Word: travenol
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Corporate executives, however, have been anything but cautious. Beginning with a spate of billion-dollar oil-company buyouts in 1981, the merger wave has rolled over virtually every industry. This year alone, acquisitions have produced the largest U.S. gas distributor (Internorth-Houston Natural Gas), a medical giant (Baxter Travenol-American Hospital Supply), a vast food-processing concern (Nestlé-Carnation) and one of the mightiest high-technology combinations (Allied-Signal). Last week even brought a proposed sports marriage between the New Jersey Generals and the Houston Gamblers of the U.S. Football League. The number of megadeals this year could wind...
...health-care industry is bubbling with billion-dollar mergers. American Hospital Supply, the nation's largest distributor of hospital supplies, agreed last week to merge with Baxter Travenol Laboratories, the third-biggest hospital-supply company, in a deal valued at $3.8 billion. Monsanto has also agreed to acquire G.D. Searle for $2.7 billion, giving the chemical giant a long-desired place in the Pharmaceuticals market...
...Baxter merger put an end to American Hospital's four-month-old plan to combine with the Hospital Corp. of America, the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain. Baxter Travenol's $51-a-share offer, $15 more than HCA's previous bid, was grudgingly accepted by the American Hospital board only after irate stockholders, led by Financier Carl Icahn, threatened to throw out the board of directors...
...dealt with covered a wide range of corporate activity, from a call on Emerson Electric to adopt ethical criteria for accepting military contracts: to a demand that Merck & Co. cease making contributrions to charitable organizations and non-profit institutions: to an appeal to Standard Oil of California. Baxter Travenol, Texaco, and Xerox to abide by minimal standard of ethical conduct in their South African operations or withdraw from that country...
Continental Illinois directors who were asked not to seek re-election at next spring's stockholders meeting include the vice chairman of the board of directors of International Business Machines and the chief executive officers of Borg-Warner, FMC Corporation, IC Industries, and Baxter Travenol Laboratories, individuals with extremely successful track records, none of whose companies had ever had serious problems. Yet, by exercising rights gained last spring when agreeing to bail out the bank, the FDIC has stunned Wall Street by ordering their quick removal...