Breck's it deal for the sake of science at Europe's largest Biomedical Research Center the Francis Crick Institute in London a staff survey found many E.U. Scientists working here it would be less likely to want to stay as a result of projects that the scientists share them I'm currently funded by the E.U. And I was for my Ph D. Which I also did here in the U.K. . And I know that lots of this money will not arrive in the U.K. Anymore and of course that's a big concern I think that definitely makes me thinking of other places than the U.K. . I'm thinking about other options in Europe in Central Europe on even maybe going back to the gradient in science minister has insisted there will be no cliff edge for U.K. Science and says issues are being addressed some president amounts of investment going into U.K. Saw it's an extra $7000000000.00 in the next 5 years we are rolling out a $1000000000.00 pound research program to scientists from around the world and we're also mindful of the issue of mobility and keeping people here meanwhile the vacuum cleaner Dyson is to manufacture its new electric car in Singapore the company which has its headquarters in the U.K. Said the decision was based on staffing supply chains and markets and had nothing to do with BRACKS It's the 1st shuttle to roll off the production line in 2021 we see more people out jogging on an evening in town centers than drinking in pubs and bars that's the message from one Whitney taxi driver as copies have been telling us a decline in the night time economy in the county is hitting them hard Simon more runs substract says he's seen a culture change working in Whitney he knows so many more things now they can spend money on. Days out when you've got music festivals going on locally so you get weekends where you are flour we work not in the cabin in towels we can now become rely on the regular way business that we used to one possible reason is an oversupply of cabs in Witney because licenses can be valid across town. Lines town council leader Dean Temple says that does not seem to be too many jibes for demands . A lot of. Sort of. Reply your. Unless you go. Out there. And a powerful suspecting more than 1700 properties across come Abingdon Appleton and eaten this morning S S E N says it apologizes for the loss of supply and is investigating the cause of the fold engineers are on site and have reconnected power to the majority of customers all properties will be reconnected by 1 pm which is weather for today Jai with sunshine at times but also a bit of cloud cover highs of 15 Celsius that's 59 Fahrenheit B.B.C. Radio News It's 3 minutes past tense of a thank you your story. On B.B.C. Radio. Good morning good morning to top for Tuesday and here to read you get 3 hours of the good stuff Sophie is new saying Gary is travelling Flurry is producing and Queen Christina I feel I should stand up at this moment is of course some way by reigning over us all to bring the morning show juggernaut to you so what have we got for you this morning to come never forgetting what women did for today's women when it comes to suffrage why one town in which is really going out for that Soap Awards is well known not the washing variety the T.V. So Ask any teacher and I suspect that marking books particularly at home can be a real pain will be meeting the local teacher who has just been named Teacher of the year and has come up with an alternative to taking the books home to mark that teachers will be cheering for that one Dr K. Of our resident psychologist will be with us on temptation and he has a great quiz for you if you got a moment to pause when he's with us this morning do you do it you will find it fascinating also. Why Mary Curie needs you here and as much as you might need them and own film Freddy Mercury we had about the big film released and from his nephew that I'm so much more to come he said B.B.C. Radio. Cuts in a big dollop of music as well. Taking off I think he's cool for a show I'm wrong about the moaning. About. The rock but I don't know. About. That song just let me give. Me my shit. And your. Former. Always been a place to. Shop. Shop. Shop. Shop. Shop buy the boat. Don't. Buy the boat. Is still. In love with you that you want. To let loose from. The need to. When you. Feel. His corporation I wrote about 8 minutes exactly past time we had to be precise B.B.C. Radio always said if I'm with you sitting in for cat this morning now it's a 100 years since millions of women got the vote the legislation Granted some women in the U.K. The right to vote this year as 100th anniversary serves as a reminder I guess of how far we've come some of course would argue there is still some way to go like equal pay for women but maybe that's a debate for another time one Oxfordshire community is determined however to celebrate 100 years of Women's of voting rights and this child from finding joins me good morning and learn how important is it for you and indeed your. To remember what women historically went through to get the vote I think it's incredibly important because we would have no voice if they hadn't sacrificed their lives and push in huge amounts of effort all that time ago it's also just a wonderful opportunity to celebrate and to look at what's happening now and to look forward to say the day is as much about looking back but it's also about saying what's happening now what's going on what are the exciting initiatives what are the things that women are doing in the area and how do we imagine it might be in another 100 years well yes and you know it's funny we had a crystal ball thing that prompted you to get Farringdon involved and I guess I've often been involved in women's activities in a variety of ways for many many years going back into the seventy's I found it very rewarding and important to me personally and I