HOTEL DISCOVERY INC
SB-2/A, 1997-09-17
EATING PLACES
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<PAGE>   1
 
   
   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON SEPTEMBER 17, 1997
    
 
   
                                                      REGISTRATION NO. 333-34235
    
================================================================================
 
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
 
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 1
    
   
                                       TO
    
                                   FORM SB-2
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                     UNDER
                           THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
                 (Name of Small Business Issuer in its Charter)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                            <C>                            <C>
          MINNESOTA                        5812                        31-1487885
(State or other jurisdiction   (Primary standard industrial         (I.R.S. Employer
      of incorporation)         classification code number)      Identification Number)
</TABLE>
 
                      7701 FRANCE AVENUE SOUTH, SUITE 217
                             EDINA, MINNESOTA 55435
                                 (612) 841-6363
         (Address and Telephone Number of Principal Executive Offices)
 
             STEPHEN D. KING, CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
                      7701 FRANCE AVENUE SOUTH, SUITE 217
                             EDINA, MINNESOTA 55435
                                 (612) 841-6363
           (Name, Address, and Telephone Number of Agent For Service)
 
                                   Copies to:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>
           WILLIAM M. MOWER, ESQ.                         GIRARD P. MILLER, ESQ.
            GAY L. GREITER, ESQ.                       DOHERTY RUMBLE & BUTLER, P.A.
     MASLON EDELMAN BORMAN & BRAND, LLP                  3500 FIFTH STREET TOWERS
             3300 NORWEST CENTER                          150 SOUTH FIFTH STREET
      MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55402-4140              MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55402-4235
               (612) 672-8200                                 (612) 340-5555
             FAX (612) 672-8397                             FAX (612) 340-5584
</TABLE>
 
    APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED SALE TO THE PUBLIC: As soon as practicable
after the effective date of this Registration Statement.
 
    If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box
and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier
effective registration statement for the same offering. [ ]
 
    If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c)
under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement
for the same offering. [ ]
 
    If delivery of the prospectus is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434,
please check the following box. [ ]
 
                        CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
================================================================================
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
       TITLE OF EACH CLASS              ADDITIONAL        PROPOSED MAXIMUM     PROPOSED MAXIMUM
         OF SECURITIES TO              AMOUNT TO BE        OFFERING PRICE          AGGREGATE            AMOUNT OF
          BE REGISTERED              REGISTERED(1)(2)         PER UNIT          OFFERING PRICE      REGISTRATION FEE
<S>                                 <C>                  <C>                  <C>                  <C>
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units, each consisting of one
  share of Common Stock, $.01 par
  value, and one Class A Warrant
  to purchase one share of Common
  Stock...........................   345,000 Units(3)           $5.00             $1,725,000             $517.50
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Common Stock, $.01 par value(4)...    345,000 Shares            $6.50             $2,242,500             $672.75
======================================================================================================================
</TABLE>
    
 
(1) Pursuant to Rule 416 under the Securities Act, this registration statement
    also covers such additional securities as may become issuable upon exercise
    of the Class A Warrants.
 
   
(2) Represents additional securities registered with Amendment No. 1. A filing
    fee of $8,816.66 was previously paid.
    
 
   
(3) Includes 45,000 Units subject to an option granted to the Underwriter to
    cover over-allotments, if any.
    
 
   
(4) Issuable upon exercise of the Class A Warrants.
    
                            ------------------------
 
    THE REGISTRANT HEREBY AMENDS THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON SUCH DATE OR
DATES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO DELAY ITS EFFECTIVE DATE UNTIL THE REGISTRANT SHALL
FILE A FURTHER AMENDMENT WHICH SPECIFICALLY STATES THAT THIS REGISTRATION
STATEMENT SHALL THEREAFTER BECOME EFFECTIVE IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 8(A) OF
THE SECURITIES ACT, OR UNTIL THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT SHALL BECOME EFFECTIVE
ON SUCH DATE AS THE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 8(A), MAY
DETERMINE.
================================================================================
<PAGE>   2
 
     Information contained herein is subject to completion or amendment. A
     registration statement relating to these securities has been filed with the
     Securities and Exchange Commission. These securities may not be sold nor
     may offers to buy be accepted prior to the time the registration statement
     becomes effective. This prospectus shall not constitute an offer to sell or
     the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these
     securities in any State in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be
     unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws
     of any such State.
 
   
                SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED SEPTEMBER 17, 1997
    
 
                         [HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC. LOGO]
 
   
                                2,500,000 Units
    
 
   
                 Consisting of 2,500,000 Shares of Common Stock
    
   
                   and 2,500,000 Redeemable Class A Warrants
    
                           -------------------------
 
   
    Hotel Discovery, Inc. (the "Company") is offering 2,500,000 units (the
"Offering"), each unit consisting of one share of Common Stock, $.01 par value
(a "Share") and one redeemable Class A Warrant at an initial public offering
price of $5.00 per unit (a "Unit"). The Class A Warrants are immediately
exercisable and, commencing 10 trading days after the Effective Date (as
hereinafter defined), transferable separate from the Common Stock. Each Class A
Warrant entitles the holder to purchase at any time until four years following
the date that the Registration Statement relating to this Prospectus has been
declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Effective
Date"), one share of Common Stock at an exercise price of $6.50 per Warrant,
subject to adjustment. The Class A Warrants are subject to redemption by the
Company for $.01 per Warrant at any time 90 days after the Effective Date, on 30
days' written notice, provided that the average closing bid price of the Common
Stock exceeds $7.00 (subject to adjustment) for any 14 consecutive trading days
prior to such notice. See "Description of Securities."
    
 
    Prior to this Offering, there has been no market for the Company's
securities. See "Underwriting" for information relating to the factors
considered in determining the Price to Public. The Company has applied for
listing its Common Stock, Class A Warrants and Units on the Nasdaq SmallCap
Market under the symbols HOTD, HOTDW and HOTDU, respectively.
                           -------------------------
 
    THIS OFFERING INVOLVES A HIGH DEGREE OF RISK AND SUBSTANTIAL DILUTION. SEE
"RISK FACTORS" COMMENCING ON PAGE 6 AND "DILUTION" ON PAGE 12. THESE ARE
SPECULATIVE SECURITIES.
                           -------------------------
  THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
 EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
   AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
                               CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
====================================================================================================================
                                                                         UNDERWRITING             PROCEEDS TO
                                              PRICE TO PUBLIC            DISCOUNT(1)               COMPANY(2)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                       <C>                      <C>                      <C>
Per Unit.................................          $5.00                    $0.40                    $4.60
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total(3)(4)..............................       $12,500,000               $1,000,000              $11,500,000
====================================================================================================================
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(1) The Underwriter will receive a sales commission equal to 8% of the Total
    Price to Public from the sale of the Units. The Company has also agreed to
    pay the Underwriter a nonaccountable expense allowance equal to 2% of the
    Total Price to Public. The Company has also agreed to sell to the
    Underwriter, for nominal consideration, a 5-year warrant to purchase up to
    250,000 shares at 120% of the Price to Public (the "Underwriter's Warrant").
    In addition, the Company has agreed to indemnify the Underwriter against
    certain liabilities. See "Underwriting."
    
 
(2) Before deducting expenses of the offering estimated at $220,000, which does
    not include the 2% nonaccountable expense allowance described in Note 1
    above and assumes no exercise of the Underwriter's over-allotment option.
 
   
(3) The Company has granted the Underwriter a 45-day option to purchase up to
    375,000 additional Units from the Company solely to cover over-allotments,
    if any. If such option is exercised in full, the Total Price to Public,
    Total Underwriting Discount and Total Proceeds to Company will be
    $14,375,000, $1,150,000 and $13,225,000, respectively. See "Underwriting."
    
 
(4) At the request of the Company, up to 10% of the Units offered hereby may be
    reserved for sale to persons designated by the Company at the Price to
    Public.
 
    The Units are offered by the Underwriter, subject to receipt and acceptance
by it, its right to reject orders in whole or in part and to certain other
conditions. It is expected that delivery of the certificates representing the
Units will be made on or about          , 1997 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
 
                         [RJ Steichen & Company Logo]
                The date of this Prospectus is          , 1997.
<PAGE>   3
 
                      [PICTURES TO COME FROM THE COMPANY]
 
IN CONNECTION WITH THIS OFFERING, CERTAIN UNDERWRITERS (AND SELLING GROUP
MEMBERS) MAY ENGAGE IN PASSIVE MARKET MAKING TRANSACTIONS IN THE COMMON STOCK,
UNITS AND CLASS A WARRANTS ON NASDAQ IN ACCORDANCE WITH RULE 103 OF REGULATION
M. SEE "PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION."
<PAGE>   4
 
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
     The following summary is qualified in its entirety by the more detailed
information and financial statements (including the notes thereto) appearing
elsewhere in this Prospectus. Unless otherwise indicated, the information in
this Prospectus assumes no exercise of the Underwriter's over-allotment option.
This Prospectus contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and
uncertainties. The Company's actual results may differ significantly from the
results discussed in the forward-looking statements. Factors that might cause
such differences include, but are not limited to, those discussed under the
heading "Risk Factors", which investors should carefully consider.
 
                                  THE COMPANY
 
     The business of Hotel Discovery, Inc. (the "Company") is to develop, own
and operate theme restaurants with a retail component designed to appeal to the
upscale casual dining market. The Company opened its first restaurant in the
Kenwood Shopping Center in Cincinnati, Ohio (the "Kenwood Unit") on December 19,
1996, and a second restaurant to be located at the Mall of America in a suburb
of Minneapolis, Minnesota (the "Mall of America Unit") is under development.
 
     In October 1995, a limited partnership raised $2.5 million to build the
Kenwood Unit which, at 17,000 square feet and up to 360 seats, represents the
first embodiment of the Hotel Discovery theme concept. In conjunction with a
reorganization of the Company, the assets of the limited partnership were
directly contributed to the Company in November 1996 in consideration of Common
Stock of the Company. See "Reorganization." The Company subsequently raised
approximately $7 million in private placements which concluded in June and July
1997, the proceeds of which were used to complete and add special features to
the Kenwood Unit, begin development of the Mall of America Unit and for working
capital purposes.
 
     Management has spent more than four years in the development stage of the
Hotel Discovery concept. The Company's officers bring substantial restaurant
experience to the Company, with significant hands-on multi-location operating
experience as well as extensive site selection and development experience.
 
   
     Hotel Discovery is a concept restaurant that offers the themes of
adventure, imagination, exploration and innovation as entertainment. In the
Kenwood Unit, these themes are embodied in the Safari Room, the Artist Loft, the
Observatory and the Mapping Room. Specially designed furnishings and
decorations, as well as the sights and sounds of state-of-the-art video and
audio systems, transport guests along imaginative dining journeys. Imaginary
places filled with myths and legends provide a unique blend of awareness,
enjoyment, and entertainment to guests of Hotel Discovery.
    
 
     The Hotel Discovery menu offers a broad range of cuisine from around the
world, including "cultural fusion" menu items such as Barcelona Spring Rolls and
Asian Tacos. Features include American, Asian, Jamaican, West Indian, Mexican
and European tastes and textures. Menu items are freshly made, using only the
highest quality fresh meats, produce, spices and other ingredients. The menu
mirrors the exploratory journey and adventure society themes of the restaurant
itself.
 
     The Company targets the upscale casual segment of the dining-out industry,
for which quality food pleasingly presented is an important consideration.
Management expects that future restaurants will be located in highly visible,
upscale malls or resort areas which feature upper and upper middle class
demographics and a high level of tourist traffic. The Company is considering
potential sites in Las Vegas and Chicago, but no assurances can be given that
attractive sites will be located in those cities or that negotiations to build
or lease such sites will be successfully concluded.
 
   
     The Company began operations as Hotel Mexico, Inc. ("HMI"), which was
incorporated in Ohio in January 1994. The Kenwood Restaurant Limited
Partnership, an Ohio limited partnership (the "Kenwood Partnership") was formed
in June 1995 to own and operate the Kenwood Unit. HMI's operations and the net
assets of the Kenwood Partnership were combined in November 1996, and in August
1997 HMI was reorganized as Hotel Discovery, Inc., a Minnesota corporation. See
"Reorganization." The Company's
    
                                        3
<PAGE>   5
 
executive offices are located at 7701 France Avenue South, Suite 217, Edina,
Minnesota 55435 and its telephone number is (612) 841-6363.
 
                                  THE OFFERING
 
   
Securities Offered............   2,500,000 Units, each Unit consisting of one
                                 share of Common Stock and one redeemable Class
                                 A Warrant at an initial public offering price
                                 of $5.00 per Unit. Each Class A Warrant is
                                 immediately exercisable and, commencing 10
                                 trading days after the Effective Date,
                                 transferable separately from the Common Stock.
                                 Each Class A Warrant entitles the holder to
                                 purchase, at any time until four years after
                                 the Effective Date, one share of Common Stock
                                 at an exercise price of $6.50 per Warrant,
                                 subject to adjustment. The Class A Warrants are
                                 subject to redemption by the Company for $.01
                                 per Warrant at any time 90 days after the
                                 Effective Date, on 30 days' written notice,
                                 provided that the average closing bid price of
                                 the Common Stock exceeds $7.00 (subject to
                                 adjustment) for any 14 consecutive trading days
                                 prior to such notice.
    
 
Common Stock Outstanding
  Before this Offering........   5,399,289 Shares
 
   
Common Stock Outstanding
  After this Offering.........   7,899,289 Shares(1)
    
 
Proposed Nasdaq SmallCap
  Market Symbols:
  Common Stock................   HOTD
  Warrants....................   HOTDW
  Units.......................   HOTDU
 
Use of Proceeds...............   The Company intends to utilize the proceeds for
                                 further concept development, to complete
                                 development and construction of a second Hotel
                                 Discovery restaurant at the Mall of America in
                                 Bloomington, Minnesota (the "Mall of America
                                 Unit") and a third Hotel Discovery restaurant
                                 at an unidentified site, and for working
                                 capital.
- -------------------------
   
(1) Does not include (i) 375,000 Units subject to the Underwriter's
    over-allotment option; (ii) 250,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon
    exercise of the Underwriter's Warrant at 120% of the Price to Public; (iii)
    2,500,000 shares of Common Stock which are issuable upon the exercise of the
    Class A Warrants at an exercise price of $6.50 per Warrant; (iv) 214,955
    shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of warrants at an exercise
    price of $3.75 per warrant; (v) 750,000 shares of Common Stock reserved for
    issuance under the Company's 1997 Stock Option and Compensation Plan, of
    which options relating to 502,666 shares are currently outstanding at
    exercise prices ranging from $3.00 to $3.34 per share; and (vi) 50,000
    shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of directors' stock options at
    an exercise price of $3.34 per share.
    
