Mississippi School Order Prompts Mixed Reactions from Rights Attorneys; Ruling Bans All-White Jury, Frees Georgia Rights Worker; NAACP Legal Defense Fund Sues N. Carolina Hospital; Nation's First Legal Intern "Graduates"
Press Release
July 11, 1964
Cite this item
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Press Releases, Volume 1. Mississippi School Order Prompts Mixed Reactions from Rights Attorneys; Ruling Bans All-White Jury, Frees Georgia Rights Worker; NAACP Legal Defense Fund Sues N. Carolina Hospital; Nation's First Legal Intern "Graduates", 1964. bece8710-b592-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/c7dc26a7-40e6-4cff-9533-7a7d5bf53846/mississippi-school-order-prompts-mixed-reactions-from-rights-attorneys-ruling-bans-all-white-jury-frees-georgia-rights-worker-naacp-legal-defense-fund-sues-n-carolina-hospital-nations-first-legal-intern-graduates. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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NAACP
_. Legal Defense and Educational Fund
PRESS RELEASE
President July 11, 1964
Dr. Allan Knight Chalmers
Director-Counsel
Jack Greenberg
Associate Counsel
Constance Baker Motley
MISSISSIPPI SCHOOL ORDER
PROMPTS MIXED REACTIONS
% FROM 'RIGHTS ATIORNEYS
Hit Segregationist Views of Court
JACKSON, MISS,--The NAACP Legal Defense Fund this week aired
Mixed feelings about the Federal District Court order calling
for grade-a-year school desegregation in three Mississippi com-
munities.
Among the 63 children involved in the suits are Darrell
Kenyatta and Reene Denise Evers, children of slain NAACP Field
Secretary Medgar Evers.
The Fund, through Assistant Counsel Derrick Bell, who handled
the suits in Jackson, Leake County and Biloxi, issued the following
statement in reaction to the decision of Judge Sidney R. Mize:
"We are gratified that a Federal District Court in Mississippi
has entered a final injunction requiring a plan to begin public
school desegregation in the state this fall.
"However, we of the Legal Defense Fund are disappointed that
the court, whose order offered so great a potential for peaceful
acceptance of school desegregation, expressed at such length its
disagreement with the Supreme Court's decision of 1954.
"We are also disappointed at the court's agreement with seg-
regationist testimony that Negroes are inferior to whites and
both races fare better in separate schools," Mr. Bell said.
"This position was entirely discredited by the Supreme Court
in the Brown case, and has been rejected recently by the Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which reviewed similar testimony
in cases from Birmingham, Ala. and Savannah, Ga., brought by
Legal Defense Fund attorneys.
(more)
Jesse DeVore, Jr., Director of Public Information—Night Number 212 RIverside 9-8487
“)
™
NAACP Legal Defense Fund -2- July 11, 1964
"In the Savannah case, the Court of Appeals noted
that the real fallacy of 'the classification theory' is
that many Negro pupils are superior to many white pupils
in achievement and aptitude.
"The court noted that the constitution does not pro=
hibit assigning individual students to particular schools
On the basis of intelligence, achievement or other apti-
tude under a uniformly administered program in which yaeq
is not a factor.
"But the court added that no educational process is
constitutional where 'the individual Negro student is not
to be treated as an individual and allowed to proceed along
with other individuals on the basis of ability alone with-
out regard to race.'"
Attorney Bell furtner noted that additional legal
action may be necessary if the Mississippi school boards
propose unacceptable plans.
RULING BANS ALL-WHITE JURY;
FREES GEORGIA 'RIGHTS WORKER
Legal Defense Fund Hails Crucial Victory
ATLANTA, GA,--Jack Greenberg, NAACP Legal Defense Fund
director-counsel, this week hailed a Georgia Court of
Appeals ruling that reversed the assault conviction of
white civil rights worker Ralph Allen.
The court said systematic exclusion of Negroes from
juries violates the rights of Negro and white defendants.
:
(more)
NAACP Legal Defense Fund -3- July 11, 1964
"If other courts adopt the reasoning of this opinion,"
Mr. Greenberg said, "white civil rights workers will have
greater protection against discriminatory arrests and
judicial proceedings. Numerous other Legal Defense Fund
cases involving white rights workers--currently being tried
or appealed--will also be favorably affected.
"Furthermore , should southern white attorneys begin
to raise the issue of discriminatory jury selection on
behalf of their white clients, the entire practice of ex-
cluding Negroes from this important aspect of citizenship
May soon come to an end," Mr, Greenberg concluded.
Mr. Allen's arrest and conviction were on a charge
of assault with intent to murder. A field secretary of the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Mr. Allen was
engaged in a voter-registration project in Americus, Ga.
He was arrested during a night demonstration for allegedly
throwing a bottle at a policeman. He denied the charge.
