CERIDIAN CORP
DEF 14A, 1995-03-24
COMPUTER & OFFICE EQUIPMENT
Previous: CERIDIAN CORP, 8-K/A, 1995-03-24
Next: KYSOR INDUSTRIAL CORP /MI/, DEF 14A, 1995-03-24



<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
                      the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

    Filed by the Registrant /X/

    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

    Check the appropriate box:

    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement

    /X/  Definitive Proxy Statement

    / /  Definitive Additional Materials

    / /  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c)
         or Section 240.142-12

                                       CERIDIAN CORPORATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

/X/  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-6(i)(2)
/ /  $500  per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3)
/ /  Fee  computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules   14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11

     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------

     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------

     3) Per  unit  price  or  other  underlying  value  of  transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:*

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------

     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
*    Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
     was determined.

/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2) and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was  paid
     previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

     1) Amount Previously Paid:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Filing Party:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:

        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                                (CERIDIAN LOGO)

   
                          NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
                STOCKHOLDERS ON MAY 10, 1995 AND PROXY STATEMENT
    

Dear Stockholder:

   
    Ceridian  Corporation's Annual Meeting  of Stockholders will  be held in the
Westminster Room,  Harbor Court  Hotel, 550  Light Street,  Baltimore,  Maryland
21202  on May 10, 1995 at 9:00 a.m.  E.D.S.T. Whether or not you plan to attend,
please complete and return your proxy card.
    

   
    This booklet contains the notice of  meeting and the proxy statement,  which
includes  information about the nominees for election to the Board of Directors.
It also  includes information  about  a proposal  recommended  by the  Board  to
increase by 3,000,000 shares the number of shares that may be issued pursuant to
Ceridian's  1993 Long-Term  Incentive Plan.  Enclosed with  this booklet  is the
proxy card.
    

    Please return the accompanying proxy card as promptly as possible to  ensure
that your vote is counted at the meeting.

                                          Sincerely,
                                          Lawrence Perlman
                                          CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT AND
                                           CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

Corporate Headquarters and Mailing Address:
8100 34th Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55425
(612) 853-8100
<PAGE>
   
                              CERIDIAN CORPORATION
    
                               ------------------

   
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
    

                            ------------------------

   
    The  Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  of Ceridian  Corporation,  a Delaware
corporation (the "Company"), will be held in the Westminster Room, Harbor  Court
Hotel, 550 Light Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21202 on Wednesday, May 10, 1995 at
9:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight Savings Time, for the following purposes:
    

   
    (1) To elect directors for the following year;
    

   
    (2)  To approve amendments  to the Company's  1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan,
       including an  amendment to  increase by  3,000,000 shares  the number  of
       shares that may be issued pursuant to that Plan; and
    

   
    (3) To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting.
    

   
    Stockholders  of  record  of the  Company's  common  stock at  the  close of
business on March  21, 1995  will be  entitled to vote  at the  meeting and  any
adjournments. No admission ticket will be necessary.
    

   
    TO  BE SURE THAT YOUR VOTE IS COUNTED,  WE URGE YOU TO COMPLETE AND SIGN THE
PROXY CARD, AND RETURN IT IN THE POSTAGE PAID ENVELOPE ENCLOSED IN THIS  PACKAGE
AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. The prompt return of your signed proxy card will assist the
Company in reducing the expense of additional proxy solicitation.
    

   
    A  list of  stockholders entitled to  vote at  the meeting will  be open for
examination by any  stockholder for any  purpose germane to  the meeting  during
ordinary business hours from April 26, 1995 through May 10, 1995, at the offices
of  Venable, Baetjer & Howard, 1800 Mercantile  Bank & Trust Building, 2 Hopkins
Plaza, Baltimore, Maryland 21201.
    

   
                                          By Order of the Board of Directors
    

   
                                                    [SIGNATURE]
                                          John A. Haveman
                                          SECRETARY
    

   
March 30, 1995
    

                                       1
<PAGE>
                              CERIDIAN CORPORATION
                                PROXY STATEMENT
                                    CONTENTS

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                PAGE
                                                                                                                -----
<S>                                                                                                          <C>
General Information........................................................................................           3
Election of Directors (Item 1).............................................................................           4
  The Board of Directors...................................................................................           4
  Nominees for Director....................................................................................           4
  Committees of the Board of Directors.....................................................................           5
  Directors' Compensation..................................................................................           6
  Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation..............................................           7
Approval of the Amended and Restated 1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan (Item 2)................................           7
  Introduction.............................................................................................           7
  Types of Incentive Awards................................................................................           8
  Provisions Applicable to all Plan Awards.................................................................           9
  Tax Information Regarding Stock Option Awards............................................................          11
Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation....................................................          11
Stock Price Performance Graphs.............................................................................          15
Executive Compensation.....................................................................................          17
  Summary Compensation Table...............................................................................          17
  Stock Option Grants......................................................................................          18
  Option Exercises and Option Values.......................................................................          19
  Performance Restricted Stock Awards......................................................................          20
  Pension Plan.............................................................................................          20
  Executive Employment Agreements..........................................................................          22
  Change of Control Provisions.............................................................................          22
Share Ownership Information................................................................................          23
  Share Ownership of Directors and Management..............................................................          23
  Share Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners.............................................................          24
Independent Auditors.......................................................................................          24
Other Matters..............................................................................................          24
  Stockholder Proposals....................................................................................          24
  Compliance With Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act.............................................          25
  Solicitation of Proxies..................................................................................          25
1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan (As Amended and Restated as of May 10, 1995).................................         A-1
</TABLE>
    

                                       2
<PAGE>
                              CERIDIAN CORPORATION

                             ---------------------

                       PROXY STATEMENT FOR ANNUAL MEETING
                    OF STOCKHOLDERS TO BE HELD MAY 10, 1995

                            ------------------------

                              GENERAL INFORMATION

   
    This  proxy  statement  and the  enclosed  proxy  card are  being  mailed to
stockholders beginning  on  or about  March  30,  1995 in  connection  with  the
solicitation  of proxies by the Board  of Directors of Ceridian Corporation (the
"Company") for use at the Annual Meeting  of Stockholders to be held on May  10,
1995  (the "Annual Meeting"). Holders of the Company's common stock (the "Common
Stock") of record at the close of business on March 21, 1995 will be entitled to
vote at the  meeting. At the  close of  business on March  21, 1995,  45,585,022
shares  of Common  Stock were  outstanding and  entitled to  vote at  the Annual
Meeting. Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote.
    

    When proxy cards are returned  properly signed, the shares represented  will
be  voted as directed. When  no direction is given, the  shares will be voted as
recommended by the Board. The proxy  also gives discretionary authority to  vote
the  shares on any  other matter which  may properly come  before the meeting. A
stockholder may revoke a proxy  at any time before it  is exercised by filing  a
revoking  instrument with  the Secretary of  the Company,  by submitting another
proxy card with a later date, or by voting in person at the meeting.

    The Company's Bylaws specify that  except as otherwise provided by  Delaware
law or by the Company's Restated Certificate of Incorporation, the vote required
to  decide  each matter  to be  brought before  a meeting  of stockholders  is a
majority of the shares of Common Stock represented in person or by proxy at  the
meeting  and entitled to vote  on the matter. Because shares  that are held by a
person who abstains from  voting on a particular  matter are treated as  present
and entitled to vote on that matter, an abstention has the same effect as a vote
against  the matter. If, however, a broker indicates on a proxy that it does not
have discretionary  authority to  vote certain  shares on  a particular  matter,
those shares will not be considered as present and entitled to vote with respect
to  that matter.  In other  words, broker  non-votes are  not counted  as a vote
against such a matter.

    It is the Company's policy that all stockholder meeting proxies, ballots and
voting tabulations that identify the vote of a particular stockholder are to  be
kept confidential if the stockholder has requested confidential treatment on the
proxy  card or ballot. If the stockholder  so requests, no such document will be
available for examination, nor will the identity and vote of any stockholder  be
disclosed prior to the final tabulation of the vote at the stockholders' meeting
except (i) as necessary to meet applicable legal requirements; (ii) to allow the
independent election inspectors to count and certify the results of the vote; or
(iii)  in  the event  of  a proxy  solicitation in  opposition  to the  Board of
Directors based on an opposition proxy  statement filed with the Securities  and
Exchange  Commission. The independent election inspectors may inform the Company
whether or not a particular stockholder has voted.

                                       3
<PAGE>
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
                                    (ITEM 1)

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

    The business of the Company is managed  under the direction of the Board  of
Directors,  which met six times  in 1994. The Company's  Bylaws provide that the
Board shall determine the  number of directors, which  is currently set at  ten.
All  ten directors presently serving on the Company's Board have agreed to stand
for re-election and have been designated by the Board as nominees for  director.
See  "Nominees for Director" for profiles of the nominees. Eight of the nominees
were previously elected by the stockholders,  while Mr. George R. Lewis and  Ms.
Carole J. Uhrich were first elected as directors by the Board effective November
8, 1994.

    The  Board  recommends a  vote  FOR and  solicits  proxies in  favor  of the
nominees named below. Proxies cannot be voted  for more than ten people. If  any
nominee  becomes  unable or  unavailable  to serve,  proxies  will be  voted for
another nominee selected  by the  Board. Each  person elected  will hold  office
until  the 1996 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and until his or her successor is
duly elected and qualifies, or until earlier resignation or removal.

NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR

    RUTH M. DAVIS  Dr. Davis, 66, has been President and Chief Executive Officer
of the  Pymatuning  Group,  Inc., which  specializes  in  technology  management
services,  since 1981.  She serves  as Chairman of  the Board  for the Aerospace
Corporation and as  a trustee of  Consolidated Edison Company  of New York.  Dr.
Davis  is a director of Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.; Premark International,
Inc.; Principal Financial Group Inc.;  Sprint Corporation; SofTech Inc.;  Varian
Associates,  Inc.; Giddings  & Lewis, Inc.  and BTG,  Inc. Dr. Davis  has been a
director of the Company since 1984.

    ALLEN W. DAWSON  Mr. Dawson, 68, is Chairman Emeritus of Siecor  Corporation
("Siecor"),  a joint  venture of  Corning Incorporated  and Siemens Corporation.
Siecor manufactures  fiber optic  cable and  ancillary equipment.  From 1989  to
1991,  Mr. Dawson was  Chairman of the  Executive Committee of  Siecor, and from
1980 to 1989 he was Chairman and  Chief Executive Officer of Siecor. Mr.  Dawson
has been a director of the Company since 1986.

   
    RONALD  JAMES   Mr.  James,  44, is  Vice  President-Minnesota of  U  S WEST
Communications, Inc.  ("US West"),  a telecommunications  company. He  has  been
employed  by US West since 1971, and has held his current position since January
1990. Mr.  James is  a director  of The  St. Paul  Companies, Inc.;  Great  Hall
Investment  Funds, Inc.  and Automotive Industries  Holding, Inc.  Mr. James has
been a director of the Company since 1991.
    

    RICHARD G.  LAREAU   Mr.  Lareau,  66,  is a  partner  in the  law  firm  of
Oppenheimer  Wolff & Donnelly.  He is a director  of Nash-Finch Company, Merrill
Corporation and  Northern  Technologies  International  Corporation,  and  is  a
trustee  of the  Mesabi Trust, a  mineral royalty  trust. Mr. Lareau  has been a
director of the Company since 1971.

   
    GEORGE R. LEWIS  Mr.  Lewis, 54, is Vice  President and Treasurer of  Philip
Morris  Companies Inc. ("Philip Morris"), a  consumer packaged goods company. He
has been employed by Philip Morris since 1967, and has held his current position
since 1984. Mr. Lewis is a director  of Central Fidelity Banks, Inc. and  Kemper
National Insurance Companies. Mr. Lewis was elected as a director of the Company
November 8, 1994.
    

    CHARLES  MARSHALL   Mr. Marshall,  65, served  as Vice  Chairman of American
Telephone and Telegraph Company, a  telecommunications company, from 1985  until
his  retirement in April 1989.  Mr. Marshall is a  director of GATX Corporation,
HARTMARX Corporation, Sonat Inc., Sundstrand Corporation and Zenith  Electronics
Corporation. Mr. Marshall has been a director of the Company since 1989.

                                       4
<PAGE>
    LAWRENCE  PERLMAN    Mr.  Perlman,  56,  is  Chairman,  President  and Chief
Executive Officer of the  Company. He was appointed  Chairman in November  1992,
has  been President and Chief Executive Officer since January 1990 and served as
President and  Chief Operating  Officer of  the Company  from December  1988  to
January  1990. He is a director of Inter-Regional Financial Group, Inc.; Seagate
Technology,  Inc.;  The   Valspar  Corporation;   Computer  Network   Technology
Corporation  and Bio-Vascular, Inc. He is also a member of the National Advisory
Board of the Chemical  Banking Corporation. Mr. Perlman  has been a director  of
the Company since 1985.

    CAROLE J. UHRICH  Ms. Uhrich, 51, is Group Vice President, Manufacturing and
Product  Development of  Polaroid Corporation ("Polaroid"),  an imaging company.
She has been employed by Polaroid since 1966, and has held her current  position
since  1992.  Prior to  that  time, she  served  in a  series  of manufacturing,
corporate quality and  market research positions.  Ms. Uhrich was  elected as  a
director of the Company November 8, 1994.

    RICHARD  W. VIESER  Mr.  Vieser, 67, retired in  1989 after having served as
Chairman, President  and Chief  Executive Officer  of Lear  Siegler, Inc.  since
March 1987, and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of FL Aerospace Corp. since
September  1986 and of FL Industries, Inc. since  June 1985. He is a director of
Dresser Industries, Inc.;  INDRESCO Inc.; Sybron  International Corporation  and
Varian  Associates, Inc.  Mr. Vieser  has been a  director of  the Company since
1988.

    PAUL S. WALSH  Mr.  Walsh, 39, is Chief  Executive Officer of The  Pillsbury
Company  ("Pillsbury"),  a  wholly-owned subsidiary  of  Grand  Metropolitan PLC
("Grand Metropolitan"). Prior  to assuming  this position in  January 1992,  Mr.
Walsh was Joint Chief Operating Officer of Grand Metropolitan's Food Sector from
June  1991 to January 1992, Division Chief Executive of Pillsbury from July 1990
to June 1991; and Chief Operating Officer  of Pillsbury from April 1989 to  July
1990.  Prior responsibilities included  service as Executive  Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer of Grand Metropolitan's Food Sector. Mr. Walsh has  been
a director of the Company since 1991.

COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

    The  Board elects an Executive Committee, an Audit Committee, a Compensation
and Human Resources Committee, a Nominating and Board Governance Committee and a
Quality and Technology Committee. The following are members of these  committees
as of March 1, 1995:

  Executive Committee:
   Lawrence Perlman, Chair
   Ronald James
   Richard G. Lareau
  Audit Committee:
   Richard W. Vieser, Chair
   Ruth M. Davis
   Allen W. Dawson
  Compensation and Human Resources
  Committee:
   Charles Marshall, Chair
   Ronald James
   Richard G. Lareau
   Paul S. Walsh
  Nominating and Board
  Governance Committee:
   Richard G. Lareau, Chair
   Charles Marshall
   Paul S. Walsh
  Quality and Technology Committee:
   Ruth M. Davis, Chair
   Allen W. Dawson
   Ronald James
   Lawrence Perlman
   Richard W. Vieser

    The  Executive Committee acts  on matters that  arise between Board meetings
and require  immediate  action.  All  actions by  the  Executive  Committee  are
reported  to and are ratified by the  Board. The Executive Committee took action
six times in 1994.

    The Audit Committee reviews and recommends to the Board the selection of the
Company's independent auditors, consults with the Company's independent auditors
and reviews the scope and significant findings of the audits performed by  them,
reviews the adequacy and sufficiency of the

                                       5
<PAGE>
Company's  financial  and  accounting controls,  practices  and  procedures, the
activities and  recommendations  of its  internal  auditors, and  its  reporting
policies and practices. The Audit Committee met five times in 1994.

