Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 121.djvu/799

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[121 STAT. 778]
PUBLIC LAW 110-000—MMMM. DD, 2007
[121 STAT. 778]

121 STAT. 778

PUBLIC LAW 110–82—SEPT. 20, 2007

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‘‘(i) be chosen by the Secretary, after consultation with the Commission of Fine Arts and review by the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee; and ‘‘(ii) contain the so-called ‘Sacagawea design’ and the inscription ‘Liberty’. ‘‘(C) EDGE-INCUSED INSCRIPTIONS.— ‘‘(i) IN GENERAL.—The inscription of the year of minting and issuance of the coin and the inscriptions ‘E Pluribus Unum’ and ‘In God We Trust’ shall be edge-incused into the coin. ‘‘(ii) PRESERVATION OF DISTINCTIVE EDGE.—The edge-incusing of the inscriptions under clause (i) on coins issued under this subsection shall be done in a manner that preserves the distinctive edge of the coin so that the denomination of the coin is readily discernible, including by individuals who are blind or visually impaired. ‘‘(D) REVERSE DESIGN SELECTION.—The designs selected for the reverse of the coins described under this subsection— ‘‘(i) shall be chosen by the Secretary after consultation with the Committee on Indian Affairs of the Senate, the Congressional Native American Caucus of the House of Representatives, the Commission of Fine Arts, and the National Congress of American Indians; ‘‘(ii) shall be reviewed by the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee; ‘‘(iii) may depict individuals and events such as— ‘‘(I) the creation of Cherokee written language; ‘‘(II) the Iroquois Confederacy; ‘‘(III) Wampanoag Chief Massasoit; ‘‘(IV) the ‘Pueblo Revolt’; ‘‘(V) Olympian Jim Thorpe; ‘‘(VI) Ely S. Parker, a general on the staff of General Ulysses S. Grant and later head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs; and ‘‘(VII) code talkers who served the United States Armed Forces during World War I and World War II; and ‘‘(iv) in the case of a design depicting the contribution of an individual Native American to the development of the United States and the history of the United States, shall not depict the individual in a size such that the coin could be considered to be a ‘2-headed’ coin. ‘‘(3) ISSUANCE OF COINS COMMEMORATING 1 NATIVE AMERICAN EVENT DURING EACH YEAR.— ‘‘(A) IN GENERAL.—Each design for the reverse of the $1 coins issued during each year shall be emblematic of 1 important Native American or Native American contribution each year. ‘‘(B) ISSUANCE PERIOD.—Each $1 coin minted with a design on the reverse in accordance with this subsection for any year shall be issued during the 1-year period beginning on January 1 of that year and shall be available throughout the entire 1-year period.

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