                                        4
<PAGE>   6
 
                         SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 TWENTY-SIX WEEKS ENDED
                                                 YEAR ENDED      YEAR ENDED     -------------------------
                                                DECEMBER 31,    DECEMBER 29,     JUNE 30,      JUNE 29,
                                                    1995            1996           1996          1997
                                                ------------    ------------     --------      --------
                                                                                       (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                             <C>             <C>             <C>           <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:
Net sales...................................     $        0     $   104,129     $        0    $ 1,864,564
Restaurant costs and expenses...............              0         309,563              0      2,525,472
Selling, general and administrative
  expenses..................................         14,775         138,209         44,122        765,573
Pre-opening and development costs...........        923,482       1,970,452        413,889        189,423
Other (income) expense......................          2,209          13,507        (10,950)        65,787
                                                 ----------     -----------     ----------    -----------
  Net loss..................................     $ (940,466)    $(2,327,602)    $ (447,061)   $(1,681,691)
                                                 ==========     ===========     ==========    ===========
Net loss per share..........................     $     (.28)    $      (.53)    $     (.10)   $      (.33)
                                                 ==========     ===========     ==========    ===========
Shares used in per share calculations.......      3,362,611       4,355,187      4,286,100      5,058,240
                                                 ==========     ===========     ==========    ===========
</TABLE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        JUNE 29, 1997
                                                          ------------------------------------------
                                                                          PRO FORMA     PRO FORMA AS
                                                            ACTUAL           (1)        ADJUSTED(2)
                                                            ------        ---------     ------------
<S>                                                       <C>            <C>            <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Working capital (deficiency)..........................    $(1,684,117)   $  (284,117)   $10,745,883
Total assets..........................................      6,972,765      7,572,765     18,602,765
Total liabilities.....................................      5,065,966      4,265,966      4,265,966
Accumulated deficit...................................     (5,123,427)    (5,123,427)    (5,123,427)
Stockholders' equity..................................      1,906,799      3,306,799     14,336,799
</TABLE>
    
 
- -------------------------
(1) Assumes completion on June 29, 1997 of the sale of 499,804 shares of Common
    Stock at $3.00 per share for net proceeds of approximately $1.4 million that
    actually occurred in July 1997.
 
   
(2) As adjusted for the sale of the Units offered hereby and the anticipated
    application of the net proceeds therefrom. Does not include: (i) 375,000
    Units subject to the Underwriter's over-allotment option; (ii) 250,000
    shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the Underwriter's Warrant
    at 120% of the Price to Public; (iii) 2,500,000 shares of Common Stock which
    are issuable upon the exercise of the Class A Warrants at an exercise price
    of $6.50 per Warrant; (iv) 214,955 shares of Common Stock issuable upon
    exercise of warrants at an exercise price of $3.75 per warrant; (v) 750,000
    shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance under the Company's 1997 Stock
    Option and Compensation Plan, of which options relating to 502,666 shares
    are currently outstanding at exercise prices ranging from $3.00 to $3.34 per
    share; and (vi) 50,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of
    directors' stock options at an exercise price of $3.34 per share.
    
                                        5
<PAGE>   7
 
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
     An investment in the Shares offered hereby is highly speculative and
involves a high degree of risk. Investors could lose their entire investment.
Prospective investors should carefully consider the following factors, along
with the other information set forth in this Prospectus, in evaluating the
Company, its business and prospects before purchasing the Shares.
 
LACK OF SIGNIFICANT OPERATING HISTORY
 
     The Company's first restaurant, the Kenwood Unit, opened on December 19,
1996 and, accordingly, the Company faces all of the risks, expenses and
difficulties frequently encountered in connection with the operation and
development of a new business enterprise, including the lack of a significant
operating history. Management anticipates net losses to continue for the
foreseeable future. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to
generate significant revenues or operate profitably. Future revenues and
profits, if any, will depend upon various factors, including market acceptance
of the Hotel Discovery concept, the quality of restaurant operations, the
ability to expand to multi-unit locations and general economic conditions.
Furthermore, to the extent the Company's expansion strategy is successful, there
is no assurance that the Company will successfully manage the transition to
higher volume operations, control its operating expenses, attract necessary
additional personnel, or attract the required capital. Unless otherwise stated,
all historical financial results for the Company are derived solely from the
Kenwood Unit, which may not be indicative of other locations.
 
LIMITED BASE OF OPERATIONS
 
     The Company currently operates one restaurant, the Kenwood Unit, and plans
to open the Mall of America Unit in the second quarter of 1998. During the
Company's initial development stage, the combination of a relatively small
number of locations and the significant investment associated with each new
restaurant may cause the operating results of the Company to fluctuate
significantly and adversely affect the profitability and cash flow of the
Company. Due to the small number of current and planned locations and the large
expenditure required to open each new unit, poor operating results at any one
unit or a delay in the planned opening of a unit would materially affect the
profitability and cash flow of the entire Company. Future growth in revenues and
profits will depend to a substantial extent on the Company's ability to increase
the number of its restaurants and on its choice of locations. Because of the
substantial financial requirements associated with opening new units, the
investment risk related to any one Hotel Discovery unit is much larger than that
associated with most other restaurant companies' venues.
 
DEPENDENCE ON KEY PERSONNEL
 
     The Company will be largely dependent upon the personal efforts and
abilities of Stephen D. King, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Ronald
K. Fuller, President and Chief Operating Officer. The loss or unavailability to
the Company of either of these individuals could have a material adverse effect
upon the Company's business. See "Management."
 
NEED FOR ADDITIONAL MANAGEMENT
 
     The success of the Company will depend in large part upon the Company's
ability to supplement its existing management team. While both Messrs. King and
Fuller have significant restaurant and multi-location restaurant management
experience, the Company will need to hire other corporate level and management
employees to help implement and operate its expansion plans, including a chief
financial officer. The failure to obtain, or delays in obtaining, key employees
could have a material adverse effect on the Company. See "Management."
 
DEPENDENCE ON DISCRETIONARY CONSUMER SPENDING
 
     The success of the Company's operations depends to a significant extent on
a number of factors including discretionary consumer spending, economic
conditions affecting disposable consumer income, the overall
 
                                        6
<PAGE>   8
 
success of the malls, entertainment centers and other venues where Hotel
Discovery restaurants are or will be located, and the continued popularity of
theme restaurants generally and the Company's concept in particular. Theme
restaurants are more susceptible to shifts in consumer preferences and
frequently experience a decline of revenue growth or of actual revenues as
consumers tire of the related theme.
 
RISKS OF NEW CONSTRUCTION
 
     Construction projects, including the opening of additional restaurant
locations, entail risks, including shortages of materials or skilled labor,
unforeseen environmental, engineering or geological problems, work stoppages,
weather interference, floods, difficulties with regulatory agencies and
unanticipated cost increases, any of which could give rise to delays and cost
overruns.
 
LIMITED FINANCIAL RESOURCES; ADEQUACY OF PROCEEDS AND NEED FOR ADDITIONAL
FINANCING
 
     The Company's ability to execute its business strategy depends to a
significant degree on its ability to obtain substantial equity capital and other
financing to fund the development of additional restaurants. The proceeds of
this Offering will provide the Company with the financing required to develop
and open the Mall of America Unit and for working capital purposes. The total
cost of developing the Kenwood Unit was approximately $4.7 million, which
included $3.5 million for building design and construction and $1.2 million for
equipment, furniture and fixtures. The Company estimates that the total cost of
developing the planned Mall of America Unit will be approximately $4.5 million,
net of landlord contributions. Although the Company estimates that the proceeds
from this Offering will be sufficient to develop and open both the Mall of
America Unit and a third Hotel Discovery restaurant, there can be no assurance
that both of such restaurants can be developed at such estimated costs. If the
proceeds of this Offering are not sufficient to develop a third unit, the
Company may be required to seek additional funds through an additional offering
of the Company's equity securities or by incurring indebtedness. If additional
funds are required, there can be no assurance that any additional funds will be
available on terms acceptable to the Company or its shareholders. New investors
may seek and obtain substantially better terms than were granted its present
investors and the issuance of such securities would result in dilution to
existing shareholders. Furthermore, as the Company prepares to open additional
restaurants, it will expend a relatively higher amount on administrative
expenses than would a mature company with similar operations.
 
EXPANSION STRATEGY
 
     The Company's ability to open and successfully operate additional
restaurants will also depend upon the hiring and training of skilled restaurant
management personnel and the ability to successfully manage growth, including
monitoring units and controlling costs, food quality and customer service. The
Company anticipates that the opening of additional restaurants will result in
additional expenses associated with managing operations located in multiple
markets. Furthermore, the Company believes that competition for unit-level
management has become increasingly intense as additional restaurant chains
expand to new markets. Achieving consumer awareness and market acceptance will
require substantial efforts and expenditures by the Company. An extraordinary
amount of management's time may be drawn to such matters and may adversely
affect operating results. The Company is considering potential sites in Las
Vegas and Chicago, but there can be no assurance that the Company will be able
to enter into any other contracts for development of additional restaurants on
terms satisfactory to the Company or at all. Accordingly, there can be no
assurance that the Company will be able to open new restaurants or that, if
opened, those units can be operated profitably.
 
RESTAURANT AND RETAIL INDUSTRY COMPETITION
 
     The restaurant and specialty retail businesses are highly competitive. The
restaurant industry is highly competitive with respect to price, service,
quality and location and, as a result, has a high failure rate. There are
numerous well-established competitors, including national, regional and local
restaurant chains, possessing substantially greater financial, marketing,
personnel and other resources than the Company. There can be no assurance that
the Company will be able to successfully respond to various competitive factors
affecting the restaurant industry. The restaurant industry is also generally
affected by changes in consumer preferences,
 
                                        7
<PAGE>   9
 
national, regional and local economic conditions and demographic trends. The
performance of restaurant facilities may also be affected by factors such as
traffic patterns, demographic considerations, and the type, number and location
of competing facilities. In addition, factors such as inflation, increased labor
and employee benefit costs, and the availability of experienced management and
hourly employees may also adversely affect the restaurant industry in general
and the Company in particular. Restaurant operating costs are further affected
by increases in the minimum hourly wage, unemployment tax rates and similar
matters over which the Company has no control.
 
     The theme retail business is also highly competitive, particularly in
locations experiencing an oversupply of retail businesses. Hotel Discovery would
compete with a number of well-established specialty retailers possessing
significantly greater financial, marketing, personnel and other resources than
the Company.
 
LONG-TERM, NON-CANCELABLE LEASES
 
     The Company has entered into long-term leases relating to the Kenwood Unit
and the Mall of America Unit. These leases are non-cancelable by the Company
(except in limited circumstances) and range in term from 12 to 15 years.
Additional restaurants developed by the Company are likely to be subject to
similar long-term, non-cancelable leases. If the Kenwood Unit, the Mall of
America Unit or any other future restaurant does not perform at a profitable
level and the decision is made to close that unit, the Company may nonetheless
be committed to perform its obligations under the applicable lease, which would
include, among other things, payment of the applicable base rent for the balance
of the respective lease term. If such a termination were to occur at one or more
of these locations, the Company could lose a restaurant without necessarily
receiving an adequate return on its investment. See "Description of Leases."
 
CONTROL OF THE COMPANY
 
   
     Following this offering, Stephen D. King will control approximately 28.5%
of the Company's Common Stock, assuming all of the shares offered hereunder are
sold. See "Principal Shareholders." Thus Mr. King will have the ability to
substantially influence the election of members of the Board of Directors and to
direct the operations and financial affairs of the Company.
    
 
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
 
     The restaurant business is subject to various federal, state and local
government regulations, including those relating to the sale of food and
alcoholic beverages. The failure to maintain food and liquor licenses would have
a material adverse effect on the Company's operating results. In addition,
restaurant operating costs are affected by increases in the minimum hourly wage,
unemployment tax rates, sales taxes and similar costs over which the Company has
no control. Many of the Company's restaurant personnel will be paid at rates
based on the federal minimum wage. Increases in the minimum wage would result in
an increase in the Company's labor costs. The Company will be subject to "dram
shop" statutes in certain states, including Minnesota and Ohio, which generally
provide a person injured by an intoxicated person the right to recover damages
from the establishment that served alcoholic beverages to the intoxicated
person. The Company has obtained liability insurance against such potential
liability.
 
TRADEMARKS
 
     The Company's ability to successfully implement its Hotel Discovery concept
will depend in part upon its ability to protect its trademarks. The Company has
filed a trademark application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office
to register the "Hotel Discovery" mark and design. There can be no assurance
that the Company will be granted trademark registration for any or all of the
proposed uses in the Company's applications. In the event the Company's mark is
granted registration, there can be no assurance that the Company can protect
such mark and design against prior users in areas where the Company conducts or
will conduct operations. There is no assurance that the Company will be able to
prevent competitors from using the same or similar marks, concepts or
appearance.
 
                                        8
<PAGE>   10
 
SUBSTANTIAL DILUTION
 
   
     Purchasers of the securities offered hereby will experience immediate
substantial dilution of $3.25 per share in net tangible book value per share of
Common Stock if all of the shares offered hereby are sold. See "Dilution."
    
 
DIVIDENDS NOT LIKELY
 
     At the present time, the Company intends to use earnings, if any, to
finance further growth of the Company's business. Accordingly, investors should
not purchase the shares with a view toward receipt of dividends.
 
LACK OF PUBLIC MARKET; DETERMINATION OF OFFERING PRICE
 
     Prior to this Offering, there has been no public market for the Company's
securities. Although the Company has applied for listing of the Common Stock on
the Nasdaq SmallCap Market, there can be no assurance that an active public
market will develop or be sustained. In addition, the SmallCap Market may be
significantly less liquid than the Nasdaq National Market. If the Company fails
to maintain the standards for quotation, the Company's securities could be
removed from the market and traded in the over-the-counter market. As a result,
an investor would find it more difficult to dispose of, or obtain accurate
quotations as to the price of, the securities.
 
