delivered the opinion of the Court.
We must decide whether a California statute that requires California Rotary Clubs to admit women members violates the First Amendment.
I
A
Rotary International (International) is a nonprofit corporation founded in 1905, with headquarters in Evanston, Illinois. It is “an organization of business and professional men united worldwide who provide humanitarian service, encourage high ethical standards in all vocations, and help build goodwill and peace in the world.” Rotary Manual of Procedure 7 (1981) (hereinafter Manual), App. 35. Individual members belong to a local Rotary Club rather than to International. In turn, each local Rotary Club is a member of International. Ibid. In August 1982, shortly before the trial in this case, Inter *540 national comprised 19,788 Rotary Clubs in 157 countries, with a total membership of about 907,750. Brief for Appellants 7.
Individuals are admitted to membership in a Rotary Club according to a “classification system.” The purpose of this system is to ensure “that each Rotary Club includes a representative of every worthy and recognized business, professional, or institutional activity in the community.” 2 Rotary Basic Library, Club Service 67-69 (1981), App. 86. Each active member must work in a leadership capacity in his business or profession. The general rule is that “one active member is admitted for each classification, but he, in turn, may propose an additional active member, who must be in the same business or professional classification.” 1 Id., at 7, App. 86. Thus, each classification may be represented by two active members. In addition, “senior active” and “past service” members may represent the same classifications as active members. See Standard Rotary Club Constitution, Art. V, §§ 2-5, Record 97-98. There is no limit to the number of clergymen, journalists, or diplomats who may be admitted to membership. Manual 31, 33, App. 38-39.
Subject to these requirements, each local Rotary Club is free to adopt its own rules and procedures for admitting new members. Id., at 7, App. 35. International has promulgated Recommended Club By-laws providing that candidates for membership will be considered by both a “classifications committee” and a “membership committee.” The classifications committee determines whether the candidate’s business or profession is described accurately and fits an “open” classification. The membership committee evaluates the candidate’s “character, business and social standing, and general *541 eligibility.” Brief for Appellants 7-8. If any member objects to the candidate’s admission, the final decision is made by the club’s board of directors.
Membership in Rotary Clubs is open only to men. Standard Rotary Club Constitution, Art. V, § 2, Record 97. Herbert A. Pigman, the General Secretary of Rotary International, testified that the exclusion of women results in an “aspect of fellowship . . . that is enjoyed by the present male membership,” App. to Juris. Statement G-52, and also allows Rotary to operate effectively in foreign countries with varied cultures and social mores. Although women are not admitted to membership, they are permitted to attend meetings, give speeches, and receive awards. Women relatives of Rotary members may form their own associations, and are authorized to wear the Rotary lapel pin. Young women between 14 and 28 years of age may join Interact or Rotaract, organizations sponsored by Rotary International.
B
In 1977 the Rotary Club of Duarte, California, admitted Donna Bogart, Mary Lou Elliott, and Rosemary Freitag to active membership. International notified the Duarte Club that admitting women members is contrary to the Rotary constitution. After an internal hearing, International’s board of directors revoked the charter of the Duarte Club and terminated its membership in Rotary International. The Duarte Club’s appeal to the International Convention was unsuccessful.
The Duarte Club and two of its women members filed a complaint in the California Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles. The complaint alleged, inter alia, that appellants’ actions violated the Unruh Civil Rights Act, Cal. Civ. Code Ann. §51 (West 1982). 2 Appellees sought to enjoin *542 International from enforcing its restrictions against admitting women members, revoking the Duarte Club’s charter, or compelling delivery of the charter to any representative of International. Appellees also sought a declaration that appellants’ actions had violated the Unruh Act. After a bench trial, the court concluded that neither Rotary International nor the Duarte Club is a “business establishment” within the meaning of the Unruh Act. The court recognized that “some individual Rotarians derive sufficient business advantage from Rotary to warrant deduction of Rotarían expenses in income tax calculations, or to warrant payment of those expenses by their employers . . . .” App. to Juris. Statement B-3. But it found that “such business benefits are incidental to the principal purposes of the association ... to promote fellowship . . . and . . . ‘service’ activities.” Ibid. The court also found that Rotary clubs do not provide their members with goods, services, or facilities. On the basis of these findings and conclusions, the court entered judgment for International.
