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HR0571 |
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LRB094 12887 HSS 47735 r |
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| HOUSE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, Shelby Foote was born on November 17, 1916, in |
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| Greenville, Mississippi, the cultural center of the |
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| Mississippi Delta; he was the only child of Shelby Dade Foote, |
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| a local businessman, whose roots ran deep in American history, |
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| and Lillian Rosenstock Foote; and
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| WHEREAS, Under the influence of William Alexander Percy, a |
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| local author and the uncle of young Shelby's best friend, |
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| Walker Percy, young Shelby took to books, discovering abiding |
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| favorites from Shakespeare to Dickens; and
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| WHEREAS, At the University of North Carolina at Chapel |
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| Hill, Mr. Foote wrote short stories and poems for the campus |
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| literary magazine before dropping out in 1937 without taking a |
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| degree; he did find occasion, with Walker Percy, to visit |
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| William Faulkner in Oxford, Mississippi; and
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| WHEREAS, In 1940 Mr. Foote entered the United States Army |
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| and served as a battery captain of field artillery in Europe |
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| before his Army career ended in 1944; and
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| WHEREAS, Following his military service, Mr. Foote found |
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| odd jobs, including a stint as a reporter for The Delta |
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| Democrat Times; and
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| WHEREAS, In 1946, he sold his first short story to The |
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| Saturday Evening Post, and after rejections and rewrites, he |
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| sold his first novel, "Tournament", to Dial Press; and
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| WHEREAS, Mr. Foote would go on to write five more novels, |
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| including "Follow Me Down" (1950), "Love in a Dry Season" |
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| (1951), "Shiloh" (1952), "Jordan County" (1954), and |
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| "September, September" (1978), all of which were set in the |
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| South; and
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