     In addition, if the Company fails to maintain its qualification for the
Units to trade on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market, the Units will be subject to
certain rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission relating to "penny
stocks." Such rules require broker-dealers to make a suitability determination
for purchasers and to receive the purchaser's prior written consent for a
purchase transaction, thus restricting the ability of purchasers and
broker-dealers to sell the stock in the open market.
 
     The offering price of the Units has been arbitrarily determined by
negotiation between the Company and the Underwriter and bears no relationship to
the Company's current operating results, book value, net worth or financial
statement criteria of value. The factors considered in determining the offering
price included an evaluation by management of the history of and prospects for
the industry in which the Company competes and the prospects for earnings of the
Company. Such factors are largely subjective, and the Company makes no
representation as to any objectively determinable value of the Units offered
hereby. See "Underwriting".
 
CURRENT PROSPECTUS AND STATE REGISTRATION REQUIRED TO EXERCISE WARRANTS;
POSSIBLE REDEMPTION OF WARRANTS
 
     Purchasers of Units will be able to exercise the Class A Warrants only if a
current prospectus relating to the shares of Common Stock underlying the Class A
Warrants is then in effect and only if such securities are qualified for sale or
exempt from qualification under the applicable securities laws of the states in
which the various holders of Class A Warrants reside. Although the Company will
use its best efforts to (i) maintain the effectiveness of a current prospectus
covering the shares of Common Stock underlying the Class A Warrants and (ii)
maintain the registration of such Common Stock under the securities laws of the
states in which the Company initially qualifies the Units for sale in the
Offering, there can be no assurance that the Company will be able to do so. The
Company will be unable to issue shares of Common Stock to those persons desiring
to exercise their Class A Warrants if a current prospectus covering the shares
issuable upon the exercise of the Class A Warrants is not kept effective or if
such shares are not qualified nor exempt from qualification in the states in
which the holders of the Warrants reside.
 
     The Class A Warrants are subject to redemption at any time by the Company
at $.01 per Warrant 90 days after the Effective Date, on 30 days' prior written
notice, if the average closing bid price of the Common Stock shall exceed $7.00
(subject to adjustment), for 14 consecutive trading days, at any time prior to
such notice and provided a current prospectus covering the shares is then
effective under federal securities laws. If the Class A Warrants are redeemed,
Warrant holders will lose their right to exercise the Warrants except during
such 30-day redemption period. Redemption of the Class A Warrants could force
the holders to
 
                                        9
<PAGE>   11
 
exercise the Class A Warrants at a time when it may be disadvantageous for the
holders to do so or to sell the Class A Warrants at the then market price or
accept the redemption price, which is likely to be substantially less than the
market value of the Class A Warrants at the time of redemption. See "Description
of Securities -- Class A Warrants."
 
UNDERWRITER'S WARRANT
 
     The Company has agreed to sell to the Underwriter, for nominal
consideration, a five-year warrant to purchase up to 220,000 shares of Common
Stock at 120% of the Price to Public. As long as the Underwriter's Warrant or
other outstanding warrants remain unexercised, the Company's ability to raise
additional capital may be adversely affected. See "Underwriting."
 
UNDESIGNATED STOCK
 
   
     The Company's authorized capital consists of 100,000,000 shares of capital
stock. The Board of Directors, without any action by the Company's stockholders,
is authorized to designate and issue shares in such classes or series (including
classes or series of preferred stock) as it deems appropriate and to establish
the rights, preferences and privileges of such shares, including dividends,
liquidation and voting rights. The Company currently has 5,399,289 shares of
Common Stock outstanding and has authorized the issuance of an additional
2,875,000 shares of Common Stock in contemplation of this Offering. A further
4,139,955 shares of Common Stock have been authorized for the following: (i)
2,500,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of the Class A Warrants being issued
as part of this Offering (2,875,000 if the Underwriter's over-allotment option
is exercised in full), (ii) 250,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of the
Underwriter's Warrant, (iii) 214,955 shares of Common Stock issuable upon
exercise of warrants; (iv) 750,000 shares reserved for issuance under the
Company's 1997 Stock Option and Compensation Plan, of which options relating to
502,666 shares are currently outstanding, and (v) 50,000 shares of Common Stock
issuable upon exercise of directors' stock options. No other class of common
stock or preferred stock is currently designated and there is no current plan to
designate or issue any such securities. The rights of holders of preferred stock
and other classes of common stock that may be issued may be superior to the
rights granted to the holders of the Units. The ability of the Board of
Directors to designate and issue such undesignated shares could impede or deter
an unsolicited tender offer or takeover proposal regarding the Company. Further,
the issuance of additional shares having preferential rights could adversely
affect the voting power and other rights of holders of Common Stock.
    
 
SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
   
     The sale, or availability for sale, of substantial amounts of Common Stock
in the public market subsequent to this offering may adversely affect the
prevailing market price of Common Stock and may impair the Company's ability to
raise additional capital by the sale of its equity securities. The Company and
its directors, executive officers and 5% shareholders have agreed that they will
not sell nor grant any option for the sale of or otherwise dispose of any shares
of Common Stock for 180 days after the Effective Date without the prior written
consent of the Underwriter. It is expected that 4,438,288 shares of the
Company's Common Stock which were sold in reliance on "private placement"
exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act") will
become eligible for sale pursuant to Rule 144 under the 1933 Act as follows:
1,857,001 shares on the Effective Date (except that holders of 1,510,933 of such
shares have agreed not to sell or otherwise dispose of such shares for 90 days
after the Effective Date), 1,092,400 shares in the fourth quarter of 1997
(except that the holders of such 1,092,400 shares have agreed not to sell or
otherwise dispose of such shares for 90 days after the Effective Date), 800,685
shares in the second quarter of 1998, and 739,203 shares in the third quarter of
1998. See "Description of Securities -- Shares Eligible for Future Sale." In
connection with this Offering, certain officers and directors of the Company
have agreed to escrow a portion of their shares with the State of Minnesota for
three years or until (i) the Company meets certain earnings requirements
established by the State of Minnesota, or (ii) the State of Minnesota determines
that the escrow agreement is no longer necessary.
    
 
                                       10
<PAGE>   12
 
MINNESOTA ANTI-TAKEOVER LAW
 
     The Company is subject to Minnesota statutes regulating business
combinations and restricting voting rights of certain persons acquiring shares
of the Company, which may hinder or delay a change in control of the Company.
 
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
   
     The net proceeds to be received by the Company from this Offering, after
deducting estimated costs and expenses of the Offering, are estimated to be
approximately $11,030,000 ($12,717,500 if the Underwriter's over-allotment
option is exercised in full). The Company intends to utilize the net proceeds as
follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                           <C>
Further concept development.................................  $   300,000
Development and construction of the Mall of America Unit....    4,500,000
Development and construction of a third Hotel Discovery
  restaurant at an unidentified site........................    4,500,000
Working capital.............................................    1,730,000
                                                              -----------
Total.......................................................  $11,030,000
                                                              ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
NEW FACILITIES
 
     The Company intends to apply at least $9,000,000 of the net proceeds to
develop and open two new Hotel Discovery restaurants. The Company currently
estimates that the average cost of developing and opening new Hotel Discovery
restaurants, including equipment, furniture, fixtures and pre-opening expenses,
will range from $4,000,000 to $4,500,000 per facility, net of landlord
contributions, depending upon location, site conditions, construction costs, and
the level of landlord contributions to a facility. There can be no assurance
that the Company will be able to develop and open new Hotel Discovery
restaurants at such costs.
 
GENERAL
 
   
     The foregoing represents the Company's best estimate of its allocation of
the net proceeds of this Offering, based upon the current state of its business
operations, its current plans and current economic and industry conditions.
These estimates are subject to change based on unanticipated levels and types of
competition, adverse market trends and new business opportunities. Any material
revisions in the allocation of proceeds will be made at the discretion of the
Board of Directors. The Company believes the net proceeds from this Offering,
together with cash generated from operations, will be sufficient to meet the
Company's capital needs for at least 12 months, in connection with the Company's
plans to develop the Mall of America Unit and the third restaurant Unit. Pending
the use of the proceeds of this Offering, the Company intends to invest the
proceeds in short-term, high quality, interest-bearing instruments. If the
Underwriter exercises the over-allotment option in full, the Company will
realize additional net proceeds of approximately $1,687,500. Such additional net
proceeds will be added to the Company's working capital.
    
 
                                       11
<PAGE>   13
 
                                    DILUTION
 
   
     As of June 29, 1997, the Company's net tangible book value was $1,886,799
or approximately $0.39 per share of Common Stock. "Net tangible book value"
represents the tangible assets of the Company less all liabilities. Without
giving effect to any other changes in net tangible book value after June 29,
1997, other than to give effect to (i) the sale of the securities offered hereby
(assuming the entire offering price of the Units is allocated to the Common
Stock), and (ii) the application of the net proceeds therefrom, the tangible
book value as of June 29, 1997 would have been $12,916,799, or approximately
$1.75 per share. This represents an immediate increase to existing shareholders
in net tangible book value of approximately $1.36 per share and an immediate
dilution to new shareholders of $3.25 per share. "Dilution" represents the
difference between the amount per share paid by purchasers in this Offering and
pro forma net tangible book value per share of the Common Stock after this
Offering. The following table illustrates the per share dilution to new
investors as of June 29, 1997:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                           <C>     <C>
Public offering price.......................................          $5.00
Net tangible book value before offering.....................  $0.39
Increase in net tangible book value attributable to new
  investors.................................................   1.36
                                                              -----
Pro forma net tangible book value after the offering........           1.75
                                                                      -----
Dilution in net tangible book value to new investors(1).....          $3.25
                                                                      =====
</TABLE>
    
 
- -------------------------
   
(1) The dilution in net tangible book value per share to new investors, assuming
    the Underwriter's over-allotment option is fully exercised, would be $3.12.
    
 
     The following table summarizes the differences between the existing
shareholders and the new investors with respect to the number of shares of
Common Stock purchased from the Company, the total cash consideration paid, and
the average cash consideration per share of Common Stock paid (assuming the
entire offering price of the Units is allocated to the Common Stock).
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       TOTAL CASH
                                           SHARES PURCHASED(1)        CONSIDERATION
                                           -------------------    ---------------------   AVERAGE PRICE
                                            NUMBER     PERCENT      AMOUNT      PERCENT     PER SHARE
                                            ------     -------      ------      -------   -------------
<S>                                        <C>         <C>        <C>           <C>       <C>
Founding Investors.......................  3,000,000     38.0%    $ 2,500,000     11.3%       $0.83
Private Placement Investors..............  2,399,289     30.4       7,197,867     32.4         3.00
New Investors............................  2,500,000     31.6      12,500,000     56.3         5.00
                                           ---------    -----     -----------    -----
     Total...............................  7,899,289    100.0%    $22,197,867    100.0%
                                           =========    =====     ===========    =====
</TABLE>
    
 
- -------------------------
   
(1) The foregoing table takes into account the July 1997 sale of 499,804 shares
    of Common Stock at $3.00 per share but does not take into consideration: (i)
    375,000 Units subject to the Underwriter's over-allotment option; (ii)
    250,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the Underwriter's
    Warrant at 120% of the Price to Public; (iii) 2,500,000 shares of Common
    Stock which are issuable upon the exercise of the Class A Warrants at an
    exercise price of $6.50 per Warrant; (iv) 214,955 shares of Common Stock
    issuable upon exercise of warrants at an exercise price of $3.75 per
    warrant; (v) 750,000 shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance under the
    Company's 1997 Stock Option and Compensation Plan, of which options relating
    to 502,666 shares are currently outstanding at exercise prices ranging from
    $3.00 to $3.34 per share; and (vi) 50,000 shares of Common Stock issuable
    upon exercise of directors' stock options at an exercise price of $3.34 per
    share.
    
 
                                       12
<PAGE>   14
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
     The Company has never declared or paid any cash dividends on its Common
Stock, and the Board of Directors presently intends to retain all earnings, if
any, for use in the Company's business for the foreseeable future. Any future
determination as to declaration and payment of dividends will be made at the
discretion of the Board of Directors.
 
                                 CAPITALIZATION
 
     The following table sets forth the capitalization of the Company as of June
29, 1997, as further adjusted to give effect to the sale of the Units offered
hereby and the anticipated application by the Company of the proceeds therefrom.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       PRO FORMA
                                                          ACTUAL      PRO FORMA(1)   AS ADJUSTED(2)
                                                          ------      ------------   --------------
<S>                                                     <C>           <C>            <C>
Long-term debt:
  Long-term debt, net.................................  $   895,870   $   895,870     $   895,870
  Convertible debt(3).................................      150,000       150,000         150,000
                                                        -----------   -----------     -----------
       Total long-term debt...........................    1,045,870     1,045,870       1,045,870
                                                        -----------   -----------     -----------
Stockholders' equity:
  Common stock, $.01 par value; 100,000,000 shares
     authorized; 4,899,485 shares issued and
     outstanding; 5,399,289 pro forma; 7,599,289 as
     adjusted.........................................       48,995        53,993          78,993
  Additional paid-in capital..........................    7,581,231     8,976,233      19,981,233
  Common stock subscribed.............................     (600,000)     (600,000)       (600,000)
  Accumulated deficit.................................   (5,123,427)   (5,123,427)     (5,123,427)
                                                        -----------   -----------     -----------
       Total stockholders' equity.....................    1,906,799     3,306,799      14,336,799
                                                        -----------   -----------     -----------
       Total capitalization...........................  $ 2,952,669   $ 4,352,669     $15,382,669
                                                        ===========   ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
- -------------------------
(1) Assumes completion on June 29, 1997 of the sale of 499,804 shares of Common
    Stock at $3.00 per share for net proceeds of approximately $1,400,000 which
    was completed in July 1997.
 
   
(2) As adjusted for the sale of the Units offered hereby and the anticipated
    application of the net proceeds therefrom. Does not include: (i) 375,000
    Units subject to the Underwriter's over-allotment option; (ii) 250,000
    shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the Underwriter's Warrant
    at 120% of the Price to Public; (iii) 2,500,000 shares of Common Stock which
    are issuable upon the exercise of the Class A Warrants at an exercise price
    of $6.50 per Warrant; (iv) 214,955 shares of Common Stock issuable upon
    exercise of warrants at an exercise price of $3.75 per warrant; (v) 750,000
    shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance under the Company's 1997 Stock
    Option and Compensation Plan, of which options relating to 502,666 shares
    are currently outstanding at exercise prices ranging from $3.00 to $3.34 per
    share; and (vi) 50,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of
    directors' stock options at an exercise price of $3.34 per share.
    
