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| 0700-0730
0709: 600,000 children will today discover which secondary school they'll attend in September. Brighton and Hove is repeating it's controversial lottery method.
0712: Has 24 hour licensing had any effect on Britain's binge drinking culture?
0715: The mismanagement of a scheme to compensate miners for pit-related illness has left some waiting more than 10 years for compensation.
0720: Soaring wheat costs are proving devastating for one of Britain's leading food companies; Greg Wood has the business news.
0724: As a military team are brought in to help at the Jersey children's home central to child abuse allegations, what affect is the scandal having on the people of Jersey?
0728: Garry Richardson has the sports news.
0730-0800
0732: The price of food has soared over the past year, everything from milk to soya and meat to corn. Tom Feilden looks at the reasons behind this problematic international trend.
0740: A look at today's papers.
0743: Since "The Revolution will not be Televised" poet and musician Gil Scott Heron hasn't had it easy, but as US politics get interesting again, he's making a bit of a come back.
0747: Thought for the Day with The Rt. Rev. Tom Butler.
07:50 The Texas and Ohio primary elections could decide between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.
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| 0800-0830
0810: Has 24 hour drink licensing had any effect on Britain's culture of binge-drinking? A government review is due out today. Licensing Minister is Gerry Sutcliffe.
0820: How an astrologist became a secret weapon of WWII.
0825: Garry Richardson talks to Tim Henman and has the sports news.
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| 0830-0900
0832: Despite Israeli troops withdrawing from Gaza, Ehud Olmert has warned that this does not mean military action is over. Manuel Hassassian is the Palestinian Delegate to London.
0837: Greg Wood has the business news.
0840: The Thai government is offering sterilised women who lost their children is the tsunami a free operation to reverse the procedure.
0845: With Iran due for elections later this month Jon Leyne asks the people what they really want.
0850: How will a post-Bush America face world politics? Celebrated US commentator Robert Kagan and chief foreign affairs correspondent Gideon Rachman.
0855: Dmitry Med-VYAY-dev, Med-vay-dev, Med-vyay-dyev...with the likes of Hilary Clinton struggling with the name of Russia's new President; how should we tackle difficult foreign names? |  |  |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  We don’t always have time to play the whole interview on air. Listen to the extended interview here, exclusive to the Today website.
 |  |  | Zbigniew Brzezinski (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.
|  |  |  | Sonny Rollins (26/11/07) The legendary Jazz saxophonist talks about his time in prison, phone calls with John Coltrane, 9/11 and the ambitions of a Jazz survivor. |  |  |  | President Pervez Musharraf (17/11/07) James Naughtie asks the President of Pakistan when he will lift his country's state of emergency and what he is doing to tackle Islamist Terrorism. |  |  |
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