Professor Doughtery's has made numerous contributions to advancing the study of Semiotics at New York University.
Ray Charles | Ray Bradbury | X-ray | Man Ray | Satyajit Ray | Stevie Ray Vaughan | Ray Milland | Ray Liotta | Ray Davies | Sugar Ray Leonard | Billy Ray Cyrus | Ray Stevens | Blu-ray Disc | Ray Winstone | Ray Kurzweil | X-ray crystallography | Ray Brown (musician) | Ray Bolger | Ray Mears | Sugar Ray Robinson | Ray Anderson | Nicholas Ray | Lexemuel Ray Hesler | Sugar Ray | Ray | Ray Manzarek | Ray Brown | Ray Anderson (musician) | Ted Ray | Ray Conniff |
Charles F. Dougherty (born 1937), U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania
•
Charles J. Dougherty (born 1949), President of Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
He currently lives in South Pasadena with his wife Dr. Ellen Dougherty, the superintendent of the Lawndale Elementary School District.
Emily is the daughter of Sharon M. Oster and Ray C. Fair, both professors of economics at Yale University.
John M. Dougherty (born 1932), American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church
Principles of Economics, a basic economics text co-authored with Ray C. Fair and Sharon Oster, first published in 1989, is in its ninth edition and is used at more than 500 colleges and universities.
2009: he announced his engagement to Tanzanian musician Rehema Chalamila (popularly known as Ray C).
Rehema Chalamila (born May 15, 1982 in Iringa), popularly known for her stage name Ray C, is a musician from Tanzania.
The Bliss Institute, founded in 1986, is named for Ray C. Bliss, University of Akron alumnus, university trustee and former chair of the Republican National Committee.
Ray C. Strang (born Sandoval, Illinois, USA 1893 – died 1957) was an American Western artist and illustrator.
He was assigned to Headquarters 15th Air Force, SAC, as chief, Operations Division, where he planned the B-52 round-the-world non-stop flight, Operation Power Flite, in 1957.
United States v. Dougherty was a 1972 decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in which the court ruled that members of the D.C. Nine, who had broken into Dow Chemical Company, vandalized office furniture and equipment, and spilled about a bloodlike substance, were not entitled to a new trial on the basis of the judge's failing to allow a jury nullification jury instruction.