Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 94 Part 3.djvu/902

 94 STAT. 3546

PUBLIC LAW 96-607—DEC. 28, 1980

the State of Kansas, constructed under the general authority of the Act of July 24, 1946 (60 Stat. 641 et seq.) is hereby designated and hereafter shall be known as the "Keith Sebelius Lake". Any law, regulation, record, map, or other document of the United States referring to the waters impounded by the Norton Dam unit of this project shall be held to refer to the "Keith Sebelius Lake", and any future regulations, records, maps, or other documents of the United States, in reference to these waters, shall bear the name "Keith Sebelius Lake". TITLE XIV MONOCACY NATIONAL BATTLEFIELD 16 USC 430j.

Appropriation authorization.

SEC. 140. (a) The Act entitled "An Act to establish a National Military Park at the battlefield of Monocacy, Maryland" approved June 21, 1934 (48 Stat. 1198) is amended by revising the first section thereof to read as follows: "That in order to commemorate the Battle of Monocacy, Maryland, and to preserve for historical purposes the breastworks, earthworks, walls, or other defenses or shelters used by the armies therein, the battlefield at Monocacy in the State of Maryland is hereby established as the Monocacy National Battlefield. The battlefield shall comprise the area within the boundary generally depicted on the map entitled 'Monocacy National Battlefield', numbered 894/40,001A, and dated April 1980, which shall be on file and available for public inspection in the Office of the National Park Service, Department of the Interior.". (b) In addition to other funds available for purposes of the park referred to in subsection (a), there is authorized to be appropriated up to an additional $725,000 for acquisition of lands and interests in lands and $1,250,000 for development. TITLE XV ROGERS C. B. MORTON RECOGNITION

Information, submittal to congressional committees.

SEC. 1501. The Secretary is authorized to commemorate, at Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland, the contributions of Rogers C. B. Morton, as a Member of Congress, and later as Secretary of the Interior, toward the development of the Seashore and to conservation in general. Such commemoration shall be in the form of an appropriate plaque or monument, suitably located, or may subsequently take the form of dedication of a suitable structure. Within one year of the effective date of this section, the Secretary shall inform, in writing, the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs of the United States House of Representatives and the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of the United States Senate, as to actions he has taken to implement the provisions of this section. TITLE XVI WOMEN S RIGHTS NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK

16 USC 410 II.

SEC 1601. (a) The Congress finds that— (1) The Women's Rights Convention held at the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848 was an event of major importance in the history of the United States because it marked the formal beginning of the struggle of women for their equal rights.

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