MOTOROLA INC
DEF 14A, 1995-03-21
RADIO & TV BROADCASTING & COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT
Previous: MISSISSIPPI POWER CO, 35-CERT, 1995-03-21
Next: NALCO CHEMICAL CO, 424B3, 1995-03-21



<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
            the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.    )

    Filed by the Registrant /X/
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

    Check the appropriate box:
    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    / /  Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
         14a-6(e)(2))
    /X/  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.14a-12

                                            MOTOROLA, INC.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

/X/  $125 per  Exchange Act  Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii),  14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2)  or
     Item 22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
/ /  $500  per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).
/ /  Fee  computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules   14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11.
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
        filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     5) Total fee paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
/ /  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement  number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     1) Amount Previously Paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Filing Party:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
   [LOGO]
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES:                          PLACE OF MEETING:
1303 East Algonquin Road                              1297 East Algonquin Road
Schaumburg, Illinois 60196                            Schaumburg, Illinois 60196

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

To the Stockholders:

    Notice  is hereby given that the annual meeting of stockholders of Motorola,
Inc. (the "Company" or "Motorola"), a Delaware corporation, will be held in  the
Auditorium at the Company's Galvin Center, 1297 East Algonquin Road, Schaumburg,
Illinois  on Tuesday, May 2,  1995 at 5:00 P. M.,  local time, for the following
purposes:

    1.  To elect directors for the ensuing year;

    2.  To consider and vote upon the Non-Employee Directors' Stock Plan; and

    3.  To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting.

    Only stockholders of the Company of record at the close of business on March
15, 1995 will be entitled to vote at the meeting.

    Stockholders are requested to vote, date, sign and mail their proxies in the
form enclosed even though they now  plan to attend the meeting. If  stockholders
are  present at the meeting,  their proxies may be  withdrawn, and they may vote
personally on all matters brought before the meeting.

                                            By order of the Board of Directors
                                                     Richard H. Weise
                                                         SECRETARY
March 21, 1995

                                   IMPORTANT

    WE HOPE YOU WILL ATTEND THE  STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. IN ORDER THAT THERE  MAY
BE A PROPER REPRESENTATION AT THE MEETING, EACH STOCKHOLDER IS REQUESTED TO SEND
IN HIS OR HER PROXY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE WHICH REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED
IN  THE UNITED STATES. ATTENTION BY STOCKHOLDERS TO THIS REQUEST WILL REDUCE THE
COMPANY'S EXPENSE IN SOLICITING PROXIES.
<PAGE>
                                PROXY STATEMENT

    The  annual  meeting of  stockholders of  Motorola,  Inc. (the  "Company" or
"Motorola") will  be held  on May  2, 1995  for the  purposes set  forth in  the
accompanying  Notice.  The only  matters  which the  Board  of Directors  of the
Company intend to present are the election of directors and the adoption of  the
Non-Employee  Directors' Stock Plan. It is anticipated that this Proxy Statement
and the enclosed proxy will  be first mailed to  stockholders on or about  March
21, 1995.

    Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on March 15, 1995 will
be entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting or any adjournments thereof.
On that  date, there  were  588,517,254 issued  and  outstanding shares  of  the
Company's  common stock, $3 par value per share ("Common Stock"), the only class
of voting securities of the Company. For each matter, including the election  of
directors,  which may  come before  the meeting, each  share is  entitled to one
vote.

    The enclosed proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors of the Company. If
the proxy  in such  form is  properly  executed and  returned, and  choices  are
specified,  the  shares represented  thereby  will be  voted  at the  meeting in
accordance with those instructions. If no choices are specified, the proxy  will
be voted--

    FOR - Election of directors nominated by the Board of Directors and

    FOR - Adoption of the Non-Employee Directors' Stock Plan.

    The proxy, if given, may be revoked by the stockholder giving it at any time
before  it is voted, and  such right is not limited  by or subject to compliance
with any specified formal procedure. A proxy may be revoked by written notice of
revocation or by a later proxy, in either case delivered to the Secretary of the
Company. Attendance at the 1995 Annual  Meeting will not automatically revoke  a
proxy,  but a stockholder in attendance may request a ballot and vote in person,
thereby revoking a prior granted proxy.

    The Company's Annual Report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994  was
first  mailed  to stockholders  on  or about  March  21, 1995.  Stockholders are
referred to that report for financial and other information about the activities
of the Company.  The Annual Report  is not incorporated  by reference into  this
Proxy Statement and is not to be deemed a part hereof.
<PAGE>
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

    The  terms of office of all present  directors of the Company will expire on
the day of the annual meeting upon the election of their successors. The  number
of directors of the Company to be elected at the annual meeting is eighteen. The
directors  elected  at  the annual  meeting  will serve  until  their respective
successors are elected and qualified or until earlier death or resignation.

                                    NOMINEES

    Each of the nominees named below is currently a director of the Company  and
each  was elected  at the annual  meeting of  stockholders held on  May 3, 1994,
except for Mr. Fuller and Mr. Pepper who were elected to the Board of  Directors
in November, 1994 and Ms. Lewent and Dr. White who are standing for election for
the first time.

    Erich  Bloch and  Wallace C.  Doud are not  standing for  re-election to the
Board of  Directors  pursuant to  the  Company's policy  on  age and  tenure  of
directors.

    At the time of the annual meeting, if any of the nominees named below is not
available to serve as a director (an event which the Board of Directors does not
now anticipate), the proxies will be voted for the election as directors of such
other  person or  persons as  the Board of  Directors may  designate, unless the
Board of Directors, in its discretion,  adopts a resolution reducing the  number
of directors.

    Set  forth  below are  the names  and  ages of  the nominees,  the principal
occupation of each, the year in which  first elected a director of the  Company,
the  business experience of  each for at  least the past  five years and certain
other information concerning each of the nominees.

                                       2
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            WILLIAM J. WEISZ
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD, MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1968
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--67

                       Mr.  Weisz  joined  the  Company  in  1948;  became  vice
                   president  in  1961;  general manager  of  the communications
                   division in  1965;  executive vice  president  and  assistant
                   chief  operating officer  in 1969;  president in  1970; chief
                   operating officer  in 1972;  vice chairman  of the  board  in
                   1980;  chief executive  officer in  1986; and  officer of the
                   board in 1988. Mr. Weisz retired as an officer of the Company
                   in  1989,  but  remained  active   with  the  Company  as   a
                   consultant,  and  a teacher  at  Motorola University  and, in
                   1993, was elected chairman  of the board. He  is a member  of
the Board of Directors of Harris Bankcorp, Inc. and its wholly-owned subsidiary,
Harris  Trust  and Savings  Bank.  Mr. Weisz  is a  Fellow  of the  Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the  Radio Club of America and is  past
chairman  of the Electronic  Industries Association Board of  Governors. He is a
member of  the  Massachusetts  Institute of  Technology  Corporation  (Board  of
Trustees).  He has  served on  a number  of government  advisory committees. Mr.
Weisz received a B.S.E.E. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of  Technology
and  did graduate work at Northwestern University and the University of Chicago.
He has an  honorary Doctor of  Business Administration degree  from St.  Ambrose
College and has been given the MIT Corporate Leadership Award and the Electronic
Industries Association Medal of Honor.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            DAVID R. CLARE
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: RETIRED; FORMERLY PRESIDENT,
                   JOHNSON & JOHNSON
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1986; CHAIRMAN OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                   AND MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--69

                       Mr.   Clare  joined  Johnson  &  Johnson,  a  health-care
                   products supplier,  in 1946  as a  manufacturing trainee  and
                   spent  his entire  career with that  company. He  served in a
                   variety of assignments and, in  1971, was elected a  Director
                   and  member of  the Executive  Committee. In  1976, he became
                   President and Chairman of  the Executive Committee. In  1989,
                   he  retired from those  positions and became  Chairman of the
Finance Committee and,  in 1990, he  retired from Johnson  & Johnson's Board  of
Directors.  He is a member  of the Board of Trustees  of the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation. He is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

                                       3
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            H. LAURANCE FULLER
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD, PRESIDENT AND
                   CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, AMOCO CORPORATION
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1994
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--56

                       Mr. Fuller is Chairman of the Board, President and  Chief
                   Executive  Officer of  Amoco Corporation,  an energy products
                   company.  Mr.   Fuller  was   elected  President   of   Amoco
                   Corporation  in 1983, and its Chairman of the Board and Chief
                   Executive Officer  in 1991.  He has  been a  member of  Amoco
                   Corporation's  Executive Committee and a  member of the Board
                   of Directors of Amoco since 1981. Mr. Fuller joined Amoco  in
                   1961,  was named President of Amoco  Oil Company in 1978, and
was elected Executive Vice President of Amoco Corporation in 1981. He is also  a
director  of The  Chase Manhattan Corporation,  The Chase  Manhattan Bank, N.A.,
Abbott  Laboratories,   the   American  Petroleum   Institute,   Catalyst,   and
Rehabilitation  Institute of Chicago. He is a trustee of Northwestern University
and the Chicago Orchestral Association, and  a member of the University  Council
of Cornell University. Mr. Fuller graduated from Cornell University in 1961 with
a  B.S. degree  in chemical  engineering, and earned  a J.D.  degree from DePaul
University Law School in 1965.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            CHRISTOPHER B. GALVIN
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: PRESIDENT AND CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER,
                   MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1988; MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND FINANCE
                   COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--44

                       Mr. Galvin  began working  for the  Company part-time  in
                   1967  and full-time in 1973. Between  1973 and 1988 he served
                   in a variety of  sales, sales management, marketing,  product
                   management,   service   management  and   general  management
                   positions in the  Company's Communications, Tegal  subsidiary
                   (semiconductor   capital   equipment  products)   and  Paging
                   businesses. In 1988, he became Chief Corporate Staff  Officer
                   and  was  elected to  the Motorola's  Board of  Directors. In
1990, he was appointed to the Office of the Chief Executive as Senior  Executive
Vice President and Assistant Chief Operating Officer. He has served as President
and  Chief Operating Officer since 1993. Mr. Galvin received a bachelor's degree
from Northwestern University  and a  master's degree with  distinction from  the
Kellogg  Graduate School of Management at Northwestern.  He is a trustee of Rand
Corporation, Northwestern University, and the American Enterprise Institute. Mr.
Galvin is a son of Robert W. Galvin.

                                       4
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            ROBERT W. GALVIN
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: CHAIRMAN OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE,
                   MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1945
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--72

                       Mr. Galvin started his career at the Company in 1940.  He
                   held the senior officership position in the Company from 1959
                   until   1990,  when  he  became  Chairman  of  the  Executive
                   Committee. He continues to  serve as a  full time officer  of
                   the Company. He attended the University of Notre Dame and the
                   University of Chicago, and is currently a member of the Board
                   of  Trustees of Illinois Institute  of Technology. Mr. Galvin
                   has been  awarded a  number of  honorary degrees  as well  as
industrial, professional and national awards and recognition.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            JOHN T. HICKEY
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: RETIRED; FORMERLY EXECUTIVE VICE
                   PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1974; CHAIRMAN OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE AND
                   MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND AUDIT COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--69

                       Mr.  Hickey joined the Company in 1948; became manager of
                   the semiconductor products division in 1956; assistant to the
                   president in 1958; vice president for planning in 1965;  vice
                   president  for  finance and  secretary  in 1970;  senior vice
                   president and chief financial officer in 1974; and  executive
                   vice president in 1984. He retired in 1985. He also serves as
                   a  director  of Trustmark  Insurance  Company. He  is  a past
Chairman of the  Board of Trustees  of Loyola Academy,  Wilmette, Illinois.  Mr.
Hickey  graduated from Loyola  University of Chicago and  holds an M.B.A. degree
from the University of Chicago.

                                       5
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            ANNE P. JONES
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: CONSULTANT
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1984; CHAIRMAN OF THE LEGAL COMMITTEE AND
                   MEMBER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--59

                       Ms. Jones is currently working as a consultant. She was a
                   partner in  the Washington,  D.C. office  of the  Sutherland,
                   Asbill  &  Brennan  law  firm  from  1983  until  1994. Prior
                   thereto, she was a Commissioner of the Federal Communications
                   Commission, General  Counsel of  the Federal  Home Loan  Bank
                   Board,  and was on  the staff of  the Securities and Exchange
                   Commission from  1968  to  1977.  She  was  Director  of  the
                   Division  of  Investment  Management  of  the  Securities and
Exchange Commission in 1976 and 1977. Ms. Jones is a director of the IDS  Mutual
Fund  Group and C-COR Electronics,  Inc. She holds B.S.  and L.L.B. degrees from
Boston College and its Law School, respectively.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            DONALD R. JONES
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: RETIRED; FORMERLY EXECUTIVE VICE
                   PRESIDENT AND CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1987; MEMBER OF THE FINANCE AND LEGAL
                   COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--64

                       Mr. Jones joined the Company in 1951; became director  of
                   finance  and planning of the communications division in 1968;
                   treasurer  of  the  Company  in  1971;  vice  president   and
                   assistant  chief  financial  officer  in  1974;  senior  vice
                   president and assistant chief financial officer in 1984;  and
                   executive vice president and chief financial officer in 1985.
                   He  retired in  1991. He  is a  trustee of  the Kemper Mutual
                   Funds, Chicago,  Illinois.  Mr.  Jones  received  a  B.S.E.E.
degree  from  the  University of  Illinois  and  did graduate  work  in Business
Administration at Northwestern University.

