Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1974, edition 1 / Page 11
Part of Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
SEPT. 1#, 1974 O MARY W. JUUOUS Mrs. Mary White Julious, 37, of _ 1512 Derry St., died Monday at her home. The funeral will be at Freeman Demery's , Funeral Hume In Hemingway, S.C She ? was -a native ?of Georgetown, S.C., but had lived in Winston-Salem for the past nine years and was a member of Mars Hill Baptist 'Church. ?- Surviving are widower, Martin Sharon .and- Tangle Nichole . Juliousof the home; sisters, Mrs. Bessie Duncan of Washington, D.C., Miss Zuella White and Mrs. Gatha Hanna of Winston-Salem and Mrs. Eleanora. Peak of Hendersonville; brothers, Frank White Sr. of. Ft. Lauderdale j*Fla. and Bill White of Hemingway. . Your bible is your major 9 textbook, study it. Everyone should unite in the. worship service. It is a grand opportunity for spiritual conditioning. To be 1 ii. li y i- ? A A. ? spiritualized is an asset to good otuHviiur aiiH tPArhinc ? DiUUjrtttg ottu icavmiig ? jH . I ? ?, \ Church 1 | ST. JOHN CME CHURCH a 1628 Clark Ave. Rev. Joseph H. Lightsey, Pastor I Telephone 725-3968 I *** | ST. PAUL UNITED 5 'METHODIST CHURCH I 2400 Dellabrook Rd. NE Rev. J.W. Gwyn, Pastor Telephone 723-4531 > r i +++ ST. HOME UNITED I METHODIST CHURCH m 1390 Thurmond St. Rev. William R. Crawford, Pastor Z Telephone 724-2514 ???|??? - iHHt ST. JAMES AME CHURCH 1501 Patterson Ave NE | Rev. J.T. McMilla^, Pastor +*rk GALILEE BAPTIST CHURCH 575 Claremont Ave. Rev. Warnie C. Hay, Pastor I Telephone 724-3857 ? Changing Ro * ^ . Fl^rkt TVS A^Vpi.* CHAPEL HILL - County and" regional health directors from across the state examined the changing role of local health departments at the North Carolina Local Health Director's Workshop held in Winston-Salem Sept. 11-13. A panel discussion on methods of controlling high blood pressure highlighted the first session's program. Other subjects * examined included, cost ac V- 1 bituari Forsyth Funeral Home Is in charge of all services and arrangements. ? RUSSELL GALLOWAY Russell Galloway, 79, of 923 Taft Street died Monday b* his home.. m ". . He was a native of 'Patrick County, Va. and had lived in Winston-Stelem 44 years. He was a landscape gardener .with Reynolds Inc. and was of the Baptist faith. Mildred Galloway of the home; and _ four sons, Harver V. Galloway of 1720 Grant Street, Willie R. Galloway of 2037 Harrison Avenue, Ruben Galloway of 943 Gillette Street and Jarvis Galloway of the home. The body* is pt Clark S. Brown and Sons Funeral Home: u * directory j NEW ZION BAPTIST CHURCH 1 158 Highland Ave. Rev. Issac Carter, Pastor Telephone 725-9644 Revival held the week of Sep- | tember 9, 1974. Each evening at . 7:30 PM Rev. M.L. Dillingham, Shiloh I Baptist Church Mocksville, NC - Speaker *** | MT. PLEASANT .BAPTIST I CHURCH | 1731 Kimberly Rd. NW Rev. H.S. Lewis, Jr. Pastor Telephone 725-9623 *** | r UNITED METROPOLITAN Z BAPTIST CHURCH 450 Metropolitan Dr. Rev. J. Donald Ballard, Pastor Telephone 723-0519 +++ ST. PAUL CHURCH OF | CHRIST OF THE APOSTOLIC - FAITH 1401 E. 25th St. Elder S.R. Mahan Telephonqf^23-1478 le In Health scussed counting for community health services, child health screening. working together for school children and manpower management from the per spective of the state Department of Human Resources. The workshop is sponsored by the UNC School of Public Health's Department of Health Administration in Chapel Hill. Dr. Charles Harper, associate dean of the school, was course director. WINSTON-SALEM CHRONICLE es And WILTON WILLIAMS Mr. Wilton Williams, 66, of 2711 N. Patterson Avenue died early Tuesday at his home after a twoday illness. ?? He WS" hftP1 "inhnpiMlU, S.C., to Demus and Sarah Stuckey Williams and had lived in Washington, D.C., before coming to Winston-Salem seven years ago. He was a retired government . worker in Washington and a veteran of World War II. He was a member' of Lane CME Cburch in Washington. BojJy Can By CHEREE BRIGGS ' When SPIT)** nonnlp hunr thg word psychiatry or "Freud," they think of the bearded likeness of* the founding father of psychoanalysis. Or, perhaps they think of movie stereotypes of psychiatric patients - clutching poodles or raincoats - stopping in telephone pay booths to ask their analysts if they may cross the street. Psychiatrists today use the basic dynamic principles set forth by Freud and subsequent scholars. These principles subsequently fell into ' disfavor with -some doctors?who?con-? sidered the method of treatment too rigid and too lengthy. One of the "founding Freuds" of North Carolina laments this misunderstanding. Dr. George Ham, a psychiatrist, a psychosomatic investigator and psychoanalyst, said, "Being a Freudian now sounds as though you adhere to a dogma at any cost... I consider -myself a catalyst, the one who can try to give people the toots they can use to help themselves grow in maturity. I am for anything that gets out bottled up emotions. I try to get my patients to let it rip," he said. "Self-knowledge* leads to self-determination." Dr. Ham said the "new" approaches are "additives, and not substitutes, for the basic dynamic psychiatry derived from psychoanalytic theory and other disciplines. The first chairman of the UNC Department of Psychiatry, Dr. Ham is still a practicing psychoanalyst but he was the one who was analyzed Friday and Saturday by hundreds of former faculty members, house staff and colleagues when they honored him at the departmental alumni day. An Easterner and a graduate of Dartmouth College and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Dr. Ham also trained at the University of Virginia and Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago and at the Institute for Psychoanalysis in Chicago. Dr. Ham came to UNC because