Even with having to give up most of their other friendships, they continued to go to Central High and became closer to each other. To add on, Melba mentions when her and the other Little Rock Nine came back from their trip receiving awards from the North and how they were treated, “We had come back home, to Little Rock, back to being called ‘niggers’ by the segregationists and those ‘meddling children’ by our own people” (Beals 218). Being called all of the names that the Little Rock Nine were being called would make most people think that they should stop trying to fix the problem, but even if Melba thought about it, she stayed the entire school year no matter how many names she was called, which wasn’t even the worst of it. In a biography from the National Women’s History Museum, “Rosa Parks,” by Arlisha Norwood, writes about how Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama in 1955. She started the Montgomery bus boycott to no longer segregate public transportation. She was arrested after refusing to give up her seat and also lost her job