Word: militaryã
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...that the government would not object to protesters organizing lines of students heckling recruiters and applicants. Although the court did not outline specific guidelines for protests in the opinion, it did acknowledge the right of students and faculty “to associate to voice their disapproval of the military??s message.”Boston College law professor and FAIR president Kent Greenfield said yesterday that the “silver lining” in the decision was the court’s reaffirmation of protest rights.“I’m sure...
...Students and faculty are free to associate to voice their disapproval of the military??s message,” Roberts wrote...
...This fosters the impression that the University, whilst respectfully disagreeing with aspects of the military??s policy, accepts that the national interest overrides these concerns. By making it clear that its objection is to a discriminatory policy rather than to the military as a whole, the University’s objections are more likely to be taken seriously as the legitimate objections of a rational, moderate, and patriotic institution, rather than the irrelevant obstructionism of radical leftists...
...target certain minority groups (following the español link on goarmy.com or airforce.com does not simply lead to a translated site, but an entire culturally-based sales pitch aimed at Latino youth.) To further elicit meaning from the data, one might also compare statistics between branches of the military??since, for instance, the Air Force offers significantly different prospects for its recruits than the Army. GUSTAVO A. ESPADA ’96 Somerville, Mass. January...
Army recruiters faced about 20 protesters at Harvard Medical School yesterday as gay rights supporters staged a demonstration to decry the military??s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy...