Page Six THE MI CHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 2, 1976 Suit challenges West Point honor code NEW YORK IP) -- West Point's cherished honor code was challenged in federal court yesterday only hours after the U. S. Military Academy said that the number of cadets who cheated on homework has near- ly doubled. The suit said the honor code is unconstitutional. THE NUMBER formally ac- cused, tantamount to a guilt finding, now stands at 98, in- cluding four who have resigned, in what could be the worst cheating scandal in West Point's history. An officer-cadet internal re- view panel returned the formal allegations against 46 additional juniors, an academy spokes- man said. The lawsuit, filed in U. S. 7th Ann Arbor Medieval Festival OPEN MEETINGS JUNE 1 & 2 7:30 P.M. Kuensel Rm MiChigon Union District Court in Manhattan, asks for a permanent injunc- tion to ban the code and to cease all trials and other means of enforcement. A WEST POINT spokesman said academy officials had not yet seen the complaint and could not comment on it. The suit also seeks reinstate- ment of all "guilty" cadets, re- jection of resignations submit- ted by cadets in the current scandal and restoration of clean records for the accused. It said the code is "detrimen- tal to and impedes the fulfill- ment of the mission of West Point in that it is subjectively invoked, unequally implement- ed and enforced and creative of divisiveness and discontent among the cadets who are ex- pressly required thereunder to spy and inform upon their peers." THE SUIT was filed on be- half of Cadet Timothy Ring- good, 22, of Phoenix, who has alleged there is widespread cheating at the academy and, as a result, has been accused of tolerating cheating. The code forbids toleration, 'saying, "A cadet will not lie, cheat, or steal, nor tolerate those who do." Arguing that the code is ap- plied unequally in violation of the U. S. Constitution, the suit was filed by the firm of Siller & Galian, Sidney Siller, presi- dent of the New York Criminal and Civil Courts Bar Associa- tion, said last week that the as- sociation would hold ad hoc hearings into the legal rights of cadets. THE SUIT, for which class action is sought, charges that failure to apply the code equal- Berkeley BERKELEY, Calif (AP) - A decade ago this university city was barricaded during student riots. Now a new controversy barricades to keep traffic out is splitting the community - of residential neighborhoods. Next Tuesday, voters make a decision on ballot measure 0. The initiative, which qualified with 3,500 signatures, calls for the elimination of the Berkeley Traffic Management Plan, now less than a year old. THE PLAN-"an experiment," says one city official - calls for hundreds of new stop signs, a dozen traffic diverters, 11 new traffic lights, 21 traffic circles and 44 traffic diverters to re- ly is "prevalent and is delib- erately sanctioned" to "cover up the true extent of the cadet honor code violations so as to perpetuate the illegal, illusory and unworkable standard for cadet behaviors." The defendants were incom- ing honor committee chairman, Cadet Michael Ivy; outgoing chairman, Cadet William An- dersen; Army Secretary Mar- tin R. Hoffman; Lt. Gen. Sid- ney Berry, academy superin- tendent ,and Brig. Gen. Walter Ulmer, commandant. In January 1975, the U. S. Court of Appeals threw out a suit by eight cadets who claim- ed their constitutional rights were violated by their epul- sion in 1973 on charges ranging from cheating to transporting liquor on campus. Cadets formally accused have the option of resigning or of appealing their cases to a Board of Officers. split on barrier plan route automobile traffic from narrow, tree-lined residential streets to main arteries. The most visible barricades are concrete balls linked with redwood bars used to block streets. Drivers often enter a street from the open end, then are forced to make U-turns when they find the other end barred. Supporters of the plan say neighborhood streets are safer, automobile traffic and accidents have been reduced and public transportation is being used by more of the city's 118,000 resi- dents. BUT OPPONENTS brand it a miserable flop. They say traffic has merely been shuffled to new areas and complain of de- lays, confusion and actual dan- ger when fire, police or medi- cal vehicles are forced to take longer routes to their destina- tions. "I think the present system has a lot of problems," said councilwoman Shirley Dean. "But we anticipated that when we passed it in July. It was an experiment. "But I think the concept has merit," she added. "If there are certain things that don't work they should be removed, but this would just throw the baby out with the bath water. It just eliminates everything." "THE CHAOS that was pre- dicted has occurred," says Dr. Robert Fink, co-chairman of Citizens Against Barricades, which is pushing the initiative. "It hasn't stopped people from driving their cars, it just pun- ishes them for doing it." One police sergeant recalled $200 in damage to a patrol car when it crashed over a barrier in pursuit of a rapist. And Fire Lt. Freenan Long says the bar- riers affect their operation by slowing response time and forc- ing fire engines to use crowded major streets. Using diverters began 10 years ago, says Herman Sinemus, Berkeley's traffic engineer. "In the late '60s many neighbor- hoods wanted it and we felt rather than do it piecemeal, let's do it city wide." 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