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  1. Mark C. Honeywell

    Mark Charles Honeywell (December 29, 1874-1964) was a U.S. electronics industrialist; founder & eponym of Honeywell, Inc.; 1st president of Honeywell, Incorporated 1927-1933; CEO of Honeywell, Incorporated 1927-1933.

  2. Frank Honeywell

    J. Frank Honeywell (1877? - August 6, 1951) was a U.S. author of juvenile books.

  3. Mark Charles Honeywell

    Mark Charles Honeywell (December 29, 1874-1964) was a U.S. electronics industrialist; founder & eponym of Honeywell, Incorporated; 1st pres. of Honeywell, Incorporated 1927-1933; CEO of Honeywell, Incorporated 1927-1933.

  4. Sarah-Jane Honeywell

    Sarah-Jane Honeywell was born in 1974 in Worksop, Nottinghamshire. She is a television presenter on the CBeebies television channel in the UK.

  5. Mario Monti

    Mario Monti (born March 19, 1943) is an Italian economist and politician

  6. David M. Cote

    David M. Cote is chairman and CEO of Honeywell. He was first elected president, CEO and a member of the Board of Honeywell in February 2002, and became chairman of the Board of Directors on July 1 2002. Previously, Cote served as chairman, president and CEO of TRW, a $16 billion Cleveland-based products and services provider for the automotive, aerospace and information technology markets. Cote joined TRW from General Electric in November 1999, where he served 25 years, …

  7. Ivan Seidenberg

    Utilizing the popular LEGO robotics computing tools, the students participated in a challenging, hands-on program to design software and a system to address the problems and opportunities related to finding Alternative Energy/Renewable Resources. Ivan Seidenberg , CEO of Verizon Communications, Inc., after whom the program is named, dropped by to speak personally with the students during one of their design sprints.

  8. Lawrence Bossidy

    Lawrence A. Bossidy ('Larry') is a businessman and author. From 1991-1999 Bossidy served as Chairman and CEO of AlliedSignal Corporation. He became Chairman of Honeywell Corporation when Honeywell was acquired by AlliedSignal in 1999. (Allied Signal, well known in the Aerospace, Aviation, and Military industries adopted the Honeywell name, as Honeywell's product diversity provided greater notoriety in the consumer market).

  9. Nance Dicciani

    Nance Dicciani is president and chief executive officer of Specialty Materials, a strategic business group of Honeywell. Specialty Materials, based in Morristown, N.J., is a global leader in providing customers with high-performance specialty materials, including fluorine products; specialty films and additives; advanced fibers and composites; intermediates; specialty chemicals; electronic materials and chemicals; and technologies and materials for petroleum refining.

  10. Gordon Bethune

    Gordon M. Bethune (born August 1941) is the chairman of the board of Aloha Airgroup, parent company of Aloha Airlines. He was CEO of Continental Airlines from 1994 until his retirement at the end of 2004. From 1996 on, he also served as chairman of the board at that airline. He also serves on the boards of Honeywell, Sprint Nextel, Prudential Financial, and the Wills Group. Prior to joining Continental, he was an executive at Boeing.

  11. Bob Bemer

    Robert William Bemer (February 8, 1920 - June 22, 2004) was a computer scientist best known for his work at IBM during the late 1950s and early 1960s. Born in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, Bemer graduated from Cranbrook School in 1936 and took an A.B. in Mathematics at Albion College in 1940. He earned a Certificate in Aeronautical Engineering at Curtiss-Wright Technical Institute in 1941.

  12. James H. Binger

    James Henry Binger "(born 1916, died 5 November, 2004)" was a trained lawyer who rose to become Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Honeywell, and later Hewlett Packard. A well known philanthropist, horse enthusiast and New York and Minneapolis theatre entrepreneur

  13. Eugene Meyer

    Eugene Isaac Meyer (October 31, 1875 - July 17, 1959) was an American financier, public official, publisher of the "Washington Post" newspaper. He served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1930 to 1933. He was the father of publisher Katharine Graham. Born in Los Angeles, California, he was the son of Marc Eugene and Harriet (Newmark) Meyer. He grew up in San Francisco and attended college across the bay at the University of California, …

  14. William W. George

    William W. George is a professor of Management Practice at Harvard Business School, former Executive-in-Residence at the Yale School of Management, and former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Medtronic. He is the author of the 2003 book, "Authentic Leadership" which was a BusinessWeek best-seller and the 2007 release, "True North" released by Jossey-Bass.