just wanted to bring it home really I know lots of fantastic women in my local community doing all kinds of different things and once we started talking about it we were just felt really excited and particular about our wall of honor where we're inviting members of the community to celebrate a woman it could be somebody in your family it could be somebody in your street somebody famous nationally or internationally and it's going to be made into a book and put in the library and that's something akin to anybody listening to this program we'd love to hear from you I guess a historic document for years to come yes I mean it'll be random. You know sometimes those are the most interesting. That Do you believe I mean and you mentioned there you know woman a young woman of the seventy's like myself there there was a very strong feminist movement and some will argue of course there still is I think that's evolved and changed but how how did it come home to you then as a young woman perhaps going out into the world what women's roles were because they have changed even in our lifetimes or many of the lifetimes of women listening now of how much absolutely circumstances have changed for women what the expectations were and the possibility is I guess a slow. You know I still carry from the seventy's that I think was very potent was the personal is political and what I took from that was an understanding that things that were going on in my life and of course that links to me to movement now you know were reflecting bigger systematic problems in our society that still women weren't getting the were getting equal pay all those kind of things well it's interesting you talk about equal pay even today we have news of about 8000 workers who will strike amid a lack of progress on equal paid claims for women thousands of female workers in Glasgow do you believe this still a long way to go for women's equal rights I think there's probably quite a lot to be done not just on the more obvious things about pay and but a whole attitude that we might be able to bring in about how things are done the way in which we work the nation that perhaps we might all work slightly less on or be more involved with our children for example just very simply and structures like that still haven't really been put because they are they are complex structures on the other hand and I go back to talking about the late seventy's and maybe early eighty's when I started 1st started in broadcasting I was the only female on the radio station and that wasn't unusual and I look around now and I can see out of probably 8 people 123-4567 of us a female so some things have changed things have changed I a friend of mine who is the very very early woman barrister when she arrived in her chambers she was told she couldn't use the lavatory that was in the chambers and she would have to go down the road and used to do in the cafe. Exactly. Some progress but we still think it's fair to say you know there is still as we've got women thousands of women striking up in Glasgow is a long way to go on to things like equal pay not least in this organization you know there are many in public service organizations where there is progress still to be done on a. I suppose less political point what have you got planned then far and into mark 100 years we've got so much there's a wonderful health clinic with alternative practitioners there who are offering taster sessions and talks all morning there's going to be singing with Emily Marshall a voice for natural voice thing and there's going to be an art session you can go home with something lovely to celebrate the day in the colors of the suffragettes which I'm wearing but this is radio. Pretty much entire then we've got a mini use for him that we've been very involved with the equality group at Farmington community college here were fantastic group of young people really really inspiring to be involved with them they're going to be working with the vice president president for women from the student union in Oxford here and then they're going to feed back into our bigger panel and we've got a lot of fascinating speakers telling Browning A.B. Pharmacy the Soil Association there with her latest book pig and only the C.E.O. Of the sort of. Pick that's. Running out of time but when Where exactly is it taking place in the corner exchange at Farringdon on Saturday the 17th of November from 11 to 5 some events in other places starting at 1033 plans to get in pay on the door phenomenal amount of fun information inspiration celebration to be had do come along man as well and very much we always have to say there's never one to exclude men in these days discussion I say one thing about that I've just been reading an amazing book on the suffragettes and I had no idea that quite a number of men not only were in prison but went on hunger strike they were hard labor to support various support really really all the very best with it Liz thank you very much indeed if you'd like more details from Liz about that event we've got her phone number and she's happy for us to pass that to you but in the meantime good luck with it thanks very much. If you make a new. Beginning beginning. As the weeks and. Tragically. It will. Give. Us the we tend to. See. a Wheaton in. An exam and you turn it no tears left to cry Ariana Grande day at 18 minutes past 10 My thanks to Liz Ross chard necessary if you want to know more about that. Celebration of 100 years of suffrage then. And do give us a call we've got her details now the film but Humean Rhapsody is a celebration of the music of Queen as you might imagine and it's extraordinary from Freddie Mercury It premiers at Wembley Arena tonight now well Freddie Mercury was known on stage for his flamboyant personality also stage he was a very private man in a rare interview