    The  Compensation  and  Human  Resources  Committee  determines compensation
policies, practices and structures  for key employees  of the Company,  approves
the  compensation and benefits of  executive officers, evaluates the performance
of the  chief  executive officer,  reviews  the process  of  managing  executive
succession,  diversity  and  development,  and  assesses  the  adequacy  of  the
Company's human  resource principles  and philosophy.  This Committee  met  five
times in 1994.

    The  Nominating  and  Board Governance  Committee  reviews  the composition,
organization and governance of  the Board and its  committees and recommends  to
the  Board the adoption of policies  pertaining thereto, recommends to the Board
compensation for non-management directors, and serves as a nominating  committee
that  considers all nominees,  including those recommended  by stockholders, for
Board membership. This Committee met four times during 1994.

    The Quality  and  Technology Committee  reviews  the systems  and  processes
comprising  the Company's  quality management  program, evaluates  the Company's
technological resources and  assets, and assesses  the Company's business  plans
and strategies in light of external technology trends and internal technological
support. This Committee met three times in 1994.

    During  1994, each director attended at least  75 percent of the meetings of
the Board and his or her committees.

DIRECTORS' COMPENSATION

    Directors who are employees are not paid directors' fees. In 1994, directors
who were  not  employees were  paid  an annual  retainer  of $20,000,  $900  for
attendance  at Board  meetings, $750  for attendance  at committee  meetings and
$1,000 per day for time spent on other Company business. In addition, the chairs
of the Compensation and Human Resources, Audit, Nominating and Board Governance,
and Quality and Technology Committees received a supplemental annual retainer of
$3,000. For 1995, the annual retainer will be increased to $22,000, and fees for
attendance at Board  and committee  meetings will  be increased  to $1,000.  The
other aspects of director compensation will remain the same.

   
    Under the 1993 Non-Employee Director Stock Plan, each director who is not an
employee  of the  Company receives  a one-time grant  of 1,000  shares of Common
Stock, restricted as to transfer, upon election to the Board for the first  time
(directors  other than Mr. Lewis and Ms. Uhrich received this grant in 1993 when
the Plan was approved by the Company's stockholders), and an annual grant of  an
option  (first received  during 1993) to  purchase 1,000 shares  of Common Stock
upon election or  re-election by  the stockholders  to the  Board. A  restricted
stock  award will be forfeited if the applicable director's service on the Board
is terminated for any  reason other than death  or disability within six  months
from the date it was granted. Shares subject to a restricted stock award may not
be  sold, transferred, pledged or  otherwise disposed of until  such time as the
director's service on  the Board ceases.  The exercise price  per share of  each
option granted to a director will be 100 percent of the fair market value of the
underlying Common Stock on the date the option is granted. An option will become
exercisable in full six months after its date of grant, and will expire 10 years
from its date of grant.
    

    Non-employee  directors  are  also  entitled to  participate  in  a deferred
compensation plan. Each  such director  with at  least 12  calendar quarters  of
service  as a  director of  the Company  at the time  he or  she ceases  to be a
director will receive  (or, in the  event of  the director's death,  his or  her
beneficiary  or estate  shall receive) quarterly  payments for the  lesser of 48
calendar quarters or the number of quarters of service as a director. The amount
of each quarterly  payment will be  one-fourth of the  amount of the  director's
annual  retainer at the time he  or she ceases to be  a director. The plan makes
such payments subject to  conditions involving non-competition, preservation  of
proprietary  information and providing requested consulting services. If, within
two years of a change of control of the

                                       6
<PAGE>
   
Company (defined as described under "Executive Compensation -- Change of Control
Provisions"), a  director resigns  following a  material adverse  change in  the
conditions  under  which he  or  she performs  services  as a  director,  or the
director  is  removed  from  the  Board  for  any  reason  other  than   conduct
constituting  a felony or the  willful failure to fulfill  duties as a director,
the director will acquire a fully  vested interest in any benefit accrued  under
this  plan, even though the director may not have completed 12 calendar quarters
of service as  a director. During  1994, the Company  established and funded  (a
1994  contribution of $0.6 million) a Directors' Benefit Protection Trust out of
which benefits under the  directors' deferred compensation  plan to persons  who
cease  to be  directors of the  Company after December  1, 1994 are  to be paid.
Assets in  this trust  remain subject  to the  claims of  the Company's  general
creditors.
    

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

    Mr.  Lareau, who  served on the  Company's Compensation  and Human Resources
Committee during 1994,  is a  partner in  the law  firm of  Oppenheimer Wolff  &
Donnelly,  which has provided  and continues to  provide legal representation to
the Company on various matters.

                      APPROVAL OF THE AMENDED AND RESTATED
                         1993 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
                                    (ITEM 2)

INTRODUCTION

    The Ceridian  Corporation 1993  Long-Term Incentive  Plan (the  "Plan")  was
adopted  by the  Board of  Directors and approved  by the  stockholders in 1993.
Under the  Plan,  stock options,  restricted  stock awards,  stock  appreciation
rights  and  performance units  may be  granted  to such  employees and  in such
amounts as determined by the Board's Compensation and Human Resources  Committee
(the "Compensation Committee").

    At its meeting on February 3, 1995, the Board of Directors approved (subject
to  stockholder  approval) certain  amendments to  the  Plan and  authorized the
submission of an  amended and restated  Plan to the  Company's stockholders  for
their  approval. The substantive  changes in the amended  and restated Plan from
the Plan approved in 1993 are:

        (1) An increase in the number  of shares of Common Stock authorized  for
    issuance under the Plan by 3,000,000 shares, to 6,000,000 shares in total.

        (2) An extension of the period during which awards may be made under the
    Plan from February 3, 1996 to February 3, 1999.

        (3)  Provisions designed to  ensure that future  restricted stock awards
    made  to  persons  other  than   newly  hired  employees  will  qualify   as
    "performance-based  compensation"  for  purposes of  Section  162(m)  of the
    Internal  Revenue  Code  of  1986,  as  amended  ("Section  162(m)").  These
    provisions  and others in  the Plan are  intended to ensure  the federal tax
    deductibility under  Section  162(m)  of future  compensation  paid  to  the
    Company's  executive officers  in the form  of stock  options and restricted
    stock awards.

   
    As of  February  28, 1995,  approximately  275,000 shares  of  Common  Stock
remained  available for  awards under  the Plan. Of  the shares  of Common Stock
subject to Plan awards made through that date, 69% involved stock option  awards
with  a fair market value exercise price,  and 31% involved awards of restricted
stock with performance  conditions attached (see  page 20 for  a description  of
these  awards). No awards of stock appreciation rights or performance units have
been made under  the Plan, nor  are there any  current plans to  make awards  of
those types.
    

    The Board believes that stock option and performance restricted stock awards
have been and will continue to be an important element of a compensation program
that  is successful in attracting and retaining key employees and aligning their
financial interests with the interests of the stockholders.

                                       7
<PAGE>
As a result, the Board believes that  it is necessary to increase the number  of
shares  available for issuance under the Plan and to extend the term of the Plan
to continue to achieve these goals. At the same time, the Board believes that it
is desirable, in light of  Section 162(m), to structure  the Plan so that  stock
option  and restricted stock awards  generally will qualify as performance-based
compensation for purposes of  Section 162(m), and thereby  be deductible by  the
Company  without  regard to  the deduction  limit  otherwise imposed  by Section
162(m). THE  BOARD  THEREFORE RECOMMENDS  THAT  THE STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE  FOR  THE
PROPOSAL  TO AMEND AND RESTATE THE PLAN.  Approval of this proposal requires the
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares represented and entitled to vote on
this matter.

   
    After giving effect to  the amendment of  the Plan, approximately  3,275,000
shares  of Common  Stock would  be available for  future awards  under the Plan,
representing 7.2% of  the number  of shares of  Common Stock  outstanding as  of
February  28, 1995, and 5.7% of the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding
on that date  on a  fully diluted basis  (which primarily  reflects the  assumed
conversion of the Company's 5 1/2% Cumulative Convertible Exchangeable Preferred
Stock  ("5 1/2%  Preferred Stock") into  10,384,000 additional  shares of Common
Stock at $22.72 per share). Shares that  would be available for award under  the
amended  Plan and  certain ancillary plans  and shares subject  to all currently
outstanding employee  and director  stock options  (under the  Plan and  various
predecessor  and ancillary plans) would represent  17.2% of the number of shares
of Common Stock outstanding as of February 28, 1995, and 13.8% of the number  of
shares of Common Stock outstanding on that date on a fully diluted basis.
    

    The  Plan, as recommended  to be amended,  is attached as  Exhibit A to this
proxy statement. The  following summary of  its provisions is  qualified in  its
entirety by reference to that Exhibit.

TYPES OF INCENTIVE AWARDS

   
    Up  to 6,000,000 shares of the Company's  Common Stock may be the subject of
stock option, restricted  stock, stock appreciation  right and performance  unit
awards  under  the  Plan, an  increase  of  3,000,000 shares  from  the  Plan as
originally adopted.  Although the  Plan does  not specify  what portion  of  the
shares  may  be  subject to  each  particular  type of  award,  it  is currently
anticipated that most future awards will  be stock options and that  performance
restricted  stock awards  will be  utilized to  a lesser  degree. The  Plan also
provides that the  maximum number  of shares  of Common  Stock that  may be  the
subject of all types of awards made under the Plan to any one participant in any
one taxable year of the Company shall not exceed 250,000 shares.
    

   
    STOCK OPTIONS.  Options granted to acquire shares of Common Stock may either
be  incentive  stock  options  ("ISOs"),  meaning  that  they  will  qualify for
specialized tax treatment available  under Section 422  of the Internal  Revenue
Code,  or nonqualified stock options. The terms of each option grant shall be as
approved by  the  Compensation Committee,  subject  to certain  conditions.  The
exercise  price per share may not be less  than the fair market value of a share
of the underlying Common Stock  on the date the  option is granted. The  closing
price of the Common Stock on the New York Stock Exchange composite tape on March
21,  1995 was $33 7/8 per  share. Payment of the exercise  price must be in cash
unless the Compensation Committee permits payment in shares of previously  owned
Common  Stock. An option will generally not  be exercisable within six months of
its date of grant,  and will expire  at the time fixed  in the applicable  award
agreement,  which shall not be more than  ten years after the grant date. Unless
the  Compensation  Committee  determines   otherwise,  an  option  will   become
exercisable  as to one-third of the shares subject to the option on each January
1 that occurs at least six months after the date of grant.
    

    RESTRICTED STOCK.  The Plan allows  awards of shares of Common Stock,  which
may   not  be  sold,  transferred,  pledged   or  otherwise  disposed  of  until
restrictions on such actions  lapse. The Compensation  Committee may specify  in
connection  with  any  restricted  stock  award when  and  to  what  extent such
restrictions on  transferability  will  lapse, at  which  time  the  participant
becomes  vested in all or some portion  of the award. Restrictions generally may
not lapse within six months of the  date of grant. The Plan as amended  provides
that  all restricted stock  awards, other than  those that may  be made to newly
hired employees, must be performance-based. Such restricted stock awards may not
be granted

                                       8
<PAGE>
unless the Compensation Committee has specified the performance goal  applicable
to  the particular performance period relating to such shares, and may not vest,
in whole or part, unless the Compensation Committee has certified that such goal
for such  performance period  has been  attained. The  Plan requires  that  each
performance  goal specified by the Compensation  Committee must be a relative or
absolute measure of one  or more of the  following over a specified  performance
period:  total return to the Company's  stockholders; fully diluted earnings per
share for the Company; or earnings  before interest and taxes, return on  equity
or invested capital, or revenue growth for the Company or a specified subsidiary
or  division of  the Company.  The Compensation  Committee has  the authority to
determine the specific targets applicable to those performance goals as well  as
the  performance  period  for  each performance  restricted  stock  award. While
restrictions on transferability remain in effect, a participant has the right to
vote the stock  and, unless  the Compensation Committee  provides otherwise,  to
receive  any  dividends or  distributions  with respect  thereto.  If employment
terminates while restrictions on transferability remain in effect, shares  still
subject to the restrictions are forfeited.

    STOCK  APPRECIATION RIGHTS.  A stock appreciation right ("SAR") entitles the
recipient to receive a  payment from the  Company, in the  form of cash,  Common
Stock or both, equal to the difference between the market value of the number of
shares  of Common  Stock covered  by the  SAR as  of the  exercise date  and the
exercise price of the SAR. The terms of  an SAR award shall be as determined  by
the  Compensation Committee, subject to  certain Plan requirements. The exercise
price per share may  not be less than  the fair market value  of a share of  the
underlying  Common Stock on the  date the SAR is  granted. An SAR will generally
not be exercisable within six  months of its date of  grant, and will expire  at
the  time fixed in the applicable award  agreement, which shall not be more than
ten years after  the grant  date. Unless the  Compensation Committee  determines
otherwise,  an SAR will become exercisable as to one-third of the shares subject
to the SAR on each January 1 that  occurs at least six months after the date  of
grant.

    PERFORMANCE  UNITS.   Performance  units may  be awarded  on such  terms and
conditions as  the  Compensation  Committee may  specify.  Such  conditions  may
include  payment or vesting restrictions which involve continued employment with
the Company and  satisfaction by  the Company or  a specified  business unit  or
subsidiary  of  predetermined  performance goals  approved  by  the Compensation
Committee at the time  the performance units are  awarded. Upon satisfaction  of
applicable  terms and  conditions, performance units  would be  payable in cash,
shares  of  Common  Stock  or  some  combination  thereof  in  the   Committee's
discretion.

    OPTIONS  OR  STOCK  IN LIEU  OF  BONUS.   The  Plan also  provides  that the
Compensation Committee may, in its discretion,  allow a participant to elect  to
receive some or all of the participant's annual bonus under the Company's annual
Executive  Incentive Plan in the form of nonqualified stock options or shares of
Common Stock rather than in cash. Any such election must be made before the  end
of the calendar year preceding the calendar year for which the bonus is payable.
If such an election is permitted, the Compensation Committee would establish the
terms  and conditions applicable to the election, including specifying the means
by which the  number of  options or  shares of  stock would  be determined.  Any
option  granted pursuant to such an election  would have an exercise price equal
to the current market price of the Common Stock as of the first business day  of
the calendar year for which the bonus is payable.

    Information regarding future awards to be made under the amended Plan if the
stockholders approve the amendments is not presently determinable.

PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO ALL PLAN AWARDS

   
    PARTICIPANTS.   Participants in the Plan are those officers and employees of
the Company (including  its subsidiaries and  any other entity  approved by  the
Compensation  Committee in which the Company  has a significant equity interest)
whose performance has had or can have a significant effect on the success of the
Company. Non-employee directors of the  Company are not eligible to  participate
in  the  Plan.  Approximately  900  executive  and  managerial  level  employees
(including the 10 current executive  officers) satisfy the criteria required  to
participate in the Plan.
    

                                       9
<PAGE>
   
    ADMINISTRATION  OF THE PLAN.   The Plan is  administered by the Compensation
Committee, which will  have the  authority (i) to  interpret the  Plan, (ii)  to
establish  rules for the Plan's administration, (iii) to determine all terms and
conditions of  incentive  awards to  be  made under  the  Plan, subject  to  the
limitations  expressed therein, (iv) to amend or modify the terms of outstanding
awards  in  any  way   permitted  by  the   Plan,  including  accelerating   the
exercisability  or  vesting of  an award,  extending  the term  of an  award, or
authorizing the grant of  a new award in  substitution for a surrendered  award,
(v)  to modify  financial goals  relating to  the grant,  vesting or  payment of
awards and to exclude the effect of  unusual items from the determination as  to
whether  specified goals  have been  met, and (vi)  to delegate  to directors or
officers of  the  Company such  authority  of the  Compensation  Committee  with
respect  to  the  Plan  as  such  Committee  may  determine  in  accordance with
applicable law, except that no such  authority may be delegated with respect  to
participants who are executive officers.
    

    AMENDMENT  OF THE PLAN.   The Board of Directors may  amend the Plan in such
respects as is deemed advisable. No such amendment will be effective without the
approval of the Company's stockholders if stockholder approval of the  amendment
is  required pursuant to Rule  16b-3 under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
Section 422 of  the Internal Revenue  Code or the  rules of the  New York  Stock
Exchange.

    SHARE  ADJUSTMENTS.    If there  is  any  material change  in  the corporate
structure or  shares of  Common Stock,  such  as in  connection with  a  merger,
recapitalization,  stock split, stock dividend,  or other extraordinary dividend
(including a spinoff), the Compensation Committee (or the board of the surviving
corporation) shall make appropriate adjustments in the aggregate number and kind
of securities subject to award  under the Plan and in  the number of shares  and
purchase  price per share, if any, under  any awards outstanding under the Plan.
If all  or  any  portion  of  an  award  terminates,  expires  or  is  cancelled
unexercised or unvested, or if all or any portion of an award is settled or paid
in  cash or any form other than Common Stock, then the shares subject to such an
award will automatically become available for reissuance under the Plan.

    EFFECT OF  TERMINATION OF  EMPLOYMENT.   If  a participant's  employment  is
terminated by reason of death or disability, each stock option award immediately
becomes  fully exercisable but  any restricted stock  award (or portion thereof)
that has not yet  vested will be  forfeited. If a  participant retires, a  stock
option  will continue  for its  full term  and become  exercisable as originally
scheduled, but any restricted stock award (or portion thereof) that has not  yet
vested  will  be  forfeited.  Treatment  of  performance  units  and  SARs  upon
termination of employment  due to  death, disability  or retirement  will be  as
provided  in  the  applicable  award agreement.  If  a  participant's employment
terminates for any other reason, options that are then exercisable will continue
to be  exercisable for  90 days  after termination  (unless termination  is  for
cause),  but shares of restricted stock  not yet vested are forfeited. Treatment
of performance units and  stock appreciation rights will  be as provided in  the
applicable award agreement.

    NON-TRANSFERABILITY  OF  AWARD.   No  award granted  under  the Plan  may be
transferred by a participant for any reason  or by any means, except by will  or
by the laws of descent and distribution.

    TERM  OF THE PLAN.  The Plan was  effective as of February 3, 1993. The Plan
as amended will terminate  on February 3, 1999,  three years after its  original
termination date.

   
    CHANGE  OF CONTROL PROVISIONS.   If the  employment of a  participant in the
Plan is terminated within two years of a change of control of the Company by the
Company for reasons other than substantial nonperformance of duties or felonious
conduct, or by the  participant for "good reason,"  all stock options that  have
been  outstanding at least six months  will immediately become fully exercisable
for the remainder of their terms, and all restricted stock awards that have been
outstanding  at  least  six  months   will  immediately  become  fully   vested.
Performance  units and  SARs will vest  or continue  to vest as  provided in the
applicable award agreements. The Plan defines a change of control of the Company
and "good reason" for termination of employment in the same manner as summarized
under the  caption "Change  of Control  Provisions"  on page  22 of  this  proxy
statement.
    

                                       10
<PAGE>
TAX INFORMATION REGARDING STOCK OPTION AWARDS

    An  optionee will not incur any federal  income tax liability as a result of
the grant of an incentive stock  option ("ISO") or a nonqualified stock  option.
The  same is true  when any option  becomes exercisable. Upon  the exercise of a
nonqualified option, the optionee will  generally recognize ordinary income  for
federal  income tax purposes  in an amount  equal to the  difference between the
fair market value of the shares at the time of exercise and the exercise  price.
The  income recognized by the optionee will be subject to tax withholding by the
Company, and the Company will be entitled to a tax deduction in an amount  equal
to the amount of ordinary income recognized by the optionee. Upon resale of such
shares  by the  optionee, any  difference between  the sale  price and  the fair
market value of the shares at the time the option was exercised will be  treated
as capital gain or loss.

    Generally,  an optionee will  not incur federal income  tax liability as the
result of  an exercise  of an  ISO.  However, except  in the  case of  death  or
disability,  if an ISO is  exercised more than three  months after an optionee's
termination of  employment  (a  "disqualifying  exercise"),  the  optionee  will
recognize  ordinary income in an amount equal to the difference between the fair
market value of the shares  on the date of exercise  and the exercise price.  In
addition,  for purposes of calculating an optionee's alternative minimum tax, if
any, the difference between the fair market value of the shares at the time  the
ISO  is exercised and the exercise price becomes an item of adjustment. When the
shares acquired upon exercise of an ISO are sold, the optionee will be taxed  on
the  difference between the  sale price and  the exercise price.  If such a sale
does not occur within two  years of the date the  ISO was granted or within  one
year  of the date  it was exercised, then  the gain, if any,  will be treated as
long-term capital gain. If such a sale occurs within either of the time  periods
specified  in the preceding  sentence (a "disqualifying  disposition"), then the
portion of the optionee's gain equal  to the difference between the fair  market
value  of the stock on the date of exercise (or, if less, the selling price) and
the exercise price will  be treated as ordinary  compensation income, while  the
balance  of any gain would be treated  as capital gain. The Company is generally
not entitled to a deduction  as the result of the  grant or exercise of an  ISO.
However,  if  the  optionee  recognizes  ordinary  income  as  the  result  of a
disqualifying exercise or disposition, the Company is entitled to a deduction in
an  equivalent  amount  in  the  taxable  year  of  the  Company  in  which  the
disqualifying event occurs.

    The foregoing is only a summary of the general effect of U.S. federal income
taxation  upon  the optionee  and  the Company  with  respect to  the  grant and
exercise of  options under  the Plan  and the  subsequent sale  of shares.  This
summary  does not discuss the income tax laws of any state or foreign country in
which an optionee may reside.

            COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

   
    The Company's Compensation and Human Resources Committee (the  "Committee"),
comprised  solely of non-employee directors, is responsible for establishing and
administering the compensation program for the senior executive officers of  the
Company. The Company's executive compensation program is intended to (i) provide
competitive  levels of overall compensation to attract and retain well qualified
executives, (ii)  motivate  executives to  achieve  the short-  and  long-  term
strategic  goals of  the Company  and (iii)  have a  direct relationship  to the
enhancement  of  stockholder  value.  The  three  components  in  the  Company's
executive  compensation  program are  base  salary, annual  incentive  bonus and
long-term incentive compensation. The program is generally designed so that  the
target  mix of total  compensation is 40%  to 60% base  salary, with the balance
consisting of performance-based variable components (annual incentive bonus  and
long-term  incentive compensation). Because the long-term incentive component of
the Company's  executive  compensation  program  was  supplemented  in  1994  by
performance restricted stock awards (described below), in future years the total
mix  of  compensation could  be more  heavily weighted  toward performance-based
variable components. In addition, greater  weight is given to  performance-based
compensation  at  higher  levels  of  responsibility  within  the  Company.  The
executive  employment   agreements  that   the  Company   maintains  with   nine
    

                                       11
<PAGE>
   
of  the executive officers, including the  chief executive officer and the other
four officers  named  on page  17,  provide that  they  will be  compensated  in
accordance with the Company's executive compensation program.
    

   
    Information  regarding  competitive  compensation levels  and  practices for
positions comparable  to  executive  officer positions  within  the  Company  is
obtained  by  the  Committee  from  nationwide  compensation  survey information
collected and  evaluated by  independent consulting  firms, and  advice from  an
independent,  nationally recognized  compensation consulting firm.  As a result,
comparative compensation information is drawn from a broader range of  companies
than  those included in the industry indices contained in the performance graphs
on pages 15 and  16, and not  all of the companies  included in the  performance
graph  indices are included in the  surveys utilized. Based on this information,
the Committee generally  targets base  salary, total  cash compensation  (salary
plus  annual  bonus) and  long-term incentive  award  levels for  each executive
officer position to fall in a range between the 50th and 75th percentiles of the
relevant compensation marketplace, although the upper  end of this range may  be
exceeded  if the Committee  believes individual circumstances  warrant. With the
1994 grant  of  performance  restricted stock  awards,  total  compensation  for
executives  participating in that program would  be expected to exceed the upper
end of  this range  if total  returns  to the  Company's stockholders  over  the
specified  performance periods  relative to other  companies in the  S&P 500 are
significantly above average.
    

    SALARY.  The  annual determination  of an individual  officer's salary  with
respect  to the prescribed target  range is based on  a subjective assessment by
the Committee  of the  responsibilities  of the  position and  the  performance,
experience  and current salary  of the executive filling  the position. The 1994
base salary for executive officers was generally within the targeted range.

    ANNUAL INCENTIVE BONUS.  The  annual incentive program provides yearly  cash
bonuses  to executive officers,  although the Committee  may, in its discretion,
permit individuals to elect to receive part or all of their annual bonus in  the
form  of  stock options  rather than  cash. Four  executive officers  elected to
receive varying portions of  their 1994 annual incentive  in stock options.  For
purposes  of  this  election, an  option  to  acquire one  share  was  valued at
one-third  of  the  option  exercise  price.  The  annual  determination  of  an
individual  officer's target bonus, expressed as a percentage of base salary, is
based on a subjective assessment by the Committee of the responsibilities of the
position,  competitive  practice  and   the  Committee's  philosophy   regarding
performance-based compensation.

   
    For  1994, target  bonus percentages for  executive officers  other than Mr.
Perlman ranged from 35% to 55% of  base salary, with the maximum possible  bonus
generally  one  and one-half  times the  target amount.  Of the  total potential
bonus, 80% consisted of a financial component. For staff officers, the financial
component consisted of a requirement that the Company achieve a specified  level
of  earnings per share  ("EPS") during 1994. For  officers assigned to operating
units, one-fourth of the financial component  consisted of the same Company  EPS
requirement  and the balance consisted of  a requirement that the operating unit
achieve a  specified level  of pre-tax  earnings,  except that  in the  case  of
Ceridian  Employer Services ("CES"), any payment of the operating unit financial
component at a level above  target was based on  a requirement that CES  satisfy
criteria  involving  business unit  profitability,  revenue growth  and progress
against strategic objectives. The 20%  non-financial component was based on  the
Committee's   subjective  assessment  of   the  executive  officer's  individual
performance  in  the  areas  of  quality  improvement  and  fostering  workforce
diversity.  With respect to the financial component, bonus payments at, above or
below the target percentages  could be made depending  on whether the  financial
performance  of the Company (and, if applicable,  the business unit to which the
executive is assigned) met,  exceeded or fell short  of the applicable  targeted
financial  goal. The targeted financial component  of the bonus would be payable
if budgeted earnings were achieved, but no bonus would be payable if an earnings
threshold  amount  were  not  achieved.   For  1994,  both  the  financial   and
non-financial  components  of  the  annual incentive  program  were  paid  at or
slightly above the  superior level  for executive officers,  resulting in  bonus
payments for executive officers other than
    

                                       12
<PAGE>
Mr.  Perlman ranging between 52.5% and 87% of base salary. The Committee retains
discretion to adjust upward  the annual incentive if,  in its judgment, such  an
action is warranted under the circumstances.

    LONG-TERM  INCENTIVES.  Long-term  incentives are intended  to emphasize the
link between executive compensation and improved total returns to the  Company's
stockholders.  Although the Company's 1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan provides for
the grant  of stock  options, restricted  stock, stock  appreciation rights  and
performance  units, stock options  with a fair market  value exercise price have
been the primary long-term incentive utilized for executives in recent years. An
annual award  of stock  options is  typically made  to each  executive  officer,
although  additional  awards  may  be  made  at  the  Committee's  discretion in
circumstances such as promotions. During 1994, the Committee determined that  it
would  be beneficial to the Company and its stockholders if the annual awards of
stock options were supplemented by an additional long-term incentive which would
reward senior executives if and only if the relative total return to  Ceridian's
stockholders  over  a two  to four  year performance  period exceeded  the total
returns to stockholders of  most other companies in  the S&P 500. The  Committee
determined  that the  most desirable means  of accomplishing this  result was to
award to approximately 50 executives,  including the executive officers,  shares
of  restricted stock, all of which would vest only if the Company's total return
to stockholders over periods ranging from two  to four years is at least in  the
90th  percentile of all  companies in the  S&P 500. Fifty  percent of the shares
would vest if the Company's total return to stockholders is at least in the 75th
percentile, twenty-five percent would vest if  the Company's total return is  at
least  in the 60th percentile, and none would  vest if total return is less than
the 60th percentile. Shares which do not vest by the end of the fourth year  are
forfeited.  The Committee believes that this program provides a very direct link
between executive compensation and superior total returns to stockholders,  sets
challenging  performance  hurdles,  increases  the  ownership  stake  of  senior
management in the Company, and  appropriately supplements other elements of  the
executive compensation program.

    The  annual determination of an individual officer's option award within the
range prescribed for his or her position is based on a subjective assessment  by
the  Committee of the  responsibilities of the position  and the performance and
experience of, and past option awards made to, the individual. For 1994,  option
awards were generally in the upper half of the targeted range. The determination
of  an officer's performance restricted stock  award was primarily a function of
the total compensation range targeted for  his or her position and the  expected
value  of  the other  elements of  his  or her  compensation package,  with 60th
percentile total  return  performance  generally expected  to  result  in  total
compensation at or near the upper end of the targeted compensation range for the
position,  and  75th  and  90th percentile  total  return  performance generally
expected to result  in total  compensation in  excess of  the upper  end of  the
targeted range.

    CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION.  Mr. Perlman's base salary during 1994
was  $600,000, unchanged since 1990, and will be $650,000 in 1995. The Committee
believes Mr. Perlman has performed exceptionally  well, and that an increase  in
his  base salary at this time is  warranted. Mr. Perlman's 1994 annual incentive
was determined based solely on the Company's EPS, and amounted to 97.5% of  base
salary  as compared to a target of 65%, reflecting superior earnings performance
for the Company during 1994.

    During 1994, Mr. Perlman  was granted a stock  option for 80,000 shares  and
75,000 shares of performance restricted stock as the long-term incentive portion
of  his compensation package. In approving this award, the Committee principally
considered (i)  Mr. Perlman's  role  in the  Company's improved  1994  operating
performance;  (ii)  his work  over  several years  to  position the  Company for
strategic growth in revenue  and earnings; (iii) the  increase in the  Company's
shareholder  value during the year; (iv) the competitive range for Mr. Perlman's
position; and  (v) the  desire to  increasingly orient  his compensation  toward
performance-based components.

    DEDUCTIBILITY  OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION.  During 1993, the Internal Revenue
Code (the "Code") was amended to  impose on public companies, such as  Ceridian,
an annual limit of $1 million on

                                       13
<PAGE>
deductions for compensation payments made to each of the chief executive officer
and  the four most highly  paid executive officers employed  at fiscal year end.
Compensation that is considered "performance-based" according to the Code is not
counted toward the $1 million annual limit.

    The Committee supports the philosopy that a significant portion of the total
compensation provided to an executive, particularly the chief executive  officer
and others occupying positions of significant responsibility within the Company,
should  be performance-based. Consistent with that philosophy, a large component
of the compensation provided to the five highest compensated officers is in  the
form  of stock options with  a fair market value  exercise price, which the Code
classifies as  "performance-based." Similarly,  the proposed  amendments to  the
1993  Long-Term Incentive  Plan discussed  on pages 7  through 11  of this proxy
statement include a requirement that any future awards of restricted stock under
that Plan to  existing employees  must qualify as  "performance-based" for  Code
purposes.

