Report on Leland Consolidated School District
Public Court Documents
October 13, 1972

4 pages
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Press Releases, Volume 1. Legal Defense Fund Scores Major School Integration Breakthrough, 1964. 250553f2-b492-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/0978232e-6c49-4cbb-9d07-ec4392dc0032/legal-defense-fund-scores-major-school-integration-breakthrough. Accessed August 19, 2025.
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10 Columbus Circle New York, N.Y. 10019 JUdson 6-8397 NAACP une 19, 19 PRESS RELEASE Bi President Dr. Allan Knight Chalmers Director-Counsel hs Jack Greenberg , Associate Counsel ce Constance Baker Motle "he LEGAL DEFENSE FUND SCORES MAJOR dae s Legal Defense and Educational F und SCHOOL INTEGRATION BREAKTHROUGH NEWYORK, N.Y.--A major breakthrough in school integration took~ place yesterday when a federal district court put» an end to & "private" schools and tuition grants often utilized by southern communities seeking to avoid integration. Jack Greenberg, director-counsel, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which won the ruling, today applauded that order, which "closes the door on attempts at ending the '54 school segregation de- ¢ision via the school closings and tuition grant tactics. "We will move quickly to apply it whenever such efforts at school integration evasion occur anywhere in the south, where we are currently pressing 82 separate school integration actions in 14 states. "This decision will alter the southern school integration picture in hard core ares," he said. The ruling referred to came down yesterday in the U.S, District Court for the eastern district of Va. Judge John D, Butzner Jr. said that the Surry County school board may no™®* longer process or approve "any applications from persons Te= siding in Surry County for state or county scholarships for use in any school that discriminates in admission and educa- tion of pupils on the basis of race." In addition, Judge Butzner decreed that the school board may no longer use race as a criteria in "assignment, placement; transfer, admission, enrollment or education of any child in andsto any public school or any child's use of any facility owned or controlled by the School Board." White students in Surry County have been attending "pri- vate" schools on scholarship, while Negroes attended their all-colored "public" schools. The case was argued by Henry L. Marsh III and Samuel WwW. Tucker, NAACP Legal Defense Fund cooperating attorneys of Richmond, Va. =e a0 Jesse DeVore, Jr., Director of Public Information—Night Number 212 Riverside 9-8487