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Mark Ford may refer to: Mark Ford (businessman), New Zealand executive, including inaugural chair of Auckland Transport; Mark Ford (cricketer) (born 1961), South African cricketer; Mark Ford (poet) (born 1962), British poet; Mark Ford (footballer) (born 1975), English former association football player; Mark Ford, founder of the British and ...
Mark Fields (born January 24, 1961 [1]) is an American businessman and former chief executive officer of Ford Motor Company. Prior to his July 1, 2014, appointment, Fields served as the company's chief operating officer .
In 2012 Ford published a poetry collection called Back and Out Again (Cap & Bells Press) under his full name, Mark Morgan Ford, so as to distinguish his poetry from Mark Ford, a better-known poet. Back and Out Again (Mark Morgan Ford) (ISBN 9780615515250) Lexis in Wolf’s Clothing (Mark Morgan Ford) (ISBN 9780988336285) It is Raining Lovely ...
Ford Motor Company Chief Operating Officer Mark Fields (center), with (from left) CEO Alan Mulally, Executive Chairman Bill Ford, North America chief Joe Hinrichs, and product development chief ...
Mark Ford was born in Nairobi, Kenya on the 24th June, 1962 to Donald and Mary Ford. His father worked for the airlines BOAC, then British Airways.As a result, he had a peripatetic childhood, moving 'to a new country roughly every 18 months', accompanied by a 'sense of rootlessness or of not belonging'.
From a surname: This is a redirect from a person's surname.It is used because Wikipedia has only one article about a person with this surname, or because one individual is the most likely topic sought by this surname (other persons who share this name might be listed at an anthroponymy article or at the end of a disambiguation page).
The Mark 1, and later the Mark 1A, Fire Control Computer was a component of the Mark 37 Gun Fire Control System deployed by the United States Navy during World War II and up to 1991 and possibly later. It was originally developed by Hannibal C. Ford of the Ford Instrument Company [1] and William Newell.
Automotive Components Holdings, LLC (informally ACH) is a Ford Motor Company-managed temporary business formed by the 2005 transfer of 17 automotive components factories and six research, testing and other facilities from Visteon Corporation to Ford. The creation of ACH was intended to ensure that Ford continued to receive a flow of parts from ...