with his family Priya Rai has been talking to his nephew Samuel about his family memories of the star. It all fell apart in a while because it was just listening to his music around the house and yeah it would just seem completely like just my Uncle Freddie he he saw but obviously getting older you start to realize that OK this isn't this isn't normal this is like somebody very very famous in my family so yeah I'd say probably about 12 wish I started to realize I came when clues very famous and obviously with my family they've always made me aware of him and just to be very proud and appreciative of his music and his legacy. I want to give the audience a song that they can before. I want to live. By them and so out she spoke about such like the proudest of moms or a you know how did she talk about him to you I think growing up all the time we had A.B. Used to do a little scrapbooks together this whenever we found an article in newspaper magazine would be cut out together and when everything on the radio we turn the radio and and listen to it and speak the very. Thing that is it's hard on for the generations because it's so different you can't relate Queen to any of the bottom this is a completely different it's not even a John are so many different genres and one so I think that's why his music will always be that because it's just so different. Freddie desire to go broader need to know I make music he was one of the nice wellnigh people. And he died of complications related to that yes in the story of his life and career how important is that Paul I think that his career should be the most important thing because that was he was he was at an ice. He was he was a musician and it was his career that was important this is when the operatic section comes in. You know press exception here. Bobby are. The stories you kind of had about him around the house and around his high and yes I was there as I said that to this Performa when he was that. I would just say he was a normal son and and. To my mom and I don't call to me he sent our old house a huge Easter Egg about. What a given year they thought it was make it I mean almost as big as them I'm wrong. It was funny he always sent us a amazing presents and definitely looked after us to say he was any bad for the very beginning of my life you decorate it I'm very big in part time work. That it's. Just. A. Way. She was killed. Trying. To. Carry Us. And she. I use. A. Live. Live live live. In the film the human Rhapsody celebration of course of the musical Queen and it's extraordinary from on Freddie Mercury It premiers The film premiered at Wembley Arena tonight and before here in the truck we heard from Freddie's nephew. Right then where are we it's coming up to 28 minutes past 10. Travel OK let's find out how we're doing on the roads and his clothes shop on Unfortunately it's looking busy on the M 40 now a couple of problems northbound one lane is close between a junction 8 a outfit and 9 at best if the recovery after a breakdown also is heavy on the southbound approach junction line it best as because of an accident Elaine is still closed on the slip writes that they were looking a little bit sticky elsewhere the major you seem to be running fairly well the A 40 a little bit heavy though on that eastbound approach to the roundabout timesaver travel from B.B.C. Radio Works but I'm clash. Thanks very much indeed okey doke Where are we yes we need to play get something to work there we'll that'll work. 109. Travel. I always love it when I sit here and talk to most of the radio Oxford's pride November the 11th marks the centenary of Armistice Day. Creating a memorial filled with your messages which will be laid at St Giles oil before it's taken to the battlefields of Iraq this afternoon from one join me live a mature life at the tame War Memorial to find out how you can get involved and your message to be passed on B.B.C. Radio Oxford's copy of pride join me. At the tame woman Morial this afternoon from. Getting on for half 10 in a moment the Soap Awards and not the washing variety of the carbolic sots butt. The T.V. And. The T.V. So. What. Think go from sunny Gulf on calls $970.00 album Bridge Over Troubled Water. 28 minutes to 11 and the reviews today in for cat oh new morning show on B.B.C. Radio also now so do you like you soaps of the T.V. Variety obviously. That's just a few. We're talking about the T.V. Rather than soap variety although. To the latest twists and turns in the soaps grip audiences have become an integral part of course of T.V. Showed us last night inside so magazine held their awards with recognition aplenty for those who made us gossip snorts or laugh out loud over the last 12 months who acted up a storm what had you Grant who made you laugh and which story did you cry Joining us now is inside so magazine editor Stephen Murphy Stephen good morning got over the hangover from last night I'm a little bit lower voice than I might be. Surprised if I do a sticky for how all the awards decided. Readers of insight so for Lorenzo there is an entire week devoted event is very very good fun from that point of view because it's the actors really appreciate it because it is from the genuine public you know any weather any surprises last time we come on to who got what in just a moment but any surprises because there have been periods in in so poor woods I suppose where all the familiar and all vs ones I guess the Big East have walked off with the gongs and then there's been a bit of a shift in recent times. Always ebbs and flows a little bit flows over over a year a couple of years but I think everyone who won last night was was very well deserved is quite a Cornish and street name generally oh well you know that was very well deserved out so you know well let's take a look at who got water and why Best Actor Best