One of the objectionable parts according to UC was a philosophical preamble in one of the textbooks which stated...and I paraphrase, and no this isn't what it said verbatim, but what I believe it meant:
"whatever findings science has theories about, we as Christians believe in creation by God. We should always remember this and place God above any scientific theory which is contradictory with God's word (in the search for truth.)"
UC is upset because of a philosophical preamble which is religious in nature, UC claiming this one preface makes invalid the rest of the textbook. They are saying the science is bad, just because of that.
If some of the textbooks began each chapter with some scripture written there, is that any different than having a poem, or famous quote? Seems like all it does is try to focus on Christianity, but how does that change the science? People are free to have inspiration. Many great scientists were Christians and actually did serious scientific research.
People are free to think what they want and it's not the business of a university to dictate that. E=Mc2 is pretty much agreed upon universally. The idea God created the universe and all in it is not universally agreed upon by scientists, but many do. It is valid for a Christian school to acknowledge what they believe in and what gives inspiration.
This looks to me like UC is exercising thought police tactics. If you deny someone entrance because they are a Christian and believe in creation, who have the audacity to preamble their textbooks with this belief, then that sure looks to me like suppression of religion by the state...unconstitutional.
Les