                                       6
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            JUDY C. LEWENT
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF
                   FINANCIAL OFFICER, MERCK & CO., INC.
                   NOMINEE
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--45

                       Ms. Lewent  has  been  Senior Vice  President  and  Chief
                   Financial  Officer,  Merck  &  Co.,  Inc.,  a pharmaceuticals
                   company,   since   1992   and    was   formerly   its    Vice
                   President--Finance  and  Chief Financial  Officer (1990-1992)
                   and Vice President and Treasurer  (1987-1990). She is also  a
                   director   of   Astra   Merck,   Inc.;   the   DuPont   Merck
                   Pharmaceutical Company;  Johnson  &  Johnson  Merck  Consumer
                   Pharmaceuticals Company; The Quaker Oats Company; Rockefeller
Financial Services, Inc.; and Rockefeller & Co., Inc. Ms. Lewent received a B.S.
degree  from  Goucher  College  and  a M.S.  degree  from  MIT  Sloan  School of
Management.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            WALTER E. MASSEY
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: PROVOST AND SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT,
                   ACADEMIC AFFAIRS, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SYSTEM
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1993; MEMBER OF THE NOMINATING AND
                   TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--56

                       After being staff physicist  and post-doctoral fellow  at
                   Argonne  National  Laboratory,  assistant  professor  at  the
                   University of Illinois, associate professor and professor  of
                   physics  at Brown University, Dr.  Massey then joined Argonne
                   National Laboratory  as its  director and  was named  to  the
                   additional  position of  Vice President  for Research  at the
                   University of  Chicago  in  1982. In  1984,  he  became  Vice
President  for Research and  for Argonne National  Laboratory, the University of
Chicago. In  1991, he  was appointed,  by President  Bush, the  Director of  the
National  Science  Foundation, which  office he  held  until April,  1993. Since
April, 1993 he  has been Provost  and Senior Vice  President, Academic  Affairs,
University  of California System. Dr. Massey  received a Ph.D. degree in physics
and Master of Arts degree from  Washington University. He also holds a  Bachelor
of Science degree in Physics and Mathematics from Morehouse College. He also was
a  past President of  the American Physical  Society. He is  a director of Amoco
Corporation and BankAmerica  Corporation and  its subsidiary,  Bank of  America,
N.T.S.A.

                                       7
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            JOHN F. MITCHELL
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: VICE CHAIRMAN AND OFFICER OF THE BOARD,
                   MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1974; MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND
                   TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--66

                       Mr.  Mitchell  joined the  Company  in 1953;  became vice
                   president of  the Company  in 1968;  general manager  of  the
                   communications division in 1972; executive vice president and
                   assistant chief operating officer in 1975; president in 1980;
                   chief  operating  officer  in  1986;  and  vice  chairman and
                   officer of the board  in 1988. He is  former chairman of  the
                   Electronic  Industries Association and a former member of its
Board of  Governors. He  is a  former director  of the  National Association  of
Manufacturers;  a member of the President's National Security Telecommunications
Advisory Committee; a  Fellow of the  Radio Club  of America; is  a director  of
National  Material Corporation and is  on the Advisory Board  of Trustees of the
Foundation  for  Student  Communications,  Princeton  University.  Mr.  Mitchell
received a B.S. degree from the Illinois Institute of Technology. He was awarded
an honorary doctorate from Iowa Wesleyan College.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            THOMAS J. MURRIN
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: DEAN OF DUQUESNE UNIVERSITY'S
                   SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1991; MEMBER OF THE COMPENSATION AND
                   NOMINATING COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--65

                       Mr.  Murrin is  Dean of  Duquesne University's  School of
                   Business Administration. He  previously was Deputy  Secretary
                   of  the U.  S. Department  of Commerce  and served  as a U.S.
                   delegate to  the  NATO Industrial  Advisory  Group and  as  a
                   member  of the  Defense Policy  Advisory Committee  on Trade.
                   From 1983  to  1987,  he  was President  of  the  Energy  and
                   Advanced    Technology   Group   of   Westinghouse   Electric
Corporation, which he joined in 1951. Mr. Murrin also served as chairman of  the
Commission  on the Federal  Appointment Process, the  Federal Quality Institute,
the Board of Overseers  of the Commerce  Department's Malcolm Baldrige  National
Quality  Award and the Defense Department's  Defense Manufacturing Board. He has
also served as Distinguished Service  Professor in Technology and Management  at
Carnegie  Mellon University,  as Chairman of  the Board of  Trustees of Duquesne
University and as a member of the Board of Trustees of Fordham University. He is
a director of Duquesne Light Company and its holding company, DQE, Inc.

                                       8
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            JOHN E. PEPPER, JR.
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: PRESIDENT OF PROCTER & GAMBLE CO.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1994
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--56

                       John E. Pepper, Jr., is President and member of the Board
                   of Directors of  Procter &  Gamble Co.,  a consumer  products
                   company.  Mr. Pepper joined Procter  & Gamble in 1963, became
                   General Manager of Procter &  Gamble Italia in 1974, and  was
                   named  Division Manager - International  in 1977. In 1978, he
                   returned to  the U.S.  as  Vice President-Packaged  Soap  and
                   Detergent  Division. He was  elected Executive Vice President
                   of Procter & Gamble Co. and  named to its Board of  Directors
                   in 1984 and was named President in 1986. Mr. Pepper is also a
director of the Xerox Corporation. He is Co-Chairman of the Governor's Education
Council of the State of Ohio, a member of the Yale School of Management Advisory
Council,  and was  Chairman of  the 1994 Cincinnati  United Way  Campaign. He is
Co-Chairman of  the Cincinnati  Youth  Collaborative, a  trustee of  the  Christ
Church  Endowment Fund and the Cincinnati  Art Museum. Mr. Pepper graduated from
Yale University in  1960 and  holds honorary  doctorate degrees  from Mount  St.
Joseph College and St. Petersburg University (Russia).

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            SAMUEL C. SCOTT III
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: CORPORATE VICE PRESIDENT OF
                   CPC INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1993; MEMBER OF THE COMPENSATION AND
                   FINANCE COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--50

                       Mr.  Scott is currently a Corporate Vice President of CPC
                   International, Inc., a consumer foods company, and  President
                   of  Corn Products, its North American corn refining business.
                   Mr. Scott joined Corn Products in 1973 and has held a variety
                   of increasingly responsible positions with the company  since
                   that  time.  He  received  a Bachelor  of  Science  degree in
                   mechanical   engineering   and    a   Master   of    Business
Administration  degree from Fairleigh Dickinson University.  Mr. Scott is on the
Boards of  Directors of  Arancia-CPC, Inroads/Chicago,  MERC (Minority  Economic
Resources Corporation), Harris Bank Argo, and the Corn Refiners Association.

                                       9
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            GARY L. TOOKER
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: VICE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD AND
                   CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, MOTOROLA, INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1986; MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE, FINANCE AND
                   LEGAL COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--55

                       Mr.  Tooker  started with  the  Company in  1962, holding
                   ascending marketing  and  operations assignments  within  the
                   semiconductor  division; he was appointed director of product
                   operations--MOS in 1974;  in 1975, he  was elected  corporate
                   vice   president   and  general   manager  of   the  discrete
                   semiconductor division; vice president and general manager of
                   the group's  international  semiconductor division  in  1980;
vice president and general manager of the semiconductor products sector in 1981;
executive  vice  president and  general  manager of  the  semiconductor products
sector in  1984;  senior executive  vice  president and  chief  corporate  staff
officer  in 1986; chief operating  officer in 1988; president  in 1990; and vice
chairman of the board and chief executive officer in 1993. Mr. Tooker has served
as chairman of the Semiconductor Industry Association Board of Directors, member
of the Arizona  Association of  Industries Board of  Directors, the  Scottsdale,
Arizona  Boys Club Board of Directors and as a member of the Advisory Council on
Engineering at Arizona State University. He is the past Chairman of the Board of
Directors of the American Electronics Association.  He is a member of the  Board
of  Directors of  Junior Achievement  of Chicago,  the Arizona  State University
Alumni Association and the Arizona State University Foundation. He is a director
and deputy international  president of  the Pacific Basin  Economic Council  and
chairman  of its U.S. Member Committee. He  is active in the Chicago United Way.
He  is  a  director  of  Eaton  Corporation  and  a  member  of  the  Electrical
Manufacturers   Club,  the  Chicago  Economics  Club,  the  American  Management
Association and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. In  1983,
he received the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Arizona State University. He is
a  graduate of Arizona State University where he received a bachelor's degree in
Electrical Engineering and did post-graduate studies in Business Administration.

                                       10
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            GARDINER L. TUCKER
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: RETIRED; FORMERLY VICE PRESIDENT FOR
                   SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1980; CHAIRMAN OF THE TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE AND
                   MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND AUDIT COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--69

                       Dr.  Tucker   joined  International   Business   Machines
                   Corporation  in 1952 as a  research scientist. Thereafter, he
                   served in a variety of research positions for IBM,  including
                   manager  of semiconductor  and transistor research  at an IBM
                   laboratory. In 1961, he was appointed Director of Development
                   Engineering for  IBM World  Trade  Corporation and  in  1963,
                   Director  of Research for IBM. Starting in 1967, he served in
the Department of Defense as Deputy Director of Defense Research and Engineering
for Electronics and Information Systems; as Principal Deputy Director of Defense
Research and Engineering;  and in 1970,  as Assistant Secretary  of Defense  for
Systems  Analysis. From 1973 to 1976, he was Assistant Secretary General of NATO
for Defense Support. From 1976  to 1985, he was  vice president for science  and
technology,   International  Paper  Company,  a  paper  and  building  materials
producer. Dr. Tucker received an A.B.  degree from Columbia College in New  York
City and a Ph.D. in Physics from Columbia University.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[PHOTO]            B. KENNETH WEST
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD, HARRIS BANKCORP,
                   INC.
                   DIRECTOR SINCE 1976; CHAIRMAN OF THE NOMINATING COMMITTEE AND
                   MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND FINANCE COMMITTEES
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--61

                       Mr.  West is  Chairman of the  Board of  Harris Trust and
                   Savings Bank and its  holding company, Harris Bankcorp,  Inc.
                   He  had been employed  at Harris since  1957, and was elected
                   President of Harris in 1980 and Chairman and Chief  Executive
                   Officer  in  1984.  In  September 1993  he  retired  as chief
                   executive officer and as an employee, retaining his  position
                   as Chairman of the Board. He is also a director of The Pepper
                   Companies,  Inc.  A native  of  Carthage, Illinois,  Mr. West
joined Harris after two years  of service as a U.S.  Navy Officer. He is a  1955
Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of Illinois and after joining the bank
completed  night  classes to  receive an  M.B.A.  with honors  in 1960  from the
University of Chicago.  He is  a member  of and past  chairman of  the board  of
trustees  of the University of Chicago and  in 1988 was awarded the University's
honorary Doctor of Laws degree. He is immediate past President of the University
of Illinois Foundation and is the immediate past Chairman of the Civic Committee
of the Commercial Club of Chicago of which he is a past President.

                                       11
<PAGE>
[PHOTO]            DR. JOHN A. WHITE
                   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION: DEAN OF ENGINEERING,
                   GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
                   NOMINEE
                   AGE AT 12/31/94--55

                       Dr. White  has served  since  July 1,  1991, as  Dean  of
                   Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology, having been a
                   member of the faculty since 1975. During the period from July
                   1988  to September 1991,  he served as  Assistant Director of
                   the National Science Foundation  in Washington, D.C.  through
                   an  Intergovernmental Personnel Agreement  with Georgia Tech.
                   He is  a director  of Eastman  Chemical Company  and  Russell
                   Corporation.   Dr.  White   received  a   B.S.I.E.  from  the
University of Arkansas, a M.S.I.E. from Virginia Tech and a Ph.D from Ohio State
University.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                         INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

    KPMG Peat Marwick served as the Company's independent public accountants for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994 and are serving in such capacity for the
current fiscal year. The appointment  of independent public accountants is  made
annually  by the Board of  Directors. The decision of  the Board of Directors is
based on the recommendation of the audit committee, which reviews both the audit
scope and  estimated  audit  fees.  Representatives of  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  are
expected  to be present at  the annual meeting and  will have the opportunity to
make a statement if they desire to do so and to respond to appropriate questions
of stockholders.

