Dare to Object
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In the fall of 1957, two girls in their sophomore year at Little Rock Central High School in Little Rock, Ark., passed notes to each other across the aisle of their classroom. Gloria's note read, "Becky, I see you in the hallway, but I don't know if you want me to say hello or not." Becky's response expressed more than a case of new-school-year nervousness. "Gloria, I see you, too, but please, don't say hello to me," the note read. "The white citizens' council has spies everywhere and I don't want to put my family in danger."
Although it had been more than three years since the United States Supreme Court ruled on the unconstitutionality of racial segregation in public schools with the Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka decision of May 17, 1954, Arkansas Governor Orval E. Faubus resisted the ruling, which was to begin at the high-school level in the Little Rock School District (LRSD). On September 23, 1957, nine African-American students, including 14-year-old Gloria Ray, now Gloria Ray Karlmark (CHEM, MATH '65), decided to rightfully claim what the Supreme Court said was theirs. Against a crowd of some 1,000 protestors, they entered the all-white high school and into the chronicles of history.
Turmoil-filled Years
Karlmark never expected the ugly reception she and the other "Little Rock Nine" experienced that day, or that by a direct order from Governor Faubus, the Arkansas National Guard would bar them from entering school on the first day of class, September 2, 1957. According to Karlmark, Arkansas of the 1950s was generally considered to be more progressive than other states, such as Alabama and Mississippi, and had already lifted its ban on such laws as those that relegated African Americans to the rear of buses.
"We lived in neighborhoods that were integrated; I had white neighbors," explains Karlmark, who visited Main Campus of Illinois Institute of Technology in May to receive the IIT Alumni Medal. "I grew up with white kids and they grew up with me. We went to different schools, but we played together. No one expected what happened because people knew one another." African-American students in Little Rock attended Dunbar High School, which had a good academic reputation but had fewer course selections and classrooms than Little Rock Central, and lacked an athletics practice field.
Shortly after the Supreme Court decision was made, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People went before the LRSD to begin integration. Karlmark's historic walk was delayed for two years as various strategies were initiated to prevent integration from happening. The LRSD immediately adopted the Blossom Plan, which called for gradual integration—to begin in high schools in 1957 and to be followed by grade schools in subsequent years. In early 1957, the Arkansas State Legislature continued to block integration by approving four 'segregation bills' and instituting a 3 percent sales tax on the election ballot to ensure that funds would be available to continue its efforts. Citizens groups, such as the Mother's League of Central High School and the Capital Citizens Council, joined in the protest by placing anti-integration advertisements in newspapers and holding rallies. One month before school was scheduled to open, the governor of Georgia gave his support to Faubus, going so far as to commend those who supported a concept known as "state's rights," that is, the right of a state to oppose the federal government.
After Karlmark and her classmates were denied entrance to Little Rock Central on September 2, federal judge Ronald Davies ordered integration to begin two days later. Again, on September 4 the way was blocked for African-American students. As increased chaos ensued, Davies began legal proceedings against Faubus and several guardsman for interfering with integration. The rioting that occurred once the Little Rock Nine finally entered the school on September 23 was so intense that President Dwight D. Eisenhower ordered in units from the United States Army's 101st Airborne Division to help restore calm. Troops remained on campus for nearly one month to escort the nine throughout their school day.
Once the troops left, the problems returned and remained with the Little Rock Nine until the end of the academic year. Only one student in the group graduated from Little Rock Central before the school was officially closed for 1958-59 after Faubus signed into law a bill that allowed him to shut down a district school that was facing integration, pending a public vote.
Because of the many traumatic experiences Karlmark endured at Little Rock Central, it was well into adulthood before she could speak openly about her time at the school. "During that year, the nine of us didn't share with each other our problems," she says, noting that each of them was assigned to separate classrooms, only getting together for lunch. "At the end of the day we'd say, 'It was okay' or 'I managed.' We were trying to keep up our morale and not say anything that was going to make somebody decide not to come back," explains Karlmark. "We didn't want to worry our parents so we just kept it in."
The nine suffered physical and mental abuse, as did those who associated with them. Karlmark recalls the kindness of Becky, who passed notes with her so many years ago. She shares what Becky meant in presentations she gives about bullying and the 'silent majority' to grade school children in Sweden, where she has lived for more than 40 years with her husband, Krister (M.S. DESG '69), a former IIT Institute of Design faculty member.
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