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‘Huffington Post’: Catholic Group Withdraws from Vanderbilt over New Policy
FIRE is not alone in noting that the student organization Vanderbilt Catholic has withdrawn from Vanderbilt University due to Vanderbilt University's infringement on student groups' freedom of association. , Tyler Kingkade points out that under Vanderbilt's new non-discrimination policy, a faith-based organization like Vanderbilt Catholic can no longer require that leaders of the group share its core beliefs and values. This fundamental denial of students' right to associate around shared beliefs has forced Vanderbilt Catholic (and possibly other groups in the near future) to disaffiliate with the school and lose official student organization status, which means they no longer have equal access to university funding, meeting spaces, organization mailboxes, and other resources.
This move isn't just unfortunate from the student group's vantage point. As the Huffington Post article highlights, it may also prove costly for Vanderbilt:
There is a for fraternities and sororities on campus that allows them to exist as single-sex groups, per . Without creating an exemption for religious groups, however, people like Vanderbilt alumnus and donor Thomas Singleton.
"If they insist on implementing this policy, I will probably stop all relationships with Vanderbilt," Singleton told NPR. "Because I'm a Christian, and I feel like Christians have a right to express their views and to choose their leadership on this campus — and they seem to be the primary group that's singled out by this policy."
the full article for more perspectives on this troubling issue, including a take from Robert's . Here's hoping that Vanderbilt reverses course quickly, before more student voices are removed from the panoply of views on campus.
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