  15. Eric Shinseki

    Eric Ken Shinseki (born November 28, 1942) is a retired United States Army General and served as the 34th Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1999 - 2003). He is the first Asian American in U.S. history to be a four-star general, and the first to lead one of the four U.S. military services.

  16. Simon Ramo

    Simon Ramo (born May 13, 1913) is an American physicist, engineer, and business leader. He led development of microwave and missile technology and is sometimes known as the father of the Intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). He has been partly responsible for the creation of two Fortune 500 companies of the 1970s; Ramo-Wooldridge (TRW after 1958) and Bunker-Ramo (now part of Honeywell). Simon was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, …

  17. Greg Papadopoulos

    Greg Papadopoulos, Ph.D. is the current Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Sun Microsystems. He is the creator and lead proponent for Redshift, a theory on whether technology markets are over or under-served by Moore's Law. Papadopoulos achieved a B.A. in systems science from the University of California, San Diego, …

  18. Fernando J. Corbató

    Fernando José Corbató is a prominent computer scientist, notable as a pioneer in the development of time-sharing operating systems. Amongst many awards, he received the Turing Award in 1990, "for his pioneering work in organizing the concepts and leading the development of the general-purpose, large-scale, time-sharing and resource-sharing computer systems". The first timesharing system he was associated with was known as the MIT Compatible Time-Sharing System, …

  19. Monte Davidoff

    Monte Davidoff (born 1956) is an American computer programmer. He graduated from Nicolet High School in Glendale, Wisconsin in 1974. He went on to Harvard, where he majored in applied mathematics, the department at Harvard that, at the time, included computer science. He also worked at WHRB, the college radio station. He graduated from Harvard in 1978. Davidoff is best-known for writing the floating-point arithmetic routines for Altair BASIC while he was at Harvard.

  20. Florentin Smarandache

    Florentin Smarandache is a Romanian-American writer and associate professor of mathematics and science at the University of New Mexico, Gallup, New Mexico. Smarandache was born in Bălceşti, in the Romanian county of Vâlcea. According to his own autobiographical accounts, in 1986 he was refused an exit visa by the Ceauşescu regime that would have allowed him to attend the International Congress of Mathematicians at the University of California, Berkeley.

  21. Irma Wyman

    Irma M. Wyman (born 19xx) was a systems thinking tutor and was the first female CIO of Honeywell.

  22. William H. Nichols

    William H. Nichols (1852 - 1930) was a famous chemist and businessman who was instrumental in building the chemical supply business in the U.S. The specialty materials business of Honeywell traces its roots back a small sulfuric acid company he started in 1870. Nichols was one of the original founders of the American Chemical Society, serving as president in 1918 and 1919. The New York branch of the society gives a prestigious award every year that is named after him.

  23. K. Mani Chandy

    K. Mani Chandy is the Simon Ramo Professor of Computer Science at the California Institute of Technology. He has been the Executive Officer of the Computer Science Department twice, and he has been a professor at Caltech since 1989. Chandy got his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Electrical Engineering with a thesis in Operations Research. He got a Masters from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, …

  24. James P. Hogan

    James Patrick Hogan is a British science fiction author.

  25. Sean Durfy

    Sean Durfy became WestJet President in September 2006 and Chief Executive Officer in September 2007. As President and CEO, Sean is responsible for both the strategic direction of the company and the day-to-day operations of the airline, leading over 7,300 WestJetters as they deliver an exceptional guest experience. Sean joined WestJet's Executive team in 2004 as Executive Vice-President Sales, Marketing and Airports.

  26. David J. Lesar

    David J. Lesar, age 52, is Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Halliburton Energy Services. Trained as a Certified Public Accountant, Lesar spent 16 years at Arthur Andersen. He had spent most of his career at Andersen, where he worked on their Halliburton account. In 1995, Lesar was hired by Halliburton as a new vice president. Three months later he had a new boss, Dick Cheney. Within a year of his arrival, Cheney had fired Tommy Knight—a 32-year Kellogg, …

  27. Chris Linn

    Chris Linn (born March 17, 1976) is an American comedian and magician, who is billed as "America's Magical Funnyman". Born in Rochester, Michigan, a suburb outside of Detroit, Michigan Chris Linn has been a professional entertainer since he was in high school. His theatrical comedy shows mix unique magic effects, stunts, music, and multi-media elements. Although Linn says that his interest in comedy came from listening to Richard Pryor albums at a very young age, …

  28. Rand Araskog

    Rand Vincent Araskog (born Octoder 31, 1931) is a prominent U.S. businessman and an ex-CEO of ITT Corporation. Araskog is of Scandinavian origin; his grandfather arrived to Minnesota from Sweden. Rand Araskog was elected as a valedictorian in his school and went on to West Point where he studied until 1953, majoring in Soviet studies. He is fluent in Russian. Later, he studied at Harvard University. He started his career in Pentagon and was sent working in Europe.