Actor was Jackie shepherd for carnations street who had quite a gritty storyline which came in for you know there was quite a lot of sort of little bit of sort of pressure tension and controversy around about I think you know Elaine I think it was a really interesting story for them to do because some I've argued they thought perhaps a shame would might have got it was a more to get best exit for the for the story line around best writing best exit in his own life you know like that but that's an interesting category time but it was well essential because because it's everything from someone without a great big blaze of glory or whatever to this one and this 11 and I think this one really affected a lot of people absolutely What about Best Actress and Best Actress was Emma from. Charging Yeah Emma has done very well the last few years has actually won the Best So the last 3 it's interesting isn't it you know some of the sort of certain age can remember when Emma dare was sort of shoved on in the twilight zone and I saw where we had very few you know viewers to be honest and yet now it's up there you know with the big boys I suppose you know it's one more awards and anything else last few years and I support. An amazingly good show I suppose what's also telling Steven is that given the nature of so we have category not only best exit but best bad boy and best BAD GIRL Yeah because because the kind of spirit fun about soaps as well I mean you know they do all this amazing stuff but also the public know that it's entertainment so that you know with as we like we like to do the bad guy has a bad girl she was on the other one almost like kind of the time less. Is about we know what it is we enjoy it we know he's bad she's good she's bad and that's kind of part of the enjoyment of it. Who carried off the most gongs was it Coronation Street it was Coronation Street last night and he was snapping at their heels and some of his energy or stuff and he was a little bit interesting because we've not talked about Eastenders but it was a standard hurt you know because. You know huge falling for Danny Dyer So Danny Dyer and Kelly bright were best partnership for making Linda from East Enders The queen and king of the Queen Vic and I think as well exam because they're amazing for partnership and they also won an award for the night cream storyline needed where I am where Shakira was and died which was a very which is still going on now actually the kind of repercussion that storyline are going right through the year you know was a very very very good and very true to life story and we're really short on time but I want to ask you this question I suspect the answer is your editor of Inside so magazine but matter of course you do the things you can't. Even Murphy thank you very much thank you. We. Want to scream. She thinks you love the beach. Those. Days has big sea. Chill it's a. Global defang. Of Love a little love. Say book. And. Say. Love. Me. a moment talking about teaching all skinny teacher about marking books and I suspect many will roll their eyes and say they take marking home with them well I'm not such a teacher whose pioneering idea ended the practice of start taking books home to Mark has been honored with a national award his idea of verbal feedback is now being rolled out across the school it's been hailed as something quite phenomenal actually we'll be meeting Andy in just a moment shantytowns also at the B.B.C. Don't you get a man from over 200 families from New South thinks he fought in the 1st World War Did you have ancestors who lived there at the time of the war 37 of those men died and a commemorated in the church of St John the Evangelist in Baker. We're a community history project rushing up the lives of the men and of the community of New South think in the era of the war if one of those men was a relative of yours or if you have memories letters for photographs and someone who lived in the parishes We'd love to hear from you for more information search for 37 men to find our website in more of our community appeals on the B.B.C. Radio Oxford i Player or if you'd like to make one of your own email shout out oxygen at B.B.C. Canada you get. Now then half term of course for many and for many teachers they might just be lying down in a darkened room having a bit of a rest at the moment but in Oxfordshire a teacher who's pioneering idea ended the practice of start taking books home to Mark has been honored with a National Award and the Sylvester from Chrome OS gifted prime Renia one Ford was named primary school teacher of the year at the Pearson Awards which celebrate transformational teaching his idea of verbal feedback is now being rolled out across the school it's been hailed as a phenomenal shift in teacher workload a bit the cheering from the gallery as we speak and the welcome and many congratulations What's it like for the kids knowing that teach is teacher of the year. I think I think they'll be quite pleased to know. They were OK Tell me a little bit about the school you teach and OK so we teacher cry Marsh and it's a small school $205.00 kids are forming tree but all lovely kids lovely family and lovely teachers this is a really really nice place to be yeah well clearly you like it and clearly you've come up with this idea and I said in the introduction Ask any teacher not been there I've taught in the past you take stuff in fact you stagger home fact sometimes you see stitches with suitcases going home with marking and sometimes you know you feel that's just an inevitability of the work that you're setting you've come up with and all change on that front what have you done you know I got fed up with it yeah I teach in year 6 just for the go to secondary school so I was taking home. X amount of books and marking for 3 hours a night easily and in the end