               MEETINGS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY

    During 1994, the Board of Directors of the Company met in person four times.
Two of the meetings were of two days duration.

    All incumbent  directors attended  75%  or more  of  the combined  total  of
meetings  and actions of the Board of Directors and the committees on which they
served during 1994.

              COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY

    The  Company  has  standing  audit,  compensation,  nominating,   executive,
finance, legal and technology committees of the Board of Directors.

    The  present  members of  the audit  committee  are Messrs.  Doud, CHAIRMAN,
Hickey and Tucker  and Ms.  A. Jones. This  committee held  two meetings  during
1994. The principal functions of the audit committee are as follows:

    1.   Recommend to the Board of Directors the selection of independent public
       accountants;

    2.  Review and approve the scope of the examinations to be conducted by  the
       independent public accountants;

                                       12
<PAGE>
    3.  Review the reports and evaluations of the independent public accountants
       and  monitor  progress toward  correction  of any  important deficiencies
       specified by such accountants;

    4.  Review the accounting standards and principles followed by the  Company,
       and  in  this connection,  receive annually  from the  independent public
       accountants a report describing any material item affecting the financial
       statements which might be given alternative treatment;

    5.   Receive internal  audit reports  directly from  the Company's  internal
       auditors  and  monitor  progress  in  the  correction  of  any  important
       deficiencies; and

    6.  Monitor  adherence to  established corporate  practices, including  such
       matters  as conflict  of interest,  political contributions, questionable
       payments and standards of business  conduct, and arrange for any  special
       investigations or audits that may be deemed necessary.

    The  present  members  of  the  compensation  committee  are  Messrs. Clare,
CHAIRMAN, Murrin and  Scott. This  committee met  seven times  during 1994.  The
compensation  of  executive  officers  is  reviewed  by  the  committee  and the
compensation of other elected officers of  the Company is reviewed and fixed  by
the  compensation committee. In addition, the compensation committee administers
the Motorola Executive  Incentive Plan,  the Long Range  Incentive Program,  the
Long  Range  Incentive  Plan of  1994,  the  Share Option  Plans,  and generally
exercises the authority of the Board of Directors with respect to other  benefit
plans of the Company.

    The  present members of the nominating committee are Messrs. West, CHAIRMAN,
Massey and Murrin.  This committee held  three meetings in  1994. The  principal
functions of the nominating committee are as follows:

    1.   Provide  written criteria to  be used  as a guideline  in selecting and
       reviewing candidates for the Board;

    2.  Develop and maintain a list of potential candidates for the Board;

    3.  Provide an indoctrination and  education program for new members of  the
       Board;

    4.  Review the performance and contribution of outside members of the Board;
       and

    5.   Determine the need for, and  qualification of, any corporate officer to
       be a candidate for nomination.

    The  nominating   committee  will   consider  individuals   recommended   by
stockholders  of the  Company as  potential future  nominees. The  names of such
individuals together with a full statement  of their qualifications to serve  as
directors of the Company should be submitted to the nominating committee in care
of  the  Secretary  of the  Company  at  1303 East  Algonquin  Road, Schaumburg,
Illinois 60196.

    Messrs. R.  Galvin,  CHAIRMAN, Clare,  Doud,  C. Galvin,  Hickey,  Mitchell,
Tooker,  Tucker, and  West are  the present  members of  the executive committee
which reviews the Company's strategic

                                       13
<PAGE>
planning process and the allocation of resources and exercises the authority  of
the  Board on  specific matters assigned  by the  Board from time  to time. This
committee did not hold any meetings in 1994.

    Messrs. Hickey, CHAIRMAN, C.  Galvin, D. Jones, Scott,  Tooker and West  are
the  present  members  of  the  finance  committee,  which  discusses  and makes
recommendations with respect to  the overall financial  posture of the  Company.
This committee held three meetings in 1994.

    Messrs.  Tucker, CHAIRMAN, Bloch, Doud, Massey  and Mitchell are the present
members of the technology committee,  which identifies and assesses  significant
technological  issues and needs  affecting the Company.  This committee held two
meetings in 1994.

    Ms. A.  Jones, CHAIRMAN,  and Messrs.  Bloch, D.  Jones and  Tooker are  the
present  members of the legal committee, which is responsible for maintaining an
overview of the Company's legal affairs  and its relationship with all  internal
and external attorneys. This committee held two meetings in 1994.

                             DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

    The  standard arrangement during 1994 for compensating directors who are not
employees ("non-officer directors") of the Company was the payment of an  annual
retainer  of  $35,000 to  each director.  The annual  retainer was  increased to
$40,000, effective January 1, 1995. Each non-officer director who is chairman of
a  committee  receives  an  additional  $4,000  per  annum.  In  addition,  each
non-officer  director receives $1,500 per  day for directors' meetings attended,
$1,000 per day for full  or partial days devoted to  assigned work on behalf  of
committees  of the Board,  including attendance at  committee meetings which are
not held in conjunction with, and on the same day as, directors' meetings;  $500
per  day for committee meetings attended which are held in conjunction with, and
on the same day  as, directors' meetings  and $1,000 per  day for certain  other
services for the benefit of the Company or any subsidiary which are requested by
the  Board, any committee of the Board or a member of the Chief Executive Office
(currently, Gary L. Tooker and Christopher B. Galvin). Non-officer directors may
elect to defer receipt of all or any portion of their annual retainer and  their
per meeting fees until the year after that in which they cease being a director,
become  disabled or reach  a designated age. Such  deferred amounts are credited
with interest  at a  rate based  on the  discount rate  for ninety-day  Treasury
bills.  Payments generally may be  made in a lump  sum or in annual installments
over a period not exceeding ten years. The entire undistributed deferred  amount
(plus  interest)  will  be  distributed  in  a  lump  sum  upon  a participating
director's death.  The Company  also reimburses  its directors  and spouses  who
accompany  directors,  in certain  instances,  for travel,  lodging  and related
expenses they  incur in  attending Board  and committee  meetings. In  addition,
non-officer  directors  participate  in a  retirement  plan which  will  pay the
director, upon retirement  on or after  age 65,  an annual benefit  equal to  10
percent  of the annual retainer  in effect on the date  of his or her retirement
for each year  of service with  a maximum benefit  equal to 80  percent of  such
retainer.  Benefits will continue for  the life of the  retired director and the
director's spouse. Directors who are full  time employees of the Company do  not
accrue  benefits under this  plan unless they  remain on the  Board of Directors
after retiring from the Company. Non-officer directors are covered by  insurance
which provides accidental death and dismemberment

                                       14
<PAGE>
coverage  of  $500,000 per  person. The  spouse  of each  such director  is also
covered by such insurance when traveling with the director on business trips for
the Company.  The  Company pays  the  premiums  for such  insurance.  The  total
premiums  for coverage of all  such directors and their  spouses during the year
ended December 31, 1994 was approximately $2,760.

    Mr. Robert W.  Galvin, a director  and executive officer,  owns an  airplane
which  he used on business travel for the Company for approximately 82.9% of its
miles flown in  1994. The  Company employs  pilots and  mechanics for  airplanes
which  it  owns.  They also  devote  a portion  of  their time  to  Mr. Galvin's
airplane, including those times when it  is not being used on Company  business.
The  Company  pays  the  salaries  and the  cost  of  fringe  benefits  of these
employees. Mr. Galvin  pays all of  the other expenses  of his airplane,  except
that  the cost  of fuel,  oil and  relatively minor  incidental crew  and flight
expenses incurred solely in connection  with Company business flights, are  paid
by  the  Company. Mr.  Galvin does  not  charge the  Company when  other Company
personnel accompany  him  on  his  airplane on  business  trips.  In  1994,  and
historically,  the percentage  of the total  expenses of the  airplane which has
been paid by  the Company  has been  less than the  percentage of  usage of  the
airplane  for Company business. In  1994, a company wholly-owned  by the wife of
Mr. Christopher B.  Galvin performed  interior design and  related services,  at
cost, for a multiple of clients in the Company. Payments totalling approximately
$90,000  have been or are to  be made to her company.  No profit was made by her
company from  these services.  The Company  considers these  arrangements to  be
economically beneficial to it.

    Mr.  Erich Bloch,  a director, had  a consulting agreement  with the Company
under which he  performed services  as a consultant  to the  Company on  various
matters.  He received $30,000 plus expenses  under this arrangement in 1994. Mr.
John Hickey, a director, had a consulting agreement with the Company under which
he consulted with investment  professionals within the  Company on an  as-needed
basis.  He received  $32,000 plus  expenses under  this arrangement  in 1994. In
addition, Mr. Donald  Jones, a  director, had  a consulting  agreement with  the
Company  under  which  he served  as  Chairman  of the  Advisory  and Retirement
Committees and  received $8,000  per quarter.  Mr. Jones  received during  1994,
$38,000  for  his services  which included  $6,000 for  consulting fees  for the
fourth quarter  of 1993,  and  was reimbursed  for  his expenses.  Dr.  Gardiner
Tucker, a director, also had a consulting agreement with the Company under which
he  was compensated $15,000 in  1994 for his services  which included $5,000 for
consulting fees for the  second half of  1993, and was  also reimbursed for  his
expenses connected with his services. Mr. William J. Weisz has an agreement with
the  Company under which he performs services  as a consultant to the Company on
various matters, the majority of which are related to his duties as Chairman  of
the Board of Directors. In 1994 he was paid $75,000 for the month of January and
$25,000  a month thereafter.  Thus Mr. Weisz received  $350,000 plus expenses in
1994 in addition to the other payments he receives as a director.  Additionally,
Mr.  Weisz was awarded a bonus of  $175,000 in recognition of his performance as
Chairman of  the Board  of Directors  as well  as other  activities he  performs
frequently. Ms. Anne Jones was a partner in the law firm of Sutherland, Asbill &
Brennan  which furnished legal services to the Company in 1994 and she may serve
as a consultant to the Company from time to time.

                                       15
<PAGE>
                            APPROVAL BY STOCKHOLDERS

    In order to be elected,  a nominee must receive the  vote of a plurality  of
the  outstanding shares of Common Stock  represented at the meeting and entitled
to vote. Shares may be voted for or withheld from each nominee. Shares that  are
withheld and broker non-votes will have no effect on the outcome of the election
because  directors  will be  elected  by a  plurality  of the  shares  voted for
directors.
      THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A  VOTE FOR THE ELECTION AS  DIRECTORS
  OF  THE NOMINEES NAMED HEREIN. UNLESS  INDICATED OTHERWISE ON THE PROXY, THE
  SHARES WILL BE VOTED FOR THE ELECTION AS DIRECTORS OF SUCH NOMINEES.

                                       16
<PAGE>
                SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT OF THE COMPANY

    The following table sets forth information as of January 31, 1995 (except as
indicated below)  regarding the  beneficial ownership  of Common  Stock by  each
director  and nominee for director  of the Company, by  the persons named in the
Summary Compensation Table on  page 19, and by  all current directors,  nominees
and current executive officers of the Company as a group.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         SHARES UNDER     TOTAL SHARES
                                              SHARES      EXERCISABLE     BENEFICIALLY
                  NAME                       OWNED(1)     OPTIONS(2)        OWNED(3)
- -----------------------------------------  ------------  -------------  -----------------
<S>                                        <C>           <C>            <C>
Gary L. Tooker                                  157,326       424,000         582,841(4)
Christopher B. Galvin (5)                     2,586,477       300,000       2,900,018(6)
John F. Mitchell                                216,318       186,000         407,733
Edward F. Staiano                                20,000       260,000         280,265
James A. Norling                                 40,632       304,000         345,730
William J. Weisz                                379,322       --              411,382(7)
Erich Bloch                                       5,000       --                5,000(8)
David R. Clare                                   40,232       --               40,232
Wallace C. Doud                                   4,682       --                4,682
H. Laurance Fuller (9)                            2,000       --                2,000
Robert W. Galvin (5)                         15,245,741       --           15,279,740(10)
John T. Hickey                                   53,525       --               57,125(11)
Anne P. Jones                                     3,779       --                3,779
Donald R. Jones                                  51,202        50,000         152,404(12)
Judy C. Lewent (13)                                   0       --                    0
Walter E. Massey                                    646       --                  646
Thomas J. Murrin                                 13,000       --               15,000(14)
John E. Pepper, Jr.                                   0       --                1,020(15)
Samuel C. Scott III                               4,340       --                4,340
Gardiner L. Tucker                                4,084       --                4,084
B. Kenneth West                                  10,000       --               10,000
John A. White (13)                                2,000       --                2,000
All current directors, nominees and
 current executive officers as a group
 (33 persons)(16)(17)                        17,819,636     2,564,173      20,570,766(18)
<FN>
- --------------------------

(1)  Includes  shares over  which the  person currently  holds or  shares voting
     and/or investment power but excludes interests,  if any, in shares held  in
     the  Company's Profit Sharing and Employee  Stock Ownership Plan Trusts and
     the shares listed under "Shares Under Exercisable Options."

