* Mono Hackers
+** John Luke
+
+John Luke has touched many aspects of Mono, including the core
+libraries, Gtk#, MonoDevelop, and Monodoc. His skills are apparent
+from his work. He sets an example by writing documentation along with
+his patches.
+
+** Dan Morgan
+
+Dan Morgan is an important contributor to the System.Data related
+assemblies but their code and has contributions that have touched
+plenty of areas in the Mono project as well as helping with the Win32
+installers on the early Mono days.
+
+** Tim Coleman
+
+Tim Coleman contributions span System.Data and set the foundation for
+some of the later work on System.Web.Services and has contributed all
+around Mono.
+
+** Todd Berman
+
+Todd Berman is a steady contributor to Mono. He has worked
+everywhere: from the Class Libraries, to the early implementation of
+the GAC and most recently has lead the effort to develop, port and
+maintain MonoDevelop an IDE for the Mono environment. His help has
+been key to the development of Mono.
+
+** Zoltan Varga
+
+Zoltan has contributed significantly to Mono, with bug reports and bug
+fixes as well as pushing the envelope of the things that can be done in
+and with the mono runtime: the gcc-based ngen compiler, code coverage
+and more recently his work with Reflection.Emit that got mono to the
+point of running the IKVM Java virtual machine.
+
+** Sergey Chaban
+
+Sergey has been a long time contributor to the project, from the early
+work on the class libraries that were critical to Mono's origin: every
+time you use a Hashtable in Mono, it runs Sergey's code, to the
+low-level optimizations on the JIT engine and to his work on ILASM and
+the PEToolkit. And countless other things.
+
** Nick Drochak
The first, deserved, entry in the <b>Mono Hackers Hall Of Fame</b> is for