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Clare Spencer | 15:44 UK time, Thursday, 2 December 2010

A look at the stories ranking highly on various news sites.

Snow dominates a few most read lists. Times readers are finding out about [subscription reqd]; the Daily Mail reports that .

While six of the ten most popular stories on the ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ News site relate to the snow hitting the UK, Guardian readers are looking at . Luke Harding writes that American diplomats' cables expose their opinions that the Russian government works with senior mafia bosses.

The Spectator has : US cables from 1975 about Margaret Thatcher. Of Britain's "newest political star" the cable says that if she is ever to become Britain's first woman prime minister, she must use that time to humanise her public image, adding "the odds are against her".

Proving popular at the Independent is . The piece says that Sweden is rocked by the previously-hidden fact that he was a Nazi party member who grew rich during World War 2 running an armaments factory that had been stolen from its Jewish owners.

Telegraph readers are interested in . According to the paper, Britons are thought to be sitting on millions of mobile phones that could be sold for cash. It lists the most and least valuable recycled mobiles ranging from the Apple iPhone 4 at £390 to the Sony Ericsson Z300: average price just £1.

The Sun's readers prefer to look at , lingerie model Danielle Bux, for his 50th birthday party.

The New Statesman's most read story is . The Lib Dem MP for Yeovil contests the accusation that his party was never serious about a coalition with Labour. Mr Laws says "we would have been stark staring mad" to accept a coalition with no majority in the Commons, no clear policy platform and no guarantee of a referendum on voting reform.

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