Sboll is Your Go-to Source for the Latest Finance News, Covering Markets, Banking, Investments, Economy and Stocks.
⎯ 《 Sboll • Com 》

UPenn Rejects Apollo CEO Rowan’s Call for Resignations in Antisemitism Fight

2023-10-12 22:57
The University of Pennsylvania stood by its president and chair of the board of trustees, rebuffing calls for
UPenn Rejects Apollo CEO Rowan’s Call for Resignations in Antisemitism Fight

The University of Pennsylvania stood by its president and chair of the board of trustees, rebuffing calls for their resignation by major donors including Apollo Global Management Inc.’s Marc Rowan, who accused them of tolerating antisemitism.

“The university has publicly committed to unprecedented steps to further combat antisemitism on its campus, reaffirmed deep support for our Jewish community, and condemned the devastating and barbaric attacks on Israel by Hamas,” Vice Chair Julie Platt said in an emailed statement Thursday.

The board’s executive committee “unanimously endorsed the actions taken by the university,” Platt said. She expressed “full confidence” in Penn’s president, Elizabeth Magill, and board chair Scott Bok.

Accusations of antisemitism roiled Penn as the university hosted the Palestine Writes Literature Festival last month, weeks before the Hamas attacks. Rowan, who’s also chairman of the board of advisors of Penn’s Wharton business school, said the festival featured “well known antisemites and fomenters of hate and racism” and accused Magill of failing to condemn the rhetoric from the event.

“I call on all UPenn alumni and supporters who believe we are heading in the wrong direction to ‘Close their Checkbooks’ until” Magill and Bok step down, he wrote in a letter earlier this week. He told CNBC on Thursday that he was “strongly encouraged” to reconsider his chairmanship of Wharton, but rejected that advice.

Dick Wolf, creator of the Law & Order franchise and namesake of Penn’s Wolf Humanities Center, said Magill and Bok’s leadership has “inadequately represented the ideals and values of our university and they should be held to account.”

On Sept. 12, the Philadelphia-based university had addressed the controversy over the festival, saying “we unequivocally — and emphatically — condemn antisemitism as antithetical to our institutional values. As a university, we also fiercely support the free exchange of ideas as central to our educational mission. This includes the expression of views that are controversial and even those that are incompatible with our institutional values.”

--With assistance from Brandon Sapienza.