none more dramatic, none more important than the one symbolized by this young woman, elizabeth eckford. her story would have been different, really, if her mother and father had had a phone. they were working people, and they had six kids to raise and they could not afford that sort of extravagance. so in september of 1957, on september 3rd of 1957, the eckfords didn't get the phone call telling her that elizabeth was supposed to meet with the nine other kids that were going to desegregate little rock central high the next morning, and that together the ten of them would be escorted to the school. so on the morning of that first day on september 4th of 1957, elizabeth got up early to make sure that she could get herself dressed in the clothes she carefully picked out for her first day. she made this skirt. she had breakfast with her family. when breakfast was over her mom called the kids together so they could call pray together the 27th psalms. she picked up the binder her mother got her and put on the sunglasses she hoped might hide how scared she was, and she took the bus to little