 
(3) Convertible into 39,600 shares of Common Stock at maturity on July 1, 1999.
 
                                       13
<PAGE>   15
 
                    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
                 FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
     The following discussion should be read in connection with the Company's
financial statements and related notes thereto included elsewhere in this
Prospectus.
 
OVERVIEW
 
     The Company was formed in January 1994 as an Ohio corporation to develop,
own and operate upscale, casual theme restaurants under the name "Hotel
Discovery." The Company opened its first restaurant in the Kenwood Shopping
Center in Cincinnati, Ohio in December 1996. Prior to opening the Kenwood Unit,
the Company had no revenues and its activities were devoted solely to
development. The Company is presently developing a unit in the Mall of America
in Bloomington, Minnesota.
 
     Future revenue and profits, if any, will depend upon various factors,
including market acceptance of the Hotel Discovery concept, the quality of the
restaurant operations, the ability to expand to multi-unit locations and general
economic conditions. The Company's present sources of revenue are limited to its
existing unit. There can be no assurances the Company will successfully
implement its expansion plans, in which case it will continue to be dependent on
the revenues from the existing unit. The Company also faces all of the risks,
expenses and difficulties frequently encountered in connection with the
expansion and development of a new and expanding business. Furthermore, to the
extent that the Company's expansion strategy is successful, it must manage the
transition to multiple site operations, higher volume operations, the control of
overhead expenses and the addition of necessary personnel.
 
     The Company has adopted a 52/53 week accounting period ending on the Sunday
nearest December 31 of each year.
 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
     The Company had no revenues or operations during the period from January
13, 1994 (Inception) to December 19, 1996 (the opening of the Kenwood Unit).
Accordingly, comparisons to periods prior to December 19, 1996 are not
meaningful.
 
     Total Revenues -- The Kenwood Unit opened in December 1996. For the year
ended December 29, 1996, the Company had total sales of $104,129 compared with
$1,864,564 for the 26 weeks ended June 29, 1997.
 
     Costs and Expenses -- For the year ended December 31, 1995, the Company had
a net loss of $940,466. For the year ended December 29, 1996, the Company had a
net loss of $2,327,602 compared with a net loss of $1,681,691 for the 26 weeks
ended June 29, 1997. The net losses for 1995 and 1996 are largely attributable
to concept development and pre-opening costs totaling $923,482 and $1,970,452
for each period, respectively. The net loss for the 1997 period is largely
attributable to additional expenses as the Company increases its corporate
overhead structure for the development of additional locations supported by
revenues from a single operating unit. On February 1, 1997, the Company entered
into an employment agreement with an executive officer requiring the payment of
annual compensation totaling $200,000 per year. This agreement, and continued
increases in the Company's corporate overhead, will impact general and
administrative expenses on an ongoing basis.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>   16
 
OPERATING RESULTS OF THE KENWOOD UNIT
 
     During the period from the commencement of Kenwood Unit operations
(December 19, 1996) to December 29, 1996, food and beverage costs were $43,324
or 41.6% of sales compared with $612,115 or 32.8% of sales for the June 29, 1997
period. The improvement in food and beverage costs as a percentage of sales is
due primarily to improved operating efficiencies.
 
     Labor, benefits and other direct restaurant operating expenses were
$241,239 or 231.7% of sales during the period from the commencement of Kenwood
operations (December 19, 1996) to December 29, 1996, compared to $1,638,357 or
87.9% of sales during the 26 weeks ended June 29, 1997. This improvement in
restaurant operating expenses as a percentage of sales is due primarily to
improved labor management and other operating efficiencies and increased sales.
 
     Although no assurances can be given, management believes that the Kenwood
Unit's current level of sales, trained workforce and general operation will
continue to improve unit level performance in future periods.
 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
     The Company has met its capital requirements through the sale of Common
Stock to and borrowings from its principal shareholder, Stephen D. King, the
private placement of common stock and debt, and through revenues from
operations. During the period from January 13, 1994 (Inception) through
September 1995, the Company's predecessor sold 1,750 shares of Common Stock to
Mr. King and another individual for nominal consideration, which shares were
split 825-to-1 in November 1996.
 
     During the years ended December 29, 1996 and December 31, 1995, the maximum
amount of borrowings from Mr. King outstanding at any time was $1,213,469 and
$862,891, respectively. At year end December 29, 1996, and December 31, 1995,
the amount of such outstanding indebtedness was $447,787 and $862,891,
respectively. Included in these amounts were concept development costs
reimbursed to a demonstration restaurant owned and operated by Mr. King in the
amount of $278,101 for the year ended December 29, 1996 and $433,996 for the
year ended December 31, 1995. The Company paid interest of 11.5% on all such
advances.
 
   
     In October 1995, Kenwood Restaurant Limited Partnership, an Ohio limited
partnership formed in June 1995 (the "Kenwood Partnership"), raised $2.5 million
in a private placement of 250 shares of Common Stock of the Company's
predecessor (which shares were split 825-to-1 in November 1996, and now
represent 206,250 shares of the Company) and limited partnership interests in
the Kenwood Partnership. In a reorganization of the Company which occurred in
November 1996, the Kenwood Partnership contributed all of its assets to the
Company's predecessor, including the Kenwood Unit, in exchange for 1,350,000
shares of Common Stock of the Company.
    
 
     From November 1996 through July 1997, the Company's predecessor completed
private placements of an aggregate of 2,392,889 shares of Common Stock at $3.00
per share. The net proceeds were approximately $5.9 million. Such proceeds have
been, and will be, used for new and additional features for the Kenwood Unit,
repayment of indebtedness, working capital and development of the planned Mall
of America Unit.
 
     For the year ended December 31, 1995, the year ended December 29, 1996 and
the 26 weeks ended June 29, 1997, the Company used $932,549, $1,024,187 and
$2,387,424, respectively, in cash flow for operating activities.
 
   
     Since Inception, the Company's principal capital requirements have been the
funding of (i) the development of the Company and the Hotel Discovery concept,
(ii) the construction of the Kenwood Unit and the acquisition of furniture,
fixtures and equipment therein and (iii) the development of the Mall of America
Unit. Total capital expenditures for the Kenwood Unit were approximately $4.7
million.
    
 
     When completed, the Company estimates that capital expenditures for the
Mall of America Unit will be approximately $4.5 million, net of landlord
contributions of $1.6 million. The unit is expected to be complete in the second
quarter of 1998.
 
                                       15
<PAGE>   17
 
   
     The Company borrowed $1.0 million under a leasehold mortgage term loan from
a bank, which is personally guaranteed by Mr. King. This financing was used for
the Kenwood Unit. Principal and interest are due monthly through October 1999,
at which time the remaining balance is due in full. This loan had an outstanding
principal balance of $965,290 on June 29, 1997. In December 1996, the Company
borrowed an additional $2.5 million under a mortgage term loan from a bank.
Payments of interest only were due through January 1998, at which time the
entire principal balance was due. This loan was paid in full on January 31,
1997. In May 1997, the Company borrowed $2.0 million on a 13-month term note,
with interest only payable monthly at the rate of 7.15%. This note was
guaranteed by Mr. King and was fully secured by substantially all of the
Company's assets. This note was repaid in full in July 1997. On June 23, 1997,
the Company borrowed $800,000 from Provident Bank, which is fully secured by
substantially all of the Company's assets. The loan bears interest at 2% over
the bank's reference rate payable monthly. The loan was personally guaranteed by
Mr. King. This loan was repaid in full in July 1997.
    
 
   
     After development of the two units funded by this offering, future
development and expansion will be financed through cash flow from operations and
other forms of financing such as the sale of additional equity and debt
securities, capital leases and other credit facilities. There are no assurances
that such financing will be available on terms acceptable or favorable to the
Company.
    
 
                                       16
<PAGE>   18
 
                                    BUSINESS
 
GENERAL
 
     Hotel Discovery, Inc. is a Minnesota corporation which was formed to
develop, own and operate upscale casual theme restaurants. The Company was
formed in January 1994 as an Ohio corporation, prior to reorganizing as a
Minnesota corporation, and operates one Hotel Discovery restaurant in the
Kenwood Shopping Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, which opened in December 1996. A
second restaurant to be located at the Mall of America in a suburb of
Minneapolis, Minnesota, is currently under development. The Company also has a
license agreement with Eastgate Restaurants, Inc., a corporation wholly-owned by
Stephen D. King, for the operation of a demonstration and test restaurant in
Cincinnati which opened in June 1994.
 
HOTEL DISCOVERY CONCEPT
 
     Hotel Discovery restaurants will serve the rapidly emerging upscale casual
segment of the restaurant industry. Each Hotel Discovery restaurant will combine
two contemporary trends within the restaurant industry by incorporating the
entertainment features of restaurants such as Planet Hollywood, Rainforest Cafe
and Dave & Buster's with the upscale casual attributes of restaurants like
Palomino and The Cheesecake Factory. The Hotel Discovery concept is carefully
designed to provide guests with a new and innovative dining concept providing
noteworthy food, superior service and genuinely imaginative surroundings and
special effects. Hotel Discovery restaurants will contain visual and audio
effects providing a unique sight and sound experience. Management believes the
Hotel Discovery restaurant ambiance and entertainment quality strongly
differentiate its concept from traditional casual segment restaurants such as
Applebee's, Bennigan's, Chili's and Friday's and goes beyond the simple food
service-only concept of a typical theme restaurant.
 
THE CONCEPT AND THE KENWOOD UNIT
 
     Hotel Discovery is designed around the concepts of adventure, imagination,
exploration and invention. It is based on a foundation of superior food and
excellent service coupled with soft, sophisticated, non-intrusive entertainment.
The surroundings and extensive self-entertainment aspects within Hotel Discovery
restaurants, such as videos corresponding to each dining room, provide guests
with soft discovery experiences that allow them to actively and passively
participate in quality dining experiences.
 
     Imaginary places, myths, and legends intended to pique guests' individual
interests provide a unique land of awareness, enjoyment, and entertainment to
guests of Hotel Discovery. Specially designed furnishings and decorations, along
with specially arranged audio-visual presentations, are carefully orchestrated
to transport guests along imaginative dining journeys. The guest's voyage begins
the moment he or she enters the restaurant and sees a hologram of an old-time
sailing ship rocking on ocean waves. The guest is greeted by the concierge and
then introduced to his or her adventure guide, who seats the guest in one of
four distinctly different dining rooms: the Mapping Room, the Safari Room, the
Artist Loft, or the Observatory.
 
     Features of Hotel Discovery include the sights and sounds of
state-of-the-art video and audio systems, as well as more tangible entertainment
items such as aquariums, waterfalls, a 25-foot moving whale's tail, space
shuttle, a star dome with fiber optic lights, an artist's work in progress and
African masks with moving eyes. While guests venture through the many different
aspects of Hotel Discovery at their leisure, they are able to experience
destinations both real and imaginary within any of the four dining rooms.
 
ADDITIONAL CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT
 
     In July 1997, the Company entered into an agreement with The Cuningham
Group, an architectural and engineering firm based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to
assist the Company with Hotel Discovery concept development and rollout. The
Cuningham Group offers full design and build services and the Company believes
that it is a leading firm in the growing restaurant entertainment segment.
Clients of The Cuningham Group in the restaurant and entertainment industries
include Rainforest Cafe, Grand Casinos, Hilton Hotels, Paramount Studios, Steven
Spielberg, MCA, IMAX Corporation, Harrah's Entertainment, Knott's Berry Farm,
Walt Disney Company, Universal Studios and Six Flags.
 
                                       17
<PAGE>   19
 
THE CONCEPT AND THE MALL OF AMERICA UNIT
 
   
     The Company has obtained a lease for a 16,000-square-foot Hotel Discovery
restaurant to be located on the third floor of the Mall of America in
Bloomington, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis (the "Mall of America Unit").
The Mall of America Unit will feature a 200-foot-long, curved front elevation
that is planned to include waterfalls, stone masonry, brick and stucco which
will symbolize the evolution of building materials through the centuries. As
currently under development, the entrance will be very open and inviting, with a
large replica of a sailing ship framing the retail merchandise area on one side
and a half wall of rock with water fountains leading into the Discovery Club Bar
on the other. The bar will be used to entertain guests who are waiting to be
seated in the dining rooms and is expected to feature a stylized, partially open
globe that will be large enough for guests to actually sit inside and enjoy
sound and lighting effects.
    
                                        
                   [FLOOR PLAN OF THE MALL OF AMERICA UNIT*]
 
                      [BLUEPRINT OF MALL OF AMERICA UNIT]
 
* subject to change.
 
   
     The themes of imagination, invention, adventure and exploration will be
carried forward and expanded to represent a period and place for each of three
dining rooms. As currently planned, the Atlantis Room will transport diners to a
sanctum submerged beneath the ocean. The Serengheti Room will recall the natural
splendor of the famous Serengheti plains from the vantage point of a luxuriously
appointed veranda. The Machu Picchu Room, with massive stone ruins and primitive
wooden structures, will evoke the mysterious Incan city in the clouds.
    
 
RETAIL COMPONENT
 
     The retail area of a Hotel Discovery restaurant is located at the entrance
of the facility. All restaurant patrons will have to pass by merchandise on
their way to and from the dining areas. The retail component of the Hotel
Discovery concept at the Kenwood Unit includes a collection of adult and
children's casual clothing, including T-shirts, sweat shirts, shirts and caps,
and a limited amount of other logo merchandise. The Mall of America Unit will
display a much larger selection of merchandise which will be centered around the
four themes of imagination, invention, exploration and adventure as expressed in
the four dining rooms. Such merchandise is expected to include educational toys
and games, stationery, prints, telescopes, art materials, jewelry, primitive
musical instruments, gift items and travel and hotel memorabilia. The Company
believes that its unique theme will generate significant consumer identification
similar to the retail items sold by other restaurant/retail facilities.
 
                                       18
<PAGE>   20
 
EXPANSION PLANS; LOCATION SELECTION
 
     Management believes the Hotel Discovery concept is ideally targeted to the
upscale mall and resort area customer segment. Future expansion activities will
be concentrated in locations which exhibit large upper and upper middle class
demographics and malls containing upscale, quality retailers and upscale casual
restaurants. In addition, the large size of planned Hotel Discovery restaurants
will necessitate locations in areas with significant tourist as well as local
traffic. Several leading leasing managers of upscale malls have expressed
interest in having a Hotel Discovery restaurant as a tenant. The Company
currently intends to aim future expansion at upscale malls or resort areas.
 