he liked the area, the dean and the idea of something totally new. His eyes crinkle when he talks about starting a psychiatry department on $18,000. "And that included the secretary's salary." Watching his hands move as he talks, one can still stfise the excitement he generated among a newly developing department. He left the comfortable Chicago medical establishment for "a 20 burner stove. We had something going all the time and I loved eVery minute of it." When asked how he recruited faculty and house staff, he said flatly, "I seduced them. That is, I showed them what I saw we had, and what we had hopes we could I Fimei 17 y ~ Surviving are widow, Mrs. Eunice Williams; daughters, Mrs. Ruth Wilson of WinstonSalem and Mrs. Prances H. Johnson and Mrs. Annie Margaret Price of Washington; two sons, Rufus Williams 61 flew Jersey and James Wallace of Winston-Salem; three sisters,Mrs. Rachel Eckels and Mrs. Pamy Davis of New York City and Mrs. Hlma Bradley of Washington; and four brothers, Arthur Williams of WinstonSalem, Jack and Herbert Williams of'New York and H.W. Williams of Bishopville. Only Cas ry Brain / y do.^ Gradually th^ Hpnurtmon* ? ? w -?? ? ?!>? nifivuv grew as funds became avoilable, gadget of the mind. He is also & specialist in internal medicine.' Early on, he decided that, while the persons he was^ treating had real physical complaints which heeded medical care, they also needed "somebody who would listen to what was bugging them. At UNC, we introduced the multidisciplinary approach. We found it exciting, and it's still used." Dr.-Ham came ta Chapel Hill with a lot of hope and an inordinate amount of drive. "I didn't have the dough to compete for faculty. But one of our mandates, and we had many, was to improve ^he patient care and mental health educational program in state mental health facilities. Eventually, . they became independent, and that ii. __1 i m was as 11 snouia nave Deen. "We had a chance to develop a ' curriculum, and at the time, we_ had more course hours in psychiatry and related disciplines than most schools in the nation. For example, we started putting some psychiatry into a first year'course called Human Ecology ^nd continued integrating the principles throughout the next three years as students treated both inpatients and out-patients. challenge of developing a good residency program." What kind of teacher, administrator and pejfson is this man hundreds came to honor? Dr. Ham says that, "I li?e to think that I encouraged diverafty. Most particularly, I didn't want anybody being threatened by another's special knowledge. Namely me," he laughed. "All of , us were going to know more than the rest of us about something. Finally, I tried to treat every one of the staff as individuals." When Dr. Ham came to this state there were so few members of his specialty practicing here, one faculty wife says she sighed with relief and declared, "Well, now that George is here, it's safe to become mentally ill in North Carolina." but one continuing problem was finding space for patients. The j ? rorsyin rur | "Service With J 1800 N. Pa 1 Phones 725-97 I Winston-Salem ' ' * ? ? ' ? ' ? ' * ' * ? ? ? I I %% % ? |V . . / PAGE 11 rals 0 / the body is at Ryan Funeral Home. DELORES GO INS ?i??????i???? Mrs. Delores Helena Goins, 46, of 2948 Bainbridge Drive died Saturday, September 14, 1974; The funeral was held at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at Union Chapel Baptist Church. Burial was in Piedmont Memorial Gardens. Surviving are daughters Janice and Sheila Coins of WinstonIStfem; brother Charlie G9ms"W " Winston-Salem. ~7 " *e To In ? -/ state hospital system then had four institutions, ail staffed by doctors who haditt.D: degrees, bul stone of whom had not had specialty training in psychiatry. ~ Dr. Ham and the faculty ' 1 lit. it a mm - - . wuircu . wiui me start ot these hospitals, helping them learn the. newest techniques in treating the mentally ill. In return, their students had patients with whom . to work. ? Dr. Ham credits the late Billy Carmichael and the late .Rep. John Umstead with much of the success of the state's mental health program, because they fought for funding in the Legislature. _ When it came time to appear before the Advisory Budget Commission, Dr. Ham recalls, "We let them (the legislators) do the -heartstring stuff. One * legislator in particular would ask his colleagues, 'Would you want your mother to spend the night in jail because there was no room in the inn?' At that time, mental patients were often jailed if space was not available in a mental hospital." (There were no inpatient psychiatric-lfacilities at UNC until 1954, when a 10-bed area opened.) Dr. Ham continued, "Then I'd talk money, explaining that we s 1 narlauoH fha fift nftfi ? MA J VU V* IV fl/V^VW 3U11C (1P" propriation into $300,000 through federal and other grants since we had seen them two years before. I could honestly tell them I thought we could do that again, and it always seemed to work. In time, we got what we needed." And Dr. Ham's students felt he had what they needed. He is a physician whose interests are unusually diverse. . As . a laboratory researcher, he studied physiology. That seems far removed from the psychoanalyst's couch, but it isn't tn Hr Horn urn*? ? V w 4 1CU1I< A lie LHJHy 15 d case to carry your brain around in. We need to know all we can aTSout hereditary genetics, development during the gestation period and early childhood to better understand the human mind." Always fascinated with gadgets, Dr. Ham apparently has found that the body is often a ieral Home I i Sincerity " 1 . _ tterson Ave. I '29 or 725-9720 1 , N. C. 27105 1 , , ,1, ; B ^
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1974, edition 1
11
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75