The House on Wednesday urged the federal government to contest a court
decision that would allow colleges to limit the activities of military
recruiters on their campuses because of the military's ban on openly
gay people. The nonbinding resolution, approved 327-84, expresses
support for a 1995 law that denies defense-related funding to
universities that don't provide ROTC programs and don't give military
recruiters equal access to their campuses. Last November a three-judge
panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (news - web sites)
struck down the law, named for the late Rep. Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y. The
court said the law infringed on the free-speech rights of law schools
that had barred on-campus recruiting because of the military's "don't
ask, don't tell" policy banning open homosexuality. A U.S. District
Court judge in New Haven, Conn., on Monday backed up that conclusion,
ruling that Yale Law School can block military recruiters from campus
without losing federal funds because the law violates the school's
constitutional free speech rights. "This decision threatens to severely
damage the ability of the military to recruit the highly qualified
candidates necessary during a time of war," said Rep. John Kline (news,
bio, voting record), R-Minn., of the November ruling. But opponents of
the resolution said colleges with anti-discrimination policies are only
preventing recruiters from using campus facilities, not from contacting
students. [more]
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