Some law schools barred military recruiters from entering their campuses.
As law schools began to bar military recruiters, Congress responded with a series of amendments to military spending bills.
But if they bar military recruiters, they risk violating state and Federal laws.
Universities may bar military recruiters from their campuses without risking the loss of federal money, a federal appeals court ruled yesterday.
He noted, though, that most law schools' policies had never completely barred recruiters on campus.
The 2001 No Child Left Behind Act guarantees him and his staff entry to public schools, which would risk losing their federal financing if they barred recruiters.
A state judge today barred military recruiters from conducting interviews on the campus of the University of Connecticut Law School because the armed forces discriminate against homosexuals.
President John Marburger of the State University at Stony Brook has rejected a proposed policy that would have barred military recruiters from campus.
He broke ranks recently on a ruling in which the Supreme Court barred military recruiters from state-financed schools because of the military's discrimination against homosexuals.