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Topic: Lee R. Raymond


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In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
 Lee Raymond - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond is vice chairman of the Board of Trustees of the American Enterprise Institute and a director of the United Negro College Fund.
Raymond was named a senior vice president and was elected to the board of directors of the corporation in 1984.
Raymond was named president and director of Esso Inter-America Inc., with responsibilities for Exxon's operations in the Caribbean, Central and South America.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lee_Raymond   (388 words)

  
 Raymond Washington - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond Lee Washington (August 15, 1953 – August 9, 1979) was the founder of a Los Angeles, California street gang, which eventually would become known as the Crips, one of the most notorious and violent gangs in United States history.
Raymond Lee Washington in a 1974 police mugshot.
In 1969, 15-year-old Raymond Washington, then a student at John C. Fremont High School, organized a group of neighborhood friends and founded a gang known as the "Baby Avenues".
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Raymond_Washington   (248 words)

  
 Raymond Lee playing well for UTD men
Lee was described by his coach, Ray Farrell, as a talented offensive player with the ability to score in the post or with a long-range jump shot.
Lee was sidelined throughout the fall semester with a knee injury.
Lee is currently averaging 19.0 points per game and 5.5 rebounds per game.
www.utdallas.edu /student/mercury/2000/012400/lee.html   (253 words)

  
 Robert Ives Lee
William Raymond Lee II, 1774-1861, was a merchant of Salem and Boston, and a member of the firm of Will R. Lee and Company.
Henry Lee, the founder of the Lee family of Marblehead, Massachusetts, died at Manchester, that state, in 1675, and was perhaps the nephew of Sir Harry Lee, Bart, and grandson of Sir Robert Lee, Knight, of Hulcote, Bucks, and descended from the Lees of Lea Hall, Cheshire.
Lee is survived by his widow, his daughter, Helen Amory, who is the widow of William Henry Van Horn, of Chicago, who was educated at the University of Michigan, and has a son, Thomas Lee Van Horn; his daughter, Anna Louise, of Philadelphia, and his son, Thomas Amory Lee.
skyways.lib.ks.us /genweb/archives/1918ks/biol/leeri.html   (3204 words)

  
 An imitation of
Raymond, the owner’s wife, was a fastidious and robust woman and said Jenny was the most adroit worker she had every seen.
Raymond would think she was taking advantage of her if she first asked for eggs and flour and then used her oven to cook it.
Lee was the first to down a shot and it leaked from the corners of his mouth.
www2.sunysuffolk.edu /axelrod/creativewriting/hemingwayexercise.htm   (1926 words)

  
 Chan v. Lee (Summary Disposition Order)
Furthermore, even giving Raymond the benefit of the doubt, it was only at the second of the negotiation sessions that Raymond allegedly formed a belief that Lee implicitly began acting as his attorney for purposes of the Chans' purchase of the fee to the property.
Apart from conclusory statements in Raymond's declaration as to his subjective belief that Lee acted as attorney for him, Amy, and RC and AC Enterprise with respect to their purchase of the fee, the Chans fail to adduce any facts relating directly or inferentially to establishing an attorney-client relationship as to this matter.
Keka, 94 Hawai`i 213, 221, 11 P.3d 1, 9 (2000), we conclude that Raymond's subjective belief that Lee acted as his, Amy's, and RC and AC Enterprise's attorney for purposes of the purchase of the fee to the property was not reasonably drawn under the attending circumstances of the case.
www.hawaii.gov /jud/24390sdo.htm   (1513 words)

  
 Lee Raymond, Exxon Mobil's Chief Since 1999 Merger, to Step Down at Year's End - New York Times
Exxon Mobil, the world's largest publicly traded oil company, announced yesterday that Lee R. Raymond, its chairman and chief executive, would retire at the end of the year, after 12 years during which he steered the company ahead of its rivals.
Raymond is known for his direct, sometimes abrasive style and his limited tolerance for analysts, investors or journalists.
Raymond, who was born in Watertown, S.D., joined Exxon in 1963 with a doctorate in chemical engineering from the University of Minnesota.
www.nytimes.com /2005/08/05/business/05exxon.html?ex=1280894400&en=2953d3af1f5bcb95&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss   (865 words)

