Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 76.djvu/961

 76 STAT.]

913

PUBLIC LAW 87-806-OCT. 15, 1962

the intrastate certificate shall have been renewed, reissued, or reinstated or the restrictions removed within said one hundred and eightyday period. Such certificates of registration shall be subject to suspension or termination by the Commission in accordance with the provisions of this Act governing the suspension and termination of certificates of public convenience and necessity issued by the Commission. " (B) All rights to engage in operations in interstate and foreign commerce under the provisions of the second proviso of paragraph (1) of this subsection, as in effect immediately before the date of the enactment of this paragraph, shall cease and terminate, but any carrier lawfully engaged in interstate and foreign operations on the date of the enactment of this paragraph or any carrier who would have been so lawfully engaged in such operations but for the pendency of litigation to determine the validity of such person's intrastate operations to the extent such litigation is resolved irr favor of such person, pursuant to such provisions, may continue such operations for 120 days after such date and, if an appropriate application for a certificate of registration is filed within such period, such operations may be continued pending the determination of such application. The Commission shall prescribe the form of such application, the information and documents to be furnished, the manner of filing, and the persons to whom or the manner of giving notice to interested persons of such filings. Issues arising in the determination of such applications shall be determined in the most expeditious manner and, so far as practicable and legally permissible, without formal hearings or other proceedings. A notice of intent to engage in interstate and foreign operations accompanied by certified copies of effective, lawfully issued or acquired State certificates filed with the Commission as evidence of authority to operate in interstate or foreign commerce under the provisions of the second roviso of paragraph (1) of this subsection, as in effect immediately efore the date of the enactment of this paragraph, shall be conclusive proof that the applicant is lawfully engaged in interstate and foreign operations and the scope thereof." Approved October 16, 1962.

Pendency of litigation.

Notice of intent.

E

Public Law 87-806 AN ACT To set aside certain lands in Washington for Indians of the Quinault Tribe. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That lands heretofore set aside under the provisions of the Act of August 22, 1914 (38 Stat. 704), for lighthouse purposes at or near Cape Elizabeth on the Quinault Indian Reservation, State of Washington, and consisting of eighty-five and five onerhundredths acres, more or less, in lots 1, 2, and 3 in section 34, township 22 north, range 13 west, Willamette meridian, which lands are excess to the needs of the Treasury Department, shall be, and the same are hereby, set aside in trust for the Quinault Tribe of Indians, in the same manner and to the same extent as other real property held in trust by the United States for said tribe. SEC. 2. The Indian Claims Commission is directed to determine in accordance with the provisions of section 2 of the Act of August 13, 1946 (60 Stat. 1050), the extent to which the value of the title conveyed by this Act should or should not be set off against any claim against the United States determined by the Commission. Approved October 15, 1962. 78135 0-63—61

October 15, 1962 [S. 507]

Indians. Certain trust lands.

Indian Claims Commission. 25 USC 70a.

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