worriors don't cry

By farzana
  • Period: to

    malba

  • faubus goes to court

    september 6,1957 faubus goes to court the governor of arkansasaa files a case in court to appeal for the suspension of integertation in arkanas schools. little rock nine does not get to go to centeral HS yet.
  • faubus is defeated

    little rock center high school is dirtcted by the court to proceed with intergration . the police are directly to keep peace. faubus is afried that people may get hurt.
  • 101st airborne troop arrive in little rock

    1200 solders paratroopers from the national army came to little rock to make sure that intergration proceeds . malbas parents are visited by the president messengets to encourge them to send malba school.
  • first day inside center high school

    melba and the rest of the LR9 met up at assembly and theywere escourted tonthe building by the solders when they got inside , they were assigned a bodyguard each. they went to all their classes.
  • dynatmite

    someone threw a lit stik of dynamite into the stair well where melba and danny were . melba also attended a pep relly on this day to prevent her from entering the girls bathroom.
  • acid in the face

    a boy run up to malba with small bottle and ssprey liquid over her face. it turned out to be acid . danny ran over to her and put her face over running water to wash it away. he saved her from blindness.
  • 1/1 of 101 st airborne go home

    half of the solders of the 101 st airborne left little rock.
  • all of the solders go home

    after thanksgiving , all of the solders leave and the lr9 lose their body gourd . natoion guard keeps the peace.
  • school intergate immediately

    when malba want to the school she goes to the white people school. so the security tell her you are not accpet in the school. because she was black. but the school only for the white student. 28 oct 1956 sucz cacal conflect egypt claims ownersgip.
  • melba patillo: worriors don't cry

    Beals, a journalist, says that only in 1994, nearly forty years later, can she write her story without bitterness. Reared in a middle-class, church-going family that valued education, Melba Pattillo loved Elvis, Johnny Mathis, clothes, and the Hit Parade. She volunteered to test the Supreme Court integration ruling, not out of political conviction, but on a rebellious teenager’s whim. Along with her eight companions, she lost her adolescent innocence when she was threatened with lynching,