Hans Peter Luhn: Hans Peter Luhn (July 1, 1896 – August
19, 1964) was a researcher in the field of computer science for IBM, and
creator of the Luhn algorithm, Key Words In Context (KWIC) indexing-a kind of
automatic indexing, and Selective dissemination of information (SDI) in 1958
and was published in "Bibliography and index: Literature on information
retrieval and machine translation". 2004-D-P-II-Q-7, 2005-J-P-II-Q-28, 2007-J-P-II-Q-45, 2009-D-P-II-Q-42, 2010-D-P-II-Q-42
Harold Dwight Lasswell: Harold Dwight
Lasswell (February 13, 1902 – December 18, 1978) was a leading American
political scientist and communications theorist. Lasswell's model of
communication (also known as Lasswell's communication model or Verbal
Communication Model) was developed by American political scientist and
communication theorist Harold Lasswell in 1948 article "The Structure
and Function of Communication in Society". Lasswell's communication
model describes an act of communication by defining who said it, what was said,
in what channel it was said, to whom it was said, and with what effect it was
said. 2013-D-P-III-Q-25, 2014-J-P-II-Q-17, 2015-D-P-III-Q-23
Harold Koontz: Harold Koontz (1909-1984)
was an American organizational theorist, professor of business management at
the University of California, Los Angeles and a consultant for many of
America's largest business organizations. He co-authored the book Principles of
Management (1955) with Cyril J. O'Donnell; the book has sold around two million
copies and has been translated into 15 languages. His another book "Essentials
of Management" (1986) is co-authored with Heinz Weihrich and is a
long-time best seller.
Harry Igor Ansoff: Harry Igor
Ansoff (December 12, 1918 – July 14, 2002) was a Russian American applied
mathematician and business manager. He is known as the father of strategic
management. His landmark book, Corporate Strategy (1965), was the first
text to concentrate entirely on strategy, and although the ideas outlined are
complex, it remains one of the classics of management literature.
Harry S. Truman: Harry S. Truman (May 8, 1884
– December 26, 1972) was the 33rd President of the United States (1945–53), an
American politician of the Democratic Party. In 1946 President Harry S.
Truman appointed George F. Zook to chair a 28-member Presidential
Commission on Higher Education that was given the charge of reexamining
the U.S. system of higher education "in terms of its objectives, methods,
and facilities; and in the light of the social role it has to play." In
1947, the Presidential Commission on Higher Education (also called
as The Truman Commission) produced a six-volume report entitled
"Higher Education for American Democracy" that recommended changes to
expand opportunities for post secondary education and opined that “The
Library is second only to the instructional staff in its importance for high
quality instruction and research.” 2015-D-P-III-Q-53
Heinz Weihrich: Heinz Weihrich is an author, management
consultant, and a professor of Global Management and Behavioral Science at the
University of San Francisco. He wrote Essentials of Management (1986),
co-authored by Harold Koontz and is a long-time best seller.
Helen Elizabeth Haines: Helen Elizabeth
Haines (1872–1961) was instrumental in the development of the library
science profession, though she herself never worked as a librarian or earned a
professional degree. According to Haines one should know the community's
character and interest and be familiar with subjects
of current interest and those books can
be selected that tend toward the development and enrichment of
life.
Popular Books of Helen Elizabeth Haines includes - Living with Books: The Art of
Book Selection (1935).
Popular Quotes of Helen Elizabeth Haines
includes - "From
every book invisible threads reach out to other books, and as the mind comes to
use and control those threads the whole panorama of the world's life, past and
present, becomes constantly more varied and interesting.", Living
with Books: The Art of Book Selection (1935). 2013-S-P-III-Q-54
Henri Fayol: Henri Fayol (29 July 1841 – 19 November
1925) was a French mining engineer, mining executive,an author and director of
mines who developed a general theory of business administration that is
often called Fayolism. In 1916, he published his "14 Principles of
Management" in the book "Administration Industrielle et
Générale." Fayol also created a list of the six primary functions of
management, which go hand in hand with the Principles. Fayol was also a
classical theorist (Classical style of management). 2009-J-P-II-Q-43, 2010-D-P-II-Q-41, 2012-J-P-III-Q-70, 2013-S-P-II-Q-33, 2013-D-P-II-Q-35, 2015-J-P-III-Q-55,
2016-J-P-II-Q-39, 2016-J-P-III-Q-49
Henri La Fontaine: Henri La Fontaine (22
April 1854 – 14 May 1943), was a Belgian international lawyer and president of
the International Peace Bureau. He received the Nobel Prize for Peace in
1913. Paul Marie Ghislain Otlet along with Henri La Fontaine created the
Universal Decimal Classification (UDC), one of the most prominent examples of
faceted classification in 1905. 2008-J-P-II-Q-40, 2010-J-P-II-Q-41, 2013-J-P-III-Q-54
Henriette Davidson Avram: Henriette Davidson
Avram at the Library of Congress beginning in the
1960s developed MAchine-Readable Cataloging (MARC) that defines
a bibliographic data format.
Henry Evelyn Bliss: Henry Evelyn Bliss (January
29, 1870 – August 9, 1955) was the author of a classification system he called
Bibliographic Classification which is often abbreviated to BC and is sometimes
called Bliss Classification published in four volumes between 1940 and
1953. 2005-J-P-II-Q-29, 2008-J-P-II-Q-40, 2010-J-P-II-Q-41, 2011-J-P-II-Q-42, 2013-J-P-III-Q-54,
2016-J-P-III-Q-49
Henry Laurence Gantt: Henry Laurence
Gantt (May 20, 1861 – November 23, 1919) was an American mechanical
engineer and management consultant. Henry Laurence Gantt developed
Gantt chart which is a type of bar chart in the 1910, that illustrates a
project schedule. 2006-J-P-II-Q-32, 2007-J-P-II-Q-41
Henry
Mintzberg: Henry
Mintzberg (September 2, 1939 - ) is an internationally renowned academic and
author on business and management. The organizational configurations framework
of Mintzberg is a model that describes six valid organizational configurations
(originally only five; the sixth one was added later).
Henry Small: The co-citation analysis approach introduced
by Henry Small and published in the form of article "Co-citation in
the scientific literature: a new measure of the relationship between two
documents" in 1973.
Herbert Marvin Ohlman: Herbert Marvin
Ohlman (1927–2002) is the inventor of permutation indexing, or Permuterm
in 1958 in a paper titled "Subject-word letter frequencies with
applications to superimposed coding" to the International Conference on
Scientific Information (ICSI) in Washington, DC. Permuterm is known one of
the first successful punch card indexing systems, and is still referenced today
in the data indexing field. Herbert M. Ohlman also treated as a developer
of the automatic indexing.
Herbert Menzel: Herbert Menzel investigated user study
and defined information seeking behaviour from three angles: Behaviour
Studies, Use studies and Information flow studies in "Information Needs
and Uses in Science and Technology (1966). 2012-D-P-III-Q-1

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