was unfolding before us.

Trump, along with First Lady Melania Trump, and the vice president JD Vance, had been rushed to a secure location somewhere deep in the building. The hotel was in lockdown.

Outside, unknown to us in the room at the time, Cole Tomas Allen, a 31-year-old man from Torrance, California and an apparent guest of the hotel, lay face down after being shot by secret service agents.

Guests take shelter under tables after loud bangs were heard

He had run past the security checkpoint, which included airport-like metal detectors, in an apparent bid to reach the president who sat in the ballroom just a few seconds away on foot.

Guests and journalists alike began to speculate about security. Upon arriving at the Hilton, I had remarked to a colleague just how light the measures were. No ID checks. No pat downs on entry. A simple flash of a cardboard ticket, the exact same from last year’s event, was all that was needed to enter.

Indeed, at least one reporter who missed out on a seat had managed to get in without a ticket.

By now, the secret service lifted its lockdown and guests and journalists alike made their way to the exits. Some returned to their seats to start the spring Pea and Burrata Salad that had been served moments before the chaos ensued.

Any hope of the event restarting was quickly put to bed by the president, who announced he would hold a press conference in the White House briefing room some two miles away.

“Law Enforcement has requested that we leave the premises, consistent with protocol, which we will do, immediately. I will be giving a press conference in 30 minutes from the White House Press Briefing Room,” he wrote. “The First Lady, plus the Vice President, and all Cabinet members, are in perfect condition. We will be speaking to you in a half an hour.”

And so, the rush to the White House began. After a brief stop to collect my hard pass, the identification needed to access the White House grounds, I rushed to the briefing room on my noble steed – a rental electric scooter.

Dozens of other journalists, still clad in black tie, began to arrive. The show, as the president insisted, would go on. But for those in the room, it was nothing like the script.

Read the full story from our Chief Washington Correspondent – who was at the dinner – here

Follow our live blog for updates
‘Stay down’: Trump dinner descends into pandemonium

 

Opinion

Sonia Twigg Headshot

Sonia Twigg

Influencers are ruining the London Marathon

Most of us want to get on with the race and have an authentic experience but we are dodging camera-wielding ‘runfluencers’

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">Bernard Jenkin</span> Headshot

Bernard Jenkin

We should have been rearming for years. Soon it will be too late

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<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

Americans still have a respect for Britishness. The King can trade on that

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

The death of British industry

Chemicals underpin 95 per cent of all manufactured goods. Yet many critical chemical facilities have vanished from Britain in recent years – victims of what the Ineos billionaire Jim Ratcliffe has called “the deindustrialisation of the UK”. As Ben Marlow reports, business leaders fear the hollowing out of the UK’s industrial base is in danger of almost being missed in the corridors of Westminster.

For subscribers only

 

David Jason, 86, has graced some of the most-watched TV shows in recent history

David Jason: ‘An Only Fools return? Let’s go for it’

Would David Jason ever consider bringing back Only Fools and Horses? Reviving Derek Trotter is not something he’s completely opposed to. The death of the show’s writer, John Sullivan, in 2011, presents a challenge, but as Jason says with a Del Boy glint in his eye: “Well yeah, providing we have a good script, let’s go for it!” Away from Peckham, in this interview with Jon Peake, Jason also discusses the discovery that he fathered a daughter in 1970.

Continue reading

 

London Marathon 2026: live blog

This morning around 60,000 intrepid runners will set off from Blackheath to The Mall for the 46th edition of the London Marathon. The elite athletes will hope to complete the 26.2-mile course in little over two hours; some of the amateurs may take most of the day. Follow it all in our live blog, and learn more about the event with our interactive runner’s guide to the course.

Follow the London Marathon live here
Guide to the route for runners and viewers

 

The 10 longest-range electric cars (that all cover over 400 miles)

For the first time, all of the top 10 longest-range EVs on sale in the UK will (officially) cover more than 400 miles on a full charge, and the best will do nearly 500. Plenty of folk still believe an electric car isn’t for them, but the numbers are starting to add up for many.