AWARD-WINNING MENU
 
     The Hotel Discovery menu features items from around the world. In the 1997
Taste of Cincinnati festival, Hotel Discovery's Ebony Butterfly Medallions won
"Best Entree" and another Hotel Discovery menu entry won honorable mention in
the vegetarian category. Menu offerings include a variety of freshly prepared
steaks, chicken, seafood, entree salads and pastas, all with an eclectic,
international flair. The menu mirrors the exploratory journey and adventure
society concept embodied in the restaurant itself.
 
     Management believes that continual guest feedback on the key attributes of
food quality, menu variety, service and ambiance is crucial to Hotel Discovery's
success. It is currently obtained by weekly tabulation of comment cards that are
distributed with every guest check, an extensive mystery diner program and
periodic marketing research and telephone interviews. This constant feedback
enables Hotel Discovery management to monitor guest response to all areas of the
operation and react accordingly.
 
     Great care is taken to ensure that only the finest and freshest meats,
vegetables, spices and other ingredients are used in Hotel Discovery recipes.
Hotel Discovery's freshly prepared menu items are designed to cater to the most
discerning tastes consistent with the image of an upscale casual dining
experience.
 
RESTAURANT OPERATIONS
 
     Hotel Discovery strives to maintain quality through extensive training of
its employees and careful supervision of personnel. The Company has developed,
and expects to implement at each Hotel Discovery restaurant, operations in
accordance with a detailed operating manual, which contains specifications
relating to food and beverage preparation, maintenance of premises and employee
conduct. Each restaurant is expected to have a director of operations, five to
seven managers and a controller.
 
     The Company places emphasis on employee training and incentives. Problems
of employee turnover, low morale and inconsistent performance have been
worsening within the restaurant industry in recent years. The Company believes
that many of these problems can be lessened through extensive training, both
initially and on an ongoing basis. Hotel Discovery training begins with
classroom sessions that immerse new employees in Company food, beverage and
service standards and guest communication guidelines. Each prospective guest
service employee actually tastes, and is tested on, every food and beverage item
on the menu. Daily shift meetings are held prior to lunch and dinner to
communicate daily specials and feedback from comment cards and to reinforce
service standards.
 
MANAGEMENT AND FINANCIAL CONTROLS
 
     Hotel Discovery has implemented specific management control features for
employee follow-up, customer satisfaction, and financial results. These controls
are described below.
 
     Employee Follow-up. Shift schedules are posted weekly for each position in
the restaurant. Each shift is managed by a scheduled manager. Managers are
responsible for executing job functions and following a thorough and complete
checklist for each category of the restaurant. Checklists review the appearance
of the outside of the restaurant, the dining room, kitchen and restrooms as well
as dining room service and food preparation. Regular one-on-one meetings are
held with employees and feedback as to their performance is given on a regular
and consistent basis. This feedback includes positive reinforcement as well as
redirection when a change in focus is needed. In addition, the restaurant's
director of operations holds a weekly quality
 
                                       19
<PAGE>   21
 
circle luncheon for key employees from each position in the restaurant. The
President of the Company also holds a quarterly "town meeting" with selected
employees to ensure that a strong communications system between the corporate
office and the field is in place.
 
     Customer Satisfaction. Similar checklists are used to ensure that guests
receive a high level of service and food quality. In addition, floor management
is conducted during all peak seating periods by management. Management's
incentives include a bonus based upon a percentage of cash flow and/or
profitability. These incentives enable the manager to act and work as a
"partner." It is this type of pay-for-performance system that will allow the
results of Hotel Discovery restaurants to mirror those of an entrepreneurially
owned and operated business.
 
     Financial Controls. Financial controls are monitored through a computer
software system that is state-of-the-art for tracking sales, food costs, labor,
and guest lists. All of this data is reviewed on a daily, weekly and monthly
basis, enabling management to react promptly to correct deviations and
capitalize on trends.
 
COMPETITION
 
     The food service industry is intensely competitive with respect to food
quality, concept, location, service and price. In addition, there are many
well-established food service competitors with substantially greater financial
and other resources than the Company and with substantially longer operating
histories. The Company believes that it competes with other full-service dine-in
restaurants, take-out food service companies, fast-food restaurants,
delicatessens, cafeteria-style buffets and prepared food stores, as well as with
supermarkets and convenience stores. Competitors include national, regional and
local restaurants, purveyors of carry-out food and convenience dining
establishments.
 
     Competition in the food service business is often affected by changes in
consumer tastes, national, regional, and local economic and real estate
conditions, demographic trends, traffic patterns, the cost and availability of
labor, purchasing power, availability of product and local competitive factors.
The Company attempts to manage or adapt to these factors, but it should be
recognized that some or all of these factors could cause the Company to be
adversely affected. Management is of the opinion that quality food pleasingly
presented is an absolute requirement within the upscale casual segment of the
market.
 
THE UPSCALE CASUAL DINING SEGMENT
 
     The Hotel Discovery concept is positioned squarely in the upscale casual
segment of the dining-out industry. Virtually all the successful upscale casual
chains in the full service restaurant industry locate in major metropolitan
areas and most typically within or contiguous to a high-traffic, upscale
regional mall or resort area. While mall traffic in general has been sporadic or
declining in recent years as the "big box" concept in retailing drains potential
customers away from malls, the regional mall still remains a viable concept for
fulfilling customer needs. In actuality, the declining customer count within the
regional mall has created an opportunity for the upscale casual segment of the
restaurant industry. Landlords desiring to increase traffic within the upscale
mall have shown a willingness to provide restaurants with generous "add backs"
or "give ups" to locate within a specific mall in order to increase the traffic
flow, thereby creating an advantageous situation for both the mall developer as
well as the restaurant investor.
 
     Although price is not the most important determinant to customer count
within this $15 per average check niche, value is. The Hotel Discovery menu is
extensive, varied, innovative, original and constantly evolving, using only the
freshest ingredients coupled with a pleasing presentation. The surroundings are
high-energy and casual with efficient, attentive and friendly service. Rather
than merely a place to consume food, the concept appeals to all the senses
through video, audio and entertainment features.
 
   
     While the dining-out industry as a whole has shown relatively sluggish
growth over the last few years, the segment of the industry targeted by Hotel
Discovery has recently shown rapid growth. Since the mid-1980s the top 20% of
households have been increasing their share of total income. While this trend
has had a profound effect on retailing in general, the effect on various
segments of the restaurant industry has also been
    
 
                                       20
<PAGE>   22
 
quite pronounced. An increase in the frequency of meals consumed away from home
and a significantly larger average check have been observed.
 
GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS
 
     Hotel Discovery restaurants are subject to federal, state and local laws
affecting the operation of its restaurants, including zoning, health, sanitation
and safety regulation and alcoholic beverage licensing requirements. Each
restaurant is operated in accordance with standardized procedures designed to
assure compliance with all applicable codes and regulations. The suspension of
food service or liquor license would cause an interruption of operations at the
affected restaurant. The Company believes that it is in compliance with all
licensing and other regulations.
 
     The Company is also subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act, which governs
minimum wages, overtime and working conditions. A significant portion of Hotel
Discovery restaurant employees are paid at rates relating to federal minimum
wage. Accordingly, an increase in the minimum wage would directly increase each
restaurant's labor cost.
 
     Obtaining alcoholic beverage licenses from various jurisdictions will
require disclosure of certain detailed information about directors, officers and
greater than 10% shareholders of the Company's equity securities, and will
necessitate that such persons be approved by the appropriate liquor licensing
authority.
 
   
The Kenwood Unit
    
 
LOCATION
 
   
     The Kenwood Unit is located in the recently refurbished Sycamore Plaza at
Kenwood Shopping Center, a premier location in Cincinnati, Ohio, and opened for
business on December 19, 1996. The restaurant contains approximately 17,000
square feet on three levels and is located at the northeast corner of the
Shopping Center Plaza. The Company leases the site upon which the restaurant is
constructed.
    
 
     The Kenwood Unit was open for dinner on December 19, 1996 and for lunch on
January 4, 1997. For the 26 weeks ended June 29, 1997, the Kenwood Unit had
total sales of $1,864,564.
 
   
DESCRIPTION OF LEASE
    
 
     The initial term of the lease is for 15 years. In addition, the Company has
the right to extend the term of the lease for two additional terms of five years
each, exercisable not earlier than 12 months nor later than six months prior to
the expiration of the initial term or first option period, as applicable.
 
     The lease provides for the payment of both a monthly fixed minimum rent and
a percentage rent based on gross sales in excess of an escalating base amount.
The monthly fixed minimum rent is $12,833 for the first five years of the lease,
$14,117 for the sixth through tenth years, $15,400 for the eleventh through
fifteenth years, $16,683 during the first five-year lease renewal term and
$17,967 during the second five-year lease renewal term.
 
     In addition to the fixed minimum rent, the lease provides for the payment
of a percentage rent equal to 4% of the gross sales from the restaurant in
excess of the following annual gross sales amounts: $3,850,000 for the first
five years of the lease, $4,235,000 for the sixth through tenth years,
$4,620,000 for the eleventh through fifteenth years, $5,004,999 for the first
five-year lease renewal term and $5,390,000 for the second five-year lease
renewal term.
 
     The lease is a "triple net" lease and, in addition to the fixed minimum
rent and percentage rent, the Company is required to pay its proportionate share
of taxes, insurance, and maintenance and operation costs. Initially, the
estimated annual amount payable with respect to taxes, maintenance and operating
costs, and insurance is $4.15 a square foot, or approximately $32,000 per year.
 
     The landlord agreed to reimburse the Company in an amount up to $200,000 as
a construction allowance for the completion of building and leasehold
improvements within 30 days of the opening of the Kenwood
 
                                       21
<PAGE>   23
 
Unit. The Company expects to complete the necessary documentation to obtain such
reimbursement in the near future. In addition, the landlord agreed that it will
not construct any permanent facility within a designated no-build area outlined
in the lease. This "no-build" area allows unimpaired visibility of the
restaurant from both Kenwood Road and Montgomery Road.
 
FINANCING OF THE KENWOOD UNIT
 
     The total cost of the Kenwood Unit, including additional features, was
approximately $4.7 million. Approximately $2,475,000 of the cost of the
restaurant was funded by the proceeds of a private placement in October 1995.
Another $1,025,000 was financed by a private placement which was concluded in
June 1997, $850,000 of which was spent on new additional features. Leasehold
improvements in the amount of $200,000 will be financed by the landlord. An
additional $1,000,000 was funded by a leasehold mortgage term loan (the "Loan")
which was incurred by the Kenwood Restaurant Limited Partnership and assumed by
the Company.
 
     The Loan is secured with a leasehold mortgage and lien on the assets of the
restaurant and is guaranteed by Mr. King individually. The Loan bears interest
at a floating rate which is currently 9.06% and provides for monthly payments of
principal in the amount of $5,785 plus interest through October 1999, at which
time the remaining balance is due in full.
 
   
The Mall of America Unit
    
 
LOCATION
 
     The Mall of America Unit will consist of a 16,000-square-foot restaurant
located on the third floor of the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota. The
site is leased pursuant to a lease dated August 4, 1997 between Mall of America
Company, a Minnesota general partnership, and the Company.
 
     The Mall of America opened in August 1992 with 266 tenants and now holds
approximately 520 stores, merchandise carts and attractions, including four
large anchor tenants (Macy's, Bloomingdale's, Sears and Nordstrom). The mall
encompasses 4.2 million square feet on four enclosed floors, of which 2.5
million square feet are leasable, and employs 11,000 to 13,000 people, depending
on the season. More than 93% of the leasable space is under contract, up from
71% five years ago. The mall draws an estimated 40 million visitors per year.
Tourists account for 35% to 39% of mall traffic, which percentage increases up
to 50% in the summer months.
 
     According to a recent article in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the industry
benchmark for success in prime shopping malls is $325 in annual sales per square
foot, while stores in the Mall of America with fewer than 15,000 square feet
(which includes most of the mall's tenants) average $450 in annual sales per
square foot. This figure is partially offset by higher-than-average expenses,
including property taxes and charges for common areas such as the rotunda and
broad hallways. Mall development will increasingly focus on entertainment in
order to maintain a strong flow of visitors to the mall. Since it opened in
1992, the mall has emerged as a laboratory for new retail and development
concepts, including:
 
     - Knott's Camp Snoopy, the country's first indoor amusement park combined
       with a shopping center,
 
     - The first Rainforest Cafe, a tropical-theme restaurant with related
       entertainment and merchandise which has undergone three expansions since
       its 1994 opening and has since opened six other locations in the United
       States and in London, England;
 
     - Postmark America, the U.S. Postal Service's only retail store, and
 
     - Chrysler's Great Cars Great Trucks, a prototype showcase where shoppers
       can inspect vehicles and use touchscreen computers to price customized
       vehicles.
 
       Having successfully pioneered the Hotel Discovery concept at the Kenwood
Unit, the management of the Company is optimistic that the Mall of America, with
its reputation for innovation in retailing and entertainment, will be an ideal
location to showcase the Company's continuing development of its highly-themed,
entertainment-oriented Hotel Discovery restaurant concept.
 
                                       22
<PAGE>   24
 
DESCRIPTION OF MALL OF AMERICA LEASE
 
     The term of the lease is for 12 years, commencing on the earlier of (i) the
day following the last day allowed to the Company for completion of remodeling
of the leased space or (ii) the date on which the restaurant opens for business.
The lease does not provide for renewal terms.
 
     The lease provides for the payment of either a minimum annual rent or a
percentage rent based on gross sales. The minimum annual rent is $25 per square
foot, or $405,375 per year based on approximately 16,215 square feet of leased
area. The percentage rent is the amount by which 6% of gross sales exceeds
minimum rent. The lease provides for waiver of the minimum annual rent for the
first year of the lease. The landlord will also reimburse the Company for up to
$1.6 million in leasehold improvements.
 
     The lease is a triple net lease and, in addition to the fixed minimum rent
and percentage rent, the Company is required to pay its proportionate share of
taxes, insurance, and maintenance and operation costs.
 
