Connect with us

News

Dulwich College headmaster steps down after outburst at staff party

Published

on

Dulwich College headmaster steps down after outburst at staff party

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The headmaster of one of Britain’s leading schools stepped down from his role ahead of schedule after an incident in which he “lost [his] temper” with a colleague led to an independent investigation, according to correspondence seen by the Financial Times.

In a letter to teaching staff and parents of pupils, Joseph Spence, headmaster of the up to £55,000-a-year private school Dulwich College, said he was standing down from his role before the school year starts next month after an incident at a summer staff party.

“As some of you may have heard, I lost my temper with a member of staff at the Staff Party of 4 July — the only time in my career that anything like this happened,” wrote Spence, adding that he had apologised to the colleague involved.

Advertisement

“That incident has caused me to reflect on the toll which leading a complex multinational institution like Dulwich has taken on me, particularly given the significant challenges we have all faced in recent years,” he added.

A separate letter from the school’s chair of governors said the incident “led to a thorough investigation by an independent investigator appointed by the Governors and appropriate action has been taken to the Governors’ satisfaction”.

Spence, who has served as headmaster of Dulwich College since 2009, was planning to retire at the end of the academic year in August 2025, but will now step back into “an ambassadorial and advisory capacity”, the letter from Adrian Carr, the chair of governors, said. Spence’s replacement — Robert Milne, current headmaster of rival London private school Emanuel School — had already been chosen to start in September next year. An interim headmaster has been appointed until Milne takes up his post.

Dulwich College is among Britain’s most elite private schools — which counts Oscar-winning actor Chiwetel Ejiofor and parliamentarian Nigel Farage among its former pupils. Last year it generated £36mn in net school fees and it has lent its name to a sprawling network of international schools, largely in Asia, owned by global schools provider Education in Motion.

During Spence’s tenure, Dulwich College was among a group of London fee-paying schools that faced allegations of sexual assault by former and current pupils and allowing a “rape culture” to take hold, which emerged as part of an online campaign, known as Everyone’s Invited.

Advertisement

More recently, private schools have come under pressure from the newly installed Labour government, which initially threatened to remove their charitable status before rowing back on the idea. From next year, however, private schools will lose their exemption from the value added tax, under Labour plans to fund 6,500 new state school teaching roles.

“I had always wanted to get to the point where I had seen us through those challenges and would be able to pass on the torch,” said Spence in the letter. He said his advisory role would focus “on the ambition of raising funds for bursaries and on carrying out ambassadorial duties as required”.

A representative for Dulwich College and Spence did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

The fine line between providing campus security and allowing for free speech : Consider This from NPR

Published

on

The fine line between providing campus security and allowing for free speech : Consider This from NPR

Pro-Palestinian supporters demonstrate on the campus of Columbia University on April 30, 2024 in New York City.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Spencer Platt/Getty Images


Pro-Palestinian supporters demonstrate on the campus of Columbia University on April 30, 2024 in New York City.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

College students are trickling back onto campuses for the fall semester, just months after protests exploded across the U.S. over Israel’s war in Gaza.

University leaders are bracing for more protests and counter-protests this semester. And on some campuses, new rules have already taken effect.

Advertisement

We hear from Vanderbilt University chancellor Daniel Diermeier about the academic year ahead.

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

This episode was produced by Kathryn Fink, with reporting from KQED’s Billy Cruz. It was edited by Jeanette Woods.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Meet the Rural Voters Who Could Swing North Carolina’s Election

Published

on

Meet the Rural Voters Who Could Swing North Carolina’s Election

The most rural of the battleground states this year is North Carolina. About 3.4 million people, or roughly a third of the state’s population, reside in a rural area, more than in any other state besides Texas.

Democrats have seen their support slip in rural areas, ceding ground to Republicans. As such, rural voters in North Carolina could determine which way the state goes on Election Day, as Democrats hope to curb their losses in these communities and Republicans seek to solidify their grip.

But in interviews with more than 30 people in Wilson County, about 50 miles east of Raleigh, where backcountry roads weave in and out of tobacco fields, many residents told us that they felt both parties often overlooked their concerns, about high prices, underfunded schools and rapid growth from the state capital that is stretching into town.

Scroll to play video

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

The ascension of Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic presidential nominee has excited many Democrats in Wilson County, which narrowly voted for President Biden in 2020 and has about 78,000 residents, 40 percent of whom are Black. But voters across the county say that the animus that has plagued national politics feels draining, especially in a small place where people value being able to get along.

The Struggle for Rural Votes

The new chair of the state Democratic Party, Anderson Clayton, has prioritized reconnecting with rural voters since taking office in 2023, arguing that Democrats cannot rely only on cities and suburbs to win.

David Sherrod, a conservative in Wilson who worked at a farm most of his life and is now a mechanic, said that “the politics of both parties have flaws,” including not engaging enough with voters outside major cities. His support, though, is fully behind former President Donald J. Trump.

Advertisement

“I don’t agree with everything he does,” Mr. Sherrod said. “But I feel listened to.”

Even a Democratic voter like Jamar Jones, 29, said he sympathized with neighbors who felt fed up with both camps.

“You should be able to get an abortion and you can own a gun,” Mr. Jones said. “If the two parties are going to be polar opposites on every issue, then it’s just a scam.”