  
 WSJ -- Exxon CEO Lee Raymond's Stance On Global Warming Causes a Stir
"Lee Raymond simply doesn't care," charges Simon Billenness, senior research analyst at Trillium Asset Management, a Boston investment firm that bills itself as socially responsible.
Raymond has since toned down his position, saying global-warming issues need to be addressed; he called for voluntary, rather than regulatory, action, technological solutions and more research.
Raymond has been one of the most outspoken executives in the nation against regulation to curtail global warming.
www.junkscience.com /aug01/wsj-exxon.htm   (802 words)

  
 Bloomberg.com: Top Worldwide
``Lee Raymond is one of the great men of the industry and I have unabashed admiration for him,'' said Donald Coxe, who manages $21 billion, including Exxon Mobil shares, at Chicago- based Harris Investment Bank.
Raymond said in March that buying rivals when oil prices are rising leads to ``lousy returns.'' During the oil rally of the late 1970 and early 1980s, Exxon Corp. plowed profits into share buybacks rather than acquisitions and used stock to purchase Mobil in 1999, when oil prices were near a 12-year low.
As Raymond built Exxon Mobil into the largest producer of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, he angered environmentalists with his skepticism about the role of human activity in global warming and his opposition to the Kyoto Protocol.
quote.bloomberg.com /apps/news?pid=10000006&sid=apbVXYnN_o5M&refer=home   (1171 words)

  
 Boston.com / Business / Exxon Mobil: U.S. Can't Kick Oil Habit
Raymond said to hedge America's energy risks, the United States needs to broaden its base of energy suppliers to include Russia and other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Caspian Sea region that have large petroleum reserves.
In a speech to the Woodrow Wilson International Center, Raymond cited industry estimates that show 50 percent of global proven oil and gas reserves are in the Middle East, and Saudi Arabia alone holds about one in five of the world's oil barrels.
Separately, Raymond said favorable conditions in Iraq were "a long way off" for Exxon Mobil to invest in the country and help develop its vast oil reserves.
www.boston.com /business/articles/2004/06/08/exxon_mobil_us_cant_kick_oil_habit   (541 words)

  
 Raymond Lee’s 1990 Saleen
Fortunately, Raymond Lee is not one of those people.
Lee bought the car in October of 1990 at Drew Ford in San Diego, California, back when he was in the Marine Corps--and you could say this pony has been through the war and survived.
Lee sobered up the suspension on this car, too: Konis all around, Eibach springs up front, Hotchkis rear upper and lower control arms, and donor parts off a ’95 GT rear suspension.
www.mustang50magazine.com /featuredvehicles/14458   (505 words)

  
 Forbes.com: More Faces In The News: May 30, 2001
Exxon Mobil (nyse: XOM - news - people) Chairman and Chief Executive Lee Raymond may be getting jeers for rejecting proposals on the environment and gay rights, but shareholders cheered the announcement of a 2-for-1 stock split and an extra 2 cent per share dividend this summer.
Raymond made the announcement at a shareholders meeting, where activists inside and outside the meeting hall protested Exxon for its refusal to acknowledge the effect on climate change from the use of its products.
Raymond said it was too early to tell if the company's sales were affected.
www.forbes.com /2001/05/30/0530facespm.html   (605 words)

  
 Raymond
Raymond Lee.  Please join me in thanking him for making history in our community.  With his help, Chicago’s Chinatown is now the home of the first Chinese American museum between the East and West Coasts.
Raymond Lee in 2004, as owner of Golden Country/ Golden Ocean Foods
While there has been a lot of speculation about the donor’s identity, we have kept quiet.  But at last we can now reveal the truth.  Ladies and gentlemen, let me introduce you to the young man who grew up in Quong Yick, a long-time Chinatown resident, community leader, and visionary businessman, Mr.
www.ccamuseum.org /Raymond.html   (137 words)

  
 Bloomberg.com: Bloomberg Columnists
The result: Raymond will be retiring with a pension of slightly more than $5 million a year, based on his service and earnings through 2002.
Finally, we come to Raymond's lucrative pension plan, which is based not only on a combination of salary and bonus, but also the value of his earnings bonus.
In 1997, Raymond's pay almost doubled to $16 million, and since then it has been north of that every year, reaching a peak of $34.1 million in 1999.
quote.bloomberg.com /apps/news?pid=10000039&refer=columnist_crystal&sid=ahRyCRdYNY5s   (876 words)