EMPLOYEES
 
     As of August 22, 1997, the Company employed 133 persons, of whom 82 worked
in full-time positions and 51 were part-time. The Mall of America Unit is
expected to employ approximately 250 full- and part-time personnel when
operating at full capacity. No current employee is covered by a collective
bargaining agreement, and the Company has never experienced an organized work
stoppage, strike or labor dispute. The Company considers relations with its
employees to be excellent.
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
     The Company is not a party to any material litigation and is not aware of
any threatened litigation that would have a material adverse effect on its
business.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>   25
 
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND KEY EMPLOYEES
 
     The following table sets forth certain information with respect to each of
the directors and executive officers of the Company.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                    NAME                       AGE                  POSITION(S) HELD
                    ----                       ---                  ----------------
<S>                                            <C>   <C>
Stephen D. King..............................  41    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Ronald K. Fuller.............................  51    President, Chief Operating Officer and Director
Steven B. Carey..............................  36    Vice President -- Menu Development
Samuel J. Talucci, Jr. ......................  45    Vice President -- Operations
John J. Motschenbacher.......................  34    Controller
Patricia J. Diamond..........................  38    Director of Retail
Michael L. Krienik...........................  44    Director
Thomas W. Orr................................  52    Director
</TABLE>
    
 
     Stephen D. King, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Company,
is a managing partner of BaryCenter Capital Management, a Cincinnati-based
financial advisor and investment firm. Mr. King will devote substantially all of
his management time to the Company. From 1982 to 1990, Mr. King served in
various capacities, including Chief Executive Officer, of Pizza Hut of
Cincinnati, Inc., which operates 36 Pizza Hut restaurants in the Cincinnati,
Ohio area. Mr. King has also served in various capacities with Long John Silver,
Two Pesos and Skyline Chili franchise operations. Mr. King also has extensive
real estate and financing expertise and, from 1991 to 1994, served as managing
partner of a real estate development partnership with properties valued at
approximately $60 million.
 
     Ronald K. Fuller joined the Company as President and Chief Operating
Officer in January 1997. Mr. Fuller had served since 1993 as President and Chief
Executive Officer for Leeann Chin, Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota. From 1985 to
1993, Mr. Fuller held several executive positions with General Mills, Inc. and
General Mills Restaurants, Inc. in Minneapolis and Orlando, Florida, including
Vice President -- Operations, Executive Vice President -- New Concept
Development, and President/General Manager.
 
   
     Steven B. Carey became Vice President -- Menu Development of the Company in
January 1997. From 1994 until that time, Mr. Carey was Corporate Executive Chef
for Leeann Chin, Inc. From 1985 to 1994 he acted as Executive Chef or Senior
Executive Chef for a number of units of Restaurants Unlimited, based in Seattle,
Washington, including Palomino (Minneapolis), Ryan's Grill (Honolulu), Cutter's
Grand Cafe (Philadelphia), Kincaid's Bayhouse (Burlingame, California) and
Skates on the Bay (Berkeley).
    
 
   
     Samuel J. Talucci, Jr. became Vice President -- Operations in September
1997. From 1985 until that time, Mr. Talucci served as founder, owner and
general manager of Magnolia Cafe, an award-winning Cajun and Creole restaurant
in Philadelphia. From 1983 to 1985 Mr. Talucci worked for Mike Kelly's/Joe
Kelly's, a full-service fresh seafood, steak and prime rib restaurant
enterprise. He was initially Regional Supervisor for Joe Kelly's in Oklahoma
City, where he oversaw profitability, store openings and management training for
four restaurants, and then Director of Operations for Mike Kelly's in Detroit
where he opened two restaurants, set up systems and procedures and supervised
management training. From 1978 to 1983, Mr. Talucci served in various management
capacities for T.W. Lee's Inc. (Lexington, Kentucky), That's Entertainment Inc.
(New Haven and Yalesville, Connecticut), and Clyde's Inc. (Columbia, Maryland
and Sao Paulo, Brazil).
    
 
     John J. Motschenbacher became Corporate Controller of the Company in June
1997. From 1993 to immediately prior to joining the Company, Mr. Motschenbacher
served in various capacities for Leeann Chin, Inc., including as Director of
Accounting and MIS and as Corporate Controller. He was the Controller of
Q-Steaks, Inc., a steakhouse chain based in St. Louis Park, Minnesota. From 1991
to 1992 he was a Regional Controller for Bon Appetit Management Company (San
Francisco), a provider of contract and institutional food service. From 1988 to
1991, he served as Senior Regional Accountant and then Manager of Accounting
 
                                       24
<PAGE>   26
 
and Administration for Consul Restaurant Corporation (Bloomington, Minnesota), a
Chi-Chi's Restaurant franchisee and provider of contract food services.
 
     Patricia J. Diamond became Director of Retail of the Company in August
1997. From April 1996 to immediately prior to joining the Company, Ms. Diamond
served as General Manager of UnderWater World at the Mall of America, where she
was responsible for developing and coordinating all aquarium operations,
including financial, personnel, marketing and retail functions. From January
1992 to April 1996, Ms. Diamond acted as General Manager of the LEGO Imagination
Center at the Mall of America, where she was responsible for setup, development,
and management, including budgeting, hiring of personnel, retail, exhibition and
special events promotion.
 
   
     Michael L. Krienik became a director of the Company in September 1997 and
is President of Krienik Advertising Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio, a full-service
advertising agency which he founded in 1981. Prior to founding his own
advertising agency, Mr. Krienik served in various merchandising/management roles
with Federated Department Stores from 1973 to 1977 and then served as the
National Advertising Manager for U.S. Shoe Corporation from 1977 to 1981.
    
 
   
     Thomas W. Orr became a Director of the Company in September 1997 and has
been a Senior Consultant since 1995 for the Delta Consulting Group, Trumbull,
Connecticut, specializing in business strategy, new business development,
marketing and sales. From 1994 to 1995, Mr. Orr was President of the retail
chicken group of ConAgra Broiler Company, with responsibility for strategic
direction, operations of five plants, sales, marketing, international and
commodity businesses. Mr. Orr had previously been associated with ConAgra
Broiler Company from 1991 to 1993 as Vice President of Sales and Vice President
of Marketing. From 1993 to 1994, Mr. Orr served as Senior Vice President for
Jennie-O Foods, Inc., a subsidiary of Hormel Foods, with responsibility for
strategy development, marketing and sales for the retail, food service and
commodity divisions.
    
 
   
     The Company is actively searching for a Chief Financial Officer and expects
to hire such officer by the end of 1997.
    
 
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
     The following table sets forth all cash compensation paid by the Company
for the period from January 13, 1994 (Inception) through December 29, 1996 to
the Company's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                LONG-TERM
                                                                    ANNUAL COMPENSATION       COMPENSATION
                                                                  ------------------------   ---------------
                                                                              OTHER ANNUAL        AWARD
        NAME OF INDIVIDUAL                    POSITION            SALARY      COMPENSATION   OPTIONS GRANTED
        ------------------                    --------            ------      ------------   ---------------
<S>                                 <C>                           <C>         <C>            <C>
Stephen D. King...................  Chairman of the Board and       $0(1)           0              --
                                    Chief Executive Officer
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------
(1) Effective August 1, 1997, the Company began paying a salary to Mr. King of
    $200,000 per year.
 
EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS
 
     Mr. Fuller has a two-year employment agreement with the Company, which
provides for an annual base salary of $200,000 for his first year of employment,
which may be adjusted annually as determined by the Board of Directors, plus a
bonus based upon the Company's performance. Such agreement also provides that if
Mr. Fuller is terminated by the Company for a reason other than "cause," as
defined therein, he will receive up to two years' severance if such termination
occurs prior to the Effective Date and one year's severance if such termination
occurs thereafter. Mr. Fuller receives medical, dental and other customary
benefits. The employment agreement provides that Mr. Fuller will not compete
with the Company for one year following termination of his employment. Mr.
Fuller received options to purchase 300,000 shares of Common Stock at an
exercise price of $3.00 per share. Options to purchase 50,000 shares are
currently vested. The remaining options vest over two years.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>   27
 
     The Company intends to retain other executive management employees pursuant
to employment agreements. The Company intends to offer stock options to such
employees.
 
STOCK OPTION AND COMPENSATION PLAN
 
   
     The Board of Directors adopted the 1997 Stock Option and Incentive
Compensation Plan (the "Plan") in January 1997 and reserved 500,000 shares of
Common Stock for issuance to employees and key consultants under the Plan. The
Plan was amended in September 1997 to increase to 750,000 the number of shares
available for issuance under the Plan.
    
 
   
     The Plan is administered by the Board of Directors, which has the
discretion to determine the number and purchase price of shares subject to stock
options, which may not be below 85% of the fair market value of the Common Stock
on the date granted, the term of each option, and the time or times during its
term when the option becomes exercisable. As of the date of this Prospectus,
options aggregating 502,666 shares of Common Stock have been granted to certain
employees of the Company.
    
 
BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND DIRECTOR COMPENSATION
 
     Each of the Company's directors has been elected to serve until the next
annual meeting of shareholders. The Company's executive officers are appointed
annually by the Company's directors. Each of the Company's directors continues
to serve until his or her successor has been designated and qualified.
 
   
     Directors receive no fees for serving as directors and the Company has no
current plans to pay cash compensation to its directors. The Company's two
non-employee directors, Messrs. Krienik and Orr, each received a ten-year option
to purchase 25,000 shares of Common Stock when they joined the Board. One-third
of the options vest on each of the first, second and third anniversaries of the
date of grant. The options granted to Messrs. Krienik and Orr have an exercise
price of $3.34 a share. Members of the Board who are also employees of the
Company receive no options for their services as directors.
    
 
                                 REORGANIZATION
 
     The Company's predecessor, Hotel Mexico, Inc. ("HMI"), was originally
incorporated in January 1994 as an Ohio corporation. The Kenwood Restaurant
Limited Partnership, an Ohio limited partnership (the "Kenwood Partnership"),
was formed in June 1995 for the purpose of owning and operating the Kenwood
Unit. The general partner of the Kenwood Partnership is Kenwood Restaurant,
Inc., an Ohio corporation (the "General Partner"), which is 12.9% owned by
Stephen D. King and 87.1% owned by other shareholders. Mr. King owns 23.9% of
the voting stock of the General Partner. The Kenwood Partnership has 22 limited
partners (the "Limited Partners") as a result of a private placement in October
1995.
 
     HMI's operations and the net assets of the Kenwood Partnership were
combined on November 14, 1996. On that date, the Kenwood Partnership contributed
all of its net assets to a newly formed corporation in exchange for shares of
such corporation. HMI then merged with and into the newly-formed corporation,
the name of which was changed to Hotel Mexico, Inc. Upon consummation of the
merger, outstanding shares of HMI were converted into an aggregate of 1,350,000
shares of Common Stock of the newly formed corporation.
 
     The shares of HMI Common Stock received by the Kenwood Partnership in the
reorganization will be retained by the Kenwood Partnership until the Effective
Date. At that time, it is anticipated that the shares of Common Stock and any
other partnership assets will be distributed to the general and limited partners
in accordance with the Partnership Agreement and the Kenwood Partnership will be
dissolved.
 
     On June 24, 1997, the Board of Directors of HMI approved its
reincorporation as a Minnesota corporation named Hotel Discovery, Inc. Following
approval of the transaction and of the name change by HMI's shareholders at a
special meeting held on August 11, 1997, HMI was merged with and into Hotel
Discovery, Inc., a newly-formed Minnesota corporation, on August 22, 1997. Hotel
Discovery, Inc. has an
 
                                       26
<PAGE>   28
 
authorized capital stock of 100,000,000 undesignated shares, and each share of
Common Stock of HMI was converted into one share of Common Stock of Hotel
Discovery, Inc.
 
                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
     The Company granted a five-year non-exclusive license to Eastgate
Restaurants, Inc., an Ohio corporation wholly owned by Stephen D. King, to test
the concept at a demonstration restaurant at 792 Eastgate South Drive,
Cincinnati, Ohio, which opened in June 1994. The license granted includes the
right to use the Hotel Mexico name, emblems, restaurant design, furnishings,
menu and operating procedures. The license fee included an initial payment of
$2,500 to the Company and a monthly fee of $200.
 
   
     A principal shareholder, director and executive officer provided
essentially all of the Company's working capital in the development stage. This
working capital was provided by direct advances to the Company and reimbursement
for various business costs and expenses incurred by the principal shareholder on
behalf of the Company. During the years ended December 29, 1996 and December 31,
1995, the maximum amount of such indebtedness outstanding at any time was
$1,213,469 and $862,891, respectively. At year end December 29, 1996 and
December 31, 1995, the amount of such outstanding indebtedness was $447,787 and
$862,891, respectively. Included in these amounts were concept development costs
reimbursed to a demonstration restaurant owned and operated by the principal
shareholder in the amount of $278,101 for the year ended December 29, 1996 and
$433,996 for the year ended December 31, 1995. The Company pays interest of
11.5% on all such advances. Subsequent to December 29, 1996, this principal
shareholder has continued to provide the Company with additional working capital
advances on a revolving basis, with $348,430 and $524,000 outstanding on June
29, 1997 and the date of this Prospectus, respectively.
    
 
     Under the Kenwood Unit lease, the landlord is required to reimburse the
Company for leasehold improvements in the amount of $200,000 upon presentation
of appropriate documentation, which money the Company intends to use to retire a
portion of its debt to Mr. King.
 
     In December 1996, the Company borrowed $2.5 million under a term loan from
PNC Bank, Ohio, National Association, fully secured by cash collateral. The loan
accrued annual interest of 5.94% and payments of interest only were due through
January 1998, at which time the entire principal was due. The loan was
personally guaranteed by Mr. King. This loan was paid in full on January 31,
1997. In May 1997 the Company borrowed $2.0 million on a 13-month term note,
with interest only payable monthly at the rate of 7.15%. This note was
guaranteed by Mr. King and was fully secured by substantially all of the
Company's assets. This note was repaid in full in July 1997. Mr. King has also
personally guaranteed a $1,000,000 leasehold mortgage term loan from PNC Bank,
Ohio to the Company. See "The Kenwood Unit--Financing of the Kenwood Unit."
 
     On June 23, 1997, the Company borrowed $800,000 from Provident Bank, which
is fully secured by substantially all of the Company's assets. The loan bears
interest at 2% over the bank's reference rate payable monthly. The loan was
personally guaranteed by Mr. King. This loan was repaid in full in July 1997.
 
