Word: haider
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...understand the problems and profit of this kind of U.S. manifest destiny better than the short (5 ft. 8 in.), bald, square-jawed chairman and chief executive of the world's biggest oil company, Standard Oil of New Jersey.*He is 63-year-old Michael Lawrence Haider (rhymes with strider), and he views the world from a 29th-floor office in midtown Manhattan's RCA Building...
...company merely dipped deeper into its vast North American reserves and substituted Western Hemisphere petroleum for Middle East oil that could not reach Europe quickly because of the Suez Canal closure. As a result, Nickerson reported third-quarter earnings up 6.8%, to $93.8 million. Jersey Standard Chairman Michael L. Haider announced that the world's largest oil company had substantially increased its Western Hemisphere operations, and had a third-quarter rise in earnings of 15.8%, to $315 million. Gulf Oil's U.S. production was up in the quarter, and earnings rose 13%, to $138.4 millions. Phillips Petroleum, pumping...
...Jersey Standard, the largest oil producer, ended the year with profits up 5.2%, to $1.1 billion, despite a squeeze that forced fourth-quarter earnings be- low the 1965 period. Higher worldwide taxes and other payments ($4.7 billion) did the major damage-and 1967 will be no easier. Chairman Michael Haider thinks that the proposed 6% tax surcharge would not hurt much, but that loss of the 7% investment tax credit could be important in a company that spends $1 billion a year on expansion. - IBM might ask, "What fourth-quarter slump?" since its profits were up 13%, to a record...
Michael L. Haider, SC.D., board chairman of Standard...
There is widespread unhappiness about Johnson's "voluntary" restraints on U.S. capital investments overseas and at home. Though their companies abide by them, both Jersey Standard Chairman Michael Haider and Gulf Oil Senior Vice President W. W. Adams have pointed out that the restraints on spending abroad will weaken the country's balance of payments in the future. Haider also urges cuts in the Government's nondefense spending, which, he notes, has widened the balance-of-payments deficit by increasing demand for imports and diverting some potential exports to domestic markets...