Legal Defense Fund attorneys had earlier secured
the release of Mr. Allen and four other rights workers
who had been held for over two months without bail in an
Americus jail. Three of them faced possible death sen-
tences on a charce of “insurrection.”
Persistent Legal Defense Fund action, including an
_.appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, led to their release
and dismissal of the insurrection charge last October.
But Mr. Allen was convicted on the assault charge in
December and sentenced to two years imprisonment.
(more)
NAACP Legal Defense Fund -4- July 11, 1964
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE FUND
SUES N.CAROLINA HOSPITAL
High Point Hospital Not Directly Covered by ‘Rights Act
GREENSBORO, N.C.--Segregation at High Point Memorial Hospital
was attacked by NAACP Legal Defense Fund attorneys in U.S.
District Court here this week.
The recently passed civil rights act does not directly
prohibit hospital bias.
Donald Lindsay, wno suffers from arthritis and Mrs.
Bessie L, Haltom, who has a heart condition, seek treatment
at High Point Memorial. Both are protesting the discimina-
tory practices of that institution.
Legal Defense Fund attorneys say both patients, each
a resident of High Point, "would be segregated solely be-
cause of race and would be assigned a bed on a floor in the
west wing of the hospital which is reserved for Negro ;a-
tients only."
High Point Memorial is the only hospital in High
Point, N.C.
In addition, High Point residents B. Elton Cox,
Thomas Fuller and Charles S. Addision would seek comprehen-
sive physical examinations at High Point Memorial but have
not done so because of discimination, the attorneys say.
The Legal Defense Fund complaint points out that
High Point Memorial maintains "a number of policies and
practices of racial segregation and discrimination." These
include:
*Segregated delivery rooms for white and Negro
patients;
*Segregated newborn nursery facilities;
*Segregated room and ward facilities. (All Negro
patients, with the exception of pediatric patients,
are placed on one floor in the west wing.);
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NAACP Legal Defense Fund -5- July 11, 1964
*Segregated eating facilities are maintained for
Negro nurses and other Negro personnel.
The complaint also states that “igh Point Memorial
has received approximately $1,099,019 from the United States
in recent years for various expansions, under provisions
of the Hill-Burton act,
The U.S, Supreme Court swept away legal foundations
for jim crow practices in 2,000 hospitals and medical facil-
ities in eleven southern states last March.
North Carolina was one of the states covered.
The Hill-Burton act was passed by Congress in 1946
so that federal funds could be used by states for building
Medical facilities and hospitals.
NAACP Legal Defense Fund attorneys handling the case
include Robert R. Bond, Wilminton; Conrad 0. Pearson,
Durham; J, LeVonne Chambers, Charlotte; and Jack Greenberg
and Michael Meltsner of New York City.
NATION'S FIRST LEGAL
INTERN "GRADUATES"
Enters Law Profession in South
NEW YORK, N.Y.--After a year of wide ranging study and prac-
tice of constitutional law, Julius LeVonne Chambers, one of
the nation's first legal interns, left New York City this
week to enter the second phase of his career.
Mr, Chambers has opened an office in North Carolina
and will continue to participate in civil rights cases.
A native of Mt. Gilead, N.C., Mr. Chambers studied
and practiced law for one year at the New York City head-
quarters of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
He was the first Negro law school graduate to parti-
cipate in such an educational program, which is compcrabie
to that of the medical profession.
(more)
NAACP Legal Defense Fund -6- “July 11, 1964
The Fund's legal internship program was established
last year through a grant from the Field Foundation. It
seeks to combat the crucial shortage of civil rights lawyers
in the south.
Young Chamiers, during his year in New York City
worked under supervision of Legal Defense Fund attorneys and
assisted in research, preparation of briefs and, in some
cases, litigation.
Jack Greenberg, director-counsel of 2 Legal Defense
Fund, warmly praised Mr. Chambers’ work as a legal intezn
and preclicted an advance in the lecal representation of
Negroes as Mr. Chambers and other legal interns. begin to
practice in the south,
Mr, Chambers attended North Carolina College in Durhaa,
where he served as president of the student body. Mr.
Chambers also won honors in history and social studies and
went on to become a member of the collegiate Who's Who.
In addition, he holds the following honors: Graduate,
Summa Cum Laude, North Carolina College; LLB, high hunors,
University of North Carolina School of Law; Woodrow 'ilson
Fellow, University of Michigan; John Hay Whitney Fellow,
University of North Carolina.
He came to national attention when he became the
first of his race to become Editor-in-Chief of the North
Carolina Law Review and to graduate first in his law class.
= While attending the University of North Caroli he
was elected to the honorary legal fraternity, the campus-
wide honorary society and several other student honor groups.
Mr. Chambers, 28, who is married to the former
“Vivian Verdell Giles of Kannapolis, N.C., has also completed
work on his Master of Laws degree at Columbia University,
- New York City, where he served as a law instructor.
ij 30 as