What happened in Little Rock? Does it have anything to do with which president of the United States?

Little Rock is the capital of Arkansas (and the hometown of former President Clinton). Since the 1940s, the US Supreme Court has tried a series of cases to confirm and protect the basic constitutional rights of African Americans. Among them, 1954 Brown v. Topeka Education Bureau is the most representative case. It declared the black-and-white apartheid system in public schools unconstitutional, opened the gap of the apartheid system in the southern United States, blew the horn of completely abolishing the apartheid system, and became a milestone in the black civil rights movement and the struggle to end the apartheid system. However, many states in the southern United States refused to implement the Supreme Court's decision, adhered to the so-called "principle of segregation and equality", and refused people of color to enter white schools. The most serious conflict occurred in Little Rock, the capital of Arkansas (Clinton's hometown). 1957 In the summer, the local education committee accepted the judgment of the federal district court to enforce the Brown case and allowed nine black students to enter Little Rock Central High School. On September 2, at the beginning of the fall semester, Forbes, the democratic governor of the state, used the National Guard to block the school and prohibit black students from entering school. After the court intervened, Olvall withdrew from the National Guard on the 20th, leaving some white thugs to make trouble. On 25th, President Eisenhower had to use the US Army Airborne Division 10 1 to "occupy" Little Rock, maintain order and temporarily directly control 10000 State National Guard. Under the protection of heavily armed American soldiers, nine black students were finally admitted to school. 1At the end of September, 1997, "Nine Warriors of Little Rock" reunited in "Central Middle School". Clinton, the 46th president of the United States, who served as the governor of Arkansas in the late 1980s, attended the gathering. He spoke highly of the fearless spirit of the Nine Warriors in breaking through racial barriers. Roger, a professor of history at George Mei Sen University, said that the Little Rock incident was an "important milestone" in the American struggle against racism.