Curry v. Dallas NAACP Reply Brief for the Petitioners, Donald E. Curry et al
Public Court Documents
October 1, 1979
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Curry v. Dallas NAACP Reply Brief for the Petitioners, Donald E. Curry et al, 1979. 4972b9cd-ae9a-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/d9128a0a-1c11-4541-a3ac-32adc336b778/curry-v-dallas-naacp-reply-brief-for-the-petitioners-donald-e-curry-et-al. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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Mullinax, Wells, Baab, Cloutman & Chapman, P.C.
A T T O R N E Y S A T L A W
8 2 0 4 ELH B R O O K D R 1 V E /S U IT E 2 0 0 / P .O . BO X 4 7 9 7 2 /D A L L A S , T E X A S 7 5 2 4 7
PHONE (AC 214) 0 3 0 - 3 6 7 2 / IN FT. WORTH CALL 263-1547
October 24, 1979
EDWARD B. CLOUTMAN, III
Mr. James M. Nabrit, III
c/o Sonesta Beach Hotel
350 Ocean Drive
Key Biscayne, Florida 33149
Re: Tasby v. Estes
Dear Jim;
Enclosed is a copy of the Reply Brief for Petitioners
Curry, et al.
Sincerely,
MULLINAX, WELLS.BAAB,
CLOUTMAN & CHAeA>I , P.C.
By______________ __________Edward B.Cloutman,III
:bg
Special Delivery
In the
Supreme Court of the United States
OCTOBER TERM, 1978
No, 78-282
D onald E. Cubby, Et A l.,
Petitioners,v.
D allas N.A.A.C.P., Et Al .,
and
Nolan E stes, Et Al.,
Respondents.
No. 78-253
Nolan Estes, Et Al.,
Petitioners,
v.
D allas N.A.A.C.P., Et Al .,
Respondents.
No. 78-283
R alph F. Bbinegab, Et A l.,
Petitioners,
v.
D allas N.A.A.C.P., Et A l .,
Respondents.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
REPLY BRIEF FOR THE PETITIONERS,
DONALD E. CURRY, ET AL
R obebt L. Blumenthal
R obebt H. M ow , J b.
3000 One Main Place
Dallas, Texas 75250
Attorneys for Petitioners
Donald E. Curry, et al
SUBJECT INDEX
Page
Argument ................................................................................ 1
Conclusion ................................................................................ 15
Proof of Service ...................................................................... 17
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
Cases
Columbus Board of Education v. Penick,
47 Law Week 4924 (July 2, 1979) ......................... 2, 3, 4
Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman,
433 U.S. 406 (1977) ........................................................... 4
Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman,
47 Law Week 4944 (July 2, 1979) .......................... 2, 3, 4
In the
Supreme Court of the United States
OCTOBER TERM, 1978
No. 78-282
D onald E. Cubby, E t Al.,
v.
Petitioners,
D allas N.A.A.C.P., Et Al .,
and
Nolan Estes, Et Al .,
Respondents.
No. 78-253
N olan E stes, Et Al.,
v.
Petitioners,
D allas N .A.A.C.P., Et Al.,
Respondents.
No. 78-283
R alph F. Beinegae, Et Al.,
v.
Petitioners,
D allas N.A.A.C.P., Et Al .,
Respondents.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
REPLY BRIEF FOR THE PETITIONERS,
DONALD E, CURRY, ET AL
2
TO THE HONORABLE COURT:
Since the filing of Curry et al’s initial brief, this Court
has decided Columbus Board of Education v. Penick, 47 Law
Week 4924 (July 2, 1979) herein “Columbus” ) and Dayton
Board of Education v. Brinkman, 47 Law Week 4944 (July
2, 1979) (herein “ Dayton II” ) . This Reply Brief is required
to respond to that new authority to certain unfair charac
terizations of Curry’ initial brief, and to recent changes in
the Dallas Independent School District.
