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$5.95
1. For Phillips Contracting Inc.,
$30.00
2. Sundays Down South: A Pastor’s

1. For Phillips Contracting Inc., it's all about family: third generation at helm of company started in 1946.(Construction Mississippi)(Company Profile): An article from: Mississippi Business Journal
by George McNeil
 Digital: 4 Pages (2005-08-08)
list price: US$5.95 -- used & new: US$5.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B000B7W3W0
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Mississippi Business Journal, published by Venture Publications on August 8, 2005. The length of the article is 1049 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: For Phillips Contracting Inc., it's all about family: third generation at helm of company started in 1946.(Construction Mississippi)(Company Profile)
Author: George McNeil
Publication: Mississippi Business Journal (Magazine/Journal)
Date: August 8, 2005
Publisher: Venture Publications
Volume: 27Issue: 32Page: S13(1)

Article Type: Company Profile

Distributed by Thomson Gale ... Read more


2. Sundays Down South: A Pastor’s Stories (Folklife in the South Series)
by James O. Chatham
Hardcover: 224 Pages (1999-11-01)
list price: US$30.00 -- used & new: US$30.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 157806175X
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
In an thoughtful portrait of southerners, a long-time Presbyterian minister shares his observations of several congregations over the last four decades, identifying various southern "types," always with a compassionate eye. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (5)

4-0 out of 5 stars A Sense of Community
While I was in college in the mid 1980's I took a course called 'social movements' in which my Professor gave a lecture bemoaning our loss of a 'sense of community.' Having just left a small mountain community myself that had been my home for the first 18 years of my life I didn't have a full appreciation of the lecture that day. Over the next few years as I moved into a career, and a big city, I began to realize exactly what my Professor was talking about in that lecture. After living in several apartments in various sorts of neighborhoods I cannot even think of 5 neighbors I ever exchanged more than a nod or hello with. It really is sad to think about. Recently I was given a book, and while not the type of book to make it into my reading list very often I am grateful that it had. That's the great thing about getting books as gifts, they sometimes get you out of a rut. Something for you to keep in mind as you ponder what to get somebody for Christmas. Anyway, the book is called 'Sundays Down South,' do not let the title fool you, although written by a Pastor it has little to do with 'Sundays,' and everything to do with a 'sense of community.' The book is a collection true stories about people that have been a part of the life a man who happens to be a Pastor. The author ( James O. Chatham ) is quite clear in the Introduction that 'this is not a religious book.' Having seen a small glimpse into his theology I was thankful for that fact. What the book does do is warm your heart with short, and true stories about real people. The book breaks down into four parts. It opens in Covington Virginia. In this section one particular story, 'Amy's Gift' even brought moisture to my eye's (something fiction cannot do). The section of the book dedicated to his years in Mississippi is the finest of the four. The author's positioning in the middle of an important place in the civil rights movement of the 1960's gives historical importance to this book. The book remains personal though, giving you insight into the people of that place and time. In this section there is the story of Albert, a man of heroic proportion in the chapter 'Standing on Holy Ground', and the humorous story 'Thus Did the Lord Say.' The book continues with stories from North Carolina, and Kentucky. Some of the stories are sad, some humorous, some inspiring, all help you gain perspective. Many of the stories are about people many would just consider 'poor southerners', ahhh, but how rich they are in 'sense of community.' Compared to so many of us who live in places where we are connected in a real way with so few people, they in contrast seem immensly wealthy. In the very first chapter of the book the author expresses this thought while observing three generations in one family go off to work together in a paper mill, 'Here in vivid color before my eyes, was a vital human network called family, something the chic, upscale world of the new America would soon be paying millions of dollars in therapists' fees in a vain effort to recreate.' The book supplies the snapshots of an America that sadly seems to be slipping away, but which makes the book a pleasure to read.

5-0 out of 5 stars Sundays Down South : A Pastor's Stories
Having heard sermons of Jim Chatham, I had to read his book. This book, Sundays Down South : A Pastor's Stories, closely reflects his personal delivery of folksy wisdom as a key to deeply held truths. These stories,separate and apart, could be the journal writings of many, but woventogether, they touch in a special way the place inside of all of us whoyearn for spiritual connectedness, peace and justice. This book rates highwith me just as does the good pastor, himself. I would suggest it is greatreading for a hot summer afternoon, lemonade in hand, and a cool body ofwater someplace in the vicinity.

5-0 out of 5 stars A Shared Journey
As a Southerner, as a Presbyterian, as one who played a small part in the civil rights movement of the sixties, and as one who now lives in the same city as Rev. Chatham, I felt as if I were reliving some of my life'sexperiences as I read this book. I had met these people, I had been tothese places, I had shared these conversations, I had worshiped togetherwith them. Rev. Chatham does an outstanding job of capturing the essence ofwhat many call "polite racism": that we can be seeminglyintelligent, polite, caring, loving,religious human beings and still havethe horrible stain of racism imbedded in our hearts and our psyches. On theother hand, the courage of those who overcame the social demand offollowing the past is glorified as it should be. Congratulations, Rev.Chatham. Your readers will enjoy this journey with you.

5-0 out of 5 stars As Good As Fiction
Although my favorite books are fiction, this collection of true stories offers similar pleasure.SUNDAYS DOWN SOUTH, though not fiction, describes real people so vividly that they would make good fictionalcharacters.I finished the book recalling the names of characters, as wellas the events that constrained or liberated them.Admirable characters,the author explains in the introduction, have been given their real names. For the less admirable, he has invented unlikely names.This bookresembles twentieth-century southern fiction because it includes elementsof the heroic and the grotesque.But in Chatham's book more people areheroic than not.It is an upbeat book that reminds us of our humancapacity for goodness and sacrifice.Thisengineer-turned-Presbyterian-minister writes with the preciseness of anengineer, the concrete language of a poet, and the compassionate insight ofa good pastor.He never bores us with too much detail.He tells only whatis needed to understand the person and situation being described.Thestories take place between 1962 and the present in four southernlocations--Virginia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Kentucky.Theintroduction to each section places the reader firmly in that location.Welocal readers, for example, easily see the truth and humor in hischaracterization of laid-back Winston-Salem, N. C., as "always abouttwenty-five miles off the main route."I recommend SUNDAYS DOWNSOUTH for pleasure reading, for better understanding the meaning of beingsouthern, and for appreciating both the foibles and the sublime heights ofthe human condition.

4-0 out of 5 stars engineer-turned-presbyterian-minister
This engineer-turned-Presbyterian-minister writes with the preciseness of an engineer, the concrete language of a poet, and the compassionate insight of a good pastor.He never bores us with too much detail.He tells only what is needed to understand the person and situation being described.His stories take place in four southern locations:Covington, Virginia;Fayette/Union Church, Mississippi; Winston-Salem, North Carolina; andLouisville, Kentucky.The introduction to each section places the readerfirmly in that location.For example, we local readers easily recognizethe truth of his characterzation of laid-back Winston-Salem as "alwaysabout twenty-five miles off the main route."The book in someways resembles twentieth-century southern fiction, including characterswith elements of both the heroic and the grotesque.But in Chatham's book,more are heroic than not.He has given us an upbeat book that reminds usof our human capacity for goodness and self-sacrifice. Although Chathamnever preaches or moralizes, he often points out an insight gained from thestory.I recommend SUNDAYS DOWN SOUTH for pleasure reading, forbetter understanding of the meaning of being southern, and forappreciating--mostly with optimism--the foibles and sublime heights of thehuman condition. ... Read more


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