  
 Recycling Today Magazine :: News :: Greenwich Metals Adds Lee Raymond
Lee Raymond has joined Greenwich Metals Inc., Greenwich, Conn., as a trader of secondary aluminum alloys, RSI (remelt secondary ingot), aluminum scrap and other nonferrous scrap metal.
Raymond was most recently employed as a senior scrap metal buyer by Wabash Alloys LLC at its East Syracuse, N.Y., facility.
Raymond has been involved with industry associations including NARI, ISIS, and ISRI as a member of national committees and as a Roundtables moderator.
www.recyclingtoday.com /news/news.asp?ID=2577&SubCatID=74&CatID=23   (222 words)

  
 Chief Executive, The: The man who will lead Exxon Mobil: can one of America's most controversial CEOs be cloned? Some shareholders hope so; activists pray not - Succession - Lee Raymond - Interview
Raymond, who has been part of the Exxon organization since 1963 and chairman since 1993, had planned to retire in 2003, but agreed to stay on until a replacement was ready.
Now, at its headquarters in Irving, Tex., where the tough-talking Raymond engineered the merger and oversaw the integration of the freewheeling Mobil culture with Exxon's conservative ways, succession is the priority.
Saying that executives in training were not yet ready, the 13-member board asked Raymond, among corporate America's longest-serving CEOs, to stay on past the company's mandatory retirement age of 65.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m4070/is_2002_Oct/ai_93207315   (400 words)

  
 Exec: Energy Independence A 'Myth' - CBS News
Raymond, who runs the world's largest publicly traded oil company, said that while other countries, including Russia, will play a growing role in supplying oil to the world, the Middle East will remain the center of supply because it holds as much as half of the world's oil reserves.
Raymond predicted that fossil fuels — coal, oil and natural gas — will continue to provide most of the energy for many decades, even if there are improvement in conservation and efficiency and expansion of other energy sources.
Raymond scoffed at suggestions — heard commonly among politicians in Washington — of energy independence.
www.cbsnews.com /stories/2004/06/14/world/main622838.shtml   (815 words)

  
 Raymond Lee Washington, the founder of the Crips
Raymond Lee Washington was born in Texas on August 15, 1953 and moved to Los Angeles, California when he was three years old.
Raymond Lee Washington was killed on August 9, 1979, five months after Tookie Williams was arrested for quadruple murder.
Raymond Lee Washington, the founder of the Crips
www.streetgangs.com /magazine/raymond.html   (213 words)

  
 topic.asp?ti=14079
Lee Raymond, the tough-talking chief executive of Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) who built the Texas oil producer into the world's most valuable company, on Thursday said he would retire at the end of the year.
Lee Raymond that if you are one of his scientists and disagreed with Mr.
I understand Lee Raymond has been previously quoted as saying that speculation on oil prices accounts for about $20 of the cost per barrel of oil.
www.charlierose.com /board/topic.asp?ti=14079   (4284 words)

  
 Exxon Mobil CEO Raymond to retire at the end of the year - Aug. 4, 2005
Raymond has watched several bouts of frenzied oil prices and subsequent collapses, presided over one of the few successful mega-mergers in corporate history and helped make Exxon one of the most consistently profitable companies in the world.
Raymond, 66, has served the company for more than 42 years, including over 21 years as a director, the company said in a statement.
After reporting more than $25 billion in annual profit last year, under Raymond's reign Exxon (down $0.22 to $58.78, Research) recently stole the mantle of the world's most valuable company from General Electric Co. (down $0.16 to $34.05, Research) As of Thursday, Exxon was worth $376 billion, ahead of General Electric Co. at $361 billion.
money.cnn.com /2005/08/04/news/newsmakers/exxon_ceo   (702 words)

  
 Lee F. Raymond, Exxon Mobil
In 1999, Raymond boldly switched to expansion mode with the $85 billion acquisition of Mobil Corp. With the assimilation of Mobil now well in hand, Raymond is attempting to substantially boost Exxon's output of oil and gas--no small task for a company that already outproduces many OPEC nations.
Under Raymond, a PhD chemical engineer named chairman and CEO in 1994, the company has set new standards of capital and cost efficiency in an industry that has been careening from boom to bust for more than a century.
But in 2000, Raymond, 62, found himself caught in the limelight that he has spent his career avoiding.
www.businessweek.com /2001/01_02/b3714013.htm   (279 words)