Curry et al, Petitioners, fervently pray that this Court will
understand the following about their position. They are not
opposed to integrated schools and their position in this Court
does not arise out of any such opposition. Indeed, they are
here because they favor integrated schools and feel that
their position is the only method of ultimately achieving
integration in the public schools of the central cities of
America, a result which they devoutly desire. Secondly, Cur
ry feels that the very survival of public education in the cen
tral cities of the United States and ultimately the very
survival of the central cities of the United States is at
stake in this proceeding. Lastly, these petitioners wish to
point out that although their children are being asked to
bear the brunt of whatever remedy is imposed by the United
States Courts, neither they nor their children have any
nexus to a school board that existed in 1954 from which their
children are two school generations removed, nor do they
have any nexus to the School Board or the Federal Courts
as they existed in 1965 from which their children are a full
school generation removed. Even more pointedly, Curry has
no nexus at all to the Honorable T. Whitfield Davidson,
United States District Judge, who, Plaintiffs-Respondents
accurately point out in their brief did the student assign
ment in DISD until 1965, when the Fifth Circuit adopted
3
its racially neutral student assignment policy which was
being followed until 1971.
Petitioners are as aware as this Court of the long ugly
history of school boards trying to retain segregated schools
and fighting integration in every conceivable way. Obviously
that long history colors the thinking of this Court, as it has
colored the thinking of every Court. However, the year is
1979, not 1960, and obviously since 1965 intelligent, well-
intentioned United States Courts have attempted to achieve
racial balance in the Dallas Independent School District.
The results of those attempts for the last 14 years by the
United States Courts are before the Court in this proceeding.
The latest decision, by the Fifth Circuit, calls, for additional
action by the District Court.
Turning to the facts in Columbus and Dayton II, the
Dallas Independent School District has had a majority to
minority transfer program since 1971. The Dallas Inde
pendent School District since the enforcement of a strict
racially neutral school zone policy by the Fifth Circuit in
1965 has not had any optional transfers. Children were re
quired to go to the district in which they resided until 1971
with the adoption of the majority to minority transfers ap
proved by the Court. Since 1971 no school could be built
in the Dallas Independent School District without the ap
proval of the United States District Court. Complete faculty
desegregation of the Dallas Independent School District
occurred in 1971 and has remained constantly true since
then. The only direct cognitive purposeful act of desegrega
tion by the School District cited by the District Court in
this proceeding, upon which all remedies are based, was
its failure to adopt some of the remedial programs suggested
by the Courts from 1965 to 1971. All of these remedial pro
4
grams were voluntarily adopted before trial in the original
proceeding in this cause in 1971.
Being aware of all the distinctions set out in the para
graph above which could properly distinguish the Dallas
Independent School District, the Dallas Independent School
District was pursuant to State law, a segregated school dis
trict in 1954. As Plaintiff-Respondent Tasby et al in its
brief before this Court points out, from 1956 to 1965 the
Honorable T. Whitfield Davidson, United States District
Judge, entered a series of conflicting orders ultimately re
sulting in the stair-step plan which was struck down in 1965
with the implementation of a racially neutral system by the
Fifth Circuit.
As we read the most recent teachings of this Court in
Columbus and Dayton II, a school district which was once
a State-enforced, segregated district is not entitled to main
tain a racially neutral student assignment policy based upon
a neighborhood school concept. Petitioner would fervently
hope that the distinctions set forth in the preceding para
graph distinguishes Columbus from the Dallas Independent
School District, and will cause this Court to reverse the
Fifth Circuit as set forth in our original brief, based on
Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman, 433 U.S. 406
(1977) (Dayton I ). However, for purposes of this brief the
assumption is that Columbus stands for the proposition that
racially neutral neighborhood schools may no longer be a
student assignment policy by school districts in cities which
in 1954 were mandatorily segregated by State law, and the
Districts and Courts are required to achieve racial balance.
It is to this proposition that the remainder of this brief is
addressed, in hopes that this Court will recognize its error.
