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Roger and Wolfe
* 1907 – Roger Wolfe Kahn, American bandleader ( d. 1962 )
* October 19 – Roger Wolfe Kahn, American bandleader ( d. 1962 )
* July 12 – Roger Wolfe Kahn, American band leader ( b. 1907 )
Typical of the genre were such popular artists as Paul Whiteman, Ted Lewis, Harry Reser, Leo Reisman, Abe Lyman, Nat Shilkret, George Olsen, Ben Bernie, Bob Haring, Ben Selvin, Earl Burnett, Gus Arnheim, Henry Halstead, Rudy Vallee, Jean Goldkette, Glen Gray, Isham Jones, Roger Wolfe Kahn, Sam Lanin, James Last, Vincent Lopez, Ben Pollack, Shep Fields and Fred Waring.
Lewis and her band, Ben Bernie's band " Ben Bernie and All the Lads ", and Roger Wolfe Kahn's band were filmed by Lee De Forest in his Phonofilm sound-on-film process in 1925, in three short films that are now in the Library of Congress film collection.
* " Crazy Rhythm " w. Irving Caesar m. Joseph Meyer & Roger Wolfe Kahn.
*" Sometimes I'm Happy " by Roger Wolfe Kahn
One night, he hears the staid and starchy Roger Wolfe Kahn Orchestra song called " Crazy Rhythm " on the radio and his feet spontaneously begin to move with the urge to dance ; he sees this as a calling and decides to hitchhike to St. Louis, from where the song was broadcast.
He played with the bands of Joe Venuti, Adrian Rollini, Roger Wolfe Kahn and Jean Goldkette in addition to doing a large amount of freelance radio and recording work.
Christmas 1990 saw Central enjoy its largest audience ever for a Christmas Show with well in excess of 16 million viewers for a pantomime special edition of Family Fortunes, produced by Tony Wolfe and Associate Producer Roger Edwards.
He played in Gus Sharp's orchestra for two years and in the 1920s went on to become a significant figure of the New York scene: he was a member of the Original Memphis Five ( 1922 ), played with Russ Gorman, Roger Wolfe Kahn, Sam Lanin, Ray Miller and many others.
* Roger Wolfe Kahn ( 1907 – 1962 ), jazz musician
Otto's son, Roger Wolfe Kahn, was a popular jazz musician and band leader of the late 1920s and early 1930s.
Roger Wolfe Kahn ( October 19, 1907 – July 12, 1962 ) was an American jazz and popular musician, composer, and bandleader (" Roger Wolfe Kahn and His Orchestra ").
Two days after the divorce, on April 7, 1933, Roger Wolfe Kahn married Edith May Nelson, a Maine politician's daughter.
* Roger Wolfe Kahn at the Internet Broadway Database
* Roger Wolfe Kahn and His Orchestra
da: Roger Wolfe Kahn
de: Roger Wolfe Kahn
After a preachy, satirical voice-over monologue during scenes of Kelly and Harris ( in crutches ) hiking on a log over a creek — which Roger Ebert credits to Russ Meyer's " sick sense of humor " — the film ends with the wedding of three couples, Kelly and Harris, Pet and Emerson, and Susan and Baxter Wolfe, with Porter Hall observing from outside the court house window.
# REDIRECT Roger Wolfe Kahn

Roger and Kahn
* Roger Kahn
Robinson still got pitches thrown at him, but, as Reese recounted to author Roger Kahn, " I told him, ' You know Jack, some of these guys are throwing at you because you ’ re black.
* Roger Kahn, " The Boys of Summer " ( 1972 )
* Kahn, Roger.
The Boys of Summer is a 1972 non-fiction baseball book by Roger Kahn.
* Roger Wolff Kahn, ( b. October 19, 1907, Morristown, New Jersey-d. July 12, 1962, New York City );
Roger Wolff Kahn ( Wolff was his middle name's original spelling ) was born in Morristown, New Jersey into a wealthy German Jewish banking family.
Otto and Roger Kahn were the first father and son to appear separately on the cover of Time magazine: Otto in November 1925 and Roger in September 1927, aged 19.

Roger and Hannah
* Roger Berkowitz, Thomas Keenan, Jeffrey Katz, ed. Thinking in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt on Ethics and Politics Fordham University Press, 2009, ISBN 978-0-8232-3076-1
Guest stars in this series included Anna Chancellor, Angela Griffin, Clive Swift, Hannah Gordon, Claire Goose, Denis Lawson and Roger Lloyd Pack.
Performers on the Dance Arena were ( in order of appearance ): Marko Milosavljević, Deepchild, Trentemøller, Green Velvet, Richie Hawtin, Magda, Dee Face, Serge Santiago, 20: 20 Soundsystem, Paul Woolford, Danny Tenaglia, Nic Fanciulli, Ivan Mastermix, Hannah Holland, Frankie Knuckles, Roger Sanchez, Justin Martin, Noise Destruction, Dejan Milićević, Sébastien Léger, Blackstrobe, John Digweed, Eric Prydz, Marko Nastić.
Mr. and Mrs. Rankin had two sons, James Jr. and Roger C., and one daughter, Sara Stadler ; six grandchildren, Todd, Stephanie, Russell, Andrew, Amy, and Justin ; and four great-grandchildren, Camden, Thomas, Hannah, and Faith.

Roger and Williams
Roger Williams had recently been thrown out, and Anne Hutchinson and her Antinomians were slugging it out with the powers-that-be.
Roger Williams wrote his friend Winthrop as follows: ``
Bernard Parrillo, 20, of 19 Fletcher Ave., Cranston, was admitted to Roger Williams Hospital shortly before 11:30 a.m. yesterday after a hunting accident in which a shotgun he was carrying discharged against his heel.
In 1640's " Key Into the Language " Roger Williams described cranberries, referring to them as " bearberries " because bears ate them.
At the start of 1986, Essendon were considered unbackable for three successive flags, but a succession of injuries to key players Paul Van der Haar ( only fifteen games from 1986 to 1988 ), Tim Watson, Darren Williams, Roger Merrett and Simon Madden led the club to win only eight of its last eighteen games in 1986 and only nine games ( plus a draw with Geelong ) in 1987.
* 1631 – Roger Williams emigrates to Boston.
* 1635 – Founder of Rhode Island Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony as a religious dissident after he speaks out against punishments for religious offenses and giving away Native American land.
The statue of Roger Williams ( theologian ) | Roger Williams at Roger Williams University, Rhode Island
Providence Plantations was the name of the colony founded by Roger Williams in the area now known as the City of Providence.
The earliest documented use of the name " Rhode Island " for Aquidneck was in 1637, by Roger Williams.
Roger Williams was a theologian forced out of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
First Baptist Church in America | The congregation founded by Roger Williams ( theologian ) | Roger Williams in 1638 built this Providence, Rhode Island | Providence historic church in 1776
Roger Williams and Narragansett Indians
In 1636, Roger Williams, after being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for his religious views, settled at the tip of Narragansett Bay, on land granted to him by the Narragansett and Pequot tribes.

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