Warriors do not cry: to destroy memoirs of war to consolidate the small stone brown and the board of education theory: "In the field of education" separation, but equality "inherently inequality We do not have any places. Therefore, we believe that on the allegation of racial discrimination, people who were subject to equal protection of the law guaranteed by the 14th revision, plaintiffs and other similar acts were deprived.
Warriors should not cry this book, warriors should not cry, it is a sad but promising story, a brave young woman. At the age of 13, Melba Patillo Beals volunteered to integrate Central Highlands in Little Rock, Arkansas. On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that it was illegal to separate white and black schools under the control of Brown and Topeka Board of Education in Kansas State. Melba dreams of seeing the interior of the Chubu Highlands. The best education and imagination, you are in a dusty, fragrant training camp of ancient Sparta. The children are everywhere, beaten up and shouting. Are they crying? No Since the age of 7, these 9 year old children have been solidified, exercised, and trained. They are taught never to show fear, pain, or pain. "Please do not give them to me, but please let me have someone to kill in battle" (Spartan Anonymous). Many people do not know how correct this sentence is.
Melba Pattillo Beals's book "Warriors not cry" explains the reactions and emotions she and the other eight African-American teenagers receive in Little Rock. Arkansas abolished apartheid era in 1957. She talks about 9 students from the age of 16 and begins to write a diary until she is the last few days of Little Rock's Central High School. The story began with Melva talking about the anger, hatred, sadness she brought when she returned to Central High School for the first time and reunited with the other eight classmates. When she walked through old school halls and rooms, she remembered ... See more