The Ohio State University has agreed to change a nondiscrimination policy that prohibited religious student organizations from making critical decisions based on religious criteria.
While there is no shortage of free speech battles on college campuses, fraternities have the dubious honor of being at the center of many of the least sympathetic controversies.
A federal lawsuit was filed today against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill by Alpha Iota Omega, a Christian fraternity that was denied recognition because it would not agree to open its membership to students of different faiths.
UNC has made an ideological decision to deny religious organizations the right to make religious choices when selecting members even though there is no law that permits it to make that choice.
For the second time in less than two years, UNC Chapel Hill has denied recognition to a Christian group, claiming that the group's desire to limit its membership to Christians constitutes discrimination.
The Catholic University of America has denied official approval to a group of students wishing to open a campus chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
University of California-Irvine's decision not to interfere with an "affirmative action bake sale" protest held on Wednesday came after intensive public exposure by FIRE.
Purdue University has finally granted a Christian women's housing group an exemption from a mandatory "nondiscrimination" policy that would have made voluntary religious association impossible.