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Four years later, James Laurence Sprunt wrote a book about the history of Orton Plantation entitled The Story of Orton Plantation. After the death of Laurence Sprunt in 1973 and Annie Gray Sprunt in 1978, the ownership was shared by their four sons: James Laurence Sprunt Jr., Kenneth Murchison, Samuel Nash, and Laurence Gray Sprunt.
Weldon J. Taylor (1957-1974): first dean Bryce B. Orton, Acting Dean (1974-1975) Merrill J. Bateman (1975-1979): Economist, future LDS Church general authority and president of BYU
However, after it had become a popular dance song in Northern soul clubs in Britain, such as the Blackpool Mecca and Wigan Casino, R. Dean Taylor's record was reissued on EMI's Tamla Motown label with a B-side of "Let's Go Somewhere", [2] and reached No. 3 on the UK Singles Chart in 1974. [3]
Dean P. Taylor (1902–1977), American Congressman from New York R. Dean Taylor (1939–2022), Canadian singer-songwriter Dean Taylor (baseball) (born 1951), Major League Baseball executive
AI audio firm ElevenLabs has set agreements with the estates of Judy Garland, James Dean and other legends to use their voices to read books, articles, PDFs and other text material to mobile users ...
Billboard recommended this album to retailers, calling it an "exceptional package" and noting several standout tracks. [1] Editors at AllMusic Guide rated this album three out of five stars, with critic Quint Kik calling Taylor Motown's "greatest enigma" and criticizes the cover versions as bland, but considers the originals stronger due to Taylor's gift for songwriting.
Richard Dean Taylor (May 11, 1939 – January 7, 2022) was a Canadian musician, most notable as a singer, songwriter, and record producer for Motown during the 1960s and 1970s. [2] According to Jason Ankeny, Taylor was "one of the most underrated acts ever to record under the Motown aegis."
Beverly Hills locals Frank Sinatra, left, and Dean Martin enjoy their distinctive brand of boozy hijinks â but a barroom brawl and an errant telephone upended the good times in 1966.