    Although  the  Committee  has  considered  amending  other  elements  of the
compensation program so that they too can be considered "performance-based"  for
purposes of the Code, the Committee believes that it is more important for it to
retain  the  flexibility to  tailor the  compensation program  in the  manner it
believes most beneficial  to the  Company and its  stockholders, than  it is  to
qualify  every  aspect  of  the  Company's  executive  compensation  program  as
"performance-based" for purposes  of the Code.  In addition, any  non-deductible
amount of future compensation is not expected to be material to the Company, nor
would  such non-deductibility financially disadvantage the Company in any manner
given the Company's tax position.

February 28, 1995  Compensation and Human Resources Committee

                                          Charles Marshall, Chairman
                                          Ronald James
                                          Richard G. Lareau
                                          Paul S. Walsh

                                       14
<PAGE>
   
                         STOCK PRICE PERFORMANCE GRAPHS
    

    The graph  below compares  the  cumulative total  return during  the  period
1990-1994  for the Company's Common  Stock, the S&P 500  Index, the S&P Computer
Software and Services Index  and the S&P  Electronics-Defense Index. This  graph
assumes  the investment of $100 in the Company's Common Stock, the S&P 500 Index
and each of the industry indices on  December 31, 1989, and the reinvestment  of
all  dividends as and when distributed.  Included in the dividends reinvested is
the 1992 dividend distribution by the Company to its stockholders of all of  the
common  stock of the Company's former  computer systems subsidiary, Control Data
Systems, Inc. For  purposes of  this graph,  it is  assumed that  the shares  of
Control  Data Systems stock  were received on the  September 1, 1992 ex-dividend
date, sold at the closing market price on that date, and the proceeds reinvested
in shares of Ceridian Common Stock at the closing market price on that date.

                COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
         (CERIDIAN CORPORATION, THE S&P 500 INDEX AND INDUSTRY INDICES)

EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
            CERIDAN    S&P COMPUTER    S&P ELECTRONICS    S&P 500 INDEX
<S>        <C>        <C>              <C>               <C>
1989             100              100               100              100
1990           48.99            78.06            108.57            96.89
1991           60.03           118.99            152.01           126.42
1992           98.06           140.92            157.31           136.05
1993          122.17           179.86            205.72           149.76
1994          172.81            212.6            199.51           151.74
</TABLE>

                                       15
<PAGE>
   
    The graph below sets forth the cumulative total return during the period May
27, 1992 through December 31, 1994 for  the Company's Common Stock, the S&P  500
Index,   the   S&P   Computer  Software   and   Services  Index   and   the  S&P
Electronics-Defense Index.  This graph  assumes the  investment of  $100 in  the
Company's  Common Stock, the S&P  500 Index and each  of the industry indices on
May 27, 1992, the date the Company announced its plans to spin off Control  Data
Systems,  rename itself  Ceridian Corporation,  and pursue  additional reshaping
actions that  would cause  the  Company's continuing  operations to  consist  of
Arbitron,  Ceridian Employer  Services and Computing  Devices International. The
graph assumes  the  reinvestment  of  all dividends  as  and  when  distributed,
including the dividend distribution of Control Data Systems common stock, on the
terms described in the preface to the preceding graph.
    

   
              COMPARISON OF CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN FOR THE PERIOD
                     MAY 27, 1992 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 1994
         (CERIDIAN CORPORATION, THE S&P 500 INDEX AND INDUSTRY INDICES)
    

EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            5/27/92   12/31/92   13-31-93   12/31/94
<S>                        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
Ceridan                       100.00     107.56     118.40     119.97
S&P 500 Index                 100.00     121.96     155.66     184.00
S&P Computer & Software       100.00     113.48     148.40     143.92
S&P Electronic                100.00     132.83     165.49     234.08
</TABLE>

                                       16
<PAGE>
                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

    The  following table summarizes the compensation for the past three years of
the Company's five  most highly compensated  officers as of  December 31,  1994,
including the chief executive officer (the "Named Executives").

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                                                                               AWARDS
                                                      ANNUAL COMPENSATION           ----------------------------
                                             -------------------------------------                  SECURITIES
                                                                     OTHER ANNUAL    RESTRICTED     UNDERLYING       ALL OTHER
       NAME AND PRINCIPAL                     SALARY       BONUS     COMPENSATION   STOCK AWARDS   OPTIONS/SARS    COMPENSATION
            POSITION                YEAR        ($)         ($)           ($)          ($)(1)           (#)           ($)(2)
--------------------------------  ---------  ---------  -----------  -------------  -------------  -------------  ---------------
<S>                               <C>        <C>        <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>
Lawrence Perlman                       1994  $ 600,000  $ 585,164         --             --            80,000        $   3,375
 Chairman, President                   1993    600,000    390,109(3)      --             --           139,998(3)         4,497
 and Chief Executive Officer           1992    600,000    445,714         --             --           170,000            2,706

Ronald L. Turner                       1994    300,000    260,000         --             --            25,000            3,375
 Vice President and                    1993    273,625    285,125(5)  $  98,067(6)    $  75,000        80,000           --
 President, Computing                  1992     --          --            --             --             --              --
 Devices International (4)

Patrick C. Sommers                     1994    260,052    122,023(7)      --             --            34,176(7)         3,375
 Vice President and                    1993    250,000    162,000       254,407(6)       --            30,000              288
 President, Ceridian                   1992     19,231     14,063         --             --            50,000           --
 Employer Services (4)

Stephen B. Morris                      1994    260,040    175,635         --             --            25,000            2,928
 Vice President and                    1993    250,008    165,375         --             --            30,000           --
 President, The Arbitron               1992     20,834      9,375         --             --            50,000           --
 Company (4)

John R. Eickhoff                       1994    225,000    158,500(7)      --             --            30,822(7)         3,375
 Vice President and                    1993    187,594    135,113         --             --            40,000            2,698
 Chief Financial Officer               1992    160,000     82,286         --             --            66,540(8)         2,706
<FN>
------------------------------
(1)  The  amount  reported in  this column  represents the  market value  of the
     shares of  Common  Stock  awarded  on the  date  of  grant,  determined  by
     utilizing  the closing price of  the Common Stock on  the NYSE on the grant
     date. Holders of  restricted stock  are entitled to  receive any  dividends
     payable  on the Common Stock, but  such dividends are subject to forfeiture
     if the underlying  shares of  stock are  forfeited. Performance  restricted
     stock  grants made  during 1994  are not included  in this  column, but are
     reported on page 20  in the table captioned  "Long-Term Incentive Plans  --
     Awards  in Last  Fiscal Year."  At the  end of  1994, the  number and value
     (based on the closing price  of the Company's Common  Stock on the NYSE  on
     December  31, 1994)  of aggregate  restricted stock  holdings of  the Named
     Executives was as follows:
</TABLE>
    

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME                                                    NO. OF SHARES    VALUE ($)
------------------------------------------------------  -------------  -------------
<S>                                                     <C>            <C>
Mr. Perlman...........................................       75,000    $   2,016,000
Mr. Turner............................................       53,750        1,444,800
Mr. Sommers...........................................       50,000        1,344,000
Mr. Morris............................................       50,000        1,344,000
Mr. Eickhoff..........................................       50,000        1,344,000
<FN>

     Except for 3,750 shares held by  Mr. Turner, all restricted stock  holdings
     shown  in the preceding table reflect  shares not yet vested resulting from
     performance restricted stock awards made in 1994, the vesting of which  are
     subject  to the satisfaction of performance  conditions over two, three and
     four year performance  periods ending April  30, 1996, 1997  and 1998.  All
     shares resulting from performance restricted stock awards will vest only if
     the Company's total return to
</TABLE>
    

                                       17
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
     stockholders  over  the  performance  periods  is  at  least  at  the  90th
     percentile of companies in the
     S&P 500; none of  such shares will  vest if the  Company's total return  to
     stockholders  over the performance periods is less than the 60th percentile
     of S&P 500 companies.

(2)  The  amounts  disclosed  for   each  individual  represent  the   Company's
     contributions  to the  accounts of the  named individuals  in the Company's
     Personal Investment Plan, a 401(k) defined contribution plan.

(3)  Mr. Perlman's cash bonus was reduced as a result of his election to receive
     a portion of his 1993 bonus in  the form of a stock option covering  39,998
     shares rather than in cash.

(4)  Mr.  Turner joined the Company as an executive officer in January 1993, Mr.
     Sommers in November 1992 and Mr. Morris in December 1992.

(5)  The amount disclosed includes  $50,000 paid at the  time Mr. Turner  joined
     the Company, as well as his 1993 annual bonus.

(6)  The  amount disclosed  in this  column for  Mr. Turner  includes $44,371 in
     relocation expenses  and  $35,910  in tax  reimbursement  payments  related
     thereto.  The  amount  disclosed  for  Mr.  Sommers  includes  $131,263  in
     relocation expenses and $106,231 in  tax reimbursement payments related  to
     the relocation expenses.

(7)  The  cash bonuses of Mr. Eickhoff and  Mr. Sommers were reduced as a result
     of their elections to receive a portion  of their 1994 bonuses in the  form
     of  stock  options covering  5,822 shares  and 9,176  shares, respectively,
     rather than in cash.

(8)  Amount shown reflects antidilution  adjustments resulting from the  spinoff
     of Control Data Systems, Inc.
</TABLE>

STOCK OPTION GRANTS

    The  following table summarizes information  regarding stock options granted
during 1994 to the Named Executives.

                   OPTION/SAR GRANTS IN THE LAST FISCAL YEAR

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       INDIVIDUAL GRANTS(1)                         POTENTIAL REALIZABLE VALUE
                                  ---------------------------------------------------------------               AT
                                    NUMBER OF          % OF TOTAL                                    ASSUMED ANNUAL RATES OF
                                   SECURITIES         OPTIONS/SARS                                   STOCK PRICE APPRECIATION
                                   UNDERLYING          GRANTED TO         EXERCISE OR                   FOR OPTION TERM(3)
                                  OPTIONS/SARS     EMPLOYEES IN FISCAL    BASE PRICE   EXPIRATION  ----------------------------
              NAME                 GRANTED (#)            YEAR             ($/SH)(2)      DATE        5% ($)         10% ($)
--------------------------------  -------------  -----------------------  -----------  ----------  -------------  -------------
<S>                               <C>            <C>                      <C>          <C>         <C>            <C>
Lawrence Perlman                      80,000(4)              5.7%          $   25.00     11/29/04  $   1,260,000  $   3,180,000
Ronald L. Turner                      25,000(4)              1.8%              25.00     11/29/04        393,750        993,750
Patrick C. Sommers                     9,176(5)              0.6%              19.13     01/03/04        110,588        279,104
                                      25,000(4)              1.8%              25.00     11/29/04        393,750        993,750
Stephen B. Morris                     25,000(4)              1.8%              25.00     11/29/04        393,750        993,750
John R. Eickhoff                       5,822(6)              0.4%              19.13     01/03/04         70,166        177,086
                                      25,000(4)              1.8%              25.00     11/29/04        393,750        993,750
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  All options were  granted under  the 1993 Long-Term  Incentive Plan.  Under
     that  Plan, the Compensation Committee  retains discretion, subject to plan
     limits,  to   modify   the   terms  of   outstanding   options,   including
     exercisability  dates. Exercisability  will generally  be accelerated  if a
     recipient's employment  is  terminated within  two  years of  a  change  of
     control of the Company, as defined in "Change of Control Provisions" below.

(2)  The per share exercise price of each option granted in 1994 is equal to the
     market  value (closing price on the NYSE) of a share of Common Stock on the
     date of grant.
</TABLE>

                                       18
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
(3)  These amounts represent certain assumed rates of appreciation only.  Actual
     gains,  if  any, on  stock  option exercises  are  dependent on  the future
     performance  of  the  Common  Stock,  overall  market  conditions  and  the
     optionees'  continued employment  through the  vesting period.  The amounts
     represented in this table may not necessarily be achieved.

(4)  This option  becomes exercisable  in cumulative  one-third installments  on
     January 1 of 1996, 1997 and 1998.

(5)  Option  awarded in consideration of Mr. Sommers' election to receive 32% of
     his 1994 annual  bonus in  the form  of a  stock option  rather than  cash.
     Original  option grant on January 3, 1994 of 9,176 shares, corresponding to
     maximum potential  bonus  payment,  was confirmed  in  February  1995  upon
     determination  of actual bonus  payout. Option became  fully exercisable on
     February 3, 1995 in connection with such determination.

(6)  Option awarded in consideration of  Mr. Eickhoff's election to receive  19%
     of  his 1994 annual bonus  in the form of a  stock option rather than cash.
     Original option grant on January 3, 1994 of 5,822 shares, corresponding  to
     maximum  potential  bonus  payment,  was confirmed  in  February  1995 upon
     determination of actual  bonus payout. Option  became fully exercisable  on
     February 3, 1995 in connection with such determination.
</TABLE>

OPTION EXERCISES AND OPTION VALUES

    The  following table summarizes information  regarding the exercise of stock
options during 1994 by the  Named Executives, as well  as the December 31,  1994
value of unexercised stock options held by the Named Executives.

              AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                     AND FISCAL YEAR END OPTION/SAR VALUES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             NUMBER OF SECURITIES
                                                                            UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED        VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                               OPTIONS/SARS AT         IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS/SARS
                                                                             FISCAL YEAR END (#)       AT FISCAL YEAR END ($)(1)
                                      SHARES ACQUIRED         VALUE       --------------------------  ----------------------------
               NAME                   ON EXERCISE (#)     REALIZED ($)    EXERCISABLE  UNEXERCISABLE   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
----------------------------------  -------------------  ---------------  -----------  -------------  -------------  -------------
<S>                                 <C>                  <C>              <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>
Lawrence Perlman..................          --                 --            450,562        384,474   $   7,992,753  $   4,064,619
Ronald L. Turner..................          --                 --             16,667         88,333         204,171        687,829
Patrick C. Sommers................          --                 --             16,667         97,509         183,337        717,277
Stephen B. Morris.................          --                 --             16,667         88,333         202,171        683,829
John R. Eickhoff..................          --                 --             70,442        100,486       1,201,234        947,250
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  Represents  the difference between the market value of the Company's Common
     Stock on December 31, 1994 and the exercise price of the options.
</TABLE>

                                       19
<PAGE>
PERFORMANCE RESTRICTED STOCK AWARDS

    The following table summarizes information regarding performance  restricted
stock awards granted during 1994 to the Named Executives.

            LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLANS -- AWARDS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER
                                                                                           NON-STOCK PRICE-BASED PLANS
                                NUMBER OF SHARES, UNITS      PERFORMANCE OR OTHER     -------------------------------------
                                  OR OTHER RIGHTS (#                PERIOD             THRESHOLD     TARGET       MAXIMUM
            NAME                        SHARES)           UNTIL MATURATION OR PAYOUT  (# SHARES)   (# SHARES)   (# SHARES)
-----------------------------  -------------------------  --------------------------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                            <C>                        <C>                         <C>          <C>          <C>
Lawrence Perlman.............             75,000                5/1/94 to 4/30/98         18,750       37,500       75,000
Ronald L. Turner.............             50,000                5/1/94 to 4/30/98         12,500       25,000       50,000
Patrick C. Sommers...........             50,000                5/1/94 to 4/30/98         12,500       25,000       50,000
Stephen B. Morris............             50,000                5/1/94 to 4/30/98         12,500       25,000       50,000
John R. Eickhoff.............             50,000                5/1/94 to 4/30/98         12,500       25,000       50,000
</TABLE>

    Long-term  incentive plan awards summarized in  the table above consisted of
awards of shares of restricted stock, the vesting of which is subject to certain
performance conditions, under the Company's 1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan. Up to
one-third of the shares awarded will vest on each of April 30, 1996 and 1997  if
the  executive is  still employed by  the Company  on those dates  and the total
return to the Company's stockholders during the twenty-four and thirty-six month
periods ended  on those  respective  dates meets  certain prescribed  levels  as
compared  to other  companies in  the S&P  500. The  remaining one-third  of the
shares awarded plus any  shares that did not  vest at the end  of the first  two
performance  periods will become available  to vest as of  April 30, 1998 at the
end of the third performance period. Of the shares eligible to vest on any given
date, generally 25% of the  shares would vest if  the Company's total return  to
stockholders   (stock  price  appreciation  plus  assumed  reinvestment  of  any
dividends or other distributions) over  the applicable performance period is  at
least at the 60th percentile of companies in the S&P 500, 50% would vest if such
total  return is at  least at the 75th  percentile, and 100%  would vest if such
total return is at least at the  90th percentile. If the Company's total  return
to  stockholders is not at least at the 60th percentile, no shares would vest on
that date. Shares which have not vested  as of the end of the third  performance
period will be forfeited.

PENSION PLAN

    The   Company  maintains  two  voluntary,  tax  qualified,  defined  benefit
retirement plans for U.S. employees, one for employees of its Computing  Devices
International  business and the second for other U.S. employees (the "Retirement
Plans"), which  are identical  in all  substantive respects  and are  funded  by
employee   salary  reduction   contributions  and   Company  contributions.  The
Retirement Plans were closed to new  participants on and after January 2,  1995.
The  amount of the  annual benefit under  the Retirement Plans  is based upon an
employee's average annual compensation during the employee's highest consecutive
five-year earnings period with the Company while participating in the Retirement
Plans. Because the Internal Revenue Code  limits the annual benefit that may  be
paid  from tax-qualified  plans such  as the  Retirement Plans,  the Company has
established a Benefit  Equalization Plan to  provide retirees with  supplemental
benefits  so that they will  receive, in the aggregate,  the benefits they would
have been entitled to  receive under the Retirement  Plans had these limits  not
been  in  effect.  During  1994,  the Company  established  and  funded  (a 1994
contribution of $1.7 million) a Benefits Protection Trust out of which  benefits
under  the Benefit Equalization  Plan for persons  who terminate employment with
the Company after December 1, 1994 are  to be paid. Assets in this trust  remain
subject to the claims of the Company's general creditors.

                                       20
<PAGE>
    The  following  table  shows  estimated annual  benefits  payable  under the
Retirement Plans and the Benefit Equalization Plan to an employee who retires in
1995 at age 65:

                               PENSION PLAN TABLE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      YEARS OF SERVICE
               ---------------------------------------------------------------
REMUNERATION       15           20           25           30           35
-------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>            <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
 $   200,000   $    46,056  $    61,408  $    76,760  $    92,112  $   104,112
     300,000        70,056       93,408      116,760      140,112      158,112
     400,000        94,056      125,408      156,760      188,112      212,112
     500,000       118,056      157,408      196,760      236,112      266,112
     600,000       142,056      189,408      236,760      284,112      320,112
     700,000       166,056      221,408      276,760      332,112      374,112
     800,000       190,056      253,408      316,760      380,112      428,112
     900,000       214,056      285,408      356,760      428,112      482,112
   1,000,000       238,056      317,408      396,760      476,112      536,112
   1,100,000       262,056      349,408      436,760      524,112      590,112
   1,200,000       286,056      381,408      476,760      572,112      644,112
</TABLE>

    Annual compensation for  purposes of  the Retirement Plans  and the  Benefit
Equalization  Plan consists of salary and any  annual bonus paid during the year
(whether payable in cash or stock  options), less the amount contributed by  the
employee  to the  applicable Retirement  Plan that  year. Compensation  for 1994
covered by these  Plans for  the Named Executives  is as  follows: Mr.  Perlman,
$1,146,933;  Mr.  Turner, $524,125;  Mr.  Sommers, $406,382;  and  Mr. Eickhoff,
$346,921. Mr.  Morris elected  to  participate in  a Retirement  Plan  beginning
January  1,  1995.  For  purposes  of  the  Retirement  Plans  and  the  Benefit
Equalization Plan, an annual bonus is considered part of annual compensation  in
the  year in which it is paid, rather than  the year in which it was earned (the
latter formulation being the basis on which amounts are reported in the  Summary
Compensation Table).

    As of March 1, 1995, years of credited service for the Named Executives were
as  follows: Mr. Perlman, 14.76 years; Mr. Turner, 2.18 years; Mr. Sommers, 2.31
years; Mr. Morris, 0.17 years and Mr. Eickhoff, 31.42 years.

    Benefit amounts in the Pension Plan Table are computed assuming payments are
made on the normal life annuity basis and not under any of the various  survivor
options.  Benefits listed in the  table are not subject  to deduction for Social
Security or other offset amounts.

                                       21
<PAGE>
EXECUTIVE EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS

    The Company has employment agreements with each of the Named Executives. The
term  of each of  these agreements is the  later of June  30, 1997 (December 31,
1998 in the case of  Mr. Perlman) or two years  after a "change of control"  (as
defined  in "Change  of Control Provisions"  below) occurring  before the normal
contract  termination  date.  These   agreements  generally  specify  that   the
executives  are  required  to  devote  full time  to  the  Company  and  will be
compensated in accordance  with the  compensation policies of  the Company,  and
contain  provisions regarding protection of  confidential information, rights in
any  intellectual  property  created  by  the  executive,  and  restrictions  on
competition. If the Company terminates an agreement without cause, the executive
is entitled to receive a lump sum payment equal to two years' base salary (three
years  in Mr. Perlman's case).  In addition, the agreements  for Mr. Perlman and
Mr. Eickhoff provide that in the event of such a termination, each would receive
a supplemental retirement benefit calculated  by including the lump sum  payment
previously  noted  in the  determination of  final average  pay for  purposes of
computing retirement  benefits. Mr.  Perlman's agreement  additionally  provides
that  the calculation of such supplemental retirement benefit will include three
additional years of  service credit. Also  in the event  of termination  without
cause,  Mr. Perlman's agreement provides that  his rights and benefits under any
restricted stock or option plans will fully vest, and any restrictions on shares
of stock received under such plans  will immediately lapse. Each agreement  also
contains  certain change of control provisions  described below under "Change of
Control Provisions."

CHANGE OF CONTROL PROVISIONS

    The payment  of benefits  or  vesting of  awards  under the  Company's  1993
Long-Term  Incentive Plan  ("1993 LTIP"),  1990 Long-Term  Incentive Plan ("1990
LTIP"), and the executive employment agreements described above accelerates upon
a "change of control termination." For these purposes, a "change of control"  is
defined  as (1) a merger or consolidation  involving the Company if less than 50
percent of the Company's voting stock after the business combination is held  by
persons who were stockholders before the business combination; (2) a sale of the
assets of the Company substantially as an entirety; (3) ownership by a person or
group of at least 25 percent of the Company's voting securities; (4) approval by
the  stockholders of a plan for the  liquidation of the Company; and (5) certain
changes in the composition of the Company's Board of Directors. The term "change
of control termination" refers  to either of the  following if it occurs  within
two  years  of a  "change  of control"  of the  Company:  (i) termination  of an
executive's employment  by  the  Company  for  reasons  other  than  substantial
nonperformance  of  duties  or  conduct constituting  a  felony  involving moral
turpitude; or  (ii) the  executive terminates  employment with  the Company  for
"good  reason." "Good reason"  is generally defined  as an adverse  change in an
executive's responsibilities, authority, compensation or working conditions,  or
a material breach of an employment agreement by the Company.

    If  a change of  control termination occurs, all  shares of restricted stock
held by an executive pursuant  to the 1993 or  1990 LTIP will immediately  vest,
and  all options  granted under  the 1993 or  1990 LTIP  will become exercisable
immediately. The executive  employment agreements described  above also  provide
that  following a  change of  control termination,  an executive  is entitled to
receive a  lump  sum payment  that  is one  dollar  less than  three  times  the
executive's  "annualized includable  compensation," which is  the average annual
compensation received by the  executive from the Company  and includable in  the
executive's gross income during the five most recent taxable years ending before
the  change of control. The agreements for  Mr. Perlman and Mr. Eickhoff provide
that the amount of this lump sum payment is to be included in the  determination
of final average pay for purposes of computing supplemental retirement benefits.
This  lump sum payment would be in lieu of any other severance payment specified
in an executive  employment agreement. The  executive employment agreements  and
stock-based incentive plans also provide that all change of control compensation
pertaining  to  an  executive  must  be less  than  the  amount  which  would be
considered a "parachute payment" under the Internal Revenue Code.

                                       22
<PAGE>
                          SHARE OWNERSHIP INFORMATION

SHARE OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS AND MANAGEMENT

    The following table sets forth certain information regarding the  beneficial
ownership of the Company's Common Stock as of February 28, 1995 by each director
or  nominee for director, by  each of the Named  Executives and by all executive
officers and directors as a group.

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      SHARES OF                             OF SHARES BENEFICIALLY
                                                     COMMON STOCK                                   OWNED,
                                                     BENEFICIALLY      PERCENT OF COMMON      SHARES THAT MAY BE
NAME OF INDIVIDUAL OR IDENTITY OF GROUP               OWNED (1)         STOCK OWNED (2)   ACQUIRED WITHIN 60 DAYS(3)
-----------------------------------------------  --------------------  -----------------  --------------------------
<S>                                              <C>                   <C>                <C>
Directors
  Ruth M. Davis................................            3,873               *                        2,000
  Allen W. Dawson..............................            6,000               *                        2,000
  Ronald James.................................            3,100               *                        2,000
  Richard G. Lareau............................            5,500(4)            *                        2,000
  George R. Lewis..............................            1,000               *                      --
  Charles Marshall.............................            5,000               *                        2,000
  Lawrence Perlman.............................          767,571                1.7%                  631,704
  Carole J. Uhrich.............................            1,000               *                      --
  Richard W. Vieser............................            5,000               *                        2,000
  Paul S. Walsh................................            4,000               *                        2,000
Named Executive Officers
  Ronald L. Turner.............................           98,334                0.2%                   43,334
  Patrick C. Sommers...........................           98,424                0.2%                   44,510
  Stephen B. Morris............................           83,334                0.2%                   33,334
  John R. Eickhoff.............................          175,424                0.4%                  117,596
All executive officers, directors and nominees
 as a group....................................        1,599,805(5)             3.4%                1,087,235
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  Unless otherwise noted,  all of the  shares shown are  held by  individuals
     possessing sole voting and investment power with respect to such shares.

(2)  Number  of shares representing  less than 0.1%  of outstanding Common Stock
     designated by *.

(3)  All shares shown in this column may be acquired within 60 days through  the
     exercise  of stock options granted by the Company. These shares are treated
     as outstanding only when  determining the amount and  percent owned by  the
     applicable individual or group.

(4)  Does  not include 500 shares of common  stock owned by Mr. Lareau's wife as
     to which Mr. Lareau may be deemed to share voting and investment power, but
     as to which shares he disclaims any beneficial interest.

(5)  Includes 421 shares owned  by an executive officer's  wife as to which  the
     executive officer shares voting and investment power.
</TABLE>
    

                                       23
<PAGE>
SHARE OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS

    The  following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial
ownership of the Company's Common Stock by each stockholder who is known by  the
Company to own beneficially more than 5% of the outstanding Common Stock:

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  AMOUNT AND NATURE OF   PERCENT OF
      NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER        BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP    CLASS (1)
------------------------------------------------  --------------------  -------------
<S>                                               <C>                   <C>
FMR Corp.                                              5,456,387(2)           12.0%
 82 Devonshire Street
 Boston, MA 02109
The Equitable Companies Incorporated                   3,264,611(3)            7.2%
 787 Seventh Avenue
 New York, NY 10019
and AXA
 23 Avenue Matignon
 75008 Paris France
<FN>
------------------------
(1)  Percentage calculated based on the number of shares of the Company's common
     stock issued and outstanding as of February 28, 1995.

(2)  Beneficial  ownership as of  December 31, 1994 as  reported in Schedule 13G
     dated February  13,  1995.  These  securities  are  beneficially  owned  by
     Fidelity  Management  &  Research  Company  and  Fidelity  Management Trust
     Company, both wholly-owned subsidiaries of FMR Corp., as a result of acting
     as investment  adviser to  certain investment  companies or  as  investment
     manager of certain institutional accounts. Represents sole power to dispose
     or  direct the disposition  of 5,456,387 shares  and sole power  to vote or
     direct the vote of 116,419 shares.  Included in the total number of  shares
     reported  as beneficially owned  are 572,880 shares  that would be issuable
     upon conversion of shares of the Company's 5 1/2% Preferred Stock.

(3)  Beneficial ownership as of  December 31, 1994 as  reported in Schedule  13G
     dated  February 10, 1995. These securities  are held by subsidiaries of AXA
     and its affiliate The Equitable Companies Incorporated, primarily  Alliance
     Capital Management L.P., which holds them on behalf of client discretionary
     investment  advisory accounts. Represents sole power  to vote or direct the
     vote of 2,365,456 shares, sole power  to dispose or direct the  disposition
     of  3,246,456 shares, and shared power to dispose or direct the disposition
     of 18,155  shares (including  14,355  shares that  would be  issuable  upon
     conversion of shares of the Company's 5 1/2% Preferred Stock).
</TABLE>
    

    The parties identified in the table above have stated in their Schedules 13G
that  the Company securities they  hold were acquired in  the ordinary course of
business and were not acquired for the purpose of and do not have the effect  of
changing  or influencing  the control  of the Company  and were  not acquired in
connection with or as  a participant in any  transaction having such purpose  or
effect.

                              INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

    The  Board  has  selected  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP,  the  Company's present
auditors, to audit the accounts of the Company for the year ending December  31,
1995.

    The Board has requested that representatives of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP attend
the  Annual Meeting. They will  have an opportunity to  make a statement if they
desire to do so, and will be available to respond to stockholder questions.

                                 OTHER MATTERS

STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

   
    Any stockholder proposal to be included in the proxy materials for the  1996
Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders must  be received by  the Company  on or before
December 1, 1995.
    

    The Company's  Bylaws  require advance  written  notice to  the  Company  of
stockholder-proposed  business  or  of  a  stockholder's  intention  to  make  a
nomination for director at an annual meeting of

                                       24
<PAGE>
stockholders. They also limit the business which may be conducted at any special
meeting  of  stockholders   to  business   brought  by   the  Company's   Board.
Specifically,  the Bylaws provide that business  may be brought before an annual
meeting by a stockholder only if the stockholder provides written notice to  the
Secretary  of the Company  not less than  50 or more  than 75 days  prior to the
meeting, unless notice of the date of the meeting is given to stockholders or is
publicly announced less  than 65  days prior  to the  meeting. In  that case,  a
stockholder's notice of proposed business must be provided no later than 15 days
following  the  date notice  of  the annual  meeting  was mailed  or  the public
announcement of the  date was  made, whichever  is earlier.  The Company's  1996
Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders will  be held on  May 8,  1996. A stockholder's
notice must set forth (i) a description of the proposed business and the reasons
therefor, (ii) the name and record  address of the stockholder proponent,  (iii)
the  class and number  of shares of  Company stock owned  by the stockholder and
(iv) a description of any material  interest of the stockholder in the  proposed
business.

    The  Bylaws also provide  that a stockholder  may nominate a  director at an
annual meeting only after providing advance  written notice to the Secretary  of
the  Company within  the time limits  described above.  The stockholder's notice
shall set forth all information about each nominee that would be required  under
Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") rules in a proxy statement soliciting
proxies  for the election of such nominee, as well as the nominee's business and
residence address. The notice must also set forth the name and record address of
the stockholder proponent and  the class and number  of shares of Company  stock
owned by the stockholder proponent.

COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(A) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT

    Section  16(a)  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  requires  the  Company's
directors, executive officers and persons who beneficially own more than 10%  of
the  Company's Common Stock to file with  the SEC reports of ownership regarding
the Common Stock and other equity  securities of the Company. These persons  are
required  by SEC regulation  to furnish the  Company with copies  of all Section
16(a) reports they file. To  the Company's knowledge, based  on a review of  the
copies  of such reports  furnished to the  Company during the  period January 1,
1994 to February 14, 1995, all  Section 16(a) filing requirements applicable  to
its officers, directors and 10% beneficial owners were complied with.

SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

    The cost of soliciting proxies will be borne by the Company. The Company has
retained  Georgeson &  Company, New  York, New York,  to aid  in solicitation of
proxies. The fees and expenses of Georgeson & Company are estimated at $15,000.

    Officers and  employees  of  the  Company may  solicit  proxies  by  further
mailings,  by telephone and telegraph, and by personal conversations. No special
compensation will  be paid  to such  persons for  these tasks.  The Company  may
reimburse   brokerage  firms  and  others   for  their  expenses  in  forwarding
solicitation material to the beneficial owners of the stock entitled to be voted
at the meeting.

    COPIES OF THE COMPANY'S  ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM  10-K (AN ANNUAL FILING  WITH
THE  SEC) FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 MAY BE OBTAINED WITHOUT CHARGE BY
WRITING TO  CERIDIAN CORPORATION,  STOCKHOLDER  SERVICES DEPARTMENT,  8100  34TH
AVENUE SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55425.

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors

                                                    [SIGNATURE]
                                          John A. Haveman
                                          SECRETARY

Minneapolis, Minnesota
March 30, 1995

                                       25
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                              CERIDIAN CORPORATION
                         1993 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
                  (AS AMENDED AND RESTATED AS OF MAY 10, 1995)

1.  PURPOSE OF PLAN.

    The  purpose of the  Ceridian Corporation 1993  Long-Term Incentive Plan (as
amended and  restated  as of  May  10, 1995)  (the  "Plan") is  to  advance  the
interests  of  Ceridian  Corporation  (the "Company")  and  its  stockholders by
enabling the  Company and  its Subsidiaries  to attract  and retain  persons  of
ability to perform services for the Company and its Subsidiaries by providing an
incentive to such individuals through equity participation in the Company and by
rewarding  such individuals who contribute to  the achievement by the Company of
its economic objectives.

2.  DEFINITIONS.

    The following  terms will  have the  meanings set  forth below,  unless  the
context clearly otherwise requires:

    2.1  "BOARD" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

    2.2   "BROKER EXERCISE  NOTICE" means a  written notice pursuant  to which a
Participant, upon  exercise of  an  Option, irrevocably  instructs a  broker  or
dealer  to sell  a sufficient number  of shares  or loan a  sufficient amount of
money to pay all  or a portion of  the exercise price of  the Option and/or  any
related  withholding  tax obligations  and remit  such sums  to the  Company and
directs the  Company  to deliver  stock  certificates  to be  issued  upon  such
exercise directly to such broker or dealer.

    2.3   "CHANGE OF  CONTROL" means an  event described in  Section 12.1 of the
Plan.

    2.4  "CODE" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

    2.5  "COMMITTEE" means the group  of individuals administering the Plan,  as
provided in Section 3 of the Plan.

    2.6   "COMMON STOCK" means the common  stock of the Company, par value $0.50
per share, or the number  and kind of shares of  stock or other securities  into
which  such Common Stock  may be changed  in accordance with  Section 4.3 of the
Plan.

    2.7  "DISABILITY"  means the  disability of  the Participant  such as  would
entitle  the Participant to  receive disability income  benefits pursuant to the
long-term disability  plan  of  the  Company or  Subsidiary  then  covering  the
Participant  or, if no such plan exists or is applicable to the Participant, the
permanent and total disability of the Participant within the meaning of  Section
22(e)(3) of the Code.

    2.8     "ELIGIBLE  RECIPIENTS"  means   all  employees  (including,  without
limitation, officers and directors who are also employees) of the Company or any
Subsidiary.

    2.9  "EXCHANGE ACT" means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

    2.10  "FAIR MARKET VALUE" means, with respect to the Common Stock, as of any
date (or, if  no shares  were traded  or quoted  on such  date, as  of the  next
preceding  date on which  there was such  a trade or  quote), the closing market
price per share of the Common Stock  as reported on the New York Stock  Exchange
Composite Tape on that date.

    2.11     "INCENTIVE  AWARD"  means  an  Option,  Stock  Appreciation  Right,
Restricted Stock  Award or  Performance Unit  granted to  an Eligible  Recipient
pursuant to the Plan.

    2.12    "INCENTIVE STOCK  OPTION"  means a  right  to purchase  Common Stock
granted to  an  Eligible  Recipient pursuant  to  Section  6 of  the  Plan  that
qualifies  as an "incentive stock  option" within the meaning  of Section 422 of
the Code.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
    2.13   "NEWLY  HIRED EMPLOYEE"  means  a person  who  has been  an  Eligible
Recipient for 90 days or less.

    2.14   "NON-STATUTORY STOCK  OPTION" means a right  to purchase Common Stock
granted to an Eligible Recipient pursuant to Section 6 of the Plan that does not
qualify as an Incentive Stock Option.

    2.15  "OPTION"  means an  Incentive Stock  Option or  a Non-Statutory  Stock
Option.

    2.16   "PARTICIPANT"  means an Eligible  Recipient who receives  one or more
Incentive Awards under the Plan.

    2.17  "PERFORMANCE GOAL"  means the absolute or  relative measure of one  or
more  of the following alternatives as specified by the Committee in writing for
any Performance Period, the achievement of which is a condition precedent to the
vesting of  a Performance  Restricted  Stock Award  hereunder: Total  Return  to
Stockholders;  fully diluted  earnings per  share for  the Company;  or earnings
before interest and  taxes, return  on equity  or invested  capital, or  revenue
growth for the Company or a specified Subsidiary or division of the Company. Any
such  Performance Goal shall  be established by  the Committee on  or before the
latest date  permissible to  enable the  Performance Restricted  Stock Award  to
qualify  as "performance-based compensation" under  Section 162(m). For purposes
of this definition, any relative measure  of Total Return to Stockholders  shall
utilize  the Company's Performance  Ranking Position, and  other financial terms
shall have the same meanings as used in the Company's financial statements.

    2.18  "PERFORMANCE PERIOD" means the period of time during which Performance
Goals are  measured to  determine the  vesting of  Performance Restricted  Stock
Awards.

    2.19   "PERFORMANCE  RANKING POSITION" means  the relative  placement of the
Company's Total Return to Stockholders as measured against (i) the Total  Return
to  Stockholders of other companies in a nationally recognized index such as the
S&P 500, or in a peer group of companies selected by the Committee prior to  the
commencement of a Performance Period, or (ii) the performance of such nationally
recognized index itself.

    2.20   "PERFORMANCE RESTRICTED  STOCK AWARD" means  a Restricted Stock Award
the vesting  of  which is  conditioned  upon the  satisfaction  of one  or  more
Performance Goals.

    2.21   "PERFORMANCE  UNIT" means  a right  granted to  an Eligible Recipient
pursuant to Section 9 of the Plan to receive a payment from the Company, in  the
form  of  stock,  cash  or  a  combination  of  both,  upon  the  achievement of
established performance criteria.

    2.22  "PREVIOUSLY  ACQUIRED SHARES" means  shares of Common  Stock that  are
already owned by the Participant.

    2.23   "RESTRICTED STOCK AWARD" means an award of Common Stock granted to an
Eligible Recipient pursuant  to Section 8  of the  Plan that is  subject to  the
restrictions  on  transferability  and the  risk  of forfeiture  imposed  by the
provisions of such Section 8.

    2.24  "RETIREMENT" means the termination (other than for "cause" as  defined
in  Section 10.3(b) of the Plan) of  a Participant's employment or other service
on or after the date on which the Participant has attained the age of 55 and has
completed 10  years of  continuous  service to  the  Company or  any  Subsidiary
(determined  in accordance with  the retirement/pension plan  or practice of the
Company or  Subsidiary  then covering  the  Participant, provided  that  if  the
Participant is not covered by any such plan or practice, the Participant will be
deemed  to be  covered by the  Company's plan  or practice for  purposes of this
determination).

    2.25  "SECTION 162(M)" means Section 162(m) of the Code.

    2.26  "SECURITIES ACT" means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

    2.27   "STOCK APPRECIATION  RIGHT"  means a  right  granted to  an  Eligible
Recipient  pursuant  to Section  7 of  the Plan  to receive  a payment  from the
Company, in the form of stock, cash or a

                                      A-2
<PAGE>
combination of both, equal  to the difference between  the Fair Market Value  of
one  or more shares of Common Stock and  the exercise price of such shares under
the terms of such Stock Appreciation Right.

    2.28    "SUBSIDIARY"  means  any  entity  that  is  directly  or  indirectly
controlled  by the Company or any entity  in which the Company has a significant
equity interest, as determined by the Committee.

    2.29  "TAX DATE" means the date any withholding tax obligation arises  under
the Code for a Participant with respect to an Incentive Award.

    2.30   "TOTAL RETURN  TO STOCKHOLDERS" with  respect to a  company means the
total return  to  a  holder  of  the common  stock  of  that  company  during  a
Performance Period as a result of his or her ownership of that stock during such
Performance  Period,  such total  return to  include  both the  appreciation (or
depreciation)  in  the  per  share  price  of  such  common  stock  during  such
Performance  Period, and the  per share fair  market value of  all dividends and
distributions paid or distributed  by such company with  respect to such  common
stock  during  such Performance  Period, assuming  that  all such  dividends and
distributions are reinvested in shares of such common stock at their fair market
value on the last trading day of the month in which the dividend or distribution
is paid or distributed.

3.  PLAN ADMINISTRATION.

    3.1   THE COMMITTEE.  So long  as  the Company  has a  class of  its  equity
securities  registered under Section  12 of the  Exchange Act, the  Plan will be
administered by a committee (the "Committee") consisting solely of not less than
two members of the Board who  are "disinterested persons" within the meaning  of
Rule  16b-3 under the Exchange Act. To the extent consistent with corporate law,
the Committee  may delegate  to any  directors or  officers of  the Company  the
duties,  power and authority  of the Committee  under the Plan  pursuant to such
conditions or limitations  as the  Committee may  establish; provided,  however,
that  only  the Committee  may exercise  such duties,  power and  authority with
respect to Eligible  Recipients who are  subject to Section  16 of the  Exchange
Act.  Each determination,  interpretation or other  action made or  taken by the
Committee pursuant to the provisions of the Plan will be conclusive and  binding
for  all purposes  and on all  persons, and no  member of the  Committee will be
liable for any action or  determination made in good  faith with respect to  the
Plan or any Incentive Award granted under the Plan.

    3.2  AUTHORITY OF THE COMMITTEE.

    (a)  In  accordance with  and subject  to  the provisions  of the  Plan, the
Committee will  have the  authority  to determine  all provisions  of  Incentive
Awards  as the Committee may deem necessary  or desirable and as consistent with
the terms of  the Plan, including,  without limitation, the  following: (i)  the
Eligible  Recipients to be selected as  Participants; (ii) the nature and extent
of the Incentive Awards to be made to each Participant (including the number  of
shares  of Common  Stock to  be subject  to each  Incentive Award,  any exercise
price, the manner in which Incentive Awards will vest or become exercisable  and
whether  Incentive Awards will be granted in tandem with other Incentive Awards)
and the form  of written  agreement, if  any, evidencing  such Incentive  Award;
(iii) the time or times when Incentive Awards will be granted; (iv) the duration
of  each Incentive Award; and (v) the restrictions and other conditions to which
the payment or  vesting of  Incentive Awards may  be subject.  In addition,  the
Committee  will have the authority under the  Plan in its sole discretion to pay
the economic value of any Incentive Award  in the form of cash, Common Stock  or
any combination of both.

    (b)  The Committee will have the authority under the Plan to amend or modify
the terms  and conditions  of any  outstanding Incentive  Award in  any  manner,
including,  without limitation, the authority to extend the term of an Incentive
Award, accelerate  the  exercisability or  vesting  or otherwise  terminate  any
restrictions  relating  to  an  Incentive Award,  accept  the  surrender  of any
outstanding Incentive  Award  or, to  the  extent not  previously  exercised  or
vested,  authorize  the  grant  of  new  Incentive  Awards  in  substitution for
surrendered Incentive Awards;  provided, however  that the  amended or  modified
terms  are permitted  by the  Plan as  then in  effect and  that any Participant

                                      A-3
<PAGE>
adversely affected  by such  amended or  modified terms  has consented  to  such
amendment  or modification. No amendment or  modification to an Incentive Award,
however, whether pursuant  to this Section  3.2 or any  other provisions of  the
Plan,  will be deemed  to be a regrant  of such Incentive  Award for purposes of
this Plan.

    (c)  In  the  event  of  (i)  any  reorganization,  merger,   consolidation,
recapitalization,  liquidation, reclassification,  stock dividend,  stock split,
combination of shares,  rights offering, extraordinary  dividend or  divestiture
(including  a spin-off)  or any other  change in corporate  structure or shares,
(ii) any purchase, acquisition, sale or  disposition of a significant amount  of
assets  or a significant business, (iii)  any change in accounting principles or
practices, or (iv) any other  similar change, in each  case with respect to  the
Company  (or  any Subsidiary  or  division thereof)  or  any other  entity whose
performance is  relevant to  the grant  or vesting  of an  Incentive Award,  the
Committee  (or, if  the Company  is not  the surviving  corporation in  any such
transaction, the board of directors  of the surviving corporation) may,  without
the  consent of any affected  Participant, amend or modify  the grant or vesting
criteria of any outstanding Incentive Award that is based in whole or in part on
the financial performance of the Company (or any Subsidiary or division thereof)
or such other entity  so as equitably  to reflect such  event, with the  desired
result  that  the  criteria for  evaluating  such financial  performance  of the
Company or  such  other entity  will  be substantially  the  same (in  the  sole
discretion  of  the  Committee  or  the  board  of  directors  of  the surviving
corporation) following such  event as  prior to such  event; provided,  however,
that the amended or modified terms are permitted by the Plan as then in effect.

4.  SHARES AVAILABLE FOR ISSUANCE.

    4.1   MAXIMUM NUMBER OF SHARES  AVAILABLE. Subject to adjustment as provided
in Section 4.3 of the  Plan, the maximum number of  shares of Common Stock  that
will  be available  for issuance  under the Plan  will be  6,000,000 shares. The
shares available  for  issuance under  the  Plan may,  at  the election  of  the
Committee,  be either treasury shares or shares authorized but unissued, and, if
treasury shares are used, all references in  the Plan to the issuance of  shares
will,  for corporate law purposes, be deemed to mean the transfer of shares from
treasury.

    4.2  LIMITATION ON INDIVIDUAL AWARDS IN ANY TAXABLE YEAR. The maximum number
of shares of Common Stock  that may be the subject  of Incentive Awards made  to
any  Eligible Recipient in any one taxable  year of the Company shall not exceed
250,000 shares (the "Maximum Annual Grant").

    4.3  ACCOUNTING FOR INCENTIVE AWARDS. Shares of Common Stock that are issued
under the  Plan or  that are  subject to  outstanding Incentive  Awards will  be
applied  to  reduce  the maximum  number  of  shares of  Common  Stock remaining
available for  issuance under  the Plan.  Any shares  of Common  Stock that  are
subject  to an  Incentive Award  that lapses, expires,  is forfeited  or for any
reason is terminated unexercised or unvested and any shares of Common Stock that
are subject to an Incentive  Award that is settled or  paid in cash or any  form
other  than shares of Common Stock will automatically again become available for
issuance under the Plan.

    4.4   ADJUSTMENTS  TO SHARES  AND  INCENTIVE AWARDS.  In  the event  of  any
reorganization,    merger,    consolidation,    recapitalization,   liquidation,
reclassification, stock  dividend, stock  split, combination  of shares,  rights
offering,  divestiture or extraordinary  dividend (including a  spin-off) or any
other change in the corporate structure or shares of the Company, the  Committee
(or,  if the Company is  not the surviving corporation  in any such transaction,
the board  of directors  of  the surviving  corporation) will  make  appropriate
adjustments  (which determination will  be conclusive) as to  (i) the number and
kind of  securities available  for issuance  under the  Plan, (ii)  the  Maximum
Annual  Grant, and  (iii) in  order to  prevent dilution  or enlargement  of the
rights of Participants, the number,  kind and, where applicable, exercise  price
of securities subject to outstanding Incentive Awards.