Without questioning the good intentions of the Court in
trying to achieve a desirable result, Petitioners would show
5
from the record in this case, that mandatory student re
assignment and busing do not desegregate, but in fact re
segregate and destroy the ability to achieve an integrated
school district. The Dallas Independent School District has
been used as a model of community support for a desegrega
tion plan. The following is the result and facts of this1
District.
In October of 1970, the last October prior to the first
busing order, there were 95,012 Anglo students in the Dallas
Independent School District, That number of Anglo students
had been increasing each year until 1970 when it was down
2% from October of 1969. (Def. Ex. 13) The elementary
enrollment, however, was slightly up for Anglo students
between 1969 and 1970. (Webster, Vol. VIII, p. 169) As
of November 14, 1978, there were 45,141 Anglo students
in the Dallas Independent School District, a loss of 49,871
students, or 52.49% of the Anglo students in the DISD at
the last census before the court order of busing began. (All
numbers for 1978 are from the official reports of the Dallas
Independent School District required to be filed with the
District Court and by motion added as a supplement to
the record.) Since the new wave of busing ordered in the
summer of 1976, the District lost an additional 12,285 Anglo
students, or 21.39% of the remaining Anglo student body
in three short years. Newspaper reports of this year’s enroll
ment indicate that the decline in Anglo population is con
tinuing. As of October 1979 there were 41,893 Anglo students,
a decline in one year of 3,248 students or 7.2%.
The numbers are even more dramatic when those grades
subject to mandatory student reassignment are examined.
For example, in the northwest subdistrict grades 4 through
6 there was a decline of 47.56% of the Anglo student popula
tion from 3,592 to 1,883 in the three short years between
6
the scholastic population census used by the court in its
order of 1976 and the scholastic population census as of
November 14, 1978.1 In the middle schools in the northwest
subdistrict which were also reassigned by the district court,
49% of the Anglo students have disappeared during that
period; the Court’s order indicates 2,624 Anglo students
should be in middle schools (grades 7 and 8), in fact only
1,339 were there as of November 14, 1978. In contrast, in
the senior high schools (without student reassignment) in
the northwest subdistrict, there was only a loss of 24.9% of
the Anglo students. Obviously the lack of court ordered
student assignment created a dramatic difference between
grades 7 and 8 which lost 49% of the Anglo population on
court ordered reassignment, and grades 9 to 12 a loss of
24.9% without court ordered student assignment. The num
bers remain consistent in the other subdistricts of the Dallas
Independent School District. In the northeast subdistrict
grades 4 through 6 lost 1346 Anglo students, or 38.3% of
the court’s projected number. The middle schools, grades
7 through 8, with court ordered assignment, the district
lost 1521 Anglo students, or 35% of the 2,334 estimated to
be in the middle school. However, in senior high school,
grades 9 through 12, where there was no court ordered
student assignment, the loss was only 1,072 Anglo or 17.4%
of the projected total of 6,168. Again about half the rate of
loss compared to the court ordered student assignment plan.
Since children do not start at the high school level, and
since high school children have siblings, it is by no means
contended that the high school loss is not caused by the
Court’s orders, but clearly the loss is less,
Even more dramatic were the losses of those students
proposed to be transported in connection with the plans.
1 All declines are measured from projections in the District
Court’s opinion and appendices.
7
In the northwest subdistrict of 2,835 Anglo students to be
transported under the Court’s plan, only 1107 remain, a
loss of 1,728 students, or 61% of those Anglo students who
were supposed to be on busses. In the northeast subdistrict,
49% or 691 out of 1412 Anglo students disappeared who
were supposed to be transported pursuant to the court’s
plan. In the southeast subdistrict (the only other subdistrict
in which there was student transportation), the loss was
45% of the Anglo students.
The loss, however, is not limited to Anglos. 20% of the
black students scheduled to be transported in all subdistricts
are gone, and 12% of the Mexican-American students sched
uled to be transported have disappeared.
Set out below is a table showing the student population
of the high schools in the Dallas Independent School Dis
trict by race as of November 14, 1978. These student bodies
are in neighborhood school districts except for such changes
as majority-minority transfers and magnet schools may
occasion.
