Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Dec. 11, 1976, edition 1 / Page 10
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? - Pace 10 The Chronicle Set) WSJS Secretary < Ms. He WSJS radio Secretary of the Day Award was given last week to Sandra L. Henderson, secretary to Richard N. Davis of Davis Management Services. Mr. Davis is also the Alderman of the North Ward. Ms. Henderson has worked for Davis Management Services for the oast eight years, K?.-r - - - and becoming a secretary is something she has always wanted to be. Working for Mr. Davis and the company has really been a wonderful experience for ^Warel { Sal p* OPEN TO 7 Special Sel l Sam Dies. D. c & Regula j Track S -Tube V I Warm | wcA* J TEAI M BANK CARDS [724 /HONORED I 171" 4 A i i ?* - LADIES DIN . LADIES FASI * gifts for <4 * ; / * ^gCRgflf nrday Dec. 11, 1976 Df The Day nderson Hon J^--' 1 Sandra Henderson louse ( le!S 4 THE PUBLIC | ections of / iscontinued D t Stock Of | Flots L Socks r -Up Suits ( Cr P i ATMurrtcs 1 L-5310 ALL SALES f rrmiroiio wo. FINAL ) 444' % GO BOOTS $4 HON BOOTS $2 it the entire hmil I^mey ^Qes fftttSRICflfll 8I * *~+T % ,ored me," Ms. Henderson said. "And 1 feel I can use the knowledge that I have received thus far in the future to help me achieve whatever endeavor that I might so choose in the secretarial field." Ms. Henderson is the daughter of Nora Henderson of New. York City and has made her home here with her grandmother, Mrs. Mattie Henderson and her aunt Clarissa Henderson. She also has a son, Brian Henderson. Ms. Henderson received beautiful desk plants flowers, a certificate plaque for the wall from WSJS radio, a travel bag from Delta Airlines, and some fruits. Ms. Henderson received her secretarial training from ? Russell's Business College, I where she graduated in 1968. She is a member of St. James A.M.E. Church, where Rev. J.T. McMillian is the pastor. Outside of being a secretary, her favorite hobby and past-time is sewing, and traveling. She traveled abroad last year to NASSAU, Bahamas with James W. Lomax, Jr. and Mr. & Mrs. Sammie Gray also of the city. Ms. Henderson was also the recipient of WSJS' Secretary of the Week Award. She received dinner for two at T a l"1!* a ?/\l ?i?e juruaii 5 jlc viioiuiaio. . 299 ? -1 #4*4 I African ? A be Lind The Ci< Hon. Horace Greely: Hear Sir My paramount objt Union, and is not either to save save It by freeing any slave I woi freeing some and leaving others conld save It by freeing some ai also do that. What 1 do abont sla because I believe It helps to saw I forbear because I do not bel Union. I shall do less whenever harts the cause, and I shall do doing more will help the cause. 1 shown to be errors; and I shall a appear to be true views. I have here stated my purpose doty, and 1 Intend no modtficatft wish that aD men everywhere A. LI The first paragraph above h who have pictured Abraham Li included the last paragraph of editor of New York Tribune. ( urging him to abolish slavery ai of course Lincoln's answer fro dubious. At that particular tim< still had hopes that the South w there was a turn-about on Lin Now the last part of the lettei rarely quoted. It shows a mai political good against political n good was to save the union stepping out and following one' and proper. Lincoln, like most what he perceived as political Obviously the Civil War did r slavery. Actually, during the ft Lincoln and Congress denied overthrowing any established ii and his Cabinet insisted at that in saving the Union or doing \ majority. Gradually this idea lost much abolitionists, and other reforme of the slaves be made a paramoi on and the death toll rose, thei slaves of the enemies because 1 laborers. So on January 1 Emancinatinn Prnrlamatinn rebelling states. This military manifesto of human liberty. Lincoln caught on quickly momentum that the Proclamati celebrated Gettysburg Address asked to make a few remarks national cemetery and Lincoln countrymen to dedicate then America, "a new birth of freedc "John Brown's Body", "Rail; "The Battle Hymn of the Rej All of this bought the blacl secure his freedom. The black was good. "By the end of the w enlisted, comprising about 107 These black soldiers took part which 39 were major battles, amounting to over 68,000, ab< Black women also served, ] nurse, Susie King Taylor si principal founder of the Amei Blacks were also useful to 1 success" wrote Jeffersoh Davi "was due to the much-abused i 1 Spotlight I * -i -m oln And vil War Executive Mansion Washington, August 22,1862. jet in thh struggle is to save the or to destroy slavery. If I could dd do it, and if 1 could save It by alone I would also do it, and If I id leaving others alone I would ivery, and the colored race, I do ; the Union; and what I forbear, leve it would help to save the 1 shall believe what I am doing more whenever I shall believe I shall try to correct errors when idopt views so fast as they shall > according to my view of official m of my. oft-expressed personal could be free. Yours, ncoln as often been quoted by those incoln as a closet racist. 1 have ' the letter to Horace Greeley, jreeley had written to Lincoln id make use of black troops and m a personal point of view is s, one can suppose that Lincoln ould fall back into line, later on coin's part. : is especially interesting and is n wrestling with himself as to norality, His concept of political but political morality involved s basic ideals of what was right : professional politicians, chose good. tot begin as a crusade to abolish rst few months of conflict, both that they had any intention of istitutions of the South. Lincoln time that their sole interest was vhat they felt was best for the i of its force because clergymen, rs kept insisting that the freeing int war aim. As the war dragged re was a mass effort to free the they could serve as soldiers and ., 1863, Lincoln issued the sclaring free the slaves in the ' maneuver turned fast into a to the growing interest and on had caused came up with the of November 19, 1863. He was ; to dedicate a battlefield as a closed the speech by urging his lselves to the task of giving >m". Then there were the songs, f Round the Flag, Boys", and >ublic." c men in substantiallly to help response to join the union army ar, over 180,000 black men had o of the total union enlistments. in 499 military engagements, of r Their death tolls were high, out 37% of their total number. primarily as nurses. One black erved with Clara Barton, the rican Red Cross. the Confederacy. "Much of our s, president of the Confederacy, institution of African servitude." Robena Egemonye
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Dec. 11, 1976, edition 1
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