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Raymond Lee Clifton, pro se.
D. Brad Bailey, Asst. U.S. Atty., State of Kan., Topeka, Kan., for defendant-appellee.
Before ANDERSON, TACHA, and BRORB...
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IRVING, Texas -- Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) is establishing a $2.5 million endowment in the Teagle Foundation to fund scholarship awards in ho...
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Today's Obituaries Clendenin, Eva A. Copley, Emogene R. Glazzard, Raymond H. Sr. Grass, Mary E. Hayslett, Louise C. Kniceley, Garnette H. Lewis, Lee M. McClanahan, Ovie L. Jr. Meadows, Anna L. Sexton, Carolyn Smith, Robert L. Welch, James E. Young, Catherine
Eva Ashley Clendenin
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Energy Editors/Business Editors
IRVING, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 17, 2003
Address at Washington, D.C. Ministerial Summit Focuses on
Harnessi...
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Obituaries Today Clendenin, Eva A. Copley, Emogene R. Glazzard, Raymond H. Sr. Grass, Mary E. Hayslett, Louise C. Kniceley, Garnette H. Lewis, Lee M. McClanahan, Ovie L. Jr. Meadows, Anna L. Sexton, Carolyn Smith, Robert L. Welch, James E. Young, Catherine
Eva Ashley Clendenin
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SANTA MONICA, Calif., April 20 /U.S. Newswire/ -- ExxonMobil invested less than three-hundredths of one percent of last year's record $36 billion in profits on direct research on alternative energy, according to recent Senate testimony and company documents analyzed by the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights (FTCR). The $10 million a year that Exxon puts into a 10- year project at Stanford University also pales next to the more than $400 million granted in his final year to recently retired CEO Lee R. Raymond.
By contrast, BP (formerly British Petroleum) last year announced an $8 billion investment in a new business, BP Alternative Energy, aiming to "lead the market in low-carbon alternative power.
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In reluctant nation, Connecticut seen as 'clean energy' leader To listen to Lee R. Raymond, Exxon Mobil chairman and CEO, you'd think the idea of "energy independence" is idealistic daydreaming.
By 2020, Raymond told the Board and Council Dinner of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars recently, global energy use will jump by 40 percent, driving demand "from about 215 million oil equivalent barrels per day to almost 300 million oil equivalent barrels per day.
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- L & H Sanitation, Inc., Frank Fiore, Chester D. Johns D/B/a Heber Springs Sanitation, W.R. Brown D/B/a Brown Bag, Raymond Goff, Carl and Kerry Philamee, Leon Lackey and Merford Bell, Appellants, v. Lake City Sanitation, Inc., H.G. Smith, Richie A. Lee, Richard L. Johnston, Harold R. Verser, Joel Pilkington, Raymond E. Robus, John E. Evans, Newton Burl Parish, and J.C. Hawkins, Appellees., 769 F.2d 517 (8th Cir. 1985)
Merl Barns, Little Rock, Ark., for appellants.
Patrick James, Little Rock, Ark., for appellees.
Before McMILLIAN, Circuit Judge, BRIGHT, Senior Circu...
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DALLAS -- Shareholders of Exxon Mobil Corp., whose last chief executive took home $147 million when he retired, overwhelmingly rejected resolutions to rein in compensation at the oil company's annual meeting on Wednesday.
Chairman and Chief Executive Rex W. Tillerson said some shareholders sent a signal by withholding votes for board members who approved former CEO Lee R. Raymond's widely publicized pay and pension packages.
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The Republican leadership of the US Senate called the chief executives of the nation's leading oil companies on the carpet last month to explain why they were making a lot of money at a time when their prices were so high. Lee R. Raymond, chairman and CEO of ExxonMobil, explained the law of supply and demand. The executives blamed the high prices at the pumps on the high price of the raw material used to make gasoline, which is, of course, oil.