The California Court of Appeal reversed.
The court also held that membership in Rotary International or the Duarte Club does not give rise to a “continuous, personal, and social” relationship that “take[s] place more or less outside public view.”
Ibid,
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The court further concluded that admitting women to the Duarte Club would not seriously interfere with the objectives of Rotary International. Finally, the court rejected appellants’ argument that their policy of excluding women is protected by the First Amendment principles set out in
Roberts
v.
United States Jaycees,
The California Supreme Court denied appellants’ petition for review. We postponed consideration of our jurisdiction to the hearing on the merits.
r — i HH
In Roberts v. United States Jaycees, supra, we upheld against First Amendment challenge a Minnesota statute that required the Jaycees to admit women as full voting members. Roberts provides the framework for analyzing appellants’ constitutional claims. As we observed in Roberts, our cases have afforded constitutional protection to freedom of association in two distinct senses. First, the Court has held that the Constitution protects against unjustified government interference with an individual’s choice to enter into and maintain certain intimate or private relationships. Second, the Court has upheld the freedom of individuals to associate for the purpose of engaging in protected speech or religious activities. In many cases, government interference with one form of protected association ’will also burden the other form of association. In Roberts we determined the nature and degree of constitutional protection by considering separately the effect of the challenged state action on individuals’ free *545 dom of private association and their freedom of expressive association. We follow the same course in this case. 4
A
The Court has recognized that the freedom to enter into and carry on certain intimate or private relationships is a fundamental element of liberty protected by the Bill of Rights. Such relationships may take various forms, including the most intimate. See
Moore
v.
East Cleveland,
The evidence in this case indicates that the relationship among Rotary Club members is not the kind of intimate or private relation that warrants constitutional protection. The size of local Rotary Clubs ranges from fewer than 20 to more than 900. App. to Juris. Statement G-15 (deposition of Herbert A. Pigman, General Secretary of Rotary International). There is no upper limit on the membership of any local Rotary Club. About. 10 percent of the membership of a typical club moves away or drops out during a typical year. 2 Rotary Basic Library, Club Service 9-11 (1981), App. 88. The clubs therefore are instructed to “keep a flow of prospects coming” to make up for the attrition and gradually to enlarge the membership. Ibid. The purpose of Rotary “is to produce an inclusive, not exclusive, membership, making possible the recognition of all useful local occúpations, and enabling the club to be a true cross section of the business and professional life of the community.” 1 Rotary Basic Library, Focus on Rotary 60-61 (1981), App. 84. The membership undertakes a variety of service projects designed to aid the community, to raise the standards of the members’ businesses and professions, and to improve international relations. 5 Such an in- *547 elusive “fellowship for service based on diversity of interest,” ibid., however beneficial to the members and to those they serve, does not suggest the kind of private or personal relationship to which we have accorded protection under the First Amendment. To be sure, membership in Rotary Clubs is not open to the general public. But each club is instructed to include in its membership “all fully qualified prospective members located within its territory,” to avoid “arbitrary limits on the number of members in the club,” and to “establish and maintain a membership growth pattern.” Manual 139, App. 61-62.
Many of the Rotary Clubs’ central activities are carried on in the presence of strangers. Rotary Clubs are required to admit any member of any other Rotary Club to their meetings. Members are encouraged to invite business associates and competitors- to meetings. At some Rotary Clubs, the visitors number “in the tens and twenties each week.” App. to Juris. Statement G-24 (deposition of Herbert A. Pigman, General Secretary of Rotary International). Joint meetings with the members of other organizations, and other joint activities, are permitted. The clubs are encouraged to seek coverage of their meetings and activities in local newspapers. In sum, Rotary Clubs, rather than carrying on their activities in an atmosphere of privacy, seek to keep their “windows and doors open to the whole world,” 1 Rotary Basic Library, Focus on Rotary 60-61 (1981), App. 85. We therefore conclude that application of the Unruh Act to local Rotary Clubs does not interfere unduly with the members’ freedom of private association. 6
*548 B
The Court also has recognized that the right to engage in activities protected by the First Amendment implies “a corresponding right to associate with others in pursuit of a wide variety of political, social, economic, educational, religious, and cultural ends.”