5.  PARTICIPATION.

    Participants  in  the Plan  will be  those Eligible  Recipients who,  in the
judgment of the Committee, have contributed, are contributing or are expected to
contribute to the achievement of economic

                                      A-4
<PAGE>
objectives of  the  Company or  its  Subsidiaries. Eligible  Recipients  may  be
granted from time to time one or more Incentive Awards, singly or in combination
or  in tandem with other Incentive Awards, as may be determined by the Committee
in its sole discretion. Incentive Awards will be deemed to be granted as of  the
date  specified in the grant resolution of the Committee, which date will be the
date of any related agreement with the Participant.

6.  OPTIONS.

    6.1  GRANT. An Eligible Recipient may  be granted one or more Options  under
the  Plan,  and such  Options  will be  subject  to such  terms  and conditions,
consistent with the other provisions  of the Plan, as  may be determined by  the
Committee  in its sole discretion. The Committee may designate whether an Option
is to be considered an Incentive Stock Option or a Non-Statutory Stock Option.

    6.2  EXERCISE PRICE. The  per share price to be  paid by a Participant  upon
exercise  of an Option will be determined  by the Committee in its discretion at
the time of the Option grant but will  not be less than 100% of the Fair  Market
Value  of  one share  of Common  Stock on  the date  of grant.  Unless otherwise
determined by the  Committee, the per  share exercise price  of Options  granted
under  the Plan will be equal  to 100% of the Fair  Market Value of one share of
Common Stock on the date of grant.

    6.3  EXERCISABILITY AND DURATION. An Option will become exercisable at  such
times and in such installments as may be determined by the Committee in its sole
discretion  at  the time  of grant;  provided,  however, that  no Option  may be
exercisable prior to six months (other than Options described in Section 6.6  of
the  Plan or as provided in  Section 10 of the Plan)  or after 10 years from its
date of  grant. Unless  the Committee  determines otherwise,  an Option  granted
under  the Plan will be exercisable for 10 years from its date of grant and will
become exercisable on a cumulative basis with respect to one-third of the shares
subject to such Option on each January 1 occurring at least six months after its
date of grant.

    6.4  PAYMENT OF EXERCISE PRICE. The total purchase price of the shares to be
purchased upon exercise of  an Option will be  paid entirely in cash  (including
check, bank draft or money order); provided, however, that the Committee, in its
sole  discretion and upon terms and conditions established by the Committee, may
allow such payments  to be  made, in whole  or in  part, by tender  of a  Broker
Exercise Notice, Previously Acquired Shares or a combination of such methods.

    6.5   MANNER  OF EXERCISE. An  Option may  be exercised by  a Participant in
whole or in part from time to  time, subject to the conditions contained in  the
Plan  and in  the agreement  evidencing such Option,  by delivery  in person, by
facsimile or electronic transmission  or through the mail  of written notice  of
exercise  to  the  Company,  Attention:  Corporate  Treasury,  at  its principal
executive office  in Minneapolis,  Minnesota and  by paying  in full  the  total
exercise price for the shares of Common Stock to be purchased in accordance with
Section 6.4 of the Plan.

    6.6   OPTIONS  OR STOCK IN  LIEU OF BONUS.  Without limiting in  any way the
authority of the Committee to establish  the terms and conditions of Options  or
other  Incentive Awards, the Committee may allow Eligible Recipients to elect to
receive some or  all of their  annual cash  bonus in the  form of  Non-Statutory
Stock  Options or shares  of Common Stock  rather than cash.  The Committee will
have the sole authority to  determine whether to allow  such an election and  to
establish  the  terms  and  conditions  to such  an  election,  which  terms and
conditions will  be  set forth  in  the  agreement evidencing  such  Options  or
Incentive Awards.

7.  STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS.

    7.1    GRANT.  An  Eligible  Recipient may  be  granted  one  or  more Stock
Appreciation Rights under the Plan, and  such Stock Appreciation Rights will  be
subject  to such terms  and conditions, consistent with  the other provisions of
the Plan, as may be determined by the Committee in its sole discretion.

                                      A-5
<PAGE>
    7.2  EXERCISE PRICE. The exercise  price of a Stock Appreciation Right  will
be determined by the Committee, in its discretion, at the date of grant but will
not  be less than 100% of the Fair Market  Value of one share of Common Stock on
the date of grant.

    7.3  EXERCISABILITY  AND DURATION.  A Stock Appreciation  Right will  become
exercisable  at such times and in such  installments as may be determined by the
Committee in its sole discretion at  the time of grant; provided, however,  that
no  Stock Appreciation Right may be exercisable  prior to six months (other than
as provided in Section 10 of the Plan) or after 10 years from its date of grant.
Unless the Committee  determines otherwise, a  Stock Appreciation Right  granted
under  the Plan will be exercisable for 10 years from its date of grant and will
become exercisable on a cumulative basis with respect to one-third of the shares
subject to such Stock  Appreciation Right on each  January 1 occurring at  least
six months after its date of grant. A Stock Appreciation Right will be exercised
by  giving notice in the same manner as for Options, as set forth in Section 6.5
of the Plan.

8.  RESTRICTED STOCK AWARDS.

    8.1  GRANT.  An Eligible  Recipient may be  granted one  or more  Restricted
Stock Awards under the Plan, and such Restricted Stock Awards will be subject to
such terms and conditions, consistent with the provisions of the Plan, as may be
determined  by the  Committee in its  sole discretion. The  Committee may impose
such restrictions or  conditions, not  inconsistent with the  provisions of  the
Plan,  to the vesting of  such Restricted Stock Awards  as it deems appropriate,
including, without limitation,  that the  Participant remain  in the  continuous
employ  or service of the Company or a Subsidiary for a certain period, that the
Participant or  the Company  (or  any Subsidiary  or division  thereof)  satisfy
certain performance criteria; provided, however, that any Restricted Stock Award
made  on or after May 10, 1995 to an Eligible Recipient other than a Newly Hired
Employee must be a Performance Restricted Stock Award. Other than as provided in
Section 10 of the Plan, no Restricted  Stock Award may vest prior to six  months
from its date of grant.

    8.2  RIGHTS AS A STOCKHOLDER; TRANSFERABILITY. Except as provided in Section
s  8.1, 8.3 and 13.3 of the Plan,  a Participant will have all voting, dividend,
liquidation and other rights  with respect to shares  of Common Stock issued  to
the  Participant  as a  Restricted Stock  Award  under this  Section 8  upon the
Participant becoming the holder of record of such shares as if such  Participant
were a holder of record of shares of unrestricted Common Stock.

    8.3   DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS. Unless the Committee determines otherwise
in its sole discretion (either in the agreement evidencing the Restricted  Stock
Award  at the time  of grant or  at any time  after the grant  of the Restricted
Stock Award), any dividends or  distributions (including regular quarterly  cash
dividends)  paid with respect to shares of  Common Stock subject to the unvested
portion of a Restricted Stock Award will not be subject to the same restrictions
as the  shares to  which such  dividends  or distributions  relate and  will  be
currently  paid to the Participant. In the event the Committee determines not to
pay such dividends or distributions  currently, the Committee will determine  in
its  sole discretion  whether any  interest will  be paid  on such  dividends or
distributions. In addition, the Committee,  in its sole discretion, may  require
such  dividends  and  distributions  to  be reinvested  (and  in  such  case the
Participants consent to such reinvestment) in  shares of Common Stock that  will
be  subject to the  same restrictions as  the shares to  which such dividends or
distributions relate.

    8.4  ENFORCEMENT OF RESTRICTIONS. To enforce the restrictions referred to in
this Section  8, the  Committee may  place a  legend on  the stock  certificates
referring   to  such  restrictions  and  may  require  Participants,  until  the
restrictions have lapsed,  to keep  the stock certificates,  together with  duly
endorsed stock powers, in the custody of the Company or its transfer agent or to
maintain  evidence of stock ownership, together with duly endorsed stock powers,
in a certificateless book-entry stock account with the Company's transfer  agent
for its Common Stock.

                                      A-6
<PAGE>
9.  PERFORMANCE UNITS.

    An Eligible Recipient may be granted one or more Performance Units under the
Plan,  and such Performance Units will be  subject to such terms and conditions,
consistent with the other provisions  of the Plan, as  may be determined by  the
Committee  in its sole discretion. The Committee may impose such restrictions or
conditions, not inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan, to the vesting  of
such  Performance Units as it  deems appropriate, including, without limitation,
that the Participant remain in the  continuous employ or service of the  Company
or  any Subsidiary for a  certain period or that  the Participant or the Company
(or any Subsidiary  or division thereof)  satisfy certain performance  criteria.
The  Committee will  have the  sole discretion either  to determine  the form in
which payment of the economic value of vested Performance Units will be made  to
the  Participant (i.e.,  cash, Common  Stock or  any combination  thereof) or to
consent to or disapprove  the election by  the Participant of  the form of  such
payment.

10. EFFECT OF TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT OR OTHER SERVICE.

    10.1   TERMINATION DUE TO DEATH OR  DISABILITY. In the event a Participant's
employment or other service with the Company and all Subsidiaries is  terminated
by reason of death or Disability:

        (a)  All outstanding  Options then held  by the  Participant will become
    immediately  exercisable  in  full  and  will  remain  exercisable  for  the
    remainder of their terms;

        (b)  All Restricted Stock Awards then  held by the Participant that have
    not vested as of such termination will be terminated and forfeited; and

        (c) All Performance Units and Stock Appreciation Rights then held by the
    Participant will vest  and/or continue to  vest and, with  respect to  Stock
    Appreciation Rights, will remain exercisable in the manner determined by the
    Committee and set forth in the agreement evidencing such Incentive Awards.

    10.2  TERMINATION DUE TO RETIREMENT. Except as otherwise provided in Section
12  of the Plan, in  the event a Participant's  employment or other service with
the Company and all Subsidiaries is terminated by reason of Retirement:

        (a) All outstanding Options then  held by the Participant will  continue
    to become exercisable in accordance with their terms;

        (b)  All Restricted Stock Awards then  held by the Participant that have
    not vested as of such termination will be terminated and forfeited; and

        (c) All Performance Units and Stock Appreciation Rights then held by the
    Participant will vest  and/or continue to  vest and, with  respect to  Stock
    Appreciation Rights, will remain exercisable in the manner determined by the
    Committee and set forth in the agreement evidencing such Incentive Awards.

    10.3  TERMINATION FOR REASONS OTHER THAN DEATH, DISABILITY OR RETIREMENT.

    (a)  Except as otherwise provided in Section 12  of the Plan, in the event a
Participant's employment or other service is terminated with the Company and all
Subsidiaries for any  reason other than  death, Disability or  Retirement, or  a
Participant  is in  the employ  or service  of a  Subsidiary and  the Subsidiary
ceases to be a  Subsidiary of the Company  (unless the Participant continues  in
the  employ or service of the Company  or another Subsidiary), all rights of the
Participant under the Plan and any agreements evidencing an Incentive Award will
immediately  terminate  without  notice  of  any  kind,  no  Options  or   Stock
Appreciation  Rights then held by the Participant will thereafter be exercisable
and all  Restricted Stock  Awards then  held by  the Participant  that have  not
vested  will  be  terminated  and forfeited;  provided,  however,  that  if such
termination is due to any  reason other than termination  by the Company or  any
Subsidiary  for "cause," all  outstanding Options then  held by such Participant
will remain exercisable to the extent  exercisable as of such termination for  a
period of three months

                                      A-7
<PAGE>
after  such termination (but in  no event after the  expiration date of any such
Option) and all Performance Units and Stock Appreciation Rights will vest and/or
continue to vest  and, with respect  to Stock Appreciation  Rights, will  remain
exercisable  in the  manner determined  by the  Committee and  set forth  in the
agreement evidencing such Incentive Awards.

    (b) For purposes of  this Section 10.3,  "cause" will be  as defined in  any
employment  or other agreement or policy applicable to the Participant or, if no
such  agreement   or   policy  exists,   will   mean  (i)   dishonesty,   fraud,
misrepresentation,  embezzlement or material and  deliberate injury or attempted
injury, in each case related to the Company or any Subsidiary, (ii) any unlawful
or criminal activity  of a  serious nature, (iii)  any willful  breach of  duty,
habitual  neglect of duty or unreasonable  job performance, or (iv) any material
breach of  any  employment,  service, confidentiality  or  noncompete  agreement
entered into with the Company or any Subsidiary.

    10.4   MODIFICATION  OF RIGHTS  UPON TERMINATION.  Notwithstanding the other
provisions of this Section 10, upon a Participant's termination of employment or
other service with the Company and  all Subsidiaries, the Committee may, in  its
sole  discretion (which may be exercised  before or following such termination),
cause Options or Stock  Appreciation Rights (or any  part thereof) then held  by
such  Participant to become exercisable and/or remain exercisable following such
termination of employment or service and Restricted Stock Awards and Performance
Units then held by  such Participant to vest  and/or continue to vest  following
such termination of employment or service, in each case in the manner determined
by the Committee.

    10.5    DATE  OF TERMINATION  OF  EMPLOYMENT  OR OTHER  SERVICE.  Unless the
Committee  otherwise  determines  in   its  sole  discretion,  a   Participant's
employment  or other service will,  for purposes of the  Plan, be deemed to have
terminated on the date recorded on the personnel or other records of the Company
or the  Subsidiary  for  which  the Participant  provides  employment  or  other
service,  as determined by the Committee in  its sole discretion based upon such
records.

11. PAYMENT OF WITHHOLDING TAXES.

    11.1  GENERAL RULES. The Company is entitled to (a) withhold and deduct from
future wages of  the Participant (or  from other  amounts which may  be due  and
owing  to  the Participant  from the  Company  or a  Subsidiary), or  make other
arrangements for the collection  of, all legally  required amounts necessary  to
satisfy  any and all federal, state and local withholding and employment-related
tax  requirements  attributable  to  an  Incentive  Award,  including,   without
limitation,  the grant,  exercise or  vesting of,  or payment  of dividends with
respect to, an Incentive Award or a disqualifying disposition of stock  received
upon  exercise  of an  Incentive Stock  Option, or  (b) require  the Participant
promptly to remit the  amount of such withholding  to the Company before  taking
any action with respect to an Incentive Award.

    11.2   SPECIAL  RULES. The  Committee may, in  its sole  discretion and upon
terms  and  conditions  established  by  the  Committee,  permit  or  require  a
Participant   to   satisfy,   in  whole   or   in  part,   any   withholding  or
employment-related tax  obligation described  in  Section 11.1  of the  Plan  by
electing  to tender  Previously Acquired Shares,  a Broker Exercise  Notice or a
combination of such methods.

12. CHANGE OF CONTROL.

    12.1    DEFINITIONS.  For  purposes  of  this  Section  12,  the   following
definitions will be applied:

        (a) "Change of Control" will mean any of the following events:

           (i)  a merger or consolidation to which the Company is a party if the
       individuals and entities who were stockholders of the Company immediately
       prior to  the  effective  date  of  such  merger  or  consolidation  have
       beneficial ownership (as defined in Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act) of
       less  than  50%  of  the  total combined  voting  power  for  election of
       directors of the  surviving corporation following  the effective date  of
       such merger or consolidation;

                                      A-8
<PAGE>
           (ii)  the direct or indirect beneficial ownership (as defined in Rule
       13d-3 under  the Exchange  Act) in  the aggregate  of securities  of  the
       Company  representing 25% or  more of the total  combined voting power of
       the Company's then  issued and  outstanding securities by  any person  or
       entity, or group of associated person or entities acting in concert;

           (iii)   the  sale  of  the  properties  and  assets  of  the  Company
       substantially as an  entirety, to  any person or  entity which  is not  a
       wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company;

           (iv) the stockholders of the Company approve any plan or proposal for
       the liquidation of the Company; or

           (v)  a change in the composition of  the Board at any time during any
       consecutive 24 month  period such that  the "Continuity Directors"  cease
       for  any reason to constitute  at least a 70%  majority of the Board. For
       purposes of this  clause, "Continuity Directors"  means those members  of
       the  Board  who  either  (1)  were directors  at  the  beginning  of such
       consecutive 24 month period, or (2) were elected by, or on the nomination
       or recommendation of, at least a two-thirds majority of the then-existing
       Board of Directors.

