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・ Samuel W. Osborne
・ Samuel W. Parker
・ Samuel W. Peel
・ Samuel W. Pennypacker
・ Samuel W. Pennypacker School
・ Samuel W. Preston
・ Samuel W. Randolph
・ Samuel W. Reynolds
・ Samuel W. Richards
・ Samuel W. Rowse
・ Samuel W. Seeley House
・ Samuel W. Seymour
・ Samuel W. Small
・ Samuel W. Soule
・ Samuel W. Stockton
Samuel W. Taylor
・ Samuel W. Temple House
・ Samuel W. Thornton
・ Samuel W. Trotti
・ Samuel W. Wolfson High School
・ Samuel Waddington
・ Samuel Wadsworth Gould
・ Samuel Wadsworth Russell House
・ Samuel Waermö
・ Samuel Wagan Watson
・ Samuel Wainer
・ Samuel Wainwright House
・ Samuel Waldegrave
・ Samuel Walder
・ Samuel Waldo


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Samuel W. Taylor : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel W. Taylor
Samuel Woolley Taylor (February 5, 1907 – September 26, 1997) was an American novelist, scriptwriter and historian.
== Biography ==

Taylor was born in Provo, Utah to Janet "Nettie" Maria Woolley and John W. Taylor, the son of John Taylor, the late president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Samuel's father was a former member of the church's Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, having left in 1905 in protest over the church's recent abandonment of polygamy. Despite his father's ecclesiastical history and excommunication in 1911, Samuel was raised in the LDS Church. He later wrote a biography of his father called ''Family Kingdom'', and one of his grandfather titled ''The Kingdom or Nothing''.
In the late 1920s Taylor attended Brigham Young University (BYU) studying journalism.〔 He became editor of the student newspaper ''Y News'', in which he also wrote a weekly column called "Taylored Topics." After covering a story about bootleggers on campus, Taylor was questioned by school administration to divulge his sources, but he refused. After a temporary suspension, he returned to his previous position with the paper, and returned to upsetting administration with his writing. After six suspensions, he later recalled that he could "take a hint" and dropped out of BYU. By then he had already published five articles in nationally distributed magazines.〔 He decided to "escape" Utah and followed Gay Dimick, a fellow BYU student, back to her native California. They married there in 1934 and established their longtime home in Redwood City.〔〔
In World War II, he served as an officer in the Army Air Force public relations office in the European theater of war.
He was awarded an honorary lifetime membership by the Association for Mormon Letters in 1994.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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