Lonnie Smith | Lonnie Gordon | Lonnie Pitchford | Lonnie Mack | Lonnie Plaxico | Lonnie Smith (jazz musician) | Lonnie Thompson | Lonnie Simmons | Lonnie Napier | Lonnie Lee | Lonnie Brooks | Lonnie 'Lightning' Smith | Lonnie Donegan | Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim |
"Doctor Time" is the title of a song written by Susan Longacre and Lonnie Wilson, and recorded by American country music artist Rick Trevino.
She also had three younger brothers - Jimmie Joe (Burton Gilliam), Lonnie (G.W. Bailey), Rhett (Robert Ayers), and a younger sister named Fran (Lucy Lee Flippin).
This was the first album producer Lonnie Simmons released directly on his label, Total Experience Records.
Other characters include Gabriel Damon as Bradley; Samantha Mills as Wendy; Julie Ronnie as Lonnie Maple; Matt Shakman as Georgie Winslow; Charles Siebert as Charlie Davis; Britton Elliott as Janet Hillhurst; Josh Goddard as Steven; and Andrea Messersmith as Laurie.
#"Temporary Loss of Memory" (Holly Dunn, Lonnie Wilson, Chris Waters) – 3:04
/ Lt. Lonnie Jamison on the television drama In the Heat of the Night from 1988-1995.
On top of that, on February 28, 1986, Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth handed down season-long suspensions to Andújar, who had also dealt drugs to Lonnie Smith in 1982, and six other players who had admitted to cocaine abuse during the Pittsburgh drug trials.
Today, Kane lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Lonnie, and runs her namesake clothing company out of Vernon, California.
Lonnie Cameron (born July 15, 1964 Victoria, British Columbia) is a Canadian National Hockey League linesman, who wears uniform number #74.
Lonnie McLucas was a Black Panther Party member in Bridgeport, Connecticut who was found guilty of the May 21, 1969 murder of New York Panther Alex Rackley, in the first of the New Haven Black Panther trials in 1970.
Each year, Lonnie contributes his time and money to the ongoing projects within the group by selling his artwork at the Gillespie Field Air Show and donating a percentage of the proceeds to Air Group One.
Lonnie and Ronald have made many local and national television appearances including “Incredible Sunday’s” the result of a recommendation from Ben Vereen.
Over the next 12 years, Rooster Blues released albums by artists like Magic Slim, Eddy Clearwater, John Littlejohn, Lonnie Pitchford, Roosevelt "Booba" Barnes, James "Son" Thomas, Larry Davis, Valerie Wellington, Carey Bell, Willie Cobbs, Super Chikan, and Lonnie Shields.
When Kim tries to explain to Lonnie that even though she's Jewish, that Hanukkah and Christmas are just two different holidays that deal with the same thing in their different ways, Gus gets upset.
The original line-up consisted of Gene Harris on piano, Andrew Simpkins on double bass and Bill Dowdy on drums, along with saxophonist Lonnie 'The Sound' Walker, who dropped out the following year.
Most of the album's production was handled by a three-man production team that consisted of Antoine "Bam" Macon, Kapin and Lonnie, though Chucky Thompson of Sean "Puffy" Combs' Hitmen production team also contributed production for two songs.
As part of its gospel format, WJMO airs numerous programs from Syndication One, such as the early morning show hosted by Donnie McClurkin, the gospel-talk morning drive show hosted by Yolanda Adams, the afternoon drive show hosted by Lonnie Hunter, and the evening show hosted by James Fortune.