Morehouse to begin taking transgender men next year
The country’s only allmale historically black college will begin admitting transgender men next year, marking a shift for the school at a time when higher education institutions around the nation are adopting more welcoming policies toward LGBT students.
Leaders of Morehouse College said its board of trustees approved the policy Saturday.
Transgender men will be allowed to enroll in the school for the first time in 2020. Students who identify as women but were born male cannot enroll, however, and anyone who transitions from male to female will not be automatically eligible to receive a degree from the institution.
Morehouse officials hailed the move as an important step toward a more inclusive campus while affirming its mission to educate and develop men.
“I think Morehouse having the courage to speak to issues of masculinity in today’s environment is important,” Morehouse College President David Thomas told The Associated Press. “For 152 years, the world has, in some way, seen Morehouse as the West Point of black male development.”
Morehouse is an iconic college that counts the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., filmmaker Spike Lee and former Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson as alumni.
More than 1,000 colleges and universities nationwide have adopted some form of a transgender policy.
Spelman College, an allwoman HBCU next door to Morehouse, adopted a transgender policy in 2017, and the first transgender woman graduated in 2018. In Sudan: Sudanese political parties and movements behind nearly four months of anti-government protests met with the military Saturday, activists and the military said, holding the first talks since the army forced President Omar al-Bashir from power Thursday.
The meeting came after the movement scored key victories, first ending alBashir’s almost 30-year rule and then forcing the interim military leader, Gen. Awad ibn Ouf, from his post a day later. Protesters viewed ibn Ouf as too close to the ousted leader.
The movement said it has formed a 10-member delegation to introduce “the people’s demands” to the military council, reiterating its rejection of military rule.