mercredi 25 mars 2026

NS&I’s staggering failures

Trump hands Iran 15-point plan to end war | The blood sugar spikes damaging your brain and how to avoid them
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Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Issue No. 395

Good morning.

The government-backed National Savings and Investments bank is in a state of chaos, accused of short-changing bereaved families. This story by Harry Brennan, our Consumer Affairs Editor, has sparked animated comments from readers. Many are siding with the families forced to call in lawyers to claw back money from NS&I that is rightfully theirs.

Elsewhere, we have the latest on the war, including the 15-point peace plan sent to Iran by the US, and Tom Cotterill, our Defence Editor, explains the role Britain could play to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Try a whole year of our journalism for just £25 in our Spring Sale. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Jamie Carragher: ‘Salah will depart ahead of Ronaldo in pantheon of Premier League greats’

How Huw Edwards is plotting his comeback

Plus, the classic destinations to revisit in 2026 – and how to escape the crowds

Spring Sale: A whole year for just £25

Enjoy full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week

 

National Savings in chaos over payouts

Harry Brennan

Harry Brennan

Consumer Affairs Editor

 

For 160 years, it has been Britain’s most reliable savings bank. Entrusted with £100bn by more than 26 million customers, National Savings and Investments (NS&I) is supposed to be the epitome of stability.

Now, the institution overseen by Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, is facing a surge in complaints, which have more than doubled in just over three years. At the crux of the mess is the savings bank’s bereavement service. Families of NS&I savers who have died have been forced to call in lawyers to obtain cash that is rightfully theirs, incurring thousands in costs because of failures at the taxpayer-backed bank.

Some have been forced to pay fines to HMRC after receiving incorrect information from NS&I call handlers. Others have missed out on home purchases and claim to have been denied thousands in lost interest because of delays in money being released.

A 1945 advert for National Savings and Investments

A 1945 advert for National Savings, the taxpayer-backed bank

It represents a significant challenge for Dax Harkins, the chief executive of NS&I, who is already under fire for a spiralling bill relating to the bank’s embattled modernisation drive. There have been so many complaints that the compensation bill could be hundreds of millions of pounds.

It threatens to eat into government reserves at a time of rising costs and could raise serious questions about the future of the leadership at NS&I.

This exclusive reporting is available to subscribers only.
Read the full story here

 

Trump hands Iran 15-point plan to end war

The United States has presented Iran with a 15-point plan to end the war.

Under the proposal, the US would set strict limits on Tehran’s nuclear programme and demand the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

Washington and Tehran would also commit to a month-long ceasefire to allow negotiations on a long-term peace agreement, according to the New York Times. Iran agreed yesterday to allow “non-hostile vessels” to pass through the shipping channel.

The news will come as a relief, with the boss of Shell warning that Europe risks fuel shortages as soon as next month as the fallout from the Middle East crisis deepens. Around one fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas supplies are trapped in the Gulf following Iran’s closure of the strait.

Elsewhere, Cyprus has demanded new and improved British security guarantees after the Iranian drone attack on UK military bases on the strategic island.

The strike, and the slow response – HMS Dragon only arrived in the Mediterranean yesterday, about three weeks after the attacks – exposed the decline of Britain’s presence in the region.

Now, Tom Cotterill reports that the Royal Navy is considering the use of civilian ships to help clear Iranian mines in the Strait of Hormuz.

Tom Cotterill

Tom Cotterill

Defence Editor

 

When Iran mined one of the world’s most critical shipping lanes, triggering economic mayhem, Britain was nowhere to be seen.

For decades the Royal Navy guarded the Strait of Hormuz – through which 20 per cent of the world’s oil supply flows – with its ageing fleet of specialist mine-hunting ships.

Britain’s last minesweeper in the Middle East, HMS Middleton, left weeks ago, with the Navy looking to replace older, crewed ships with a new fleet of underwater explosive-hunting robots.

Now military top brass are planning a rapid return to clear the narrow waterway, and are considering hiring civilian ships to assist.

The cargo ship M/V Seaway Hawk transports decommissioned Avenger-class minesweepers

Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton, the head of the Armed Forces, is understood to be looking at proposals to charter commercial vessels and use them as “motherships” to deploy the new autonomous fleet.

Discussions are already taking place between the Navy and the maritime industry on how to make this happen, defence sources revealed yesterday, with Britain leading an international effort to clear the strait.

Crew aboard HMS Dragon en route to Cyprus

The move, still in its infancy, echoes how the Navy mobilised hundreds of civilian boats to rescue 338,000 Allied troops stranded on the beaches of Dunkirk, France, in 1940.
Read the full story here

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

Trump hands Iran 15-point plan to end war

Latest updates: Inflation stalls ahead of Iran conflict

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon: Iran has not yet used its nastiest weapon. We should be ready when it does

 

Opinion

Philip Johnston Headshot

Philip Johnston

It’s immoral to make future generations pay for our instant gratification

Politicians believe their constant bailouts are affordable but who pays? In the long run, it is our children picking up the bill

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Rowan Pelling</span> Headshot

Rowan Pelling

I laughed at bulk-buyers during Covid, but this time I think the preppers are right

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Ben Lawrence</span> Headshot

Ben Lawrence

Bob Monkhouse’s jokes could be smutty – but they were also dazzlingly clever

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

The Big Debate

Your Essential Reads

Jamie Carragher: ‘Salah will depart ahead of Ronaldo in pantheon of Premier League greats’

The Egyptian forward announced his departure yesterday after nearly nine years at Anfield

Some might point to public disagreements between Mohamed Salah and me over the years and claim there was an underlying problem between us, writes Jamie Carragher. So let me state without hesitation: as a player, I absolutely love Mohamed Salah. For me, he is in the pantheon of Premier League greats above even Ronaldo, Bergkamp or Cantona. The timing of his departure – which he announced yesterday – guarantees the kind of emotional, grand farewell that a player of his standing deserves. Perhaps he will get the greatest of all possible goodbyes: when he inspires Liverpool to victory in the Champions League final in Budapest. Don’t bet against it.

For subscribers only

 

How Huw Edwards is plotting his comeback

Huw Edwards leaving Westminster Magistrates’ Court in 2024

In response to Channel 5’s drama documenting his downfall and his alleged grooming of a young man, Huw Edwards has come out fighting. The former newsreader has questioned the veracity of events, suggesting he’s going to tell his side of the story and is reportedly hiring a new agent. Anita Singh, our Arts and Entertainment Editor, asks: what does the comeback of a national treasure turned sex offender really look like?
Continue reading

Last night, Channel 5 aired Power: the Downfall of Huw Edwards, its feature-length drama starring Martin Clunes as the disgraced newsreader. Anita was moved by what she saw.

Read the review

 

Blood sugar spikes can damage your brain, heart and kidneys. Here’s how to avoid them

Blood sugar spikes have been linked to a host of health problems, including cardiovascular and kidney disease, with the latest research finding that people who experienced higher spikes after eating were 69 per cent more likely to develop Alzheimer’s. Our experts explain why and give some simple food swaps to reduce your risk (and it’s good news if you like full-fat milk).

Continue reading

 
Art depicting IDF soldiers

Images included IDF soldiers standing with skulls, blood and the star of David

Zoe Strimpel: ‘Lovely time in Margate? No, it was dripping with Jew-hate’

I went to Margate for sun and sea, writes Zoe Strimpel. Little did I know when I stepped off the train that within an hour I’d be face to face with the most shocking display of anti-Semitic imagery I have ever seen outside a Nazi exhibit in a museum. Having popped into a small gallery at random, I found myself in the lair of an anti-Jewish fever dream. However, as I would soon find out, in Britain today, this isn’t considered the work of either a madman or a hate criminal: it’s just how things are.