(2)  Includes shares under options exercisable  on January 31, 1995 and  options
     which become exercisable within 60 days thereafter.

(3)  Includes  interests, if any, in shares held in the Company's Profit Sharing
     and Employee  Stock  Ownership  Plan  Trusts, which  are  subject  to  some
     investment   restrictions,  and  the  shares  listed  under  "Shares  Under
     Exercisable Options."  Unless otherwise  indicated,  each person  has  sole
     voting  and investment power over the shares reported. Each director, other
     than Mr. R. Galvin, owns  less than 1% of the  Common Stock. Mr. R.  Galvin
     beneficially  owns 2.6%  of the Common  Stock. All  directors, nominees and
     current executive officers as a group own 3.5%.
</TABLE>

                                       17
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
(4)  Mr. Tooker has  shared voting and  investment power over  157,326 of  these
     shares.

(5)  As of February 23, 1995.

(6)  Mr.  C. Galvin has  or shares investment  and voting power  with respect to
     these shares  as  follows:  sole voting  and  investment  power,  1,178,098
     shares;  sole voting power, 199 shares; shared voting and investment power,
     1,408,574 shares. Included in Mr.  C. Galvin's shares are 1,408,574  shares
     which  are shown in this table to be  owned by Mr. R. Galvin. Mr. C. Galvin
     disclaims beneficial ownership of all shares  not held directly by him  and
     of  13,147 shares owned by his wife which are included for him under "Total
     Shares Beneficially Owned."

(7)  Mr. Weisz disclaims beneficial ownership of 32,060 shares owned by his wife
     which are included for him under "Total Shares Beneficially Owned."

(8)  Mr. Bloch has shared voting and investment power over these shares.

(9)  As of February 1, 1995.

(10) Mr. R. Galvin  has or shares  investment and voting  power with respect  to
     these  shares  as  follows:  sole voting  and  investment  power, 9,943,446
     shares; sole voting  power only,  230 shares; sole  investment power  only,
     3,896,268 shares; and shared voting and investment power, 1,408,574 shares.
     Included  in Mr. R. Galvin's shares are 1,408,574 shares which are shown in
     this table to be owned by Mr. C. Galvin. Mr. R. Galvin disclaims beneficial
     ownership of all shares not directly held by him and of 31,222 shares owned
     by his wife  which are included  for him under  "Total Shares  Beneficially
     Owned."

(11) Mr. Hickey disclaims beneficial ownership of 3,600 shares owned by his wife
     which are included for him under "Total Shares Beneficially Owned."

(12) Mr.  Jones disclaims beneficial ownership of 51,202 shares held by his wife
     which are included for him under "Total Shares Beneficially Owned."

(13) Director Nominee.

(14) Mr. Murrin disclaims beneficial ownership of 2,000 shares held by his  wife
     as  trustee which  are included  for him  under "Total  Shares Beneficially
     Owned."

(15) Mr. Pepper disclaims beneficial ownership of  670 shares held by his  wife,
     200  shares held by his  son and 150 shares held  by his daughter which are
     included for him under "Total Shares Beneficially Owned."

(16) As of February 2, 1995.

(17) Each director and officer (as defined) of the Company is required to report
     to the Securities and Exchange Commission, by a specified date, his or  her
     transactions  related to  Common Stock. During  the period  January 1, 1994
     through  December  31,  1994,  to  the  Company's  knowledge,  all   filing
     requirements were timely complied with.

(18) All  directors, nominees  and current  executive officers  as a  group have
     shared voting and investment power over 1,636,823 of these shares.
</TABLE>

                                       18
<PAGE>
                             PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

    As  of December  31, 1994,  no person  was known  by the  Company to  be the
beneficial owner of more than 5% of the Company's Common Stock, except that  FMR
Corp.  filed  a  Schedule  13G  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission
containing the following information:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        NUMBER OF SHARES AND
NAME AND ADDRESS                   NATURE OF BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP        PERCENT OF CLASS
- -----------------------------  ---------------------------------------  ------------------
<S>                            <C>                                      <C>
FMR Corp. (1)                        30,028,776 shares of Common Stock          5.12%
82 Devonshire Street
Boston, MA 02109
<FN>
- --------------------------

(1)  As of December  31, 1994, FMR  Corp. had sole  voting power over  1,524,714
     shares of Common Stock and sole dispositive power over 30,014,276 shares of
     Common  Stock and shared voting and dispositive power over 14,500 shares of
     Common Stock.
</TABLE>

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

    Furnished below is a summary concerning the compensation awarded and/or paid
to each of the following current executive officers during each of the Company's
last three fiscal years:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           ANNUAL COMPENSATION                         LONG TERM COMPENSATION
                                 ----------------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------
                                                            OTHER ANNUAL    SECURITIES                         ALL OTHER
      NAME AND                                              COMPENSATION    UNDERLYING          LTIP         COMPENSATION
 PRINCIPAL POSITION     YEAR     SALARY ($)(1) BONUS ($)(2)   ($)(3)(4)    OPTIONS (#)(5)  PAYOUTS ($)(6)      ($)(7)(8)
- --------------------  ---------  -----------  ------------  -------------  -------------  -----------------  -------------
<S>                   <C>        <C>          <C>           <C>            <C>            <C>                <C>
Gary L. Tooker          1994        900,000     1,080,000         4,780         80,000              N/A*          14,048
Vice Chairman and       1993        770,000       847,000         3,750         76,000              -0-           10,350
Chief Executive         1992        715,000       415,000         5,331        120,000              -0-            5,106
Officer
John F. Mitchell        1994        600,000       720,000         5,897            -0-              N/A           15,625
Vice Chairman and       1993        600,000       660,000         5,596         30,000              -0-           13,061
Officer of the Board    1992        600,000       294,000         8,128         40,000              -0-            6,588
Christopher B.          1994        676,667       812,000         1,452         60,000              N/A            9,546
Galvin                  1993        515,000       566,500         1,062         54,000              -0-            6,047
President and Chief     1992        472,500       275,000         1,169         80,000              -0-            3,251
Operating Officer
Edward F. Staiano       1994        513,000       750,000         3,669         40,000              N/A           12,470
Executive Vice          1993        479,000       503,800         2,869         36,000              -0-            9,031
President               1992        446,333       218,700         4,380         68,000              -0-            4,470
James A. Norling        1994        513,333       640,000         2,506         40,000              N/A           10,922
Executive Vice          1993        478,333       499,900         1,898         40,000              -0-            7,649
President               1992        441,667       242,900         2,679         80,000              -0-            3,815
<FN>
- ------------------------------

*    Not currently available. See footnote (6).

(1)  Including amounts deferred pursuant to salary reduction arrangements  under
     the  Motorola Employees' Savings  and Profit Sharing  Plan ("Profit Sharing
     Plan").

(2)  These amounts  were  earned in  each  of  these years  under  the  Motorola
     Executive Incentive Plan ("MEIP") for performance during that year.
</TABLE>

                                       19
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
(3)  These  amounts are the Company's reimbursements  for the federal income tax
     liability resulting from the income imputed to that executive officer as  a
     result of coverage by a group life insurance policy for elected officers.

(4)  The aggregate amount of perquisites and other personal benefits, securities
     or  property, given to each named executive  officer valued on the basis of
     aggregate incremental cost to the Company, was less than either $50,000  or
     10%  of the  total of  annual salary and  bonus for  that executive officer
     during each of these years.

(5)  The  amounts  shown  for  options  granted  in  1993  and  1992  reflect  a
     two-for-one split of Common Stock in the form of a 100% stock dividend paid
     in April, 1994.

(6)  No  payments were  made for  1993 or  1992 under  the Long  Range Incentive
     Program or the Long Range Incentive  Plan of 1994. The 1994 payments  under
     the  Long Range Incentive Program  are not calculable at  this time but are
     expected to be very substantial.

(7)  These figures for 1994 include the following amounts for the premiums  paid
     under  the term  life portion of  the split-dollar life  insurance: for Mr.
     Tooker, $6,537; for Mr.  Mitchell, $8,065; for Mr.  C. Galvin, $2,094;  for
     Mr. Staiano, $5,018; and for Mr. Norling, $3,427.

(8)  These  figures include the  following contributions made  by the Company to
     the Profit Sharing Plan for 1994: for Mr. Tooker, $7,511; for Mr. Mitchell,
     $7,560; for Mr.  C. Galvin, $7,452;  for Mr. Staiano,  $7,452; and for  Mr.
     Norling, $7,495.
</TABLE>

                          STOCK OPTION GRANTS IN 1994

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
                        -------------------------------------------------------------  POTENTIAL REALIZABLE VALUE
                           NUMBER OF                                                     (4) AT ASSUMED ANNUAL
                          SECURITIES                                                      RATES OF STOCK PRICE
                          UNDERLYING                                                        APPRECIATION FOR
                        OPTIONS GRANTED  % OF TOTAL OPTIONS   EXERCISE OR                     OPTION TERM
                             (# OF           GRANTED TO       BASE PRICE   EXPIRATION  --------------------------
         NAME            SHARES)(1)(2)    EMPLOYEES IN 1994     ($/SH)      DATE (3)    5% ($)(4)     10% ($)(4)
- ----------------------  ---------------  -------------------  -----------  ----------  ------------  ------------
<S>                     <C>              <C>                  <C>          <C>         <C>           <C>
Gary L. Tooker                80,000               2.1%        $   57.69    12/22/04   $  2,902,440  $  7,355,200
John F. Mitchell                 -0-                 0%            --          --                --            --
Christopher B. Galvin         60,000               1.6%        $   57.69    12/22/04   $  2,176,880  $  5,516,400
Edward F. Staiano             40,000               1.0%        $   57.69    12/22/04   $  2,176,880  $  3,677,600
James A. Norling              40,000               1.0%        $   57.69    12/22/04   $  2,176,880  $  3,677,600
<FN>
- --------------------------

(1)  These  are options granted under  the Share Option Plan  of 1991 to acquire
     shares of Common Stock.

(2)  These options were granted at fair market  value at the time of the  grant,
     are  generally not  exercisable until one  year after grant  and carry with
     them the right  to elect to  have shares withheld  upon exercise and/or  to
     deliver  previously owned shares of Common Stock to satisfy tax withholding
     requirements. The  options  granted  in  1994  to  these  four  individuals
     represent well less than 0.1% of the shares of Common Stock outstanding.

(3)  These options could expire earlier in certain situations.

(4)  The  potential realizable value of the options,  if any, granted in 1994 to
     each of  these  executive  officers was  calculated  by  multiplying  those
     options  by the  excess of  (a) the assumed  market value,  at December 22,
     2004, of Common Stock if the market value of Common Stock were to  increase
     5% or 10% in each year of the option's 10-year term over (b) the base price
     shown.  This  calculation does  not take  into account  any taxes  or other
     expenses which might  be owed.  The assumed market  value at  a 5%  assumed
     annual  appreciation rate over the 10-year term is $93.97 and such value at
     a 10% assumed annual appreciation rate over that term is $149.63. At $93.97
     the  total   market   value   of   the   588,517,254   shares   of   Common
</TABLE>

                                       20
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
     Stock  outstanding on March 15, 1995  would be $55,302,966,358, which would
     be an increase of $21,351,405,975 from  the market value of such shares  at
     the  close of business on  December 22, 1994. At  $149.63, the total market
     value of the 588,517,254  shares of Common Stock  outstanding on March  15,
     1995   would   be  $88,059,836,716,   which   would  be   an   increase  of
     $54,108,276,333 from  the market  value  of such  shares  at the  close  of
     business  on December 22, 1994.  The 5% and 10%  appreciation rates are set
     forth in the Securities and Exchange Commission rules and no representation
     is, of course, made that the Common Stock will appreciate at these  assumed
     rates or at all.
</TABLE>

    AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FY-END OPTION VALUES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         NUMBER OF SECURITIES         VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                           SHARES                       UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED      IN-THE-MONEY (2) OPTIONS
                         ACQUIRED ON                  OPTIONS AT END OF 1994 (#)     AT END OF 1994 ($)(3)
                         EXERCISE (#       VALUE      --------------------------  ----------------------------
         NAME            OF SHARES)    REALIZED ($)(1) EXERCISABLE UNEXERCISABLE   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
- ----------------------  -------------  -------------  -----------  -------------  -------------  -------------
<S>                     <C>            <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>
Gary L. Tooker                  -0-             -0-      424,000        80,000    $  14,905,680    $  24,800
John F. Mitchell             40,000     $ 1,635,600      186,000           -0-    $   6,773,920          -0-
Christopher B. Galvin        75,600     $ 2,963,692      300,000        60,000    $   9,982,320    $  18,600
Edward F. Staiano               -0-             -0-      260,000        40,000    $   8,298,960    $  12,400
James A. Norling                -0-             -0-      304,000        40,000    $  11,176,500    $  12,400
<FN>
- --------------------------

(1)  The  "value  realized"  represents  the  difference  between  the  base (or
     exercise) price of  the option shares  and the market  price of the  option
     shares  on  the  date the  option  was  exercised. The  value  realized was
     determined without considering any taxes which may have been owed.