Continue reading

 

‘Everyone said having a baby at 48 would be empowering – but I’m exhausted’

A glossy narrative surrounds later motherhood – Sienna Miller even describes it as a “biohack” – but the lived reality of having a toddler in your early 50s is very different, writes Olivia Buxton. I gave birth five years ago and will be 60 by the time my son Jude hits his teens. Later motherhood is not a mistake, but neither is it a simple triumph. It is complex, demanding, beautiful and brutal.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

Why the modern world is making us more stupid – and how to protect your brain

Illustration showing a brain

The internet is turning many people into cognitive couch potatoes. Instead of trying to remember information, Google is always on hand. Rather than craft a reply to an email, one click brings up a suggestion supplied by AI. As digital habits reshape how we think, neuroscientist Dr Hannah Critchlow explains why emotional intelligence, creativity and long-term thinking are now vital to keeping our brains sharp.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

Marathon running is dangerous and exhibitionistic

Every week, one of our writers takes an unfashionable position, either defending a subject that’s been unfairly maligned or criticising something that most people love.

Marathon running
Christian Vince

Christian Vince

Senior Newsletter Editor

 

It’s marathon season. That sickening time of year when an increasing proportion of the population trade in their personalities for a pair of offensively lurid running shoes.

As someone who has run a 100km ultra marathon (that’s roughly two and a half regular marathons, if you’re wondering), I know how it inflates one’s ego. However, after I finished, I was left with an overwhelming feeling of “what was it all for?”, and a knee injury that has persisted ever since.

Since I finished that race, the unhealthy phenomenon has exploded. Everyone has surrendered their autonomy to the cult of long-distance running. Social media especially is awash with nauseating influencers who glide in and out of my algorithm evangelically spreading the runner’s gospel.

It appears we have all forgotten that the modern marathon was borne out of the Greek legend in which a messenger ran to Athens to announce an oncoming armada, only to drop dead upon arrival. One study, conducted on 1,049 runners during the 2024 New York City marathon, revealed that 447 (43 per cent) of them experienced some formof trauma either in training or during the race itself. Of those injured, 50 per cent sought medical attention or the help of a physiotherapist. I am here to defend the vanishing minority who don’t fancy putting their physical health on the line in the name of a week’s worth of bragging rights.

What about those running for charity? I concede, there are some marathon runners doing it for noble reasons, but there are less self-centred ways of raising money for a cause. How about a sponsored silence, or a charity Aqua Zumba-thon? I would much rather give my hard-earned cash to an original friend doing something unique.

It’s not just the participants that irk me, it’s the performative sideline warriors too. While they vacantly pout and preen and wield their cringe-worthy signs, tomato-faced runners are clawing their desperate ways across the finish line.

When news broke of London Marathon organisers considering splitting the event over two days to accommodate more runners, I seethed. Brilliant. Let’s make London even busier, so that more people can attempt to fill the void left behind by a midlife crisis.

So, if you are not running any sort of marathon this year, I say: “Well done!” You are refusing to plug yourself in to the propaganda being pedaled by the hive mind. If you are tempted to sign yourself up for next year’s, please resist the urge. I know you can do it.

Do you agree with Christian? Send your replies here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, for which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

One great life

Desmond Morris, zoologist behind bestselling studies of human behaviour from The Naked Ape to Manwatching

Morris teaching a group of children about animal behaviour at London Zoo

Desmond Morris, the zoologist who has died aged 98, sold at least 20 million copies of his masterwork The Naked Ape, and it was a book that was on practically every shelf in the 1970s. He described humans just like any other species, particularly in relation to their primate cousins.

A robust Darwinist, he characterised man as simply a “risen ape”, standing on two feet and boldly displaying sexual signals. He claimed, for example, that the prominent breasts of the human female were in fact “a pair of mini-buttocks on the chest that enable the woman to transmit those primeval sexual signals without turning her back on her companion”.

Morris in 1959 in a publicity shot for Zoo Time

Morris in 1959 in a publicity shot for Zoo Time

He helped popularise the notion of body language, providing ample fodder for armchair psychologists. He also had an eye for gripping snippets, such as the 18th-century English fashion for shaving off eyebrows and replacing them with fakes made from mouse fur.

Some critics accused Morris of ignoring deeper questions such as why “human sexual experience should be so utterly and uniquely different from the baboon’s eight-second poke”. However, his books entertained and provoked thought, and he wrote more than 50 of them, branching out with Catwatching, Dogwatching and Babywatching.

Read more about his fascinating life here

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was ECCENTRIC. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter here.

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