Gebhart/Belton Plaintiffs’ Attorneys
As
extracted from 347 US 483, May 17, 1954
Louis
L. Redding and Jack
Greenberg argued the cause for respondents in No. 10 [Gebhart/Belton] on the original argument and Jack Greenberg
and Thurgood Marshall
on the reargument.
On the briefs were Robert
L. Carter, Thurgood Marshall, Spottswood W. Robinson, III,
Louis L. Redding,
Jack Greenberg, George
E. C. Hayes, William
R. Ming, Jr., Constance
Baker Motley, James
M. Nabrit, Jr., Charles S. Scott, Frank D. Reeves,
Harold R. Boulware and Oliver W. Hill
for appellants in Nos. 1[Brown], 2 [Briggs]and
4[Davis] and respondents in No. 10 [Gebhart/Belton].
By special leave of Court, Assistant Attorney General Rankin argued the cause
for the United States on the reargument, as amicus
curiae, urging reversal in Nos. 1, 2 and 4 and affirmance
in No. 10 [Gebhart/Belton]. With him on the brief
were Attorney General Brownell, Philip Elman, Leon Ulman, William J. Lamont and M. Magdelena
Schoch. James P. McGranery,
then Attorney General, and Philip Elman
filed a brief for the United States on the original argument, as amicus curiae,
urging reversal in Nos. 1, 2 and 4 and affirmance in
No. 10 [Gebhart/Belton].
Briefs of amici curiae supporting appellants in No. 1
were filed by Shad Polier, Will Maslow
and Joseph B. Robison for the American Jewish Congress; by Edwin J. Lukas,
Arnold Forster, Arthur Garfield Hays, Frank E. Karelsen,
Leonard Haas, Saburo Kido and Theodore Leskes for the American Civil Liberties Union et al.; and by
John Ligtenberg and Selma M. Borchardt
for the American Federation of Teachers. Briefs of amici
curiae supporting appellants in No. 1 [Brown] and respondents in No. 10 [Gebhart/Belton] were filed by Arthur J. Goldberg and Thomas
E. Harris for the Congress of Industrial Organizations and by Phineas Indritz for the American
Veterans Committee, Inc.