   
     It is the Company's belief that each transaction referred to in this
section between the Company and an officer, director or 5% shareholder of the
Company's Common Stock was on terms no less favorable to the Company than could
have been obtained from non-affiliated parties. Any future transactions and
loans between the Company and any of such persons will be on terms no less
favorable to the Company than could be obtained from unaffiliated third parties.
All future material affiliated transactions and loans, and any forgiveness of
loans, must be approved by a majority of the independent outside members of the
Company's Board of Directors who do not have an interest in the transactions.
    
 
                                       27
<PAGE>   29
 
                             PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS
 
     The following table sets forth certain information regarding beneficial
ownership of the Company's Common Stock as of the date of this Prospectus, as
adjusted to give effect to the issuance of the securities offered hereby, by (i)
each person known by the Company to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of
the outstanding Common Stock, (ii) each director of the Company, (iii) each
executive officer of the Company, and (iv) all executive officers and directors
of the Company as a group. Unless otherwise indicated, each of the following
persons has sole voting and investment power with respect to the shares of
Common Stock set forth opposite their respective names.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      PERCENT
                                                                               ----------------------
                                                              SHARES OF        PRIOR TO      AFTER
                           NAME                              COMMON STOCK      OFFERING   OFFERING(1)
                           ----                              ------------      --------   -----------
<S>                                                          <C>               <C>        <C>
Stephen D. King(2).........................................     900,000(3)       16.7%       11.4%
Ronald K. Fuller...........................................      60,000(4)        1.1         0.8
Michael L. Krienik.........................................           0            --          --
Thomas W. Orr..............................................           0            --          --
Kenwood Restaurant Limited Partnership(2)..................   1,350,000(5)       25.0        17.1
All executive officers and directors as a group (4
  persons).................................................     960,000(3)       17.6        12.1
</TABLE>
    
 
- -------------------------
(1) Figures do not include any shares that may be purchased in the offering by
    executive officers, directors and the principal shareholder of the Company.
    Assumes that the Underwriter's over-allotment option is not exercised.
 
(2) Such person's address is 8260 NorthCreek Drive, Suite 140, Cincinnati, Ohio
    45236.
 
   
(3) Includes 248,884 shares owned by Mr. King that are subject to options to
    purchase held by various individuals. Does not include 395,276 shares as to
    which Mr. King has voting control pursuant to voting trust agreements. Such
    voting trust agreements will terminate on the Effective Date. Mr. King has
    an option exercisable through September 20, 2001 to purchase those shares.
    Also does not include shares held by the Kenwood Restaurant Limited
    Partnership, as to which shares Mr. King has voting control. See
    "Reorganization." Including all such shares (but excluding, subsequent to
    the offering, the shares subject to the voting trust agreements), Mr. King's
    percentage ownership would be 49.0% and 28.5%, respectively.
    
 
(4) Includes 50,000 shares issuable upon exercise of stock options that are
    exercisable within 60 days.
 
(5) Mr. King has voting control of these shares. See "Reorganization."
 
                                       28
<PAGE>   30
 
                           DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES
 
UNITS
 
     Each Unit offered hereby consists of one share of Common Stock and one
redeemable Class A Warrant. Warrants are immediately exercisable and, commencing
10 trading days after the Effective Date, separately transferable from the
Common Stock. Each Class A Warrant entitles the holder to purchase at any time,
until the earlier of redemption by the Company or four years following the
Effective Date, one share of common Stock at an exercise price of $6.50 per
Warrant, subject to adjustment.
 
CAPITAL STOCK
 
   
     The Company's authorized capital stock consists of 100,000,000 undesignated
shares of Common Stock, $.01 par value per share in the case of Common Stock,
and a par value as determined by the Board of directors in the case of Preferred
Stock. After the closing of this Offering, there will be issued and outstanding
7,899,289 shares of Common Stock, or 8,274,289 shares if the Underwriter's
over-allotment option is exercised in full.
    
 
COMMON STOCK
 
     There are no preemptive, subscription, conversion or redemption rights
pertaining to the Common Stock. The absence of preemptive rights could result in
a dilution of the interest of existing shareholders should additional shares of
Common Stock be issued. Holders of the Common Stock are entitled to receive such
dividends as may be declared by the Board of Directors out of assets legally
available therefor, and to share ratably in the assets of the Company available
upon liquidation.
 
   
     Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote for all purposes and
cumulative voting is not permitted in the election of directors. Significant
corporate transactions, such as amendments to the articles of incorporation,
mergers, sales of assets and dissolution or liquidation, require approval by the
affirmative vote of the majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.
Other matters to be voted upon by the holders of Common Stock normally require
the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present at the particular
stockholders' meeting. The Company's directors and officers as a group
beneficially own approximately 17.6% of the Outstanding Common Stock of the
Company. Upon completion of this Offering, such persons will beneficially own
approximately 12.1% of the outstanding shares (11.5% if the Underwriter's
over-allotment option is exercised in full). See "Principal Shareholders."
Accordingly, such persons will continue to be able to substantially control the
Company's affairs including, without limitation, the sale of equity or debt
securities of the Company, the appointment of officers, the determination of
officers' compensation and the determination whether to cause a registration
statement to be filed. There are approximately 265 beneficial holders of the
Company's Common Stock as of the date of this Prospectus.
    
 
     The rights of holders of the shares of Common Stock may in the future
become subject to prior and superior rights and preferences in the event that
the Board of Directors establishes one or more additional classes of Common
Stock or one or more series of Preferred Stock. The Board of Directors has no
present plan to establish any such class or series.
 
     The limited partners of the Kenwood Partnership, who currently own an
aggregate of 206,250 shares of Common Stock of the Company and will receive an
aggregate of 922,500 additional shares of the Company's Common Stock upon
dissolution of the Kenwood Partnership, have preemptive rights with respect to
certain private placements of equity securities and certain debt securities of
the Company pursuant to a Shareholder Agreement dated as of September 30, 1995.
These preemptive rights will terminate immediately prior to the Effective Date.
 
CLASS A WARRANTS
 
     The Class A Warrants included as part of the Units being offered hereby
will be issued under and governed by the provisions of a Warrant Agreement (the
"Warrant Agreement") between the Company and Norwest Bank Minnesota, N.A. as
Warrant Agent (the "Warrant Agent"). The following summary of the
 
                                       29
<PAGE>   31
 
Warrant Agreement is not complete, and is qualified in its entirety by reference
to the Warrant Agreement, a copy of which has been filed as an exhibit to the
Registration Statement of which this Prospectus is a part.
 
     Commencing 10 trading days after the Effective Date, the shares of Common
Stock and the Class A Warrants offered as part of the Units will be detachable
and separately transferable. One Class A Warrant entitles the holder
("Warrantholder") thereof to purchase one share of Common Stock during the four
years following the Effective Date, subject to earlier redemption, provided that
at such time a current prospectus relating to the shares of Common Stock
issuable upon exercise of the Class A Warrants is in effect and the issuance of
such shares is qualified for sale or exempt from qualification under applicable
state securities laws. Each Class A Warrant will be exercisable at an exercise
price of $6.50 per Warrant, subject to adjustment in certain events.
 
     The Class A Warrants are subject to redemption by the Company beginning 90
days after the Effective Date, on not less than 30 days' written notice, at a
price of $.01 per Warrant at any time following a period of 14 consecutive
trading days where the per share average closing bid price of the Common Stock
exceeds $7.00 (subject to adjustment), provided that a current prospectus
covering the shares issuable upon the exercise of the Class A Warrants is then
effective under federal securities laws. For these purposes, the closing bid
price of the Common Stock shall be determined by the closing bid price as
reported by Nasdaq so long as the Common Stock is quoted on Nasdaq and, if the
Common Stock is listed on a national securities exchange, shall be determined by
the last reported sale price on the primary exchange on which the Common Stock
is traded. Holders of Class A Warrants will automatically forfeit all rights
thereunder except the right to receive the $.01 redemption price per Warrant
unless the Class A Warrants are exercised before they are redeemed.
 
     The Warrantholders are not entitled to vote, receive dividends or exercise
any of the rights of holders of shares of Common Stock for any purpose. The
Class A Warrants are in registered form and may be presented for transfer,
exchange or exercise at the office of the Warrant Agent. Although the Company
has applied for listing of the Class A Warrants on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market,
there is currently no established market for the Class A Warrants, and there is
no assurance that any such market will develop.
 
     The Warrant Agreement provides for adjustment of the exercise price and the
number of shares of Common Stock purchasable upon exercise of the Class A
Warrants to protect Warrantholders against dilution in certain events, including
stock dividends, stock splits, reclassification, and any combination of Common
Stock, or the merger, consolidation, or disposition of substantially all the
assets of the Company.
 
     The Class A Warrants may be exercised upon surrender of the certificate
therefor on or prior to the expiration date (or earlier redemption date) at the
offices of the Warrant Agent, with the form of "Election to Purchase" on the
reserve side of the certificate properly completed and executed as indicated,
accompanied by payment of the full exercise price (by certified or cashier's
check payable to the order of the Company) for the number of Class A Warrants
being exercised.
 
RECENT PRIVATE PLACEMENTS OF COMMON STOCK
 
     In July 1997, the Company concluded the private placement of 499,804 shares
of Common Stock at $3.00 per share. The Company realized net proceeds of
approximately $1,400,000. These proceeds were used for working capital purposes.
 
     In June 1997, the Company concluded the private placement of 1,663,085
shares of Common Stock at $3.00 per share. The Company realized net proceeds of
approximately $4,350,000. Of these net proceeds, $1,200,000 was used to repay a
$1.2 million working capital loan from PNC Bank, Ohio, National Association,
which loan had been guaranteed by Mr. King personally. An additional $675,000
was used to complete construction and development of the Kenwood Unit, $850,000
has been or is being used for new features for the Kenwood Unit, approximately
$200,000 has been used for development and execution of the lease at the Mall of
America, and the balance was utilized for working capital, including operating
losses.
 
     The Underwriter acted as the selling agent (the "Agent") with respect to
these equity offerings. The Agent received sales commissions equal to 8% of the
gross proceeds of the offering plus a non-accountable
 
                                       30
<PAGE>   32
 
expense allowance of 2% of gross proceeds. The Agent also received four-year
warrants to purchase 199,205 shares of the Company's Common Stock at an exercise
price of $3.75 per share.
 
SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
   
     Upon completion of this Offering, there will be 7,899,289 shares of Common
Stock issued and outstanding (8,274,289 if the Underwriter's over-allotment
option is exercised in full). The shares purchased in this Offering will be
freely tradeable without registration or other restriction under the 1933 Act,
except for any shares purchased by an "affiliate" of the Company (as defined in
the Act).
    
 
   
     All the currently outstanding shares were issued in reliance upon the
"private placement" exemptions provided by the Act and are deemed restricted
securities within the meaning of Rule 144 ("Restricted Shares"). Restricted
Shares may not be sold unless they are registered under the Act or are sold
pursuant to an applicable exemption from registration, including an exemption
under Rule 144. A total of 4,438,288 Restricted Shares will become eligible for
sale, assuming all of the other requirements of Rule 144 have been satisfied, as
follows: 1,857,001 shares upon the Effective Date (except that holders of
1,510,933 of such shares have agreed not to sell or otherwise dispose of such
shares for 90 days after the Effective Date), 1,092,400 shares in the fourth
quarter of 1997 (except that the holders of such 1,092,400 shares have agreed
not to sell or otherwise dispose of such shares for 90 days after the Effective
Date), 800,685 shares in the second quarter of 1998, and 739,203 shares in the
third quarter of 1998.
    
 
     Rule 144 provides that if at least one year has elapsed since restricted
shares of Common Stock were last acquired from the Company or an affiliate of
the Company, the holder is generally entitled to sell, within any three-month
period, a number of shares that does not exceed the greater of 1% of the shares
of Common Stock then outstanding or the reported average weekly trading volume
of the Common Stock during the four calendar weeks immediately preceding the
date on which notice of the sale is sent to the SEC. Sales under Rule 144 are
subject to certain manner of sale restrictions, notice requirements and
availability of current public information concerning the Company. A person who
is not an affiliate of the Company during the three months preceding the sale
generally may sell shares without regard to the volume limitations, manner of
sale provision, notice requirements or the availability of public information
concerning the Company, provided that at least two years have elapsed since the
shares were last acquired from the Company or an affiliate.
 
   
     In general, under Rule 701 as currently in effect, any employee, consultant
or advisor of the Company who purchases shares from the Company by exercising a
stock option outstanding on the date of the Offering is eligible to resell such
shares 90 days after the date of the Prospectus in reliance on Rule 144, but
need not comply with certain restrictions contained in Rule 144, including the
holding period requirement. After the Offering, the Company intends to register,
through a Form S-8 registration statement, 750,000 shares of Common Stock that
are reserved for issuance under the Stock Option Plan. See "Management." After
the effective date of such registration statement, shares issued upon exercise
of outstanding options would generally be eligible for immediate resale in the
public market, subject to vesting under the applicable option agreements.
    
 
   
     Following this Offering, the Company cannot predict the effect, if any,
that sales of the Common Stock or the availability of such Common Stock for sale
will have on the market price prevailing from time to time. Nevertheless, sales
by existing shareholders of substantial amounts of Common Stock could adversely
affect prevailing market prices for the Common Stock if and when a public market
exists. The Company's executive officers, directors and 5% shareholders have
agreed that they will not sell, grant any option for the sale of, or otherwise
dispose of any equity securities of the Company (or any securities convertible
into or exercisable or exchangeable for equity securities of the Company) for a
period of 180 days after the Effective Date without the prior written consent of
the Underwriter. Holders of an aggregate of 2,162,889 shares of the Company's
Common Stock purchased in two private placements in which the Underwriter acted
as selling agent agreed not to sell or otherwise dispose of any shares of Common
Stock for a period of 90 days after the Effective Date.
    
 
                                       31
<PAGE>   33
 
MINNESOTA ANTI-TAKEOVER LAW
 
     The Company is governed by the provisions of Sections 302A.671 and 302A.673
of the Minnesota Business Corporation Act. In general, Section 302A.671 provides
that the shares of a corporation acquired in a "control share acquisition" have
no voting rights unless voting rights are approved in a prescribed manner. A
"control share acquisition" is an acquisition, directly or indirectly, of
beneficial ownership of shares that would, when added to all other shares
beneficially owned by the acquiring person, entitle the acquiring person to have
voting power of 20% or more in the election of directors. In general, Section
302A.673 prohibits a publicly-held Minnesota corporation from engaging in a
"business combination" with an "interested shareholder" for a period of four
years after the date of the transaction in which the person became an interested
shareholder, unless the business combination is approved in a prescribed manner.
"Business combination" includes mergers, asset sales and other transactions
resulting in a financial benefit to the interested shareholder. An "interested
shareholder" is a person who is the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of
10% or more of the corporation's voting stock or who is an affiliate or
associate of the corporation and at any time within four years prior to the date
in question was the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of 10% or more of
the corporation's voting stock.
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
     Norwest Bank Minnesota, N.A. is the transfer agent and registrar for the
Common Stock.
 
