Word: ripley
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...Rogers; Rodney Long '22, of Cambridge, Daniel A. Buckley; Jorge Valentine Manach '21, of Cambridge, Dana of the Class of 1852; Thomas Levine Parsonnet '22, of Newark, N. J., Harvard Club of New Jersey; Wallace Horton Pease '22, of Glastonbury, Conn., William Whiting; Correl Delos Pinney, Jr., '20, of Ripley, N. Y., Browne; Manuel Prenner '21, of Rochester, N. Y., Bowditch; Elwood Goodrich Ratcliffe '22, of Chicago, Ill., Harvard Club of Chicago; Leon Arthur Salmon '22, of New York City, Harvard Club of Long Island; William Thomas Salter '22, of Milton, Harvard Club of Boston; Allan Abraham Landberg...
Professor Ripley is one of the leading authorities on economics in the country. In 1908 he was the Huxley memorial lecturer of the Royal Anthropological Institute in London...
...William Zebina Ripley, Nathaniel Ropes Professor of Political Economy at the University, has been appointed lecturer in economics for the spring session at Columbia University. He will conduct the course in "Corporations and Trusts," which has been left without an instructor by Professor Saeger, who is absent on war leave. The course will only meet on Mondays and Professor Ripley will still conduct his course at the University, which meets on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays...
...rejecting by a vote of seven to two the nomination of Professor William Z. Ripley for membership on the minimum wage commission, the executive council acted as if it thought he were Professor Holcombe. Most of the criticism of Ripley would fit the prevailing estimates of Holcombe and his work on this body. Doubtless the latter did much to create the atmosphere, as to colleges and college professors, which has reacted against the Governor's latest nominee...
...believe Professor Ripley would make a good commissioner, and that Governor McCall would do well to renew the nomination with the new council soon to take office. Ripley has had varied experience in practical affairs as well as in academic life. He believes in the minimum wage idea, and we could hardly expect a board to do less than be sympathetic with the purposes for which it was founded. With one member representing the manufacturers and another labor, the occupant of the place for which the Governor nominated Professor Ripley virtually shapes the policy of the board and so should...