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Choose an audio clipÌýyou would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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0600-0630 0630-0700 |
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0700-0730
0709ÌýShould cannabis be reclassified as a more dangerous Class B drug? We speak to Steve RollesÌýof Transform, a drug policy reform organisation.
0713 Why Mr Mugabe might fear prosecution for alleged war crimes.
0719 Ministers reveal sites in England shortlisted to become environmentally-friendly towns.
0722 Business with Greg Wood.
0724 Sport with Garry Richardson.
0730-0800
0731ÌýWhy the government wants more of us to visit the local chemist if we're feeling unwell.
0736 A report on government plans to set up a network of nature reserves in the seas.
0740 The paper review.
0742 How teenagers in Spain are mimicking the British binge drinker.
0746 Thought for the Day with Professor Mona Siddiqui.
0749 91Èȱ¬ Secretary Jacqui SmithÌýtells us why a new body to police the country's borders is being launched.
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0800-0830
0810ÌýAre we facing the end of cheap mortgages? Economics Editor, Stephanie Flanders, explains why the number of mortgage products is shrinking.
0820 TheÌýnovelist,ÌýGordon Burn,Ìýwhose books deal with issues of modern fame.
0828 SportÌýwith Garry Richardson
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0830-0900
0834 Whatever happened to all that lost luggage at Terminal 5?
0839 A business update.
0842 NATO leaders are arguing in Budapest how far the boundaries of the alliance should stretch.
0847 Could a 'Big Bang' machine destroy the planet?
0852 We look at what might happen to Zimbabwe if Robert Mugabe finally steps down.
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We don’t always have time to play the whole interview on air. Listen to the extended interview here, exclusive to the Today website.
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Gil Scott-Heron (04/03/2008)
Life hasn't been easy for the 'god-father of rap', but as US politics gets interesting again, he's making aÌý comeback. |
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(01/02/08)
He used to be Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, and now he's advising presidential candidate Senator Obama. We hear his vision for US Foreign policy.
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(26/11/07)
The legendary Jazz saxophonistÌýtalks about his time in prison, phone calls withÌýJohn Coltrane,Ìý9/11 and the ambitions of a Jazz survivor. |
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(17/11/07)
James Naughtie asks the President of Pakistan when he willÌýlift his country's state of emergency and what he is doing to tackle Islamist Terrorism. |
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