First Sentence:
On January 12, 1959, the Supreme Court decided Williams v. Lee and, in so doing, opened the modern era of federal Indian law.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
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treaty substitutes, traders statutes, measured separatism, tribal prerogatives, matter preemption, exclusive tribal jurisdiction, tribal sovereign immunity, executive order reservations, tribal criminal jurisdiction, inherent tribal sovereignty, reserved water rights, facto termination, irrigable acreage, treaty hunting, state court jurisdiction, equal footing doctrine, tribal tax, tribal powers, tribal interests, federal judicial review, supra note, moderate living, judicial jurisdiction, tribes possess, prior appropriation doctrine
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
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United States, Santa Clara, Lone Wolf, Menominee Tribe, Marshall Trilogy, Arizona State Tax, Cherokee Nation, Indian Commerce Clause, Sioux Nation, Chief Justice Marshall, Fifth Amendment, Great Father, Navajo Reservation, Public Law, Pyramid Lake, Rosebud Sioux, Court of Claims, Midwest Oil, South Dakota, Black Hills, Colorado River, Flathead Reservation, Worcester-Crow Dog-Talton, District County Court, Interior Department
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