I just sat down and questioned it just thinking on spending all this time that's that's 3 hours a day easily just marking books are not really talking to the kids and then in the morning they might open the books and see if they've got HOUSE point and close it up and that's it and you're thinking that there was a lot of time and you know that so it's decided to experiment a few years ago with I asked myself a central question what actually would happen if I never marked a book again in the traditional way so I started just having a fiddle around really and and to cut a long story short we've now changed things so that whenever we're going through books we make sure that we're doing it in front of the children all the time so they they get the feedback from the teacher they're sharing it from people that are in the same group might be doing in a group of 4 or so and because it's happening in the class they can immediately go from that group and they can go out and they can start working on their target straightaway but more to the point if if I've set them a target and they don't understand how to do it they can come back into the group they can get help and it's happening there and it takes a lot longer you have to doesn't say that that's presume you can eat into your career Oh yeah it does it does but but over the years by talking to the kids and asking them is this effective what's more effective What if I do it like this what if I do it like that they all say no no this is this is really working for me having that level of conversation they still getting homework yeah yeah they still get home don't get the homework but just the feedback part of yeah but that links in as well music is quite a complicated system why try to do is is I try to make the homework feed entirely into the feedback that I'm given so rather than setting homework now on a Friday to be handed in on a Friday I might be setting 20 or different pieces of homework depending on what it is that the kids actually need to learn and they'll talk to me they'll say actually I could do with working on this a bit at home so that when you take that home you do this you. So that's there's there's much more bounce back between very well in direct loss of what they did Yeah absolutely and because it's because the kids set so effective I decided I could see the results coming from I could see that that they were getting some really good results from doing this in their own work so I start to clear space in the in the week and rather than now teaching Monday to Friday I picture the year as being more 021234567 is just what do I need to do next and what do they need to do next and how successful has it been have been able to measure results so the results of this system against just taking a load of books home giving them a grade or a house point or whatever it is they get and they're going yeah got that near closing but haven't been able to measure their result is the measure measurement comes if anyone ever comes into the class they don't talk to me Go and talk to the kids don't don't just you can watch what I'm doing if you want but go and talk to the kids and when you sit down and you talk to my year 6 class that they'll be able to tell you at any point what it is they're working on they'll still say this this is this is what I've just learned this is what I'm trying to do look at look at the results I'm having and because they're doing it within a piece of work it doesn't wait until the the work is finished you can talk to them and from one paragraph to the next they're actually saying look this is there I can see this is changing for me and that to me is impact that's our use are you getting other teachers now in other schools taking up this system yeah it's complicated right so it's not you can't blueprint anything from one school to another so at the moment in our school we we can see that it have an effect on the 1st question that you get if you have a will that work in my year 4 in my year 2 or in we have one so we've been rolling it down through the school got we've got a really really strong year one teacher she's she's wonderful she's she's relatively new in but she picked it up she ran with it and she can get these marking groups to work too so now that we're confident everyone's having had a go. I'm always asking what what's different what's the same and people are coming to look at that and taking their own ideas from HOPE Well the end of the day we want is the kids to to get something out of their education rather than just you know grade on in red to do it in red ink and you're probably not allowed to do it in reading anymore lives are not very un-P.C. To reading but anyway what what what surprised you I guess was that you got this teacher of the Year award as a result of that that was a wonderful thing because it's it's a really nice I don't think it was a direct result of that I don't know but is that that ward is put together by lots of parents and kids of top of my head teacher writing nice things about things that work for them and so the award is not because anyone's lost anything no one's been beaten it's just it's in the war that's put together by. Through good will where where people are just appreciated some can see it's worked there is always much discussion about education and I always lay bets on it that every time we get a new secretary of state for education education will change yet again because they want to be like the no butler in change and change education and then you get people like go in thinking about it it's like moving the furniture on the Titanic What if there was one other thing I mean clearly what you're doing is quite revolution in terms of feedback and marking and so on there is one thing you could tell the secretary of state of education what would you be telling. I