(2)  "In-The-Money" options are options whose base (or exercise) price was  less
     than the market price of Common Stock at December 31, 1994.

(3)  Assuming  a stock price of $58.00 per share, which was the closing price of
     a share of Common Stock reported for the New York Stock Exchange--Composite
     Transactions on December 31, 1994.
</TABLE>

              LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLANS-AWARDS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      PERFORMANCE OR
                                       OTHER PERIOD           ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER
                         NUMBER OF        UNTIL           NON-STOCK PRICE-BASED PLANS (1)(2)(5)
                           RIGHTS     MATURATION OR   ----------------------------------------------
         NAME              (#)(2)         PAYOUT       THRESHOLD ($)(3)    TARGET ($)(4) MAXIMUM ($)
- ----------------------  ------------  --------------  -------------------  -----------  ------------
<S>                     <C>           <C>             <C>                  <C>          <C>
Gary L. Tooker               1           4 Years           $       1        $ 962,500    $1,925,000
John F. Mitchell             1           4 Years           $       1        $ 750,000    $1,500,000
Christopher B. Galvin        1           4 Years           $       1        $ 643,750    $1,287,500
Edward F. Staiano            1           4 Years           $       1        $ 612,500    $1,225,000
James A. Norling             1           4 Years           $       1        $ 612,500    $1,225,000
<FN>
- --------------------------

(1)  All the payments shown are potential assumed amounts. There is no assurance
     that Motorola will achieve  results that would lead  to payments under  the
     Company's  Long Range Incentive Plan of 1994 ("LRIPL") or that any payments
     will be made under this plan.

(2)  Under the LRIPL, at the beginning of each four year cycle, the compensation
     committee determines  the objective  measures/metrics for  that cycle.  The
     measures/metrics    used   for    this   purpose   are    return   on   net
</TABLE>

                                       21
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
     assets ("RONA"),  shareholder return  and  sales growth  over a  four  year
     period, each weighted at 25%,
     compared   to  a  selected  competitive  group  of  companies.  The  fourth
     measurement is fundable  growth weighted at  25%. An award  is earned  only
     when   Company  performance  exceeds  the  minimum  specified  RONA  floor,
     notwithstanding  superior  performance  versus  the  comparator  group   of
     companies,  and can range from 0% to 200%  of the lesser of (1) 125% of the
     executive officer's annualized base salary on  January 1 of the first  year
     of  the four year cycle, or (2)  100% of the executive officer's annualized
     base salary on  December 31 of  the last year  of the four  year cycle.  No
     payments  are made unless  the minimum specified RONA  floor is exceeded by
     Motorola.
(3)  At the performance threshold--which is that point at which a payment  could
     be  made  under  the  LRIPL-- each  listed  current  executive  officer who
     participates in the LRIPL could receive $1 under the LRIPL.
(4)  At the performance target--which is that point at which 50% of the  maximum
     award  under the  LRIPL would be  payable--the indicated  payments would be
     made under the LRIPL.
(5)  These figures were calculated using the annualized base salary in effect on
     January 1, 1994 for each participating executive officer.
</TABLE>

                   PENSION AND SUPPLEMENTARY RETIREMENT PLANS

    The Company maintains a retirement income  plan known as the Motorola,  Inc.
Pension  Plan (the "Pension  Plan"). The Company's general  objective is for the
after-tax payments  from  the  Pension  Plan  and  Social  Security  to  provide
non-elected  officer employees  who have 35  years of service  under the present
Pension Plan formula, with  approximately 80% to 100%  of their final  after-tax
salary after their normal retirement. The Company has established a Supplemental
Pension  Plan ("Supplemental Plan") for participants in the Pension Plan who are
not elected  officers and  who receive  compensation in  excess of  the  reduced
compensation limit imposed by changes to the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code").
The  purpose of the Supplemental Plan is  to restore the benefits that otherwise
would have been provided by  the Pension Plan if  the compensation limit of  the
Code had not been reduced.

    The  Company also maintains a supplementary retirement plan in which elected
officers, including the  named executive officers,  participate. If the  benefit
payable  annually  (computed  on  a  single life  annuity  basis)  to  any named
executive officer under the  Pension Plan (which is  generally based on  varying
percentages  of  specified  amounts  of  final  average  earnings,  prorated for
service, as described in the Pension  Plan) is less than the benefit  calculated
under  the supplementary plan, that  officer will receive supplementary payments
upon retirement at age 60  or later. The total  annual payments to such  officer
from  both plans  will, generally,  aggregate a  percentage of  the sum  of such
officer's rate  of salary  at retirement  plus an  amount equal  to the  highest
average  of the Motorola  Executive Incentive Plan ("MEIP")  awards paid to such
officer for any five years within the last eight years preceding retirement,  as
disclosed  in the Summary Compensation Table  on page 19. Such percentage ranges
from 40%  to 45%,  depending upon  such  officer's years  of service  and  other
factors. However, the total annual pension payable on the basis of a single life
annuity  to any named executive officer  from the Pension Plan and supplementary
retirement plan is subject  to a maximum  of 70% of  that officer's base  salary
prior to retirement. If the officer is vested and retires at or after age 57 but
prior  to age 60,  he or she may  elect to receive  a deferred unreduced benefit
when he or  she attains  age 60,  or an  actuarially reduced  benefit when  that
officer retires contingent

                                       22
<PAGE>
upon  entering into an agreement not to compete with the Company. If a change in
control (as defined) of the Company occurs, the right of each non-vested elected
officer to receive supplementary payments will become vested on the date of such
change in control.

    Based on salary  levels at  January 1,  1995, and  the average  of the  MEIP
awards  paid for  the highest five  years out of  the last eight  years, for the
named executive officers in the summary compensation table, the estimated annual
benefit payable upon retirement at normal retirement age from the Pension  Plan,
as   supplemented  pursuant  to  the  officers'  supplementary  retirement  plan
described above, and a previous retirement income plan is: Mr. Tooker, $636,636;
Mr. C. Galvin, $490,000; Mr. Mitchell, $440,379; Mr. Staiano, $368,625; and  Mr.
Norling, $367,739.

          TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT AND CHANGE IN CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS

    The  Company has  adopted a  policy (the  "salary protection  policy") which
generally provides that most employees of the Company and its subsidiaries would
receive a lump sum payment,  based on years of service  and salary in the  event
their  employment  is  involuntarily terminated  (except  for  specific reasons)
during a two-year period following an unsolicited change in control (as defined)
of the  Company.  This policy,  which  is  subject to  specified  amendment  and
termination,  also  provides  for  continuation  of  medical  plan  benefits. In
addition, the Company has entered  into Termination Agreements with certain  key
employees,  including the named  executive officers, who are  not covered by the
salary protection policy because of the Termination Agreements. Each Termination
Agreement provides  for  the payment  of  benefits in  the  event that  (i)  the
executive  officer terminates  his or her  employment for any  reason within one
year of a change in control (as defined), (ii) the executive officer  terminates
his  or her  employment for  "good reason"  (as defined)  within two  years of a
change in control, or (iii) the executive officer's employment is terminated for
any reason other  than termination  for "good cause"  (as defined),  disability,
death  or normal retirement within two years of a change in control. In the case
of (ii) and (iii) above, accumulation by a person or group of a 20 percent stock
position would constitute  a change  in control, although,  in the  case of  (i)
above,  a 51 percent stock  position would be required.  No benefits are payable
under the Termination Agreements in the case of any change in control which  the
Company's  Chairman of the  Board determines to  be the result  of a transaction
which was solely initiated by the Company. The amount of the benefits payable to
an executive officer entitled thereto would  be equal to, in addition to  unpaid
salary for accrued vacation days and accrued salary and annual bonus through the
termination  date, an amount equal  to three times the  greater of the executive
officer's  highest  annual  base  salary  in  effect  during  the  three   years
immediately preceding the change in control and the annual base salary in effect
on  the termination date, plus an amount equal to three times the highest annual
bonus received during the immediately preceding  five fiscal years ending on  or
before  the termination date. Benefits are subject  to offset to the extent that
such  offset  would  improve  the  executive  officer's  after-tax  position  by
eliminating  any  excise  taxes  otherwise imposed  on  the  employee  under the
"parachute payment" provisions of  the Internal Revenue Code.  The term of  each
Termination  Agreement is  subject to automatic  one year  extensions unless the
Company gives  12 months  prior  notice that  it does  not  wish to  extend.  In
addition,  if  a  change in  control  occurs  during the  term,  the Termination
Agreement continues for an additional two years.

                                       23
<PAGE>
    THE FOLLOWING GRAPH AND  RELATED DISCLOSURE AND  THE REPORT OF  COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE  ON  EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION  SHALL  NOT  BE  DEEMED  INCORPORATED  BY
REFERENCE BY ANY GENERAL STATEMENT  INCORPORATING THIS PROXY STATEMENT INTO  ANY
FILING  UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 OR UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934, EXCEPT  TO THE  EXTENT  THAT THE  COMPANY SPECIFICALLY  INCORPORATES  THIS
INFORMATION  BY REFERENCE,  AND SHALL NOT  OTHERWISE BE DEEMED  FILED UNDER SUCH
ACTS.

                               PERFORMANCE GRAPH

    The following graph compares the cumulative total return of Motorola,  Inc.,
the S&P 500 Index and a composite S&P Electronic Subgroups Index composed of the
following  six S&P indices, weighted by  market value at each measurement point:
the S&P Communications-Equipment/ Manufacturers Index, the S&P Computer  Systems
Index,  the S&P Electrical  Equipment Index, the  S&P Electronics Defense Index,
the  S&P   Electronics  (Instrumentation)   Index,  and   the  S&P   Electronics
(Semiconductors)  Index.  The  S&P  Communications-Equipment/Manufacturers Index
currently consists  of Andrew  Corporation,  DSC Communications  Corp.,  M/A-Com
Inc.,  Northern Telecom  Limited and  Scientific-Atlanta, Inc.  The S&P Computer
Systems Index currently  consists of Amdahl  Corporation, Apple Computer,  Inc.,
Compaq Computer Corporation, Control Data Corporation, Cray Research, Inc., Data
General Corp., Digital Equipment Corp., Intergraph Corp., International Business
Machines  Corporation,  Tandem  Computers,  Inc.,  Unisys  Corporation  and Wang
Laboratories, Inc. "B". The S&P Electrical Equipment Index currently consists of
AMP Inc., Emerson Electric Co.,  General Electric Company, W.W. Grainger,  Inc.,
Honeywell  Inc., Raychem Corp.,  Thomas & Betts  Corp. and Westinghouse Electric
Corporation. The S&P Electronics Defense Index currently consists of EG&G, Inc.,
E-Systems, Inc.  and Loral  Corporation. The  S&P Electronics  (Instrumentation)
Index   currently  consists  of  Hewlett-Packard  Co.,  Perkin-Elmer  Corp.  and
Tektronix, Inc. The S&P Electronics (Semiconductors) Index currently consists of
Advanced Micro  Devices,  Inc.,  Intel  Corporation,  Motorola,  Inc.,  National
Semiconductor  Corp. and Texas  Instruments Incorporated. These  assume $100 was
invested in the  stock or the  Index on December  31, 1989 and  also assume  the
reinvestment of dividends.

                                       24
<PAGE>
                       FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN

EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
            MOTOROLA    S&P 500     SUB-GROUPS
<S>        <C>         <C>         <C>
1989           100.00      100.00         100.00
1990            91.02       96.90          99.30
1991           114.71      126.55         114.49
1992           185.05      136.04         119.07
1993           328.29      149.78         141.70
1994           414.69      151.75         158.77
</TABLE>

                                       25
<PAGE>
           REPORT OF COMPENSATION COMMITTEE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

OBJECTIVES OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAM

    The objective of Motorola's executive compensation program is to attract and
retain  key executives critical to  the long-term success of  the Company. It is
designed to  align compensation  with business  strategy and  success, and  with
Company  values. This means having  an integrated executive compensation program
that is  intended to  balance  short-term performance  with the  achievement  of
long-range  strategic  goals  and that  is  designed to  result  in continuously
improving total shareholder value. The  program rewards executives not only  for
achieving  Company goals, but also in  relationship to the Company's performance
compared to peer industry company performance.

