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Brooklyn student Orayne Williams overcomes homelessness to graduate and gets a full ride to college

Ben Chapman New York Daily News 08/01/2010 16:35
Williams (r.) walks with retired teacher Jo Ann Sokoloff, who threw him an achievement party.

Williams (r.) walks with retired teacher Jo Ann Sokoloff, who threw him an achievement party.


Homeless high school grad Orayne Williams is getting the ride of his life - a full scholarship to a four-year college.



Abandoned by his family and living alone in a Brooklyn shelter, Williams, 18, excelled at school with a 91 average at Bedford Academy in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

The Daily News broke his story on June 15, and since then, he's received more than $15,000 in scholarship money from readers.

Now, Manhattanville College in Purchase, Westchester County, has offered Williams a slot and a promise to cover any expenses he can't pay.

"I was speechless," said Williams. "I didn't think it was going to happen, but it did."

Born into a poor family outside Kingston, Jamaica, Williams was sent to live in Florida alone at age 12. In 2007, he was reunited with his mother and half sister at a Brooklyn homeless shelter.

In November, his mother kicked him out, and city Education Department social worker Wayne Harris found him a spot at a shelter for young men in Williamsburg.

Williams still managed to do well, taking three Advanced Placement classes, earning an A average, and winning a spot at an upstate two-year community college on scholarship.


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