HIGH SCHOOLS
School______________Anglo_________ Black_________M-A______ Total
No. % No. % No. %
Northwest District
Hillcrest Complex... 1298 78.62 297 17.99 31 1.88 1651
Thomas Jefferson 967 58.32 403 24.31 262 15.80 1658
North Dallas........... 154 12.32 382 30.56 695 55.60 1250
Pinkston 17 .94 1493 82.35 290 16.00 1813
W. T. White........... 2215 90.22 109 4.44 92 3.75 2455
Metro North........... 50 26.46 125 66.14 14 7.41 189
Metro West............. 153 43.59 154 43.87 5 1.42 351
Transportation
Magnet................ 73 26.55 158 57.45 43 15.64 275
Northeast District
Bryan Adams 2598 85.97 157 5.20 209 6.92 3022
James Madison...... 6 .44 1336 98.60 11 .81 1355
Skyline Center 1832 51.74 1407 39.73 254 7.17 3541
Woodrow Wilson 660 46.91 305 21.68 425 30.21 1407
Health Professions 111 21.76 346 67.84 41 8.04 510
8
HIGH SCHOOLS — (Continued)
School______________Anglo _____ Black M-A Total
Southwest District
Adamson
No.
254
%
19.63
No.
579
%
44.74
No.
437
%
33.77 1294
David W. Carter 253 14.24 1447 81.43 73 4.11 1777
Kimball 1243 54.47 739 32.38 274 12.01 2282
Sunset 896 47.76 154 8.21 790 42.11 1876
Southeast District
Lincoln.................... 1 .09 1092 99.91 0 0 1093
Samuel 1403 74.79 344 18.34 120 6.40 1876
Grady Spruce 1203 54.46 725 32.82 274 12.40 2209
East Oak Cliff
Roosevelt 5 .22 2278 99.35 10 .44 2293
South Oak-Cliff 7 .21 3390 99.50 10 .29 3407
Petitioner Curry, et al is unable to discern from a review
of the high school population census what prevents these
neighborhood schools with minority-majority transfer from
being unitary schools. In assessing these schools it should
be noted that all but three (Lincoln, Roosevelt and Pink
ston) of the non-magnet schools began as all white schools.
However, one thing is clear. Those schools in which the
court has attempted to achieve racial balance, with only one
exception, are minority isolated schools as defined by the
Equal Educational Opportunity Act, 20 U.S.C. 1701, et seq.
In the NAACP brief on p. 14, there are projected percent
ages which show eight middle schools of 50% less minority
enrollment and one of more. In fact, there is only one middle
school where minorities are not in a majority and in ten out
of sixteen the schools are more than 60% minority.
The actions of the United States courts have already pre
vented meaningful integration in the Dallas Independent
School District in those areas where it has adopted a man
9
datory student assignment plan. Additional student assign,-
meat plans as demanded by the Fifth Circuit create an
overwhelming inability by the School District to achieve
anything like a racially integrated school.
Dallas is a sunbelt city enjoying an economic boom. Its
unemployment rate is one of the lowest in the nation. As
a central city, it is not a decaying, rotting, blighted area,
but a vibrant, booming area. But ultimately a city cannot
survive without children and without the amenity of a
public school system. There are 32 public independent school
districts ringing the Dallas Independent School District,
including one residing wholly within it. Not one of those
districts other than Dallas suffer from the indignities of
court ordered student assignment. In 32 other school dis
tricts the traditional advertisement for a home “ convenient
to churches and schools” is a reality. The courts and the
district may assign students to schools, but the decision
of accepting that assignment is going to lie with parents.
Dallas has been held out as a model to the nation of a city
united to make the court ordered desegregation plan work.
There were no pickets, no bombings, no rallies, no negatives.
The problem was there were also no middle class students.
These are not numbers that come from some sociologist’s
projections, these are actual numbers in the Dallas Inde
pendent School District. However, testimony put in evidence
in this case indicates there is nothing unique about Dallas.