    The compensation committee  of the  Board of  Directors met  seven times  in
1994.  It discussed and reviewed  in detail the compensation  for the members of
the Chief Executive Office (the "CEO"), currently Gary L. Tooker and Christopher
B. Galvin, and the 13 other most-senior executives and recommended to the  Board
of  Directors for its approval changes  in compensation for those 15 executives.
It reviews and approves compensation changes  for all elected officers that  are
proposed by the CEO.

SUMMARY OF COMPENSATION PLANS

    For  many  years,  Motorola has  participated  in a  number  of compensation
surveys for all job categories, exempt and non-exempt, which it believes can  be
"benchmarked." One of these surveys is a "consolidated industries" report on the
compensation  for executive job categories in  what are currently 335 companies,
of which 22 are in the S&P Electronic Subgroups Index shown on pages 24 and  25.
Another  survey is a report on the  compensation for executive job categories in
what are currently 38 "high tech"  and major industrial companies, selected  for
their  being in some of the same general  lines of business as the Company or as
being viewed as  generally important  to the  overall high  tech industry.  This
"high  tech" survey includes 16 of the companies in the S&P Electronic Subgroups
Index shown in the graph on pages 24 and 25. Because Motorola intends to attract
and retain  substantially above-average  executives, the  determination of  base
salaries  includes a factor that raises salary range midpoints approximately 10%
above the salary levels projected using the "consolidated industries" report, as
appropriately  adjusted  to  reflect  any  higher  compensation  for   positions
indicated  in the  "high tech" survey,  on the  basis of the  Company's size and
organization  level  (determined   using  regression   analysis)  for   directly
comparable  and equivalent jobs. Where Company positions are broader or narrower
than other  comparable  positions  in other  companies,  appropriate  judgmental
adjustments are made to recognize these differences. Where Company positions are
not  comparable to  others studied,  the Company  positions are  assigned salary
ranges which provide relative  equity in relation  to other Motorola  positions.
Using  this method, salary  grades for each  elected officer position (including
the CEO, discussed below) in the Company are developed for, and approved by, the
compensation committee.

                                       26
<PAGE>
    It is also the  Company's general intention that,  where allowed by law  and
local  custom, all its  employees should have the  opportunity to increase their
base compensation by participating in one or more incentive compensation  plans,
where the payments are based on Company, unit, team, or individual performance.

    In   addition  to  a  number  of   localized  incentive  programs,  such  as
salespersons'  commissions,  Motorola  has  four  major  incentive  compensation
programs in operation. All four of these relate in one way or another to Company
performance and in most cases, to sector, group, division or team performance.

        1.   The first such program is  the RONA (Return On Net Assets employed)
    Incentive Program. This is generally available to eligible employees who are
    not participating  in  the  Motorola  Executive Incentive  Plan  and  is  an
    outgrowth of the Company's Participative Management Process. Participants in
    the  second half  of 1994  numbered approximately  117,000. RONA  awards are
    earned and  paid semi-annually  to participants  and depend,  first, on  the
    Company  and,  in  most  cases,  the  major  business  unit  for  which  the
    participant works, exceeding a minimum RONA percentage (as determined by the
    Company) during the six-month period and,  second, the extent to which  such
    minimum  percentage was exceeded.  RONA combines profit  after tax with more
    efficient utilization  of assets  to  help achieve  sales growth.  The  RONA
    percentage is calculated as:

<TABLE>
<S>             <C>        <C>             <C>        <C>
 Profit After                  Sales                   Profit After
     Tax            X      --------------      =           Tax
- --------------                                        --------------
    Sales                    Net Assets                 Net Assets
</TABLE>

        2.   The  second such program  is the Motorola  Executive Incentive Plan
    (MEIP). This is participated in by elected and appointed officers (including
    the named executive officers) and employees at certain levels of  management
    and  by  specific  professionals  who  are  deemed  individual contributors.
    Participants in 1994 numbered 776. MEIP awards are generally earned and paid
    annually and are determined and awarded as a percentage of the participant's
    base salary  earnings. For  each year,  a percentage,  not to  exceed  seven
    percent, of the Company's consolidated net earnings (as determined under the
    MEIP,  but generally on a pre-tax basis after specified deductions) for that
    year which  remains after  deducting  an amount  equal  to five  percent  of
    average  capital employed  (as determined  under the  MEIP) is  added to the
    reserve available for  payment of  MEIP awards.  Amounts were  added to  the
    reserve  for  1994. The  MEIP award  for  each participant  is based  on the
    achievement  of  a  mixture  of  financial,  strategic  non-financial,   and
    individual  goals set for each calendar year. The MEIP sets no limits on the
    amount of awards to individual participants, except that the amounts awarded
    under the MEIP cannot exceed the amount reserved.

        3.  The  third such program  is the  Long Range Incentive  Plan of  1994
    (LRIPL),  which for  the cycle  that began with  1994 is  participated in to
    varying degrees by 33 of the Company's elected officers (including the named
    executive officers) and which shareholders approved in 1994. The LRIPL award
    is determined by  the Company's  RONA, sales growth  and stockholder  return
    over a four year period, compared to an average of a similar calculation for
    a  group  of  selected  competitive  companies  chosen  by  the compensation
    committee (the "comparator

                                       27
<PAGE>
    group index"). The comparator group index is a group of what is now thirteen
    companies, generally in one or more of the same lines of the business as the
    Company, and believed by  the compensation committee  to be appropriate  for
    measuring  comparative performance on the basis  of the factors in the LRIPL
    over a four-year period.  An award is earned  only when Company  performance
    exceeds a minimum specified RONA floor, notwithstanding superior performance
    versus  the comparator group index. Additionally the award is determined, in
    part, by the Company's fundable growth.

        The LRIPL  or  a  predecessor  plan  has  been  in  effect  in  fourteen
    succeeding  four-year cycles,  the first of  which began in  1982. Under the
    most recent predecessor plan, the Long Range Incentive Program ("LRIPR"), no
    payments have  been made  since  its inception  because the  Company's  RONA
    performance  had not  previously exceeded the  RONA floor set  in the LRIPR.
    This was the  case before 1994  even though in  the previous four  completed
    four-year  cycles the Company's financial performance (as measured by LRIPR)
    exceeded the comparator  group index. For  the four year  cycle ending  with
    1994,  the RONA floor set in the LRIPR  was exceeded by the Company and very
    substantial payments are expected.

        4.  The last such  program is the Share  Option Plans. The Share  Option
    Plans  are  participated in  by a  wide range  of managerial  and individual
    contributors. Recipients  of Share  Options in  1994 numbered  approximately
    7,300.  There are  approximately 8,700  total current  Share Option holders.
    Share Options are typically awarded  annually to encourage optionees to  own
    Common  Stock,  thus  aligning their  own  personal financial  worth  to the
    Company s share  price growth. They  are granted with  option prices at  the
    then-market  price in quantities as low as  40 shares to mid-range and lower
    level Company  employees,  and in  substantially  higher numbers  to  senior
    managers. The final worth of Share Options depends wholly on the increase in
    the  value of  the Common  Stock, which,  over time,  reflects the Company's
    performance, as viewed by the market.

    Beginning with  the  Share  Option  grant in  December,  1993,  the  Company
established  higher  minimum  stock  ownership  level  guidelines  for executive
officers, including the CEO.  Under those guidelines, if  a CEO member does  not
own  shares of Common Stock representing four times his base salary and if other
executive officers do not  own shares of Common  Stock representing three  times
their base salaries, then he must retain fifty percent of the shares that remain
from  any exercise of the December, 1993 Share Option grant and any future Share
Option grants, including the 1994 Share Option grant (after deducting the number
of shares of Common Stock  that could be surrendered to  cover the cost of  such
exercise  and  any  required tax  withholdings,  even  if he  does  not actually
surrender  shares)  until  the  minimum   stock  ownership  level  is   reached.
Additionally,  these new guidelines set a minimum stock ownership level of 5,000
shares of Common Stock for all other elected officers and 1,000 shares of Common
Stock for all appointed vice-presidents.  Under these additional guidelines,  if
an  elected officer  or appointed vice-president  does not own  shares of Common
Stock representing the minimum stock ownership level, then he or she must retain
fifty percent of the shares  that remain from any  exercise of any Share  Option
granted  after June  30, 1994, or  after the date  he or she  becomes an elected
officer or appointed vice-president if later, respectively, and from any  future
Share    Option   grants,   after   deducting    the   number   of   shares   of

                                       28
<PAGE>
Common Stock that could be  surrendered to cover the  cost of such exercise  and
any  required tax withholdings,  even if he  or she does  not actually surrender
shares, until the minimum Common Stock ownership level is reached.

    On one basis or another,  the rewards under each  of these four major  plans
depend  on overall Company performance, with some also taking account of sector,
group, division, small  team or  individual performance. There  have been  years
when the employees of entire sectors, groups, or divisions, as well as executive
officers  (including one  or more  of the five  most highly  compensated at that
time) have received no  payments under the RONA  Incentive Program or under  the
MEIP or LRIPR.

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICE COMPENSATION

    The  compensation for the  CEO members consists of  base salary, annual MEIP
award eligibility, LRIPR and LRIPL award eligibility, Share Options, and certain
other benefits. In addition  to the studies mentioned  earlier, a special  Chief
Executive  Officer  and Chief  Operating Officer  ("COO") compensation  study is
conducted periodically for  the compensation  committee of  34 major  industrial
companies,  17 of which are  in the S&P Electronic  Subgroups Index shown in the
graph on pages 24/25 and 29 of which are included in "high tech" industry survey
discussed on  page 26.  This study  uses regression  analysis techniques,  which
relate  Motorola's  size  to  these other  companies'  size  to  approximate the
appropriate  base  salary,  other  components  of  compensation  and  the  total
compensation levels which should be paid for the CEO members, before taking into
account the financial and non-financial strategic performance of the Company and
the  individual performance of the CEO  members. In determining the CEO members'
base salaries, the compensation committee considers the results of these studies
and the salary range  midpoints that are approximately  10% above salary  levels
projected  on  the basis  of  the Company's  size,  together with  the Company's
performance on  its own  financial  and non-financial  strategic goals  and  the
individual performance of the CEO members. No particular weight was given to any
one of these goals in setting base salaries for the CEO members. The competitive
studies  give the committee a base from  which to modify salary and/or incentive
compensation based upon  performance. Salaries of  other executive officers  are
related  to the CEO  members' compensation and to  competitive conditions in the
industry. The compensation committee reviews, and recommends for approval to the
Board of Directors, the  base salaries for  the CEO members as  well as for  the
members  of  the Company's  internal  management committee  (generally,  all the
executive officers).  The  compensation committee  also  reviews and  fixes  the
compensation for all of the Company's elected officers.

CEO BASE SALARY

    The  CEO  members' base  salaries for  1994 were  primarily determined  as a
result of  the studies  and survey  data  referred to  above and  the  increased
responsibilities  resulting from  their promotions  in late  1993, although some
consideration was given to their leadership performance and their performance on
other subjective performance  factors described below.  In recognition of  Chris
Galvin's  increased responsibilities,  his salary was  increased in  May 1994 to
$700,000, a  level  which  the  compensation  committee  deemed  to  be  a  more
appropriate relationship to the salary of the

                                       29
<PAGE>
CEO.  Based  on  their leadership  performance  and their  performance  on other
subjective performance factors  described below,  the base salaries  of Gary  L.
Tooker and Chris Galvin were reviewed and, as of January 1, 1995, were increased
to $990,000 and $770,000 respectively.

CEO ANNUAL MEIP

    For  the MEIP award paid in 1994 for 1993 performance, 25% of the MEIP bonus
was based on the Return on Net Assets (RONA) employed by the Company, which  was
better  than in 1992, and  25% was based on  the successful achievement of other
financial goals.  The other  half was  based on  the evaluation  of  performance
against   various  goals  associated  with  the  Company's  five  key  strategic
initiatives:  Six   sigma  quality;   Total  cycle   time  reduction;   Product,
manufacturing  and environmental leadership; Profit improvement; and Empowerment
for all in a participative, cooperative, and creative workplace. As a result  of
the Company's performance in 1993, the compensation committee determined that an
increased  MEIP award was  warranted and granted  an MEIP award  of 110% of each
individual's 1993 base salary to the CEO members.

