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Choose an audio clip听you would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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0607 |
There is still the possibility of a strike by public sector workers over pension rights. |
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0615 |
In Washington, Democrats have managed to force the Senate into a rare closed session to talk about intelligence and the Iraq War. |
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0621 |
Business news with Greg Wood. |
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0626 |
Sports news with Steve May. |
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0632 |
MPs get another chance to debate the听anti-terrorism bill today. |
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0635 |
The Australian Prime Minister John Howard says his government has received a specific warning about a planned terrorist talk on Australian soil. |
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0638 |
Germany is still having trouble putting a government together despite the two main parties agreeing to form a grand coalition. |
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0641 |
There has been听rioting in Paris for six consecutive nights which started after an apparently accidental death of two youths. |
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0648 |
The review of听today's papers from Britain and Damascus. |
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0652 |
Yesterday in parliament with Rachel Hooper. |
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0655 |
Council tax might rise by about 10% if the government does not give more money to local authorities. |
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0709 |
What do the听former commander in the Metropolitan Police, Bob Milton, and Mark Oaten, Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, think of the new anti-terrorist laws? |
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0716 |
Senior Labour MPs seem to disagree with the Prime Minister's听reasons for David Blunkett's misconduct. |
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0721 |
Business update with Greg Wood. |
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0725 |
We talk about the so called Gulf War syndrome to Mark McGhee, a solicitor who represented an ex-guardsman who has been awarded a disability allowance after having served in the Gulf War. |
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0731 |
How can a farmer go on strike? |
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0739 |
Sports update with Steve May. |
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0742 |
We talk to the Conservative Ken Clarke about why he voted against the new anti-terrorism bill when it was last debated in the parliament. |
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0747 |
The head of special stamps at the Royal Mail, Julietta Edgar and Ramesh Kallidai of the Hindu Forum of Britain discuss why one of the new Christmas stamps is causing so much trouble. |
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0753 |
The听thought for the day with the writer Rhidian Brook. |
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0756 |
Former head of the National Association of Pensions Funds, Alan Pickering and Stephen Timms, the pensions reform minister, look at the new pension reports. |
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0810 |
The former Home Office minister, John Denham, and Charles Clarke, the Home Secretary,听talk about the anti-terrorism bill. |
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0817 |
Historical consultant, Jonathan Stamp and Mary Beard who teaches classics at Newnham College look at the new drama series about Rome. |
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0821 |
Sports update with Steve May. |
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0824 |
The Conservative leadership runner, David Davis, gives his views on European politics. |
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0831 |
Bolivia is on the verge of having its first indigenous president. |
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0844 |
Business update with Greg Wood. |
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0852 |
Deputy editor of the Bookseller, Joel Rickett and Windy Dryden, professor of psycho therapeutic studies at University of London, discuss why people are attracted to so called "misery memoirs". |
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0856 |
An environmentalist James Lovelock and Dr Frank Barnaby, a nuclear physicist, discuss nuclear power stations in the view of global warming. |
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