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 | Choose an audio clip you would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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 |  0707 | We're getting ID cards... or are we? Most MPs seem to need convincing. Our home affairs correspondent is Danny Shaw. |  |
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 |  0709 | American forces have stepped up air and ground attacks in Iraq. Our correspondent Paul Adams is in the Coalition Provisional Authority HQ in Baghdad. |  |
 |  0714 | They debate them but do they take them? Keith MacDougall reports from Westminster, where the Lords have been discussing buses. |  |
 |  0719 | Let's get a foretaste of tomorrow's big rugby game: Brian Moore, the former England hooker known as "pitbull" and PY Gerbeau, Frenchman, and former boss of the Millennium Dome. |  |
 |  0724 | Jimmy Mulligan was killed when a car hit him while he was standing at a bus stop. Two men, Christopher Eade and Robert Webber both admit they were in the car that ran into Mr Mulligan but because they both claim that the other one was driving, neither can be prosecuted. Roger Harrabin unravels the case. |  |
 |  0730 | The Chechen envoy Ahmed Zakayev says he won't go back to Russia until there is a change in regime. He speaks to our reporter Zubeida Malik. |  |
 |  0745 | A review of today's papers. |  |
 |  0750 | Today's entry in the programme's 'Britain at 6am' photography competition is by Will Holder. |  |
 |  0757 | Nick Raynsford, Local Government Minister, on the Council Tax - which is shaping up to be a bit of a problem for the Labour government. |  |
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 |  0810 | Another American soldier has been killed in Iraq this morning - the 400th American to die since hostilities began there in March. We speak to former Foreign Secretary Robin Cook. |  |
 |  0821 | An unfinished piece of work written by Mozart will be performed tomorrow for the first time in Britain. Professor Phil Wilby from Leeds University reconstructed it. |  |
 |  0830 | Letters. |  |
 |  0837 | Demetrious Panton - the man Margaret Hodge, the Minister for Children, described in a letter to the BBC as "extremely disturbed". |  |
 |  0840 | Andrew Hosken reports from the wine cellars at Beaune - on what experts believe could be the greatest vintage ever. |  |
 |  0845 | David Lorimer has written a book about Prince Charles's "vision". Steve Jones, professor of genetics at University College London, isn't impressed. |  |
 |  0855 | Margaret Thatcher nearly abandoned her early hopes of becoming a politician in favour of a legal career. So writes John Campbell in a new biography. |  |
 |  0857 | This week's essay is from Stuart Hughes in Cambodia. |  |
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