HAWS from page A1 homeless. Current public housing residents in HAWS's People Achieving Their Highest (PATH) program - which strives to break public housing dependency by offering advancement through educational and employment programs - will get first dibs at the remaining units. City Council Member Derwin Montgomery, whose East Ward includes The Oaks and several other HAWS properties, is pleased that the new units won't be business as usual for Housing Authority. "I'm so happy that this housing authority has tried something different," he said. Pastor Serenus Churn, whose Mt. Zion Baptist Church is a short stroll away from The Oaks, said the residents of the area have long deserved the housing options that the units will offer. nc ucucvca uic work require ment will instill a sense of pride in the residents that will, over time, spread through the entire commu nity. "The con ep nt of work and its rewards will be an enhancement," he said. The Oaks is far from the first swank housing complex that HAWS has offered. About a decade ago. the agency received tens of millions of federal HOPE VI dollars to trans form the old tenement style units at Happy Hill Gardens and Kirpberly Avenue Homes. The well of federal money has long since dried-up, Woods said, and agencies like HAWS have had to get creative with financing new units and sustaining existing ones. Much of The Oaks' $5 million price tag was paid for I with a bank loan. All told, more than $10 million will be spent in quick succession on what HAWS has dubbed the "Cleveland Avenue Initiative Masterplan." The Oaks is the first phase. Camden station, a S3 minion nous ing complex, will be erect ed a block away from The Oaks next year. The Greensboro-based owner of Summit Square, which will neighbor The Oaks and Camden Station, has agreed to invest more than $1.5 million in upgrades to its property, said Woods, who is trying to convince other landlords in the area - including the owners of the sprawling Colony Place - to improve their properties. Units at Cleveland Avenue Homes - one of just two large tenement style housing communi ties that HAWS still oper ates - recently underwent vast kitchen renovations, according to property manager Dee Dee Thomas, and an ongoing partnership between HAWS and Habitat for Humanity of Forsyth County is rehabbing sin gle family houses in the vicinity of Cleveland Avenue Homes. The Masterplan's long-term vision includes improvements at Cleveland Avenue Homes and Sunrise Towers - the Housing Authority's dated highrise for seniors that stands near the comer of Cleveland Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. If Woods has his druthers, a new complex for senior citizens will be erected adjacent to The Oaks at a site now occu pied by a small church. Woods has become a national advocate for requiring public housing residents to stand more squarely on their own two feet, having twice spoken passionately on the sub ject before a Congressional committee in the last two years. He says the math is simple: housing authori ties will not be able to stay economically viable unless they move more people from the subsi dized housing rolls to self sufficiency. "The whole concept of public housing has to change," he said adamant ly With The Oaks paving the way, Woods wants at least 200 of the Housing Authority's 1,100 units to implement a work require ment in the near future. For more information about The Oaks, go to www.haws.org or call the agency's Property Management Office at 336-727-8554. I Churn Photos by Kevin Walker Larry Woods (right) takes the Kate B. Reynolds Foundation's Joe Crocker and the City's Paul Norby (rear) on a tour of one of the units. Respect from page A6 Oct. 7 to unite the campus under the core belief that everyone deserves dignity and respect. Wake Forest is among the first to join the national movement, originally established by the Center for Inclusion at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The campaign pro motes inclusion through behavioral and organiza tional change. Nearly 2,000 members of the greater Wake Forest com munity have taken the Dignity and Respect pledge. The Nov. 6 event, which was free and open to the public, also featured Dr. Johnnetta B. Cole, director of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African Art. and Dr. Edwin G. Wilson, provost emeritus at Wake Forest. The willingness of three "living legends" to take part in the conversa tion shows the importance of this topic, said Barbee Oakes, assistant provost for diversity and inclusion and an organizer of the event. From partisan divi sions in Washington to social media incivility, the speakers shared how to focus more on commonal