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| 0607 | Councils in England will learn today how much grant they'll get from Whitehall next year. Our local government correspondent is John Andrew. | |
| 0610 | Police have raided Michael Jackson's Neverland ranch as a result of sex-abuse allegations made by a 12-year-old boy. Our correspondent Robert Nisbet is in California. | |
| 0615 | Greg Wood with the business news. | |
| 0632 | The Daily Mirror has pulled off quite a stunt at Buckingham Palace. Our royal correspondent is Peter Hunt. | |
| 0635 | The formalities of President Bush's state visit begin this morning. Mike Wooldridge reports. | |
| 0638 | MPs vote on Foundation Hospitals today. This is the big one. Norman Smith is our political correspondent. | |
| 0640 | Charlotte Green with the paper review. | |
| 0645 | Our world press review comes from Jon Leyne in Washington. | |
| 0650 | Yesterday in Parliament - or: Once Upon A Time In Westminster... | |
| 0654 | Has a fern which was thought to be found only in southern Europe been thriving unnoticed in Britain for thousands of years? | |
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| 0709 | Daily Mirror editor Piers Morgan on how his reporter got inside Buckingham Palace to stand in the very bedroom suite occupied last night by President Bush. | |
| 0714 | Tommy Sheridan, an MSP and leader of the Scottish Socialist Party, and Dr Robert McGeehan, from the Institute of United States Studies at London University, on George Bush's state visit. | |
| 0719 | The statement of Michael Jackson's lawyer Brian Oxman in response to sex-abuse allegations made by a 12-year-old boy, and Jackson's friend Uri Geller. | |
| 0724 | Will major roads be kept free of snow and ice this winter after the debacle on听motorways last year? Our transport correspondent Tom Symonds is in Leatherhead in Surrey. | |
| 0730 | The second of Mike Thomson's special reports on Ethiopia: in search of the eight year-old Fayo Hadji. | |
| 0745 | Wallabies, they're everywhere. Scott Webster, an Australian chef and owner of London's newest Australian restaurant,听tells us听what Australians do with theirs. | |
| 0750 | One area under great scrutiny in the light of President Bush's visit is the fate of the Britons held in Guantanamo Bay. Major John D. Smith - a negotiator for the Americans with the British government and the Pentagon's spokesman on the military tribunals. | |
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| 0810 | Foundation Hospitals are an听crucial part of the government's policies for the health service - but they're controversial. Ahead of an important vote today, the Health Secretary, John Reid. | |
| 0821 | Scotland play Holland at football听tonight in a crucial match - but there's history between the two countries both on and off the pitch.听Archie Gemill听is the man who scored what is known as "that Gemmill goal" against the Netherlands in the 1978 World Cup.. | |
| 0830 | Many farmers think that TB in cattle is spread by badgers...and there's a meeting today of a scientfic group set up to look into it. Our correspondent Tom Heap is on a farm in Herefordshire. | |
| 0837 | Supermarket group Sainsbury's has a new chief executive this morning - Greg Wood has more. | |
| 0840 | We hear from Alan Simpson, one of the rebellious backbenchers who will be voting tonight against Foundation Hospitals. | |
| 0845 | Today's entry in our photography competition is from Geoff Fogg. | |
| 0855 | One of the events happening in the margin of the Bush state visit is a celebration of the Marshall Scholarships. We speak to one recipient: the New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman. | |
| 0857 | Today the Royal College of Surgeons publishes a report into the ethics of facial transplantation. Dr John Barker could be the first to carry out the operation. Dr James Partridge is chief executive of the charity Changing Faces. | |
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