        (b) "Change  of Control  Action" will  mean any  payment (including  any
    benefit  or transfer of property)  in the nature of  compensation, to or for
    the benefit of a Participant under  any arrangement, which is considered  to
    be  contingent on a  Change of Control  for purposes of  Section 280G of the
    Code. As used in this  definition, the term "arrangement" includes,  without
    limitation,  any agreement between a Participant and the Company and any and
    all of  the  Company's salary,  bonus,  incentive, restricted  stock,  stock
    option,  compensation or benefit  plans, programs or  arrangements, and will
    include this Plan.

        (c) "Change  of  Control  Termination"  will mean,  with  respect  to  a
    Participant,  any of the following events occurring within two years after a
    Change of Control:

           (i) Termination of the Participant's employment with the Company  and
       all  of its Subsidiaries by the Company or any Subsidiary for any reason,
       with or without cause, except for conduct by the Participant constituting
       (1) a felony involving  moral turpitude under either  federal law or  the
       law  of the state of the Company's incorporation or (2) the Participant's
       willful failure to fulfill his employment duties with the Company or  any
       Subsidiary;  provided that  for purposes  of this  clause (2),  an act or
       failure to act by the Participant shall not be "willful" unless done,  or
       omitted  to be done, in bad faith  and without reasonable belief that the
       Participant's action or omission was in the best interests of the Company
       or a Subsidiary; or

           (ii) Termination  of  employment with  the  Company and  all  of  its
       Subsidiaries  by the  Participant for  Good Reason.  A Change  of Control
       Termination shall not include  a termination of  employment by reason  of
       death, Disability or Retirement.

        (d)   "Good  Reason"  will  mean  a  good  faith  determination  by  the
    Participant, in the Participant's sole  and absolute judgment, that any  one
    or  more of  the following  events has  occurred, without  the Participant's
    express written consent, after a Change of Control:

           (i) A change in the Participant's reporting responsibilities,  titles
       or  offices as in effect  immediately prior to the  Change of Control, or
       any removal  of the  Participant from,  or any  failure to  re-elect  the
       Participant   to,  any  of  such  positions,  which  has  the  effect  of
       diminishing the Participant's responsibility or authority; or

           (ii)  A  reduction  by  the  Company  or  its  Subsidiaries  in   the
       Participant's base salary as in effect immediately prior to the Change of
       Control or as the same may be increased from time to time thereafter; or

                                      A-9
<PAGE>
           (iii) The Company or its Subsidiaries requiring the Participant to be
       based  anywhere other than within  twenty-five miles of the Participant's
       job location at the time of the Change of Control; or

           (iv) Without replacement by a plan, program or arrangement  providing
       benefits  to the Participant equal to  or greater than those discontinued
       or adversely affected:

               (1) the failure by the Company or its Subsidiaries to continue in
           effect,  within  its  maximum   stated  term,  any  pension,   bonus,
           incentive, stock ownership, purchase, option, life insurance, health,
           accident,  disability, or any other  employee compensation or benefit
           plan,  program   or  arrangement,   in  which   the  Participant   is
           participating immediately prior to a Change of Control; or

               (2)  the taking of any action  by the Company or its Subsidiaries
           that  would  adversely  affect  the  Participant's  participation  or
           materially reduce the Participant's benefits under any of such plans,
           programs or arrangements; or

           (v)  The taking of any action by the Company or its Subsidiaries that
       would materially adversely affect the physical conditions existing at the
       time of the Change of Control in or under which the Participant  performs
       his employment duties; or

           (vi)  If  the  Participant's  primary employment  duties  are  with a
       Subsidiary of the  Company, the sale,  merger, contribution, transfer  or
       any other transaction as a result of which the Company no longer directly
       or  indirectly  controls or  has a  significant  equity interest  in such
       Subsidiary; or

           (vii) Any material breach by the  Company or one of its  Subsidiaries
       of  any employment agreement  between the Participant  and the Company or
       such Subsidiary.

    12.2   ACCELERATION OF  VESTING. Subject  to the  "Limitation on  Change  of
Control  Compensation" contained in Section 12.3 of  the Plan, in the event of a
Change of Control Termination with respect to a Participant, and without further
action of the Committee:

        (a) Each Option granted to such Participant that has been outstanding at
    least six months will become immediately exercisable in full and will remain
    exercisable until the expiration date of such Option.

        (b) Each Restricted  Stock Award (including  any Performance  Restricted
    Stock  Award) granted to  such Participant that has  been outstanding for at
    least six months will immediately become fully vested.

        (c) All Performance  Units and  Stock Appreciation Rights  then held  by
    such  Participant will  vest and/or  continue to  vest and,  with respect to
    Stock Appreciation Rights, will remain exercisable in the manner  determined
    by  the Committee and  set forth in the  agreement evidencing such Incentive
    Awards.

    12.3  LIMITATION ON CHANGE OF  CONTROL COMPENSATION. A Participant will  not
be entitled to receive any Change of Control Action which would, with respect to
the  Participant, constitute a "parachute payment"  for purposes of Section 280G
of the Code. In the  event any Change of Control  Action would, with respect  to
the Participant, constitute a "parachute payment," the Participant will have the
right  to designate those Change of Control  Action(s) which would be reduced or
eliminated so that the Participant will not receive a "parachute payment."

    12.4  LIMITATIONS ON COMMITTEE'S AND  BOARD'S ACTIONS. Prior to a Change  of
Control,  the Participant  will have  no rights under  this Section  12, and the
Board will have  the power  and right, within  its sole  discretion to  rescind,
modify  or amend this Section 12 without  the consent of any Participant. In all
other cases, and notwithstanding the authority granted to the Committee or Board
to exercise

                                      A-10
<PAGE>
discretion in interpreting,  administering, amending or  terminating this  Plan,
neither  the Committee nor the  Board will, following a  Change of Control, have
the power  to exercise  such authority  or  otherwise take  any action  that  is
inconsistent with the provisions of this Section 12.

13. RIGHTS OF ELIGIBLE RECIPIENTS AND PARTICIPANTS; TRANSFERABILITY.

    13.1   EMPLOYMENT  OR SERVICE.  Nothing in the  Plan will  interfere with or
limit in any way  the right of  the Company or any  Subsidiary to terminate  the
employment  or service of any Eligible Recipient or Participant at any time, nor
confer upon any Eligible Recipient or  Participant any right to continue in  the
employ or service of the Company or any Subsidiary.

    13.2   RIGHTS AS A STOCKHOLDER. As  a holder of Incentive Awards (other than
Restricted Stock Awards),  a Participant will  have no rights  as a  stockholder
unless  and until such Incentive  Awards are exercised for,  or paid in the form
of, shares of Common Stock and the  Participant becomes the holder of record  of
such  shares. Except as  otherwise provided in  the Plan, no  adjustment will be
made for dividends or distributions with respect to such Incentive Awards as  to
which  there is  a record  date preceding the  date the  Participant becomes the
holder of record of such  shares, except as the  Committee may determine in  its
discretion.

    13.3   RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFER. Except pursuant to testamentary will or the
laws of descent  and distribution  or as  otherwise expressly  permitted by  the
Plan, no right or interest of any Participant in an Incentive Award prior to the
exercise  or vesting of such Incentive Award will be assignable or transferable,
or subjected  to  any lien,  during  the  lifetime of  the  Participant,  either
voluntarily  or involuntarily,  directly or indirectly,  by operation  of law or
otherwise. A Participant will, however,  be entitled to designate a  beneficiary
to receive an Incentive Award upon such Participant's death, and in the event of
a  Participant's death, payment of  any amounts due under  the Plan will be made
to, and exercise  of any Options  and Stock Appreciation  Rights (to the  extent
permitted  pursuant to Section 10 of the Plan) may be made by, the Participant's
legal representatives, heirs and legatees.

    13.4  NON-EXCLUSIVITY OF THE PLAN. Nothing contained in the Plan is intended
to modify or rescind any previously  approved compensation plans or programs  of
the  Company or create any limitations on the power or authority of the Board to
adopt such additional or other compensation  arrangements as the Board may  deem
necessary or desirable.

14. SECURITIES LAW AND OTHER RESTRICTIONS.

    Notwithstanding  any other provision  of the Plan  or any agreements entered
into pursuant to the Plan, the Company will not be required to issue any  shares
of  Common  Stock under  this  Plan, and  a  Participant may  not  sell, assign,
transfer or  otherwise dispose  of shares  of Common  Stock issued  pursuant  to
Incentive  Awards granted  under the  Plan, unless (a)  there is  in effect with
respect to such shares a registration statement under the Securities Act and any
applicable state securities laws  or an exemption  from such registration  under
the  Securities Act and applicable state securities laws, and (b) there has been
obtained any other consent,  approval or permit from  any other regulatory  body
which  the Committee, in its sole  discretion, deems necessary or advisable. The
Company may condition such  issuance, sale or transfer  upon the receipt of  any
representations  or agreements from  the parties involved,  and the placement of
any legends  on certificates  representing shares  of Common  Stock, as  may  be
deemed  necessary  or advisable  by the  Company  in order  to comply  with such
securities law or other restrictions.

15. PLAN AMENDMENT, MODIFICATION AND TERMINATION.

    The Board may suspend or  terminate the Plan or  any portion thereof at  any
time, and may amend the Plan from time to time in such respects as the Board may
deem advisable in order that Incentive Awards under the Plan will conform to any
change  in applicable laws or regulations or  in any other respect the Board may
deem to be  in the best  interests of  the Company; provided,  however, that  no
amendments to the Plan will be effective without approval of the stockholders of
the  Company if stockholder approval of  the amendment is then required pursuant
to Rule 16b-3 under the  Exchange Act, Section 422 of  the Code or the rules  of
the New York Stock Exchange. No termination, suspension

                                      A-11
<PAGE>
or  amendment of the  Plan may adversely affect  any outstanding Incentive Award
without the consent of  the affected Participant;  provided, however, that  this
sentence  will not impair the right of  the Committee to take whatever action it
deems appropriate under Section 4.3 and Section 12.4 of the Plan.

16. EFFECTIVE DATE AND DURATION OF THE PLAN.

    The Plan is effective as of February 3, 1993, the date it was adopted by the
Board. The Plan  will terminate  at midnight  on February  3, 1999,  and may  be
terminated prior thereto by Board action, and no Incentive Award will be granted
after  such termination.  Incentive Awards  outstanding upon  termination of the
Plan may continue to  vest, or become free  of restrictions, in accordance  with
their terms.

17. MISCELLANEOUS.

    17.1      GOVERNING   LAW.  The   validity,   construction,  interpretation,
administration and effect  of the Plan  and any rules,  regulations and  actions
relating to the Plan will be governed by and construed exclusively in accordance
with the laws of the State of Minnesota.

    17.2  SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS. The Plan will be binding upon and inure to the
benefit  of  the  successors  and  permitted  assigns  of  the  Company  and the
Participants.

                                      A-12
<PAGE>

                             CERIDIAN CORPORATION
                            8100 34th Avenue South
                         Minneapolis, Minnesota 55425
                               (612) 853-8100

                         NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
                           STOCKHOLDERS TO BE HELD
                                MAY 10, 1995

     The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Ceridian Corporation, a Delaware
corporation (the "Company"), will be held in the Westminster Room, Harbor Court
Hotel, 550 Light Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21202 on Wednesday, May 10,
1995 at 9:00 a.m., Eastern Daylight Savings Time, for the following purposes:

     (1)  To elect directors for the following year;

     (2)  To approve amendments to the Company's 1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan,
     including an amendment to increase by 3,000,000 shares the number of shares
     that may be issued pursuant to that Plan; and

     (3)  To transact such other business as may properly come before the
     meeting.

     Stockholders of record of the Company's common stock at the close of
business on March 21, 1995 will be entitled to vote at the meeting and any
adjournments. No admission ticket will be necessary.

     TO BE SURE THAT YOUR VOTE IS COUNTED, WE URGE YOU TO COMPLETE AND SIGN THE
PROXY CARD BELOW, DETACH IT FROM THIS NOTICE AND RETURN IT IN THE POSTAGE PAID
ENVELOPE ENCLOSED IN THIS PACKAGE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. The prompt return of your
signed proxy card will assist the Company in reducing the expense of additional
proxy solicitation.

     A list of stockholders entitled to vote at the meeting will be open for
examination by any stockholder for any purpose germane to the meeting during
ordinary business hours from April 26, 1995 through May 10, 1995, at the offices
of Venable, Baetjer & Howard, 1800 Mercantile Bank & Trust Building, 2 Hopkins
Plaza, Baltimore, Maryland 21201.

                                       By Order of the Board of Directors



March 30, 1995                         John A. Haveman
                                       SECRETARY

                            DETACH PROXY CARD HERE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>

<S>                        <C>                  <C>                                  <C>
1. Election of Directors:  FOR all nominees []  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to []             FOR, EXCEPT YOU MAY []
                           listed below         vote for all nominees listed below   WITHHOLD AUTHORITY TO
                                                                                     VOTE FOR ANY NOMINEE BY
                                                                                     CROSSING OUT HIS OR HER NAME

</TABLE>

Nominees:    Ruth M. Davis, Allen W. Dawson, Ronald James, Richard G. Lareau
             George R. Lewis, Charles Marshall, Lawrence Perlman,
             Carole J. Uhrich, Richard W. Vieser, Paul S. Walsh

2. Proposal to approve amended and restated   FOR []  AGAINST []  ABSTAIN []
   1993 Long-Term Incentive Plan


Address Change and/or  []        If you wish to have your vote on all matters
Comments Mark Here               kept confidential in accordance with Ceridian
                                 Corporation policy, check here. []

                                 PLEASE SIGN EXACTLY AS NAME IS PRINTED TO
                                 THE LEFT. JOINT OWNERS OR CO-EXECUTORS OR
                                 CO-TRUSTEES SHOULD BOTH SIGN. PERSONS SIGNING
                                 AS ATTORNEY, EXECUTOR, ADMINISTRATOR, TRUSTEE
                                 OR GUARDIAN SHOULD GIVE THEIR FULL TITLE AS
                                 SUCH.

                                  Dated: ____________________, 1995

                                  _____________________________________________

                                  _____________________________________________

(Please sign, date and return this proxy      VOTES MUST BE INDICATED [X]
card in the enclosed envelope)                IN BLACK OR BLUE INK



<PAGE>

                            CERIDIAN CORPORATION

    THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF CERIDIAN
      CORPORATION FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS ON MAY 10, 1995.

   The undersigned appoints Lawrence Perlman and John A. Haveman, and either of
them, the proxies of the undersigned, with full power of substitution in each,
to vote at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on May 10, 1995 and
at any adjournment or postponement thereof all of the undersigned's shares of
Ceridian Corporation Common Stock held of record on March 21, 1995 in the
manner indicated on the reverse side hereof, and with the discretionary
authority to vote as to any other matters that may properly come before such
meeting.

   You are encouraged to specify your choices by marking the appropriate boxes
on the reverse side.

   This proxy, when properly signed, will be voted in the manner directed.
IF NO DIRECTION IS GIVEN, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR THE ELECTION OF
DIRECTORS AND FOR PROPOSAL 2.

        (Continued, and to be signed and dated, on the reverse side.)



© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission