Woman who desegregated Greensboro High relives ordeal By DAMON FORD nBCMPIIXE '? GREENSBORO - Septem ber 4,1937 was a day Josephine Boyd Bradley will never forget. It was one day after five black children in Greensboro ? enrolled at the all-white Gille spie Park Elementary and Bradley began her own histori cal journey by becoming the : first black to attend then all white Greensboro Senior High School (now Grimsley High School). Schools across the nation had become battlegrounds. Just one week earlier nine black students in Little Rock, Ark. were escorted into segre gated Central High School by federal troops while hundreds of protesters surrounded them, shouting racial obscenities. Bradley didn't get any spe cial escorts from Washington, D.C. Bradley's only prptector was her mother, Cora Boyd. Though she never garnered the amount of media attention that accompanied her Little Rock counterparts, she knew she was as significant. "I remember that first day people were lined up," Bradley said. "(White people) made some noise about it (saying) 'Nigger, go home,'-that kind of thing. The thing I remember most was this lady with this German shepherd dog and 1 was kind of expecting this dog to pounce on me because I did n't know what to expect. "1 remember the assistant principal Mr. Glen met us at the door and he wasn't too pleased to see me, and he made that very clear that he wasn't. I went to my homeroom and signed up for my classes and I think that was about the extent of it the first day." Though the historic Brown decision struck down segregat ed schools in 19S4, the ruling could not protect her from the problems she would face. "One of the teachers had told the students to throw eggs," she said. "Whenever I would go out one building to the next they would drop eggs on me." The next day was no better. "When 1 went into the cafe teria 1 ended up with all this ketchup and stuff all over my clothes." Students in her classed would leave ink and thumb . - 75 cents WlNSTON-SALEM GSEENSIORO HlGH POINT Vol. XXV No. 15 The Chronicle The Choice for African American News and Information e-moil address: wschronOnetunlimited.net Money needed for at-risk students 4 4 Study urges additional funding for neediest schools krj KEVIN WALKER v frffi CHRONICLE , ? 4 ? ? >1 A non-profit group has added its voice to a growing chorus of local i$ople calling for a change in the way public money is distributed to Schools. *?" The Public School Forum of North Carolina released a study last Week urging state officials to adopt a system of funding that would pro vide extra money for school systems with a high number of at-risk stu ttehts. v The yearlong study concludes that without the extra funding, thou sands of at-risk students will be vulnerable when a new statewide testing system is implemented in 2001. > Under the new system, students who fail to pass year-end tests in the third, fifth, eighth and 12th grades, will be denied promotion to the next grade level. . "The question is whether North Carolina's schools will have programs in place that will give young people a better chance to succeed before the new standards gomtoeffsct^sMjfrha Piiiasii, my urive dirscSorofdhB^r Forum. Dornan says currently school system across the state are, by far, not SeeManmyon A5 A&T tops BE list Greensboro university and JCSU tops in educating blacks By LATOYA HAN KINS CONSOLIDATED MEDIA GROUP When it comes to educating African Americans, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University is better than Harvard or Yale, according to a national magazine. 'i-Jn the January edition of Black Enterprise, the Greensboro school r Pennsylvania, and public schools UNC Chapel Hill and UCLA as one