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In these stipulations, the Attorney General and the Secretary of the Interior purport to renounce and disclaim for the United States Government paramount government power over certain particularly described submerged lands in the California coastal area.
United States v. California. No. 5, Original. Argued December 7-8, 1964. Decided May 17, 1965. 381 U.S. 139. Syllabus. The United States brought this suit in 1945 against California to determine dominion over the submerged lands and mineral rights under the three-mile belt of sea off the California coast.
To carry into effect this Court's decision of May 15, 1978, 436 U. S. 436 U.S. 32, and for the purpose of identifying with greater particularity parts of the boundary line, as defined by the Supplemental Decree herein of January 31, 1966, 382 U. S. 382 U.S. 448, and by the Second Supplemental Decree herein of June 13, 1977, 432 U. S. 432 U.S ...
importance: felt little allegiance to Mexico, portraying that California was clinging to Mexico by the thinnest of threads and would soon join the U.S., and by the mid-1840s, these Californios faced a growing number of American settlers with definite political sympathies. "Whig Plan".
The Treasury Historical Association (THA) upholds the legacy of the U.S. Treasury Department by stewarding its relevance into modernity. Through education and preservation, THA makes the work of the Treasury accessible to all Americans so that we may understand its role in the welfare of the Nation. What We Do.
APUSH us history important court cases. Bakke v. California. (1978) Ruled that a university's use of racial "quotas" in its admissions process was unconstitutional, but a school's use of "affirmative action" to accept more minority applicants was constitutional in some circumstances.
The history of the Department of the Treasury began in the turmoil of the American Revolution, when the Continental Congress at Philadelphia deliberated the crucial issue of financing a war of independence against Great Britain.