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Memorial Tributes: Volume 5 (1992)

Chapter: Michael L. Haider

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Suggested Citation:"Michael L. Haider." National Academy of Engineering. 1992. Memorial Tributes: Volume 5. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1966.
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Page 104
Suggested Citation:"Michael L. Haider." National Academy of Engineering. 1992. Memorial Tributes: Volume 5. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1966.
×
Page 105
Suggested Citation:"Michael L. Haider." National Academy of Engineering. 1992. Memorial Tributes: Volume 5. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1966.
×
Page 106
Suggested Citation:"Michael L. Haider." National Academy of Engineering. 1992. Memorial Tributes: Volume 5. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/1966.
×
Page 107

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MICHAEL L. HAIDER 1 904-1 986 BY WALKER L. CISLER M~c~ ~ WIDER, chairman of Exxon Corporation from 1965 to 1969, (lied on August 14,1986, at his home in Atherton, California. Born on afarmin Mandan, North Dakota, on October 1,1904, Michael Haider was one of eight children of a wheat rancher and his wife. He was a 1927 graduate of Stanford University with a B.A. in chemistry. He joined the Exxon organization in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1929 as a chemical and petroleum engineer with Carter Oil, one of the company's affiliates. He became chief petroleum engineer and then header! all phases of engineering work for Carter before being transferred in 1938 to Exxon's research organization in New York as manager of production engineering and research. In 1945 hejoined the corporation as executive assistantin the Producing Department and a year later moved to Toronto as manager of the Producing ant! Exploration Department of Imperial Oil, Limited, a Canadian company in which Exxon hell] a 70 percent interest. He was elected a director of Imperial in 1948 and vice-president in 1950. Mr. Haider returned to Exxon's corporate headquarters in NewYork in 1952 and served for two years as deputy coordinator of the company's worldwide producing activities. He then be- come president and a director of International Petroleum Com- 105

106 MEMORIAL TRIBUTES pany, Limited, which was responsible for Exxon's operations in parts of South America. In 1959 he was elected a director of Exxon Corporation, a year later became vice-president and director with responsibility for Latin America, and in 1961 was elected executive vice-president ant! a member of the Executive Committee. In 1963 he was elected president and vice-chairman of the Executive Commit- tee, and in 1965 he became chairman of the board, chief executive officer, and chairman of the Executive Committee, a position he held until his retirement in 1969. Mr. Haider was a founding member of the National Academy of Engineering. He was a past chairman of the American Petro- leum Institute and a past president of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers. He was direc- tor of the Economic Development Council of New York City; a trustee of the Committee for Economic Development; and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the National Petroleum Council, and The Business Council. He was a former chairman of the Radio Free Europe FuncI; and a former member of the board, cochairman of the Develop- ment Committee, and a member of the Finance Committee of The Metropolitan Opera. He was also a director of the First National City Bank. He heal honorary degrees from the University of Miami, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and C.W. Post College of Long Island University. Mr. Haider was elected to the Institute de Cultura Hispanica of Spain in 1962 and was awarcled the Gran Cruz de la Orden del Merito Civil (Greet Cross ofthe Civil Order of Merit) by the Spanish government in 1969. In April 1968 he received an honorary doctor of engineering and the Engineer- ing Centennial Medal from PMC College in Chester, Pennsylva- nia. In ~ 969 he received The John Fritz Medal, grantedjointly by the five professional societies representing mining, civil, me- chanical, electrical, and chemical engineers, and was a member of Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Society. In 1969 he received the Cavaliere de Gran Crose, the highest recognition of the Italian government. In 1970 he received the

MICHAEL L. HAIDER 107 Charles F. Rand Award from the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers. Mr. Haicler was survived by his wife of fifty-eight years, Alice, one daughter, and three grandchildren. As chief executive officer of one of the worId's largest corpo- rations, Mr. Haider was one of the pioneers in the globalization by U.S. corporations in overseas markets. He earned a reputa- tion as an innovator who got things done. He undertook many jobs where changing times and situations caller! for changing business methods. He was a longtime sailboat enthusiast, mainly at Cape Cod, summer home of the Haiclers, their daughter, and their daughter's family. He also had an interest in archaeology and Peruvian and Columbian artifacts. Mr. Haider will best be remembered as a distinguished petro- leum engineer and outstanding executive, whose skill and expe- rience in research, exploration, and production greatly contrite uted to progress of the petroleum industry throughout the world, and whose imaginative leadership as chairman and chief executive of firer of one of the woricl's great corporations earned him the respect and admiration of the entire business commu- nity.

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