  
 Exxon Mobil Chief to Leave
Lee R. Raymond, 66, a career Exxon employee who has held the top job for 12 years, is likely to be succeeded by the company's president, Rex W. Tillerson, 53, according to an Exxon statement.
Raymond stayed past his planned retirement at the request of the company's board of directors, which increased his total compensation last year to $38.1 million.
Raymond presided over a company that analysts view as the most efficient in the business, earning better returns on the money it spends than its rivals.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/04/AR2005080400994.html   (795 words)

  
 Exxon Mobil's CEO Turning In His Key
Raymond, 66, has been with the company and its predecessor Exxon Corp. for 42 years, with half of that time spent as a director.
Raymond oversaw the November 1999 merger of Exxon and Mobil Corp.
Raymond joined Exxon in 1963 after he received his doctorate in chemical engineering from the University of Minnesota.
www.commondreams.org /headlines05/0804-11.htm   (828 words)

  
 [No title]
Chairman Lee Raymond discusses the challenges confronting the petroleum industry in the 21st Century at the 24th Annual Oil and Money Conference, in London, where he also was named Petroleum Executive of the Year.
Remarks by Lee R. Raymond upon ExxonMobil being an honoree at the 30th Anniversary of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering.
Chairman Lee Raymond highlights the technical, economic, cultural and environmental challenges that will shape energy production worldwide in coming years.
www.exxonchemical.com /public_pa/WorldwideEnglish/Newsroom/SpeechesInterviews/OC_news_speeches.asp   (653 words)

  
 ExxonMobil - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tillerson assumed the top position on January 1, 2006 on the retirement of long-time chairman and CEO, Lee Raymond.
The rectangular Exxon logo with the blue strip at the bottom and red lettering with the two "X's" interlinked together was designed by noted industrial stylist Raymond Loewy.
Other Standard Oil descendants, such as BP and Chevron, do however maintain a few stations with the Standard Oil brand in specific states in order to retain their trademarks and prevent others from using them.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Exxon_Mobil   (2517 words)

  
 Lee Raymond Outside Online
Raymond, 66, oversees the most profitable corporation in America—ExxonMobil, which operates oil refineries in 25 countries and explores for oil and gas on six continents, racking up $25 billion in profits in 2004.
A native of South Dakota and a 42-year company veteran, Raymond is unapologetic about his disdain for the Kyoto Protocol, the international agreement to reduce global greenhouse-gas emissions, which went into effect on February 16, 2005—without the United States' participation.
In speeches and ads placed during 2001, Raymond pressed the message that the cost of complying with Kyoto far outweighs the benefits, a view echoed by President Bush when he rejected the treaty in 2001.
outside.away.com /outside/features/200505/counter-enviroment-power-list-6.html   (508 words)

  
 arbyte.us: Lee Raymond on Gasoline Prices
Lee Raymond, Chairman and CEO of ExxonMobil, was interviewed on CNBC's program "Closing Bell" on 11/08/05.
This was the day before the Congressional hearings on oil and gasoline prices, and oil company profits.
arbyte.us /blog_archive/2005/11/Lee_Raymond_on_Gas_Prices.html   (468 words)

  
 Exxon is wanted for outrageous crimes against the planet Greenpeace International
The environmental crime: Lee Raymond and Exxon are responsible for sabotaging efforts by the international community to tackle global warming.
The environmental criminal: Lee Raymond, Chairman and Chief Executive of ExxonMobil (Esso), the world's richest company, is wanted for questioning over his part in an audacious plot to bake the planet.
Johannesburg, South Africa — Lee Raymond and Exxon are the Godfathers of corporate environmental crime.
www.greenpeace.org /international/news/exxon-is-wanted-for-outrageous   (491 words)

  
 RAYMOND LEE JEWELERS eBay Store About My Store
In 2004 Raymond Lee Jewelers in Palm Beach gardens became a separate company which specializes in the buying and selling of fine estate jewelry and watches around the world.
Ken Josephson is the sole owner of the Palm Beach gardens based Raymond Lee and now is dealing with a huge, ever growing international clientele via the internet.
Established in South Florida in 1983, Raymond Lee Jewelers has become one of South Florida's premier dealers in fine diamonds, designer jewelry and watches.
cgi3.ebay.com /ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewUserPage&userid=bocagems   (311 words)

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