ities than differences. "It seems so simple? and it is. When we treat others simply as we wish to be treated, it is the most revolutionary act a human being can commit," said Cole, who also served as president of Spelman College and Bennett College for Women. Wilson, who was Dean of the College when Wake Forest made the historic decision to admit its first black student in 1962, had some bipartisan advice for politicians and students alike. "We need leadership that looks beyond race, beyond sexual orientation, beyond all trappings of our society. We need lead ers who look at the hearts and the minds of our peo ple and believe that America is destined for something more then name-calling and criti cisms. 1 think if we can do that, maybe we can rise above our separations and work together for some thing better than we have known." In her closing remarks. Student Government President Jacqueline Sutherland acknowledged Wake Forest's efforts to promote diversity, inclu sion, kindness and respect on campus. "Looking around this room, regardless of what you look like, what group you identify with, or what ethnic religious or racial box you check on stan dardized forms, we are all multicultural. Every single one of us runs the risk of being misunderstood, mis represented and mistreat ed. That is why we have to treat everybody around us with dignity and respect." The primary goal of the 'Dignity and Respect Campaign' is to embed the message 'You Belong Here' into the very fabric of our campus," Oakes said. "Dr. Angelou is famous for saying, 'I've learned that people will forget what you said, peo ple will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel."' Jacqueline Sutherland "My people an destroyed for a lack of knowledge." Hotea 4.-6 EDUCATIONAL SKNERfWMKSHOK INDIVIDUAL MEETINGS IVW1VWVM RMllVlVv TTWs wtnl to ooty for iAictooiM/ piNpoDM *j- ??? ,,, ..Ml , ?, J,I, n. MJK fc-- .h.,- .< WO pamn ipvcnci Or OWM WO OO mfwmWQ. Donna DymRoWnaon Ciwwrtiiif msmsn 336^110692 CALL TODAY! "Caring for tlm senior* In our community" Leaders from page A4 overhauling the office's training program "to make training more rele vant to state auditor's work." Both Wood and Cowell are the first women in North Carolina history to have been elected to their positions. "North Carolina Democrats are so pleased to see national recogni tion of Treasurer Cowell, Secretary Marshall and Auditor Wood for their tenacity and strength in serving the people of our state," said Joan Dressier, the President of the Democratic Women of North Carolina. "We have the best Democratic women elected to statewide office in the nation and we will con tinue that legacy by re electing Senator Kay Hagan in 2014 and con tinuing our strong sup port of all Democrats elected to serve at the statewide level." Dressier FOL from page A6 held annually for the last 20 years, every other year. "That adjustment will not impact the mission to keep the Winston-Salem community and WSSU alumni informed about O'Kelly Library projects and services," Rodney said. The funds from past events, which have included a dinner, enter tainment and informative presentations about the library, support a gradu ate assistant position at O'Kelly and the O K Scholars Institute, a pro gram for faculty. Funds were also used to cover unexpected library expenses. FOL plans to announce in January the date, time and location for the rescheduled spring fundraiser. "The Friends of the Library is very apprecia tive of everyone who responded in a positive way to our summer 2013 newsletter. We also appreciate our friends who called to inquire about our postponed November event. Thank you for your continued support and stay tuned for more information," Rodney said. Childcare from page AS that is both affordable and offers high quality e u u c a i i u n a i experiences dur ing the early years," according to Dr. Doris Piez, executive director of Forsyth Futures and also a psy chologist who | has specialized in education and .Lit J J 1 iiuiu ucvciupiucm. "These figures highlight the need to provide our children with a strong foundation for academic skills, but also for posi tive physical, social and cognitive developmental outcomes for all our chil dren, including support for their caregivers and families." Forsyth Futures is a non-profit col laborative of residents, organizations and institu tions working together to address criti cal community issues. The "Making Progress Report: Children Ready for School 2013" and other Educational Success indicators can be found at www.forsythfu turesorg. Pdez 4-1 oketa's Restaurant 102 West 3rd Street, Suite Lp5 Winston-Salem, NC 27101 Phone: (336) 750-0811 Open Mott-Fri 11-3 Sunday 12-4