In every school district meeting Dallas’ criteria, a substantial
minority population and suburban school districts surround
ing the central city, the loss of Anglo students has been such
that meaningful integration cannot exist. (See Curry Ex. 6,
Appendix p. 260 et seq.)
Not only has the Anglo population declined in such a way
as to prevent the meaningful integration of schools, but
10
the Anglo decline has really been a middle class or upper
class decline. The testimony of Dr. William Webster, head
of the Department of Research and Evaluation for the
Dallas Independent School District, was the loss of Anglo
students is really a loss of middle class and upper middle
class student population in the Dallas Independent School
District (Vol. VIII, page 192). It was his opinion that in
addition to the Anglo loss we were also experiencing a loss
of black middle class in the Dallas Independent School Dis
trict. (Id.) After noting that study performance appeared
to be the arena of debate on desegregation plans Dr. Webster
testified “This approach is tantamount to fiddling while
Rome bums. If a desegregation policy has as its principal
observable effect, the resegregation of the public schools,
whether or not a given group of students would have benefit
from that policy is academic. Methods must be found to
provide meaningful integrated experiences for school children
while not upsetting the majority population to the point
that population redistribution occurs. Only then can the
effect of induced desegregation be meaningfully discussed
and examined.” (Vol. VIII, pp. 171-172).
Even Plaintiff witness Dr. Robert Crain’s testimony was
to the same resegregation result. Vol. VIII, p. 497-498.
“What I said was if the school is designated predominantly
black, then the desegregation plan is liable to be in trouble
because a lot of white students aren’t going to go. A lot
of white students don’t show up, so that’s the problem.”
This Court, if it chooses, can command the Dallas Inde
pendent School District to achieve racial balance in its
schools. We suppose that if racial balance constitutes 5%
of the Anglo students in each school in the district, and
each school 95% minority, it can be achieved, because there
are certain Anglo students who cannot escape the mandates
11
of the Court or the school system. But that is not what
this Court is attempting to achieve nor is it what the
Dallas Independent School District desires, nor is it what
Curry believes is the best interest of any children. To order
the District Court to achieve racial balance is like ordering
the District Court and the Dallas Independent School Dis
trict to cause the sea to retreat or the sun to stand still.
The Court can command, but ultimately the people will
decide.
Not only do the figures in every central city in the United
States overwhelmingly show the failure of court ordered
student reassignment to desegregate the systems and not
only do such statistics show the overwhelming resegregation
of the schools of the central cities, but the issue of to what
purpose stares as a stark question in the eyes of any honest
examiner. From the plaintiffs own brief in this Court comes
the startling findings of plaintiffs’ own witnesses that “Of
twelve studies of desegregation at the junior high school
and high school levels five show negative effects” .... page 86,
footnote 42. “ .... only 9 of the 21 cases of desegregation in
grades 3 or 4 showed positive results” .... page 86, footnote
42. The fact is that testimony by Armor, Coleman, Estes,
Glaser, Felice and Webster, and the testimony by each of
the educators and experts studying the issue such as Nancy
St. John, overwhelmingly indicate that no positive results
flow.
Plaintiff’s witness, Dr. Robert Crain, testified at Vol. VIII,
p. 447:
“ No, I think the best single compendium is a book done
by Nancy St. John called School Desegregation —
Outcomes for Children . . .”
and at p. 502 of Vol. VIII:
12
“ However, I should point out that Nancy St. John
who did this review of the work looks at the same set
of data and concludes that there is no evidence here
that black students benefitted from desegregation. And
its likely — she goes further and she finds in one chap
ter saying on the basis of her review of the evidence
she would be opposed to massive busing and large scale
busing, I think that’s her words, because there is no
evidence that the students benefit.”
Dr. Webster testified as a result of studies conducted in
the Dallas schools that:
(Vol. VIII, p. 179, 1. 13-15)
“A. . . . Nonbused black students had more positive
attitudes towards school than did bused black students.