    For the MEIP award paid in 1995 for 1994 performance, 25% of the MEIP  bonus
was  again based on the  RONA employed by the Company,  which was better than in
1993,  and  25%  was  based  on  earnings  per  share  improvement  and  on  the
profitability  and market  share levels  of various  business units,  which were
generally achieved. The other half was based on the achievement of people goals,
such as objective minority and women  parity goals and subjective goals  related
to  identifying and training future leaders,  globalization goals, such as sales
growth and initiatives in specific countries and regions, customer  satisfaction
and  quality goals  in business  units, new  growth platforms  goals, cycle time
goals and  technology goals.  These other  goals were  also generally  achieved.
After  the end of 1994, and in  line with recent competitive survey information,
the compensation committee established,  for CEO members,  a target annual  MEIP
award  of  70% of  base salary,  with  a maximum  of 140%.  As  a result  of the
Company's performance for 1994, the CEO  members' role in achieving progress  in
both  the quantifiable (essentially  economic) and non-quantifiable (judgmental)
goals and their fine performance during the transition period after the previous
CEO left the Company,  the compensation committee determined  that a MEIP  award
was warranted and granted an award of 120% of each individual's 1994 base salary
to the CEO members.

CEO SHARE OPTIONS

    Share  Options for 80,000 shares of Common  Stock at the market price on the
grant date were  awarded in  December, 1994  to Gary L.  Tooker as  part of  the
Company's  annual option program. Share Options for 60,000 shares were similarly
awarded to Christopher B. Galvin. This level of option awards was made using the
committee's judgment.  In making  these grants,  the committee  referred to  the
options  granted and exercised by these CEO  members from 1985 to 1994 and their
stock ownership as of October, 1994.

CEO LRIPR

    No award was  earned under the  LRIPR for the  four-year period ending  with
1992  or 1993, even  though the Company's  RONA performance was  better than the
comparator group index, because the minimum corporate four-year RONA  percentage
required to be met for payment to be made

                                       30
<PAGE>
under the LRIPR was not met. Data is not yet available to compute the comparator
group index for 1994. The awards earned under the LRIPR for the four-year period
ending  with 1994 cannot be  calculated until the data  necessary to compute the
comparator group index is made public by  all of the companies reflected in  the
index.  The minimum corporate  four-year RONA percentage required  to be met for
payment under LRIPR was met and awards for the four-year period ending with 1994
are expected to be very substantial.

GENERAL

    Overall, the compensation committee believes that the CEO members are  being
appropriately  compensated in  a manner that  relates to performance  and in the
stockholders' long-term interests.

                                           Respectfully submitted,

                                           David R. Clare, Chairman
                                           Thomas J. Murrin
                                           Samuel C. Scott III

                                       31
<PAGE>
            PROPOSAL TO ADOPT THE NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' STOCK PLAN

    The Board of Directors recommends that the stockholders approve the adoption
of the Non-Employee Directors' Stock Plan (the "Plan").

    If approved by the  stockholders, members of the  Board of Directors of  the
Company  (the "Board") who are not employees of the Company may elect to receive
all or part of  the cash compensation  they receive for  services as a  director
(including  the annual  retainer fee  and any fees  payable for  services on the
Board or any committee thereof) in the form of Common Stock.

    The purpose  of the  Plan is  to advance  the interests  of the  Company  by
enabling  members of the Board to receive shares of Common Stock in lieu of cash
compensation. The principal features of the Plan are summarized below, with  the
summary  being qualified in its  entirety by reference to  the terms of the Plan
itself as set forth in Exhibit A hereto.

    Each member of the Board who is  not a regular employee of the Company  will
be  eligible to participate in the Plan.  A non-employee director shall make his
or her election  at least  six months  prior to the  end of  the first  calendar
quarter  with respect to which  such election is to  apply. The shares of Common
Stock will be issued to  such director promptly after  the end of each  calendar
quarter  with respect to such election and  the number of shares of Common Stock
received will be equal to the amount  of compensation divided by the average  of
the  high and  low prices per  share of Common  Stock reported for  the New York
Stock Exchange  -  Composite Transactions  on  the  last business  day  of  such
calendar quarter. No fractional shares will be issued.

    The maximum number of shares of Common Stock that may be purchased under the
Plan shall be 100,000; provided, however, that the number, rights and privileges
of  the shares issuable under the Plan  shall be increased, decreased or changed
if the Company shall increase or  decrease the number of its outstanding  shares
of Common Stock or change in any way the rights and privileges of such shares.

                            APPROVAL BY STOCKHOLDERS

    In  order  to be  adopted, the  Non-Employee Directors'  Stock Plan  must be
approved by the  affirmative vote  of a majority  of the  outstanding shares  of
Common  Stock represented at the meeting  and entitled to vote. Abstentions will
count as votes  against this proposal,  but broker non-votes  will not count  as
being  entitled to vote on this proposal at the meeting and, therefore, will not
be taken into account for this proposal.
      THE BOARD  OF DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE  FOR  APPROVAL OF  THE  NON-
  EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' STOCK PLAN. UNLESS INDICATED OTHERWISE ON THE PROXY, THE
  SHARES WILL BE VOTED FOR ADOPTION OF THE NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' STOCK PLAN.

                                       32
<PAGE>
                                 MISCELLANEOUS

OTHER MATTERS

    The  Board of  Directors of  the Company  knows of  no other  business to be
transacted at the annual  meeting of stockholders, but  if any other matters  do
come  before  the meeting,  it  is the  intention of  the  persons named  in the
accompanying proxy to vote or act with respect to them in accordance with  their
best judgment.

MANNER AND COST OF PROXY SOLICITATION

    The  cost  of solicitation  of  proxies will  be  borne by  the  Company. In
addition to the solicitation of proxies by use of the mails, officers, directors
and regular employees of the Company, acting on its behalf, may solicit  proxies
by telephone, telegraph or personal interview. Also, the Company has retained D.
F.  King & Co., Inc. to aid in the solicitation of proxies for which the Company
will pay an estimated fee  of $13,500, plus expenses.  The Company will, at  its
expense,  request  brokers and  other  custodians, nominees  and  fiduciaries to
forward proxy soliciting  material to the  beneficial owners of  shares held  of
record by such persons.

PROPOSALS

    Proposals  of stockholders  intended to be  presented at  the Company's 1996
annual meeting  of stockholders  must  be received  at the  Company's  principal
executive offices not later than November 22, 1995.

    The  nominating committee will consider nominees recommended by stockholders
as candidates for election to  the Board of Directors  at the annual meeting  of
stockholders.  A stockholder wishing to nominate a candidate for election to the
Board is required to give written notice to the Secretary of the Company of  his
or  her intention to  make such a  nomination. The notice  of nomination must be
received by the Company not less than 60 days nor more than 90 days prior to the
first anniversary  of  the  preceding year's  annual  meeting  of  stockholders;
provided, however, that in the event that the date of the annual meeting is more
than  30 days prior to or more than  60 days after such anniversary date, notice
must be received not less than 60 days or more than 90 days prior to such annual
meeting or within 10  days after the  meeting date is  announced. The notice  of
nomination is required to contain certain information about both the nominee and
the  stockholder making the nomination. A  nomination which does not comply with
the above procedure will be disregarded.

    Such proposals  or nominations  should  be addressed  to Richard  H.  Weise,
Secretary, Motorola, Inc., 1303 East Algonquin Road, Schaumburg, Illinois 60196.

                                            By order of the Board of Directors

                                                     Richard H. Weise
                                                         SECRETARY

                                       33
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                                 MOTOROLA, INC.
                       NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' STOCK PLAN

    1.   PURPOSE.   The  purpose of  the Motorola,  Inc. Non-Employee Directors'
Stock Plan  (the "Plan")  is to  advance the  interests of  Motorola, Inc.  (the
"Company") and its stockholders by enabling members of the Board of Directors of
the  Company (the "Board")  who are not employees  of the Company  or any of its
Subsidiaries to receive shares of the  Company's common stock, par value $3  per
share,  ("Common  Stock"),  which  Common Stock  may  be  either  authorized but
unissued or treasury shares,  in lieu of  all or a  portion of the  compensation
they receive for membership on the Board and committees thereof.

    2.   ADMINISTRATION.   The  Plan shall  be administered  by the Compensation
Committee of the Board  (the "Committee"). The Committee  shall, subject to  the
provisions  of the Plan, have  the power to construe  the Plan, to determine all
questions arising thereunder and to adopt  and amend such rules and  regulations
for  the administration of the  Plan as it may  deem desirable. Any decisions of
the Committee in the administration of  the Plan, as described herein, shall  be
final and conclusive. The Committee may authorize any one or more of its members
or  the secretary of the  Committee or any officer,  appointed vice president or
employee of  the Company  to execute  and  deliver documents  on behalf  of  the
Committee.  No member  of the  Committee shall  be liable  for anything  done or
omitted to be done  by him or  her or by  any other member  of the Committee  in
connection  with the Plan,  except for his  or her own  willful misconduct or as
expressly provided by statute.

    3.  PARTICIPATION.  Each member of  the Board who is not a regular  employee
of  the Company or any of its  Subsidiaries (a "Non-Employee Director") shall be
eligible to participate in the Plan. As used herein, the term "Subsidiary" means
any partnership,  corporation,  association, limited  liability  company,  joint
stock  company,  trust,  joint  venture,  unincorporated  organization  or other
business entity of which (i)  if a corporation, a  majority of the total  voting
power  of shares  of stock  entitled (without  regard to  the occurrence  of any
contingency) to vote in the election of directors, managers or trustees  thereof
is  at the time owned  or controlled, directly or  indirectly, by the Company or
one or more of the other Subsidiaries  of the Company or a combination  thereof,
or  (ii) if a  partnership, association, limited  liability company, joint stock
company, trust,  joint venture,  unincorporated organization  or other  business
entity,  a  majority  of the  partnership  or other  similar  ownership interest
thereof is  at the  time owned  or controlled,  directly or  indirectly, by  the
Company or one or more Subsidiaries of the Company or a combination thereof. For
purposes  hereof, the Company or a Subsidiary shall be deemed to have a majority
ownership interest  in a  partnership, association,  limited liability  company,
joint  stock company, trust, joint venture, unincorporated organization or other
business entity if the Company or such Subsidiary shall be allocated a  majority
of  partnership, association,  limited liability  company, joint  stock company,
trust, joint venture, unincorporated organization or other business entity gains
or losses or shall be or control

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
the managing  director, the  trustee, a  manager or  a general  partner of  such
partnership, association, limited liability company, joint stock company, trust,
joint venture, unincorporated organization or other business entity.

    4.    ELECTION TO  RECEIVE COMMON  STOCK IN  LIEU OF  CASH COMPENSATION.   A
Non-Employee Director may elect to reduce  all or part of the cash  compensation
otherwise  payable  for services  to be  rendered by  him or  her as  a director
(including the annual  retainer fee  and any fees  payable for  services on  the
Board  or any committee thereof) and to receive in lieu thereof shares of Common
Stock. Any such election (a) shall be in writing, (b) shall specify an amount of
such compensation to be  received in the  form of Common  Stock (expressed as  a
percentage  of  the compensation  otherwise  payable in  cash,  as an  amount in
dollars of compensation otherwise  payable in cash  or as a  type of fee  (e.g.,
retainer  fee) otherwise payable in cash), (c) shall be made at least six months
prior to  the end  of the  first calendar  quarter with  respect to  which  such
election  is to apply and (d) may not be revoked or changed thereafter except as
to compensation  for  services rendered  at  least  six months  after  any  such
election  to  revoke or  change  is made  in  writing. Any  such  election shall
continue in effect until six months after  an election to revoke or change  such
election is made in writing.

    5.  ISSUANCE OF COMMON STOCK.  If a Non-Employee Director elects pursuant to
Paragraph  4  above to  receive  Common Stock,  there  shall be  issued  to such
director promptly after the end of  each calendar quarter with respect to  which
such  election applies a number of shares of Common Stock equal to the amount of
such compensation divided by the average of the high and low prices per share of
Common Stock reported for the New  York Stock Exchange - Composite  Transactions
on  the last  business day  of the calendar  quarter for  which the compensation
would have been paid in cash in the absence of such election; provided, however,
if the New York Stock Exchange is not  open for trading on such business day  or
if Common Stock does not trade on such business day, the average of the high and
low  prices for the last day of such  calendar quarter on which Common Stock did
so trade shall  be used. To  the extent  that the application  of the  foregoing
formula  would result in fractional shares  of Common Stock being issuable, cash
will be paid  to the  Non-Employee Director in  lieu of  such fractional  shares
based upon the value established pursuant to such formula.