Continue reading

 

Author Helen Longstreth reflects on growing up with a brilliant but troubled father

‘My father was a wonderful cook, and a desperate alcoholic’

Food provokes powerful memories, and not always happy ones. Helen Longstreth, a writer, recalls a childhood in which her father cooked with abandon. Sounds wonderful, you might think. In fact, his toil was fuelled by drinking and depression, and she came to despise his minestrone soup in particular: “It was what he made when my mother wasn’t there,” she writes, in an acute recollection of food, family and deep feeling.

Continue reading

 

James Hickman shares how he has outperformed the market

‘How I turned my £100k pension into £1.8m – and beat the professionals’

Can an amateur investor beat the professionals? Yes, according to the story of James Hickman. Over the past two decades, the former plumbing business founder has grown his pension pot from £100,000 to £1.8m. Hickman, 57, reveals the strategy behind his 19 per cent annual returns, achieved without putting a penny in AI.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The classic destinations to revisit in 2026 – and how to escape the crowds

Siena has long been a go-to city for tourists seeking art, history and Tuscan gastronomy, writes Nick Trend

In this year of geopolitical uncertainty, and with flight prices starting to spiral, it seems wise to return to an old holiday favourite. Somewhere like Provence, Tuscany or Andalusia, to which Britons have been flocking for generations. These holiday Arcadias are the backdrops for long lunches on shaded terraces, warm summer nights, and waking to cloudless blue skies. Nick Trend, one of our travel experts, explains how best to visit seven of our all-time favourite destinations in 2026, and gives tips on escaping the crowds.

Continue reading

Below one more article for you this morning:

  • Whoever came up with the adage “a messy home is a happy home” clearly never felt the satisfaction of scrubbing a countertop until it sparkled. Our expert reveals clever, eco-friendly ways to tackle stains, scuffs and everyday domestic disasters.
 

From the fashion desk

The seven style signs of a man’s midlife crisis

 

Your say

Sweet tooth

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...
I can take or leave chocolate – which is just as well, given that I’m pretty good at racking up unnecessary calories in other ways. Still, as Easter approaches, even I might be doing a certain amount of taking, and it would be remiss of me not to mention the debate prompted by Xanthe Clay’s article ranking the best and worst mini eggs. Does Cadbury still reign supreme?


 

Sam Thomas thought so: “My teenage children still love to make a batch of chocolate nests with cornflakes and a couple of mini eggs for teatime on Easter Sunday.”


 

However, others had become disillusioned. According to Chris GG: “Cadbury Dairy Milk used to be pure bliss: creamy, melty, iconic. Now? Waxy and greasy. It tastes nothing like the childhood classic anymore. I blame the palm oil.”


 

Was it ever the best, though? Bernadette Danaher recalled: “I used to think Cadbury Creme Eggs were the acme of delight until Mackintosh brought out toffee and mallow eggs. Anyone remember those?”


 

Jacqueline Mariner, meanwhile, told how, “when I was a child, you could buy Easter eggs that looked like and were the same size as real eggs, with a white or brown icing shell and chocolate inside. I loved them. You could suck them for about half an hour before you broke through the coating. Alternatively, if you didn’t have the patience, you could hit them with a hammer”.


 

As for the best options today, another reader concurred with Xanthe’s award of a full five stars to Waitrose mini eggs: “They are lovely.” And Linda Hunt confessed a weakness for “Lindor mini eggs. They’re a bit too moreish, though”.

What’s your go-to Easter chocolate? Send me your responses 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.

 

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 PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

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

 

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

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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mardi 24 mars 2026

Why Trump can't stop this war

Mahmood admits anti-Semitism on rise after firebomb attack | How to get the NHS to pay for your care
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Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Issue No. 394

Good morning.

Donald Trump has proposed jointly running the Strait of Hormuz with Iran. However, this would rely on the regime neutralising its own leverage over the West. David Blair, our Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator, outlines why the US president might be stuck waging war for longer than it suits him.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Our Spring Sale is under way. Don’t miss out on one year of The Telegraph for just £25, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

JJ Chalmers interview: ‘I went on board HMS Prince of Wales – the Royal Navy is ready for war’

‘I’m polyamorous – people are wrong if they think it’s all about sex’

Plus, how to get the NHS to pay for your care

Spring Sale: Enjoy 1 year for £25

Unlock full access to our free-thinking journalism for less than 50p per week.

 

Trump: I’ll run Strait of Hormuz with ayatollah

Donald Trump has declared that he will jointly run the Strait of Hormuz with Iran after announcing a five-day ceasefire on striking its energy sites, write Neil Johnston and Fiona Parker, our Senior News Reporters in the region.

For all the talk of peace, there was little sign of a climbdown between Iran and Israel overnight.

From midnight until early morning, Tehran fired six salvos of missiles towards Israel, waking residents in major Israeli cities again with the sound of air raid sirens.

A missile fired from Iran in the sky over Hebron, in Israel’s West Bank, this morning

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has said that Jerusalem will keep bombing the Islamic Republic. Meanwhile, fear for the world economy continues to grow with Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, claiming this morning that the global energy crisis caused by the war in Iran is now “critical”.

Claiming progress on a peace deal yesterday evening, Trump said America would “jointly control” the key oil route and promised there would be a “very serious form of regime change” in the Islamic Republic. The US president said peace was likely but insisted that if negotiations fell apart, America would “just keep bombing our little hearts out”.

Below, David Blair, our Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator, explains why, despite Trump’s change in tone, this is no longer his conflict to end.

David Blair

David Blair

Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator

 

Donald Trump may have blinked by suddenly postponing his threat to bomb Iran’s power plants and disclosing “constructive” talks with the regime, but his latest zig-zag does not change one vital fact.

For as long as Iran’s de facto blockade of the Strait of Hormuz remains in place, Trump cannot end this campaign. What began as a war of choice to eliminate what he described as “imminent threats from the Iranian regime” has become a war of necessity.

That dawning realisation could explain Trump’s newly conciliatory tone. Breaking Iran’s grip on the strait by force would require a protracted war and perhaps the deployment of US ground forces. The US president has mused about seizing Kharg Island in the Gulf and holding it hostage to force the regime’s hand.

However, America is only prepared for a short offensive. The USS Gerald R Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, was redeployed from the Caribbean, where she had led the operation to overthrow Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela, and sent to the Mediterranean to launch air strikes against Iran.

USS Gerald R Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, was ordered to the Mediterranean to launch air strikes against Iran

Her crew has been at sea for nearly nine months. If they are still in action in April, their mission will become the longest by any US carrier since the Vietnam War.

Trump would prefer a deal to a long war, but why should Iran oblige him? It seems inconceivable that the Islamic Republic’s surviving leaders would relinquish the most powerful card in their hands by lifting the blockade and allowing a return to the status quo ante. Trump may get a prolonged war of necessity with Iran whether he wishes it or not.

This exclusive analysis is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

Go deeper with our full coverage of the Iran war:

Follow the latest on the conflict

Trump: I’ll run Strait of Hormuz with ayatollah

The secret talks pushing America and Iran towards peace

Iran assigns club-wielding ‘corrupt commander’ to make a deal with Trump

 

Opinion

Charles Moore Headshot

Charles Moore

Revealed: how the National Trust is re-educating its workforce

The only culture excluded from a new ad campaign is the one embodied in the 200-plus country houses the charity owns

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Nicole Lampert</span> Headshot

Nicole Lampert

Britain is a dying society, poisoned by a hatred nobody will confront

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">William Sitwell</span> Headshot

William Sitwell

I’ve done four speed awareness courses. They make me drive faster

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Your Essential Reads

‘Being on the HMS Prince of Wales was a massive and beautiful reminder of just how skilled our Armed Forces are,’ says JJ Chalmers

JJ Chalmers interview: ‘I went on board HMS Prince of Wales – the Royal Navy is ready for war’

What is life like on board HMS Prince of Wales, the Royal Navy’s flagship vessel? As part of a fascinating new documentary, JJ Chalmers, TV presenter and former Royal Marine, spent a week embedded with the crew on the 65,000-tonne, £3.2bn aircraft carrier, which could be called upon at any time to assist in the Gulf. He tells Guy Kelly that the Navy may be under scrutiny, but despite what some might say, it is ready for war.

Continue reading

 

‘For me, polyamory is about the ability to love multiple people,’ says Naomi Aldwyn-Allsworth

‘I’m polyamorous – people are wrong if they think it’s all about sex’

For Naomi Aldwyn-Allsworth, love and sex is not limited to one person. Platonically co-parenting with her former partner in their shared London home, she leads a complex romantic life, including being the “unicorn” (the third person in a relationship) for one married couple. Yet for all its complexity, Naomi insists that polyamory is more than just sex, saying that for her it is all about the ability to love multiple people.

Continue reading

 

How Europe waged war on young people to pay for pensions

When King George VI signed the state pension into law in 1946, it was a cause for celebration. No one could have predicted that 80 years later, it would threaten to bring about this country’s most dangerous financial crisis, with governments pitting old against young in a desperate battle to pay the ballooning bill. European countries have attempted their own solutions to balance the books, with varying degrees of success. The real question is, could any of these strategies work in Britain?

Continue reading

 

‘England’s head coach Brendon McCullum (L) and managing director of cricket Rob Key (R) can count themselves fortunate to still have their jobs’

Sir Geoffrey Boycott: ‘No one to blame for Ashes failure... what planet is the ECB on?’

Let’s not beat around the bush. England’s Ashes tour of Australia was an embarrassment and those accountable for the failure should be held to account. Except they have not been, writes Sir Geoffrey Boycott. We are told by the England and Wales Cricket Board that there is no one to blame. However, the time has come for Brendon McCullum to be sacked and his boss, Rob Key, to shoulder the blame for the worst pre-planned Ashes tour in my lifetime. Instead, we are told it is business as usual and we will be stuck with the same type of Test cricket.
Continue reading

Stokes backs McCullum and Key in X-rated rallying cry

 

Neil Yeoman, Karen Skeel and their border collie, Jess, pictured outside Frith Lodge in the Yorkshire Dales

‘We were idiots’: The couple who quit the rat race to open a B&B in one of Britain’s wildest corners

Karen Skeel and Neil Yeoman left their well-paid jobs and comfortable lifestyle to turn a derelict Yorkshire Dales farmhouse into one of England’s most remote places to stay. “We were obsessive about Grand Designs at the time,” says Karen, by way of explanation, while her husband adds: “I think we were idiots, the place was a mess, but the views…” Here, the couple reveal the highs and lows of their project and explain what it’s like dealing with ramblers 24/7.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

How to get the NHS to pay for your care – from someone who worked there

If you know someone paying for their own care fees, chances are that the NHS could be funding them instead. David Lee, a former manager in the health service, explains how persistence and the right paperwork can get your application over the line.

For subscribers only

Below is one more article that I hope will improve your day:

  • Where can you get the best coffee in Britain? Whether you prefer a flat white or an americano, our writers have compiled the best spots around the country here.
 

Pride of place

Dundee

Every week, one of our writers argues that their hometown is the best in Britain – but will their case convince you? This week Alan Dymock explains why, despite its surrounding narrative of decline, Dundee remains a characterful gem.

Alan Dymock

Alan Dymock

Commissioning Editor, Sport

 

In Scotland we not only celebrate our greatest poet, Rabbie Burns, but our worst as well: William McGonagall. The arch mangler of rhyme and reason, his most notorious work was written about the Tay Bridge disaster and he was a weaver in the city. So it feels only fitting that the people of Dundee treasure his memory.

Because nothing there is meant to fit; not really. Yet it does.

The place where roundabouts are called “circles”. Where high cuisine is twa pehs and a plen bridie (it’s pies and pastry, guys, and wait until you hear about an ingin ain ana).

In Dundee it’s about knowing something isn’t quite right and battering on anyway. The highest point is the Law – an old word that already means Hill, yet folk in town still call it the Law Hill.

Dundee’s Law Hill

Sure, there is a harrowing drug problem and no one below Hadrian’s Wall seems to know which of our football teams is which, but this is also where Mary Shelley found inspiration for Frankenstein. The Beano and the Dandy are our greatest exports if you discount lovely effing and jeffing Brian Cox.

This is where the word “eh” is your most important tool – a sound that can be weaponised to mean either “I” or “me”, or “yes”, or to pause or to resoundingly ask with one syllable: “You what?”

Alan pictured with his mother, father and brother in Dundee

So aye, I could tell you about the historic ship Discovery, or the V&A Museum; “Jute, Jam and Journalism” or the easy transport links to St Andrews and Edinburgh. Frankly, I’d rather tell you about the warmth of the people, misspent hours queuing at Clark’s 24-hour bakery, or why the Perth Road pub crawl is one of Britain’s true wonders.

Yes, Dundee is disorientating, but it does not seem to care and that is the city’s secret weapon. That’s why I will always love it.

What do you think of Dundee? Let us know here.

 

PUZZLES

Tackle our brain-teasing new game

Test your knowledge with The 1% Club, a game based on the hit TV show. Solve five logic-based questions starting with the foundation question, all the way to the summit.

Be warned: each question gets trickier as you progress through the rounds.

See how far you can make it without getting an answer wrong, then reveal your final result and see how your solving skills have stacked up against your fellow puzzlers.

Find the answers to the game at the bottom of this newsletter.

Try your first game for free here and play The 1% Club every day on Telegraph Puzzles.

 

Your say

Pint-sized politics

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...
The Kenton, a pub in Hackney, east London, has taken the decision to ban all under-18s, having grown tired of being “mistaken for a crèche”. I read The Telegraph’s report with a sense of trepidation. I live just a few miles away and fear that as is often the case with things that happen in Hackney, the trend could spread.

There’s a wonderful pub just up the road from me where, every weekend, young families stage something of a takeover. A couple of years ago, I occasionally resented this – in particular, whenever I was precariously carrying a round of drinks and nearly slipped on a slick of rejected sweet potato puree. Now, though, I have a toddler, and everything is different. Call me a hypocrite, but I believe that, by mid-afternoon on a Saturday, parents richly deserve a pint.


 

Shauna Brown does not share this view and many readers agreed with her. “I think I would pay an entry fee to be guaranteed no bratty children and entitled parents,” wrote Caroline Boothby.


 

Trish Bullock added: “Good for that pub. I like children, but there are places that are not suitable for them. Too many parents these days let them run wild.”


 

Rick Kirkby suggested a compromise: “A pub near me used to have a sign on the door: ‘This is a pub which allows children in, not a playground that serves beer’.”


 

Penny Still, meanwhile, recalled: “When our children were young, we would always ask the landlord if they could eat with us, and they were always impeccably behaved (they knew that an early bath and bedtime beckoned if they weren’t).”


 

For Andy Webb, there were more pressing concerns: “I see worse behaviour from adults in pubs: shouting, swearing and generally acting as though no one except their group is there. I also object to entitled dog owners who think it is OK for their pets to come sniffing around you while you’re eating.”

Do you agree with the Kenton’s landlord? Send your responses here, and the best will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, to 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.

 

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 PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

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

 

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

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Quiz answers:

  1. Foundation: Chemistry
  2. The Ascent: Ring
  3. The Summit: Salad
 

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