“Q. All right. With respect to whether the black stu
dents attended a bused from rather than a bused to
school, what was the result of your study?
“A. Black students attending bused from schools were
more positive in attitudes than were black students
that attended bused to schools.”
(Vol. VIII, p. 180, 1. 7-12)
“A. Black students in mostly white classes had a nega
tive attitude towards school while those in mostly black
classes had a positive attitude. Similarly, white stu
dents in mostly black classes had a negative attitude
towards school while white students in mostly white
classes had a positive attitude.”
(Vol. VIII, p. 182, 1. 9-16)
“ Q. All right, now, putting it in simple laymen’s terms,
this would indicate that the students that remained in
the predominantly minority schools had a more posi
tive attitude towards white students than those that
were either in attendance at or were bused to what
had been more predominantly or majority white schools,
is that correct?
“A. It would suggest that, yes.”
13
(Vol. VIII, p. 182, 1. 20-25)
“A, White students in mostly white classes had posi
tive attitudes toward black students while white stu
dents in mostly black classes had a slightly negative
attitude toward black students. So there was a signifi
cant difference between the class composition relative
to attitudes toward black students among white
students.”
About Webster and his department, the testimony was
as follows:
(Vol. VIII, p. 197, 1. 15 to p. 198, 1. 19)
“Q. Has the Research and Evaluation Department of
the Dallas Independent School District received any
recognition?
“A. Yes, I think it is probably generally recognized
as the best Department of Research and Evaluation in
the country. It has had outside auditors come in to
audit the department on several different occasions, the
most noteworthy of which was Dan Stufflebeam, who
is one of the foremost evaluation therapists in the
country.
“THE COURT: Who is It?
“THE WITNESS: Dan Stuffllebeam who is one of the
foremost evaluation therapists in the country. He
was brought in as part of the Chase study last year
and basically concluded that it was the best Depart
ment of Research and Evaluation in the country. Do
you want me to read that quote into the record?
“Q. If you would like, you certainly may.
“A. In arriving — this is quoted from the report by
Dan Stufflebeam. ‘In arriving at an overall judgment
of the evaluation In research work done in the DISD
I compared what I saw in Dallas with what I observed
in my past studies of other evaluation and research
systems in school districts, in state education depart
14
ments, federal agencies, research and development
agencies and private companies. Based on these com
parisons I am convinced that the DISD Research and
Evaluation system is considerably stronger than any
other I have observed.’ ”
The testimony of Dr. John W. Letson, former Super
intendent of Schools of Atlanta, Georgia, testified about
the transportation of the Atlanta schools to virtually an
all black system. His testimony was that the loss of com
munity support was the most tragic loss of all in the
Atlanta school system (Vol. VIII, page 51). That loss of
community support ultimately results in a public school
system which cannot adequately function. The testimony
of Dr. O. Z. Stevens of the Memphis School District in
this proceeding about the difficulties of the school system
after its loss of white students as a result of mandatory
student assignment is as follows:
(Vol. VIII, p. 148, 1.13 to p. 149, 1.11)
“A. I think it’s, you know, from all of this, there has
been kind of a spinoff. I can remember five years ago
when the preparation of a budget and the presenta
tion of it to the City Council was sort of a formality.
There was always the political rhetoric of the Board
of Education has a little bit too much fat in its budget
and you pare it back and it’s a surface kind of concern.
Most of it rhetoric for political purposes. We never
had any difficulty. If we needed an eleven cent tax
increase we got an eleven cent tax increase. We used
to, 1970-’71, for example, our annual capital improve
ment budget would be between twelve and fifteen mil
lion dollars a year, that’s the bonds that we were
selling. Our Board of Education for the past three
months has been wrestling with all sorts of internal
strife over the approval of a three million dollars bond
issue which even if the Board approves and finally gets
15
reconciled has about as much chance of being approved
by the City Council as if it were eleven. You know,
it’s the attitude throughout Memphis as it relates to
the public school system. Not one more penny for the
public school system. It was reflected in a referendum
for this past summer for a quarter cent increase in the
sales tax for education, you know, it lost ten to one.”
Obviously this Court is familiar with the further mani
festations of school districts that cannot raise funds. The
failure to raise adequate revenue is followed by teacher
strikes, followed by the ultimate abandonment of any at
tempt at quality education. The final losers in all of this
are the minorities which this Court is attempting to help.
CONCLUSION
In reading the briefs filed herein by the Plaintiffs and the
NAACP and the Justice Department, and in reading many
of the past opinions of the Circuit Courts and indeed this
Court, one is struck by the continual reference to long
ago events by long departed school boards. Perhaps inap
propriately in such a solemn brief Curry is reminded
of the opening lines of Edgar Allen Poe’s short story, “A
Cask of Amontillado” :
“A thousand injuries of Fortunate I have borne as I best
could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed
revenge.”
The Court will recall Fortunato’s final words, chained in
the wine cellar, as the last brick was placed in its position
entombing him, “ For the love of God, Montresor.” The
United States Supreme Court seems to say that the five
words “Equal Protection of the Law” require that white
children, because of their race, be transported to remote
sections of the school district to attend schools to achieve
16
racial balance, and that black children, because of their
race, be transported to remote sections of the school dis
trict to achieve racial balance. Constitutional amendment
to change this tortured interpretation of those words, if
not impossible, is extraordinarily difficult. One can only
cry out in defense of the school systems in the central
cities of America, “ Mercy.”
Respectfully submitted,
R obert L. Blumenthal
R obert H. M ow, Jr.
3000 One Main Place
Dallas, Texas 75250
Counsel for Petitioners
Donald E. Curry, et al
Dated:
17
PROOF OF SERVICE.
We, Robert L. Blumenthal and Robert H. Mow, Jr., at
torneys for Petitioners Curry et al. herein, and members
of the Bar of the Supreme Court of the United States,
hereby certify that on the day of October 1979, we
served three copies of the foregoing Brief upon the following
Counsel for Respondents, Counsel for other Petitioners,
Counsel for Amicus Curiae, and the Respondent Pro Se:
Mr. Edward B. Cloutman, III
8204 Elmbrook Drive, Suite 200
P. O. Box 47972
Dallas, Texas 75247
Ms. Vilma S. Martinez
Mexican-American Legal Defense
and Educational Fund
28 Geary Street
San Francisco, California 94108
Mr. Nathaniel R. Jones
1790 Broadway, 10th Floor
New York, New York 10019
Mr. Thomas E. Ashton, III
Dallas Legal Services
Foundation, Inc.
912 Commerce Street, Room 202
Dallas, Texas 75202
Mr. E. Brice Cunningham
2606 Forest Avenue, Suite 202
Dallas, Texas 75215
Mr. James A. Donohoe
1700 Republic National Bank
Building
Dallas, Texas 75201
Mr. Lee Holt, City Attorney
New City Hall
Dallas, Texas 75201
18
Mr. John Bryant
8035 East R. L. Thornton
Dallas, Texas 75228
Mr. James G. Vetter, Jr.
2468 One Main Place
Dallas, Texas 75250
Mr. James T. Maxwell (pro se)
4440 Sigma Road, Suite 112
Dallas, Texas 75240
Mr. Martin Frost
777 South R. L. Thornton Freeway,
Suite 120
Dallas, Texas 75203
Mr. Warren Whitham
210 Adolphus Tower
Dallas, Texas 75202
Mr. Mark Martin
1200 One Main Place
Dallas, Texas 75250
Mr. H. Ron White
1907 Elm Street, Suite 2100
Dallas, Texas 75201
by mailing same to such Counsel and Respondent pro se
at their respective addresses and depositing the same in a
United States mail box in an envelope addressed to such
addresses with first class postage prepaid.
We further certify that all parties required to be served
have been served.
Robert L. Blumenthal
Robert H. Mow, Jr.
Attorneys for Petitioners,
Curry et al.
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