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Goldman, Sachs & Co.'s Dusty Philip also had a hand in advising Stanley Works on its $4.5 billion merger with Black & Decker Corp., which was announced the day before the Berkshire-Burlington deal. Goldman's George Mattson and Edouard Metrailler joined Philip on Stanley along with Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.'s Paul Stefanick, Kirk Meighan, Bob Kitts, Charles Dupree and Sean Costello. Stanley tapped Robert Townsend III and Mark Greene of Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP, which Philip recommended, for legal advice.
Black & Decker used Glenn Campbell and Elizabeth Donley of Hogan & Hartson LLP and Christopher Johnson and Robert Cattaneo of Baltimore's Miles & Stockbridge PC. Campbell, a partner at Miles from 1990 to 1999, joined Hogan two years ago from King & Spalding LLP. Black & Decker general counsel Charles Fenton was a Miles partner before he joined Towson, Md.-based Black & Decker in 1989. B&D tapped J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. for banking advice on Stanley.
Like Dusty Philip, Cravath's Mark Greene had two deals in two days, though his second was far smaller than Philip's. Greene advised NuVox Inc., a Greenville, S.C.-based local exchange carrier, on its agreement to sell to Windstream Corp. for $643 million. NuVox general counsel Riley Murphy worked with Greene when Murphy was at E.spire Communications Inc. For banking advice NuVox used Prem Parameswaran and John Vann at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. and James Broner at Wells Fargo & Co. Broner advised Valor Communications Group Inc. on the 2006 combination with Alltel Corp.'s landlines unit that created Windstream.
On NuVox, Windstream used Daniel Heard and T. Christopher Pledger of Kutak Rock LLP. Former Kutak partner John Fletcher, Alltel's go-to guy, moved to the company just before the Valor deal signing, and is now Windstream's general counsel. Windstream used Oppenheimer & Co. for banking advice.
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