Mr. Sherrod, however, is the kind of voter that North Carolina Democrats have struggled to persuade. Since the ’90s, Republicans have mostly won the state’s rural counties, partly through a message about being left behind. Mr. Trump has continued that trend, even though many voters we spoke to in Wilson acknowledged his flaws.

Scroll to play video

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Voters in Wilson described feeling alienated and worn down by the emphasis on race and identity in politics. Some white, conservative-leaning voters said they were tired of the Democrats’ focus on race. Mr. Trump has tried to appeal to those voters by stoking resentments about their economic fortunes, at times using racially charged language.

Scroll to play video

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Scroll to play video

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

But many Black and Hispanic voters in Wilson said that addressing racial inequality was important for the country, and that Ms. Harris represented a more racially inclusive America.

Advertisement

“It matters to me that there’s a woman of color with an immigrant background running for president,” said Flor Herrera-Picasso, 33, who remembers her Mexican American family encountering racism while she was growing up in Wilson.

“Obviously it’s not going to mean equality for all yet,” she said, “but it’s a step in the right direction.”

L.G.B.T.Q. Issues and Abortion Stir Debate

Some Democrats we talked to said they worried about preserving gay rights. Many conservatives voiced concerns about the acceptance of transgender people in schools and sports, an issue that has resonated with large swaths of the Republican base.

Advertisement

Scroll to play video

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Across the political spectrum, however, voters expressed divergent views on one of the top issues in this election: abortion.

Morris Worelds, 72, said he was voting for Ms. Harris because of his support for abortion rights, and dedicating his vote to his four granddaughters.

Advertisement

“To me, Wilson is still a country town, but some things like abortion are irrelevant to country or city,” Mr. Worelds said.

Scroll to play video

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Despite their differing opinions, many Wilson residents said they valued getting along with their neighbors, in part because there was no political bubble to hide in. Cecilia Coleman and her sister, Megan Coleman, said that at Sylvia’s Family Restaurant, which their parents own, the salesmen who deliver them products were Republicans and their clientele were mostly Democrats.

“Never any problems,” Cecilia Coleman said.

Advertisement

Cecilia and Megan Coleman

This month, hundreds gathered at the Wilson County Fair Truck and Tractor Pull, where drivers in modified vehicles compete to see who can drag a heavy metal sled the farthest on a dirt field.

Watching it all was Kimberly Wade, 46, an independent who said her thoughts about the presidential race could be summarized in one word: “Iffy.”

Ms. Wade, who is undecided, says she has long grown tired of the hyperpartisan attacks clawing away at the country. Ms. Wade’s husband is disabled, and her biggest concern is increasing disability benefits.

Advertisement

But she said one overarching thought would guide her through November: “I just want my community to be OK.”

Continue Reading

News

Oil tanker explosion claimed by Houthis threatens Red Sea pollution

Published

on

Oil tanker explosion claimed by Houthis threatens Red Sea pollution

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Parts of the Red Sea are facing a significant pollution risk after Yemen’s Houthis blew up a crippled tanker and its crude oil cargo in the middle of the strategic waterway.

The Iran-backed group on Friday posted videos showing their forces’ deliberate blowing up of the Greek-owned oil tanker Sounion, whose crew had been forced to abandon ship after a series of attacks by the Houthis on Wednesday.

The EU’s Operation Aspides naval force had warned on Thursday that the drifting, abandoned vessel and its cargo of 150,000 tonnes of crude oil represented a “navigational and environmental hazard” and urged against any action that would worsen the risk.

Advertisement

The blowing up of the ship marks a new tactic for the Houthis. Since the group began its campaign against international shipping last November, it has sunk two ships — the Rubymar, attacked in February, and the Tutor, attacked in June. However, it has not previously deliberately blown up an abandoned ship.

Neither the Rubymar nor the Tutor was carrying a liquid cargo and there were no reports of serious pollution.

The UK’s Maritime Trade Operations office reported before the Houthis posted their video that three fires had been observed on the ship. That would be consistent with the video posted on a Houthi X account on Friday evening. It showed huge explosions ripping through a vessel bearing the name “Delta Tankers”, the Sounion’s Greece-based owners. The ship was attacked in the middle of the Red Sea, 77 nautical miles west of the Houthi-controlled port of Hodeidah.

The Houthis’ spokesman posted the footage with words describing it as showing the Yemeni Navy — the name the group gives to its own naval forces — burning the Sounion. The post said its owners had violated the Houthis’ bans on using ports in “occupied Palestine”, as they call Israel.

The Houthis have portrayed their campaign as an effort to support Palestinians in Gaza following Israel’s response to the Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7. The hundreds of attacks on commercial ships have prompted many international shipping groups to reroute vessels away from the strategic route through the Red Sea and Suez Canal linking the Middle East and Asia with the Mediterranean and Europe.

Advertisement

There was no immediate assessment from Operation Aspides of the extent of the environmental damage from the explosion. However, the vessel was 274-metre long and the reported 150,000-tonne cargo would be around the full capacity of a vessel of its type — about 1mn barrels.

A communications agency representing Delta Tankers reiterated the company’s previous insistence that it was seeking to salvage the ship.

“Delta Tankers is doing everything it can to move the vessel and cargo,” the agency said, after publication of the Houthis’ video.

It had previously insisted the Sounion suffered only “minor damage” in a series of missile strikes on Wednesday.

The attack on the Sounion was the Houthis’ first successful attack on a commercial ship since the attack on June 12 on the Tutor, which killed a mariner as well as sinking the ship.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending