Mass Demonstrations: The New Legal Challenge
Press Release
August 16, 1963
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Press Releases, Volume 1. Mass Demonstrations: The New Legal Challenge, 1963. 0416cd7e-b492-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/41b912ed-600c-42c5-8ed3-ebaa904f7aef/mass-demonstrations-the-new-legal-challenge. Accessed November 08, 2025.
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PRESS RELEASE
* NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATIONAL FUND.
10 COLUMBUS CIRCLE «+ NEWYORK19,N.Y. © JUdson6-8397
DR. ALLAN KNIGHT CHALMERS JACK GREENBERG CONSTANCE BAKER MOTLEY
Prasident Director-Counsel Associate Counsel
oa
FOR _IMMEDTATE RELEASE --August 16, 1963
Mass Demonstrations: The New Legal Challenge
by
Jack Greenberg, Director-Counsel
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc,
Since most street demonstrations invariably end in a
courtroom and since hundreds of school and public accommodations
cases remain to be filed and won, The NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, Inc, has been expanding its activities to
continue to serve, as in the past, the leaal arm of the civil
pee rights movement,
We now represent more than 7,500 demonstrators involved in
125 civil rights actions across the country, These comprise
members of all the major civil rights organizations,
The current crisis has caused a vast increase in civil
rights litigation, Two factors are primarily responsible:
a) the wave of peaceful protest demonstrations that began
with the sit-ins in 1960, and capped off by Birmingham and its
aftermath,
b) sharpened opposition to court orders requiring desegre-
gation, characterized by increasing complex legal activity, on
part of the southern white community, to counter our legal efforts,
For cbvious reasons, almost no southern white lawyers will
handle race relations cases, In many places, there are no Negro
attorneys with training adequate to cooperate with the NAACP Legal
Defense and Educational Fund.
“Scrucial parts of the rural South,
®
~ we will assist them in getting started,
=2-
Tallahassee, for example, the capital city of Florida, does
not have one practicing Negro lawyer, C. B. King of Albany, Ga.
is the lone civil rights attorney in southwestern Georgia, There
are only three Negro civil rights lawyers in the entire State of
Mississippi.
There are virtually no Negro lawyers anywhere in the most
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, through long
and short+range planning, is moving to cope with the present
Mrciets in four ways:
I, Julius LeVonne Chambers, brilliant graduate of the
University of North Carolina's law school, where he became the
first of his race to be editor-in-chief of the North Carolina
Law Review, will join our staff in September,
He will be our first legal intern, f
Mr, Chambers, and other participants in our legal intern f 2
program were and will be chosen with the understanding that they ~ gee
eventually practice law in southern communities where there is
an acute shortage of attorneys qualified to handle civil rights
The interns will work in the Legal Defense Fund's New York
ee under supervision of our legal staff, They will assist
nm research, litigation, and preparation of briefs,
Internship will be completed in one year, They will then
I
go to a community in the South where a civil rights lawyer is
needed, and where reasonable prospects exist for an eventual
private practice. For the first three years of their practice
Another young attorney will join Mr. Chambers during the
first phase of our program, which is being underwritten by an
initial $25,000 grant from the Field Foundation. We expect this
program to expand to six lawyer~interns by next year.
=oe 2
II, In keeping with our pledge to defend all civil rights
demonstrators seeking our assistance, the staff of the NAACP
Legal Defense Fund has doubled during the past year.
"We had five.attorneys working in this office in October 1961,
Im October 1962, we hadnine, We plan to have 17 by the end id
this year, and we are bringing them in just as fast as we can
absorb them,
In addition, we now have 100 cooperating attorneys through-#
out the South, an increase of 25 per cent during the past three ‘E
years,
Expansion of our staff legal talent is essential since
most of the research and brief writing is done in our New York
office, There are some 70 school integration cases on our s
current docket, However, this number would be more than doubled a
if we had four or five additional lawyers on cur staff at this
time,
III, Our physical facilities were doubled by our move to
new offices three weeks ago. This was made possible by our
expanding budget. We projected a $650,000 budget in 1962 and
secured it. We projected a $750,000 budget for this year, but
if the current trend of contributions continue, we will budget
$1,100,000 for 1963.
IV. We will hold practicing law institutes, to share the
latest legal knowledge with our cooperating counsel, in three
southern cities -- Washington, D. C., Atlanta, and Dallas yi this
fall. They will be conducted by professors from Columbia, Yale,
Howard and other Law Schools,
These seminar-like sessions will cover crucial legal areas \
such as: constituticnal law, including freedom of speech; school |
and public facility desegregation; federal procedure; c
law; evidence.
We will then publish manuals which will serve as a continuing
guide to civil rights attorneys, ,
Through these steps, plus the continued devotion of Legal”
Defense Fund attorneys, legalism will continue to be a potent _
weapon in the Negro's march for dignity,