Roberts
v.
United States Jaycees,
As a matter of policy, Rotary Clubs do not take positions on “public questions,” including political or international issues. Manual 115, App. 58-59. To be sure, Rotary Clubs engage in a variety of commendable service activities that are protected by the First Amendment. But the Unruh Act does not require the clubs to abandon or alter any of these activities. It does not require them to abandon their basic goals of humanitarian service, high ethical standards in all vocations, good will, and peace. Nor does it require them to abandon their classification system or admit members who do not reflect a cross section of the community. Indeed, by *549 opening membership to leading business and professional women in the community, Rotary Clubs are likely to obtain a more representative cross section of community leaders with a broadened capacity for service. 7
Even if the Unruh Act does work some slight infringement on Rotary members’ right of expressive association, that infringement is justified because it serves the State’s compelling interest in eliminating discrimination against women. See
Buckley
v.
Valeo,
Ill
Finally, appellants contend that the Unruh Act is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad. We conclude that these contentions were not properly presented to the state courts.
*550
It is well settled that this Court will not review a final judgment of a state court unless “the record as a whole shows either expressly or by clear implication that the federal claim was adequately presented in the state system.”
Webb
v.
Webb,
l-H <1
The judgment of the Court of Appeal of California is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Justice Scalia concurs in the judgment.
Justice Blackmun and Justice O’Connor took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
Notes
Rotary Clubs may establish separate classifications for subcategories of a business or profession as long as the classification “describe[s] the member’s principal and recognized professional activity . . . .” 2 Rotary Basic Library, Club Service 8 (1981), App. 87. For example, a single Rotary Club may admit categories and subcategories of lawyers: e. g., trial, corporate, tax, labor, and so on. Ibid.
The Unruh Civil Rights Act provides, in part:
“All persons within the jurisdiction of this state are free and equal, and no matter what their sex, race, color, religion, ancestry, or national origin *542 are entitled to the fall and equal accommodations, advantages, facilities, privileges, or services in all business establishments of every kind whatsoever.” Cal. Civ. Code Ann. § 51 (West 1982).
We have appellate jurisdiction to review a final judgment entered by the highest court of a State in which decision could be had “where is drawn in question the validity of a statute of any state on the ground of its being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties or laws of the United States, and the decision is in favor of its validity.” 28 U. S. C. § 1257(2). Appellants squarely challenged the constitutionality of the Unruh Act, as applied, and the Court of Appeal sustained the validity of the statute as applied. “We have held consistently that a state statute is sustained within the meaning of § 1257(2) when a state court holds it applicable to a particular set of facts as against the contention that such application is invalid on federal grounds.”
Japan Line, Ltd.
v.
County of Los Angeles,
International, an association of thousands of local Rotary Clubs, can claim no constitutionally protected right of private association. Moreover, its expressive activities are quite limited. See infra, at 548-549. Because the Court of Appeal held that the Duarte Rotary Club also is a business establishment subject to the provisions of the Unruh Act, we proceed to consider whether application of the Unruh Act violates the rights of members of local Rotary Clubs.
We of course recognize that Rotary Clubs, like similar organizations, perform useful and important community services. Rotary Clubs in the vicinity of the Duarte Club have provided meals and transportation'to the elderly, vocational guidance for high school students, a swimming program for handicapped children, and international exchange programs, among many other service activities. Record 217H-217J.
Appellants assert that we “approved” a distinction between the Jaycees and the Kiwanis Club in
Roberts
v.
United States Jaycees,
In 1980 women were reported to make up 40.6 percent of the managerial and professional labor force in the United States. U. S. Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States 400 (1986).
Appellants assert that admission of women will impair Rotary’s effectiveness as an international organization. This argument is undercut by the fact that the legal effect of the judgment of the California Court of Appeal is limited to the State of California. See supra, at 543. Appellants’ argument also is undermined by the fact that women already attend the Rotary Clubs’ meetings and participate in many of their activities.
Appellants point to.a passage in the brief they filed in the California Court of Appeal that quotes this Court’s opinion in
NAACP
v.
Button,