    6.   NUMBER OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK  ISSUABLE UNDER THE PLAN.  The maximum
number of shares of Common Stock that  may be purchased under the Plan shall  be
100,000;  provided, however, that if  the Company shall at  any time increase or
decrease the number of its outstanding shares  of Common Stock or change in  any
way  the rights and privileges of  such shares by means of  a payment of a stock
dividend or any other distribution upon such shares payable in Common Stock,  or
through   a  stock  split,  reverse  stock  split,  subdivision,  consolidation,
combination, reclassification or recapitalization  involving Common Stock,  then
the  numbers, rights and privileges of the  shares issuable under the Plan shall
be increased, decreased or changed in like manner.

    7.  MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS.

        (a) Neither the Plan nor any  action taken hereunder shall be  construed
    as  giving any Non-Employee Director any right to be retained in the service
    of the Company.

                                      A-2
<PAGE>
        (b) A  participant's rights  and  interest under  the  Plan may  not  be
    assigned  or transferred,  hypothecated or  encumbered in  whole or  in part
    either directly or by operation of law or otherwise (except in the event  of
    a  participant's death,  by will or  the laws of  descent and distribution),
    including, but  not  by way  of  limitation, execution,  levy,  garnishment,
    attachment,  pledge, bankruptcy or in any other manner, and no such right or
    interest of any participant in the  Plan shall be subject to any  obligation
    or liability of such participant.

        (c)  No shares of Common Stock  shall be issued hereunder unless counsel
    for the Company shall be satisfied that such issuance will be in  compliance
    with  applicable federal,  state, local  and foreign  securities, securities
    exchange and other applicable laws and requirements.

        (d) It shall be a  condition to the obligation  of the Company to  issue
    shares  of Common Stock hereunder, that  the participant pay to the Company,
    upon its demand,  such amount as  may be  requested by the  Company for  the
    purpose  of satisfying  any liability to  withhold federal,  state, local or
    foreign income or  other taxes.  If the amount  requested is  not paid,  the
    Company shall have no obligation to issue, and the participant shall have no
    right to receive, shares of Common Stock.

        (e) The expenses of the Plan shall be borne by the Company.

        (f)   The Plan shall  be unfunded. The Company  shall not be required to
    establish any special or separate fund  or to make any other segregation  of
    assets to assure the issuance of shares hereunder.

        (g)  By accepting any Common Stock  hereunder or other benefit under the
    Plan, each participant and each person claiming under or through him or  her
    shall  be conclusively  deemed to have  indicated his or  her acceptance and
    ratification of, and  consent to,  any action taken  under the  Plan by  the
    Company or the Committee.

        (h)  The appropriate officers of the Company shall cause to be filed any
    registration statement required by the  Securities Act of 1933, as  amended,
    and any reports, returns or other information regarding any shares of Common
    Stock  issued pursuant hereto as  may be required by  Section 13 or 15(d) of
    the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"), or any
    other applicable statute, rule or regulation.

        (i)  The provisions of this Plan  shall be governed by and construed  in
    accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware.

        (j)    Pending  issuance  of  shares  of  Common  Stock  hereunder,  all
    compensation earned  by a  Non-Employee Director  with respect  to which  an
    election to receive Common Stock pursuant to Paragraph 4 above has been made
    shall  be the property of such  director and shall be paid  to him or her in
    cash in the event that shares of Common Stock are not issued.

        (k) Headings  are  given  to the  sections  of  this Plan  solely  as  a
    convenience   to   facilitate  reference.   Such  headings,   numbering  and
    paragraphing shall not in any case be deemed in

                                      A-3
<PAGE>
    any way  material  or relevant  to  the construction  of  this Plan  or  any
    provisions  thereof. The use  of the singular shall  also include within its
    meaning the plural, where appropriate, and vice versa.

    8.  AMENDMENT.  The Plan may be amended at any time and from time to time by
resolution of the Board  as the Board shall  deem advisable; provided,  however,
that  no amendment shall  become effective without  stockholder approval if such
stockholder approval  is  required by  law,  rule or  regulation,  and  provided
further,  to the extent required by Rule  16b-3 under Section 16 of the Exchange
Act, in effect from time to time, Plan provisions shall not be amended more than
once every  six  months,  except  that the  foregoing  shall  not  preclude  any
amendment  to comport  with changes  in the Internal  Revenue Code  of 1986, the
Employee Retirement  Income Security  Act of  1974 or  the rules  thereunder  in
effect  from  time  to time.  No  amendment  of the  Plan  shall  materially and
adversely affect any  right of  any participant with  respect to  any shares  of
Common Stock theretofore issued without such participant's written consent.

    9.    TERMINATION.   This  Plan  shall  terminate upon  the  earlier  of the
following dates or events to occur:

        (a) upon the adoption of a resolution of the Board terminating the Plan;
    or

        (b) ten years from the date  the Plan is initially approved and  adopted
    by the stockholders of the Company in accordance with Paragraph 10 below.

    No  termination of the Plan shall materially and adversely affect any of the
rights or obligations of any person without  his or her consent with respect  to
any shares of Common Stock theretofore earned and issuable under the Plan.

    10.   STOCKHOLDER APPROVAL AND ADOPTION.  The Plan shall be submitted to the
stockholders of the Company  for their approval and  adoption at the meeting  of
stockholders  of the Company  to be held on  May 2, 1995. The  Plan shall not be
effective unless  and until  the Plan  has  been so  approved and  adopted.  The
stockholders shall be deemed to have approved and adopted the Plan only if it is
approved and adopted at a meeting of the stockholders duly held on that date (or
any adjournment of said meeting occurring subsequent to such date) by vote taken
in the manner required by the laws of the State of Delaware.

                                      A-4
<PAGE>

                                    APPENDIX

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

             GRAPHIC IMAGE                                NARRATIVE
                                                         DESCRIPTION
<S>                                       <C>
1.  Picture approximately 1" by 1 1/4"       1.  A picture approximately 1" by 1
    in size of each director              1/4" in size of each director is
                                          located to the left of each director's
                                          name at the beginning of each
                                          director's biographical description on
                                          pages 3 to 12 of the proxy statement.

2.  Signature of Richard H. Weise            2.  The facsimile signature of
                                          Richard H. Weise is set forth above
                                          his name in the Notice to
                                          Stockholders, Notice to
                                          Plan Participants, and on page 33 of
                                          the proxy statement.

</TABLE>




<PAGE>
   [LOGO]
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES:
1303 East Algonquin Road
Schaumburg, Illinois 60196

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TO  THE PARTICIPANTS OF THE MOTOROLA  EMPLOYEES' SAVINGS AND PROFIT SHARING PLAN
AND THE MOTOROLA EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN (THE "PLANS"):

    This Notice of Annual Meeting and the accompanying Proxy Statement are being
sent to you because you are the beneficial owner of Motorola stock by reason  of
being  a participant in either  or both of the Plans.  The trustees of the Plans
are the record owners  of such stock  and are entitled to  vote at the  meeting.
However,  you have the right  to direct how the trustees  of the Plans will vote
the shares allocated to your accounts in  the Plans. YOU ARE REQUESTED TO  VOTE,
DATE,  SIGN AND MAIL  THE VOTING INSTRUCTION  FORM ENCLOSED HEREWITH  so that it
will be received by April 20, 1995. Your presence at the meeting is not required
to enable you to vote your shares.

    Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of stockholders of  Motorola,
Inc.  (the "Company" or "Motorola"), a Delaware corporation, will be held in the
Auditorium at the Company's Galvin Center, 1297 East Algonquin Road, Schaumburg,
Illinois on Tuesday, May 2,  1995 at 5:00 P. M.,  local time, for the  following
purposes:

    1.  To elect directors for the ensuing year;

    2.  To consider and vote upon the Non-Employee Directors' Stock Plan; and

    3.  To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting.

    A  report on the meeting, which will include the Chairman's remarks, will be
mailed to you after the meeting.

                                            By order of the Board of Directors
                                                     Richard H. Weise
                                                         SECRETARY
March 21, 1995

                                   IMPORTANT

    IN ORDER THAT THERE MAY BE A  PROPER REPRESENTATION AT THE MEETING, YOU  ARE
REQUESTED TO SEND IN YOUR VOTING INSTRUCTION FORM IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE WHICH
REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.
<PAGE>
PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS, MAY 2, 1995                     [LOGO]

               THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

    The  undersigned hereby appoints Gary L. Tooker, Carl F. Koenemann, Garth L.
Milne and Kenneth  J. Johnson, and  each of them,  as the undersigned's  Proxies
(with  power of substitution) to represent and  to vote all the shares of common
stock of Motorola, Inc., which the undersigned would be entitled to vote, at the
annual meeting of stockholders of Motorola, Inc.  to be held May 2, 1995 and  at
any  adjournments thereof,  subject to the  directions indicated  on the reverse
side hereof.

    In their  discretion, the  Proxies are  authorized to  vote upon  any  other
matter that may properly come before the meeting or any adjournments thereof.

P
                                            Date: _____________, 1995
R
                                            __________________________ SIGNATURE
X
                                            __________________________ SIGNATURE
Y

Please  vote, date, sign and mail promptly  this proxy in the enclosed envelope.
When there  is  more than  one  owner, each  should  sign. When  signing  as  an
attorney, administrator, executor, guardian or trustee, please add your title as
such.  If executed by a corporation, the  full corporation name should be given,
and this proxy should be signed by a duly authorized officer, showing his or her
title.
<PAGE>
THE  BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE  FOR ALL NOMINEES LISTED BELOW AND FOR
PROPOSAL 2.

1. Election of Directors

<TABLE>
<S>                                   <C>                                   <C>
 / / FOR all nominees                 / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote        / / FOR all nominees listed below
   listed below                          for all nominees listed below         (except as marked to the contrary
                                                                               below)
</TABLE>

________________________________________________________________________________
D. Clare, H. Fuller, C. Galvin, R. Galvin, J. Hickey, A. Jones, D. Jones, J.
Lewent, W. Massey, J. Mitchell, T. Murrin, J. Pepper, Jr., S. Scott III, G.
Tooker, G. Tucker, W. Weisz, B. West, J. White.
Instruction: to withhold  authority to  vote for any  individual nominee,  write
that nominee's name here: ______________________________________________________

2. Adoption of the Non-Employee Directors' Stock Plan
              / / FOR            / / AGAINST            / / ABSTAIN

THIS  PROXY WILL  BE VOTED  IN ACCORDANCE  WITH SPECIFICATIONS  MADE, BUT  IF NO
CHOICES ARE INDICATED, THIS  PROXY WILL BE VOTED  FOR ALL NOMINEES LISTED  ABOVE
AND FOR PROPOSAL 2.
      IMPORTANT--THIS PROXY MUST BE SIGNED AND DATED ON THE REVERSE SIDE.
<PAGE>
VOTING INSTRUCTION FORM                                                   [LOGO]

                  ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS, MAY 2, 1995

    The  undersigned hereby directs that, at  the annual meeting of stockholders
of Motorola, Inc. to be  held May 2, 1995 and  at any adjournments thereof,  the
shares  of Motorola,  Inc. common  stock credited  as of  March 15,  1995 to the
undersigned's account(s) in either  or both of  the Motorola Employees'  Savings
and  Profit Sharing  Plan (the "Profit  Sharing Plan") or  the Motorola Employee
Stock Ownership Plan (the "ESOP") shall be voted, pursuant to a proxy  solicited
by  the Board of Directors  of Motorola, Inc., by  The Northern Trust Company as
Trustee of the  Profit Sharing  Plan and  by Harris  Trust and  Savings Bank  as
Trustee  of the  ESOP, or their  attorneys-in-fact, as specified  on the reverse
side hereof.

                                                         Please Sign
                                            ____________________________________
                                                Signature of Plan Participant
                                            Date: _____________, 1995

Please vote, date, sign and mail promptly in the enclosed envelope.
<PAGE>
THE  BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE  FOR ALL NOMINEES LISTED BELOW AND FOR
PROPOSAL 2.

1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

<TABLE>
<S>                                   <C>                                   <C>
 / / FOR all nominees                 / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote        / / FOR all nominees listed below
   listed below                          for all nominees listed below         (except as marked to the contrary
                                                                               below)
</TABLE>

________________________________________________________________________________
D. Clare, H. Fuller, C. Galvin, R. Galvin, J. Hickey, A. Jones, D. Jones, J.
Lewent, W. Massey, J. Mitchell, T. Murrin, J. Pepper, Jr., S. Scott III, G.
Tooker, G. Tucker, W. Weisz, B. West, J. White.
Instruction: to withhold  authority to  vote for any  individual nominee,  write
that nominee's name here: ______________________________________________________

2. ADOPTION OF THE NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS' STOCK PLAN
              / / FOR            / / AGAINST            / / ABSTAIN

       IMPORTANT--THIS FORM MUST BE SIGNED AND DATED ON THE REVERSE SIDE.


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission