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Code · STATUTES-AT-LARGE · Vol. 39 STAT. · May 4, 1916 · Chapter 110

Chapter 110.

478 words·~2 min read·/statutes-at-large/vol-39/chapter-110-369559·

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CHAP. 110.— AN ACT To provide for an increase in the number of cadets at the United States Military Academy. May 4, 1916.[[S. 4876](/us/bill/64/s/4876).][[Public, No. 69](/us/pl/64/69).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,* That the Corps of Cadets at Military Academy. Number of cadets increased. R. S., sec. 1315, p. 226, amended.the United States Military Academy shall hereafter consist of two for each congressional district, two from each Territory, four from the District of Columbia, two from natives of Porto Rico, four from each State at large, and eighty from the United States at large Selection from “honor schools.”twenty of whom shall be selected from among the honor graduates of educational institutions having officers of the Regular Army detailed as professors of military science and tactics under existing law or any law hereafter enacted for the detail of officers of the Regular Army to such institutions, and which institutions are designated as “honor schools” upon the determination of their relative standing at the last preceding annual inspection regularly made by the War Department.
Residence qualifications.They shall be appointed by the President and shall, with the exception of the eighty appointed from the United States at large, be actual residents of the congressional or Territorial district, or of the District *Provisos.* Appointing successors to cadets finishing three years’ course repealed.Vol. 38, p. 1128.of Columbia, or of the island of Porto Rico, or of the States, respectively, from which they purport to be appointed: *Provided,* That so much of the Act of Congress approved March fourth, nineteen hundred and fifteen (Thirty-eighth Statutes at Large, page eleven hundred and twenty-eight), as provides for the admission of a successor to any cadet who shall have finished three years of his course at the academy be, and the same is hereby, repealed: *Provided further,* Present appointments validated.That the appointment of each member of the present Corps of Cadets is validated and confirmed.
Appointments from Army and National Guard. Sec. 2. That the President is hereby authorized to appoint cadets to the United States Military Academy from among enlisted men in number as nearly equal as practicable of the Regular Army and the National Guard between the ages of nineteen and twenty-two years who have served as enlisted men not less than one year, to be selected *Proviso.* Limit.under such regulations as the President may prescribe: *Provided,* That the total number so selected shall not exceed one hundred and eighty at any one time.
Division of increase appointments. Sec. 3. That, under such regulations as the President shall prescribe, the increase in the number of cadets provided for by this Act shall be divided into four annual increments, which shall be as nearly equal as practicable and be equitably distributed among the sources from which appointments are authorized. Approved, May 4, 1916.
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