  29. Thomas Stockham

    Thomas Greenway Stockham (December 22, 1933-January 6, 2004) was an American scientist who developed the first practical digital audio recording system, and pioneered techniques for digital audio recording and processing as well. Stockham, known as the "father of digital audio", earned an Sc.D. degree from MIT in 1959 and was appointed Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering.

  30. Philip Price

    Philip Price is best known for computer game designs and creative programming done using the Atari 8-bit family of home computers, and was one of the founders of Paradise Programming. Along with Gary Gilbertson, he created Alternate Reality (computer game). He started programming in the 1970s using an IBM System/370 mainframe to create multiplayer computer games and to learn programming. Later at age 16 he went to Virginia Tech.

  31. Charles W. Nichols

    Charles W. Nichols and his father, William H. Nichols, helped organize the merger of 12 companies in 1899 to create General Chemical, which in 1921 joined four other companies to form Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation, a precursor to AlliedSignal, now owned by Honeywell as its specialty materials business. Charles Nichols, who served as a vice president and general manager at General Chemical and later Allied, …

  32. Clive Hollick Baron Hollick

    Clive Richard Hollick, Baron Hollick (born 19 May 1945) is a British businessman with media interests, and a noted supporter of the Labour party.

  33. Jeffrey P. Buzen

    Jeffrey P. Buzen received a PhD in Applied Mathematics from Harvard University in 1971. For the next five years, he held various appointments as a Lecturer in Computer Science at Harvard, and as a Systems Engineer at Honeywell. Some of his students at Harvard have gone on to become well known figures in the computer industry. Robert M. Metcalfe co-invented Ethernet, John M. McQuillan developed routing algorithms used by ARPAnet, and Bill Gates co-founded Microsoft.

  34. Roy Megarry

    Archibald Roy Megarry (born February 10 1937) is a Canadian businessman. He was the publisher and C.E.O of "The Globe and Mail" from 1978 to 1992. He was interim publisher from November 1993 to May 1994. Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, he received a Certified Management Accountant degree. He was a Controller for Honeywell Canada from 1957 to 1962. He worked for Daystrom (Heathkit) Ltd.

  35. Robert Ammann

    Robert Ammann (October 1, 1946 - May, 1994) was an amateur mathematician who made several significant and groundbreaking contributions to the theory of quasicrystals and aperiodic tilings. Ammann attended Brandeis University, but generally did not go to classes, and left after three years. He worked as a programmer for Honeywell. After ten years, his position was eliminated as part of a routine cutback, and Ammann ended up working as a mail sorter for the post office.

  36. Earl C. Tingey

    Earl Carr Tingey (b. June 11, 1934) is a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and has been the senior (presiding) president of the Quorums of the Seventy since 2001. Tingey was born in Bountiful, Utah, the oldest of ten children born to William W. Tingey and Sylvia Carr. He served as a LDS missionary to Australia between 1955 and 1957. Tingey married Joanne Wells in the St. George Utah Temple on June 17, 1960.

  37. Prakash Puram

    Prakash has 22 years of management experience in the consumer and high-tech industries. Most recently he was GM of the Consumer and Retail Markets Software Business at Net Perceptions. Prior to that, he was Director of Worldwide Strategy and Business Development for Honeywell's Home & Building Controls division.

  38. John E. O'Higgins
  39. Donnalee Scaggs

    DonnaLee Scaggs Vice President, Technology DonnaLee Scaggs is Vice President of Technology for Honeywell Process Solutions. She joined Honeywell Process Solutions in 2003 as Vice President/General Manager of Industrial Measurement and Control (IM&C), where she developed and successfully executed a strategy that enabled the business to get back on a robust growth path. Scaggs joined Honeywell’s Aerospace division in 1991.

  40. Sue Bushell

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