Word: amendmenteers
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Harvard law professors who oppose on-campus military recruitment—and their allies at other schools, including Yale and Duke—still say they stand a chance of winning a favorable verdict from the high court in the Solomon Amendment case.
When Justice Stephen G. Breyer asked FAIR attorney E. Joshua Rosenkranz point-blank whether law schools that hold recruiters to the nondiscrimination pledge are violating the Solomon Amendment, Rosenkranz responded, “Yes, sir.”
Rosenkranz wanted the court to rule instead that the Solomon Amendment violates schools’ free-speech rights by forcing them to spread the military’s anti-gay message. But only one justice, David H. Souter ’61, seemed inclined to support FAIR’s...
Protesters chanting “Killing Iraqis is no career, recruiters aren’t welcome here!” marched in a circle outside the Armed Forces Career Center in downtown Boston yesterday afternoon, in a demonstration timed to coincide with the first day of Supreme Court hearings on...
WASHINGTON—Amid the heated debate surrounding a key military recruitment case argued before the Supreme Court, a small but fiery group of protesters braved the frigid winter weather here yesterday to voice their opinions on the Solomon Amendment. On a sidewalk adjacent to the icy steps of the...