have got a problem with the word change I get a lot of grief for this being an old dog but actually I think evolution is a better word and and when you come in and you say let's change something you get the groans and the roles of the eyes actually what you need to do is you need to find the things that work and evolve them slowly so that you're working from a solid base you're asking the right questions why does this work what's the impact how can we make that feed into something else that's very different to about a new idea let's in it of a nice change let's all do this a different way and it's when someone I think you talk to teachers about it is that they have too much paperwork too many targets too many boxes to tick which actually detracts from what their craft is which is teaching So how do you get over that so I think that comes down that there's a very simple phrase it was given to me by my head teacher she said she said to me a long time ago look if we're going to make a decision if you've always got the child at the center of that decision it will always be the right decision and so whenever we're looking at paperwork whenever we're looking at anything that we do in school we always ask ourselves why we doing that what impact is that having And so we we skinned out any paperwork that that was being done for a folder we try and produce one piece of work that can be used many many times is in short say many businesses and. By asking that question what's the impact on the children the the paperwork that we do must have a impact in the classroom and it must influence the kids in some way and if it doesn't if we do a report for someone else it's really got no impact we question it straight away one final point now that you are teachers Yeah that gives you well you know off but it gives you a bit of a voice and a bit of clout to try to make other changes doesn't it does I think. I think it does and I'm trying not to get too wrapped up in that I think what I'm taking from is I think I think something that we're doing is working and enough people are starting to appreciate that they can see in their own children that it is working and I'm sure any parent. All they want is well they want absolutely Many congratulations continued success with your teaching Thank you thanks very much indeed thanks so much. Go to grand piano my view to focus. My. Gone. My friends and family. So much it. Will be. To see do. You see. A picture. Of all the food. Chain. Or. Go to. The focus. B.B.C. Radio Works for it David's praises prices club I've always loved 40 unfortunately is looking very busy still on the southbound side junction 10 it. Is off to an accident or going to have now been reopened but it's still just queuing on the approach as a result is also called a bit of a delay on the A $34.00 northbound on the approach to the M 40. 40 is busy on the eastbound side breaching the roundabout but it's looking fairly good on the rest of the M 40 and the A 34 is running well time to travel from B.B.C. Radio but I'm glad many thanks to your travel. 100. Travel. to a skills is it this is some and old the miss this is miss this Coming how some say so. Fast approaching 11 o'clock Dr kept up and back with us as he takes a look at the psychology behind some of the stories making the headlines today and we've got a great quiz coming up for you as well have a bash and. Still. It's 11 o'clock with the B.B.C. News back such a. Vital fast 8 scales like how to apply 10 a case should be made mandatory at school as the COO from a former South Central AMBULANCE PARAMEDIC after a police officer whose life was saved by a tannic a launches a campaign to teach the skills to more adults from a paramedic town fast aid instructor Dick Tracy says knowledge of the treatment for catastrophic bleeding has come on a lot since he started when I joined the ambulance service 25 years ago toward a case where a no no but there's been good evidence that's come out of the recent conflicts in the Middle East which has torn the case to save lives people have retained those skills so I think we need to capture people of very young age students and schools I do around $8000.00 council workers in Glasgow have started a 48 hour strike and what's thought to be the U.K. . Biggest strike over equal pay primary schools nurseries and home care services will be affected Glasgow City Council says talks are continuing with unions these women explain why they're taking action I've been waiting 12 years to be P.C. Equally nothing seems to be going anywhere and that's the reason why we've had to take action been underpaid all these years and base of IF and lot of this we did not take this decision decision easily a commitment straight because we do we keep the circuit on but she's been left by nor other means because we know what time I don't leading scientists including many with links to Oxford University pleading with U.K. And E.U. Leaders to ensure that BRACKS It doesn't damage British and European research which has been signed by 29 Nobel laureates says science needs the flow of people and ideas across borders the science minister Sanjay misses negotiators want to see close cooperation in the future now there is an absolute certainty now but what I can say is we are aware that if we want to be the go to place for science which is what our mission as a nation is then moved illiteracy and reducing the friction has to be a whole Earth the vacuum cleaner Dyson is to manufacture its new electric car in Singapore the company which has its headquarters in the U.K. Said the decision was based on start things supply chains and markets and had nothing to do with BRACKS It's the 1st car is shuttle to roll off the production line in 2021 and the cause of a fault which is affected the power supplies more than $1700.00 properties an ox.