                                  UNDERWRITING
 
   
     Under the terms and subject to the conditions contained in the Underwriting
Agreement, dated the effective date of this offering, R.J. Steichen & Company
(the "Underwriter") has agreed to purchase from the Company, and the Company has
agreed to sell to the Underwriter, an aggregate of 2,500,000 Units.
    
 
     The Underwriting Agreement provides that the Underwriter will be obligated
to purchase, subject to the terms and conditions set forth therein, all of the
Units being sold pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement (other than the Units
covered by the over-allotment option) if any of the Units being sold pursuant to
the Underwriting Agreement are purchased.
 
   
     The Company has been advised by the Underwriter that the Underwriter
proposes to offer the 2,500,000 Units at a Price to Public of $5.00 per Unit and
to certain selected dealers at such price less a concession not in excess of
$.24 per Unit to certain other dealers who are members of the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. After the initial public offering, the
Price to Public and other selling terms may be changed by the Underwriter. The
Underwriter does not intend to confirm sales to any account over which it has
discretionary authority.
    
 
   
     In the Underwriting Agreement, the Company and the Underwriter have agreed
to indemnify each other (including officers, directors and control persons of
each other) against certain liabilities under the 1933 Act, or to contribute to
payments which the Underwriter may be required to make in respect thereof.
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the 1933 Act may be
permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the Company pursuant
to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the Company has been advised that in
the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is
against public policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.
    
 
   
     The Company has granted to the Underwriter an option, exercisable within 45
days after the date of this Prospectus, to purchase up to an additional 375,000
Units at the Price to Public, less the Underwriting Discount shown on the cover
page of this Prospectus. This option may only be exercised in whole or in part,
but only for the purpose of covering any over-allotments in the sale of the
Units offered hereby.
    
 
   
     The Company's executive officers, directors and 5% shareholders have agreed
that they will not sell, grant any option for the sale of, or otherwise dispose
of any equity securities of the Company (or any securities convertible into or
exercisable or exchangeable for equity securities of the Company) for a period
of 180 days after the Effective Date without the prior written consent of the
Underwriter. Holders of an aggregate of
    
 
                                       32
<PAGE>   34
 
   
2,162,889 shares of the Company's Common Stock purchased in two private
placements in which the Underwriter acted as selling agent agreed not to sell or
otherwise dispose of any shares of Common Stock for a period of 90 days after
the Effective Date.
    
 
   
     The Company has agreed to pay the Underwriter a nonaccountable expense
allowance of 2% of the aggregate Total Price to Public of the Units or $250,000
($287,500 if the Underwriter's over-allotment option is exercised in full).
    
 
   
     The Company has agreed to sell to the Underwriter, for $50.00, five-year
warrants to purchase 250,000 shares of Common Stock of the Company at a price
per share equal to 120% of the Price to Public (the "Underwriter's Warrant").
The Underwriter's Warrant is exercisable commencing one year from the Effective
Date and for a period of four years thereafter. The Underwriter's Warrant
contains anti-dilution provisions providing for appropriate adjustments to the
exercise price and the number of shares on the occurrence of certain events. The
shares of Common Stock received upon exercise of the Underwriter's Warrant may
participate in any securities registration by the Company, at the Company's
expense, during the term of the Warrant and for two years thereafter unless and
to the extent that, in the judgment of the underwriter of such offering, the
market for the securities to be sold by the Company would be adversely affected
thereby. In addition, the holders of such shares have a one-time right to demand
registration of the shares during the term of the Warrant, at the Company's
expense, if and when registration of the Company's securities on Form S-3
becomes available under the 1933 Act. The Underwriter's Warrant also has a
cashless exercise option. Any profits realized by the Underwriter upon the sale
of the Underwriter's Warrant or the securities issuable upon exercise thereof
may be deemed to constitute additional underwriting compensation.
    
 
     In November 1996 through July 1997, the Company sold an aggregate of
2,162,889 shares of Common Stock in two private placements in which the
Underwriter acted as selling agent. The Underwriter received agent's commissions
of approximately $597,616 and warrants to purchase an aggregate of 199,205
shares of Common Stock exercisable at $3.75 per share.
 
     At the request of the Company, up to 10% of the Units offered hereby may be
reserved for sale to persons designated by the Company. The price of such Units
will be the Price to Public set forth on the cover of this Prospectus.
 
     Prior to this Offering, there has been no public market for the shares.
Consequently, the Price to Public of the Units and the exercise price of the
Class A Warrants were arbitrarily determined through negotiation between the
Company and the Underwriter and bears no relation to the Company's current
earnings, book value, net worth, financial statement criteria of value, the
history of and prospects for the industry in which the Company principally
competes or the capability of the Company's management. There can be no
assurance that the price at which the Units, the Class A Warrants or the Common
Stock will sell in the public market after this Offering will not be lower than
the price at which they are sold by the Underwriter.
 
     The foregoing is a summary of the material provisions of the Underwriting
Agreement and the Underwriter's Warrant. Copies of such documents have been
filed as exhibits to the Registration Statement of which this Prospectus is a
part.
 
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
 
     The validity of the Units offered hereby will be passed upon for the
Company by Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand, LLP, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Certain
legal matters relating to the sale of the Units of Common Stock will be passed
upon for the Underwriter by Doherty Rumble & Butler, P.A., Minneapolis,
Minnesota.
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
     The financial statements of Hotel Discovery, Inc. at December 29, 1996 and
for each of the two years in the period ended December 29, 1996 appearing in
this Prospectus and Registration Statement have been audited by Ernst & Young,
LLP, independent auditors, as set forth in their report appearing elsewhere
herein
 
                                       33
<PAGE>   35
 
and are included in reliance upon such report given upon the authority of such
firm as experts in accounting and auditing.
 
                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
     The Company is not a reporting company under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended. The Company has filed with the Washington, D.C. Office of the
Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") a Registration Statement
on Form SB-2 under the Act with respect to the Common Stock offered hereby. This
Prospectus filed as a part of the Registration Statement does not contain all of
the information contained in the Registration Statement and the exhibits
thereto, certain portions of which have been omitted in accordance with the
rules and regulations of the Commission. For further information with respect to
the Company and the securities offered hereby, reference is made to such
Registration Statement including the exhibits and schedules thereto. Statements
contained in this Prospectus as to the contents of any contract, agreement or
other documents are not necessarily complete, and in each instance, reference is
made to such contract or other document filed as an exhibit to the Registration
Statement, each such statement being qualified in all respects by such
reference. The Registration Statement and exhibits may be inspected without
charge and copied at the Washington office of the Commission, 450 Fifth Street,
N.W., Washington, DC 20549, and copies of such material may be obtained at
prescribed rates from the Commission's Public Reference Section at the same
address.
 
                                       34
<PAGE>   36
 
                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PAGE
                                                              ----
<S>                                                           <C>
Report of Independent Auditors..............................  F-1
Audited Financial Statements:
  Balance Sheet.............................................  F-2
  Statements of Operations..................................  F-3
  Statements of Shareholders' Equity........................  F-4
  Statements of Cash Flows..................................  F-5
Notes to Financial Statements...............................  F-6
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   37
 
                         REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
 
To the Board of Directors and
Shareholders of Hotel Discovery, Inc.,
 
     We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Hotel Discovery, Inc. as
of December 29, 1996 and the related statements of operations, shareholders'
equity, and cash flows for the years ended December 31, 1995 and December 29,
1996. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audits.
 
     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the financial position of Hotel Discovery, Inc. at
December 29, 1996 and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the
years ended December 31, 1995 and December 29, 1996 in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles.
 
                                          ERNST & YOUNG, LLP
 
Cincinnati, Ohio
August 20, 1997
 
                                       F-1
<PAGE>   38
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                                 BALANCE SHEET
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                DECEMBER 29,      JUNE 29,
                                                                    1996            1997
                                                                ------------      --------
                                                                                (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                             <C>             <C>
                           ASSETS
CURRENT ASSETS:
  Cash and cash equivalents.................................     $2,707,561     $ 1,998,056
  Inventory.................................................        138,757         131,987
  Other current assets......................................         91,575         205,936
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total current assets...................................      2,937,893       2,335,979
                                                                 ----------     -----------
PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
  Building..................................................      1,900,547       1,900,547
  Leasehold improvements....................................      1,452,635       1,584,677
  Equipment and fixtures....................................        902,334       1,218,538
                                                                 ----------     -----------
                                                                  4,255,516       4,703,762
  Less: accumulated depreciation............................        (25,000)       (300,000)
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total property and equipment, net......................      4,230,516       4,403,762
                                                                 ----------     -----------
OTHER ASSETS................................................         51,841         233,024
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total assets...........................................     $7,220,250     $ 6,972,765
                                                                 ==========     ===========
            LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
CURRENT LIABILITIES:
  Short-term notes payable..................................     $2,500,000     $ 2,800,000
  Accounts payable..........................................        803,885         751,197
  Accrued expenses..........................................        538,637          14,466
  Salaries and wages payable................................        174,882          36,583
  Advances payable to principal shareholder.................        447,787         348,430
  Current portion of long-term debt.........................         69,420          69,420
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total current liabilities..............................      4,534,611       4,020,096
LONG-TERM DEBT, LESS CURRENT PORTION........................        924,795         895,870
CONVERTIBLE PROMISSORY NOTES PAYABLE........................        150,000         150,000
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total liabilities......................................      5,609,406       5,065,966
                                                                 ----------     -----------
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (NOTE 7)
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY:
  Common stock (.01 par value, 100,000,000 shares authorized
     and 3,945,400 and 4,899,485 shares issued and
     outstanding)...........................................         39,454          48,995
  Additional paid-in capital................................      5,013,126       7,581,231
  Less: common stock subscribed.............................              0        (600,000)
  Accumulated deficit.......................................     (3,441,736)     (5,123,427)
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total shareholders' equity.............................      1,610,844       1,906,799
                                                                 ----------     -----------
     Total liabilities and shareholders' equity.............     $7,220,250     $ 6,972,765
                                                                 ==========     ===========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes
 
                                       F-2
<PAGE>   39
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      YEAR ENDED             TWENTY-SIX WEEKS ENDED
                                              ---------------------------   ------------------------
                                              DECEMBER 31,   DECEMBER 29,    JUNE 30,     JUNE 29,
                                                  1995           1996          1996         1997
                                              ------------   ------------    --------     --------
                                                                                  (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                           <C>            <C>            <C>          <C>
NET SALES...................................   $        0    $   104,129    $        0   $ 1,864,564
                                               ----------    -----------    ----------   -----------
COSTS AND EXPENSES:
  Food and beverage costs...................            0         43,324             0       612,115
  Labor and benefits........................            0         85,407             0     1,036,302
  Restaurant operating expenses.............            0        155,832             0       602,055
  Depreciation and amortization.............            0         25,000             0       275,000
  Selling, general and administrative
     expenses...............................       14,775        138,209        44,122       765,573
  Pre-opening and development costs.........      923,482      1,970,452       413,889       189,423
                                               ----------    -----------    ----------   -----------
       Total costs and expenses.............      938,257      2,418,224       458,011     3,480,468
                                               ----------    -----------    ----------   -----------
LOSS FROM OPERATIONS........................     (938,257)    (2,314,095)     (458,011)   (1,615,904)
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE):
  Interest (expense)........................       (2,209)       (13,507)            0       (92,503)
  Interest income...........................            0              0        10,950        26,716
                                               ----------    -----------    ----------   -----------
       Total other income (expense).........       (2,209)       (13,507)       10,950       (65,787)
                                               ----------    -----------    ----------   -----------
       Net loss.............................   $ (940,466)   $(2,327,602)   $ (447,061)  $(1,681,691)
                                               ==========    ===========    ==========   ===========
Shares used in per share calculations.......    3,362,611      4,355,187     4,286,100     5,058,240
                                               ==========    ===========    ==========   ===========
Net loss per share..........................   $     (.28)   $      (.53)   $     (.10)  $      (.33)
                                               ==========    ===========    ==========   ===========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes
 
                                       F-3
<PAGE>   40
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                       STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    COMMON STOCK       ADDITIONAL
                                 -------------------    PAID-IN     COMMON STOCK   ACCUMULATED
                                  SHARES     AMOUNT     CAPITAL      SUBSCRIBED      DEFICIT        TOTAL
                                  ------     ------    ----------   ------------   -----------      -----
<S>                              <C>         <C>       <C>          <C>            <C>           <C>
BALANCE -- JANUARY 1, 1995.....  1,650,000   $16,500   $    9,000   $   (25,500)   $  (173,668)  $  (173,668)
  Issuance of shares...........  1,350,000    13,500    2,461,000    (1,750,000)            --       724,500
  Cash received on stock
    subscribed.................         --        --           --       830,000             --       830,000
  Net loss.....................         --        --           --            --       (940,466)     (940,466)
                                 ---------   -------   ----------   -----------    -----------   -----------
BALANCE -- DECEMBER 31, 1995...  3,000,000    30,000    2,470,000      (945,500)    (1,114,134)      440,366
  Issuance of shares...........    945,400     9,454    2,543,126            --             --     2,552,580
  Cash received on stock
    subscribed.................         --        --           --       945,500             --       945,500
  Net loss.....................         --        --           --            --     (2,327,602)   (2,327,602)
                                 ---------   -------   ----------   -----------    -----------   -----------
BALANCE -- DECEMBER 29, 1996...  3,945,400    39,454    5,013,126            --     (3,441,736)    1,610,844
  Issuance of shares
    (unaudited)................    947,685     9,477    2,548,969      (690,000)            --     1,868,446
  Shares issued for services
    (unaudited)................      6,400        64       19,136            --             --        19,200
  Cash received on stock
    subscribed (unaudited).....         --        --           --        90,000             --        90,000
  Net loss (unaudited).........         --        --           --            --     (1,681,691)   (1,681,691)
                                 ---------   -------   ----------   -----------    -----------   -----------
BALANCE -- JUNE 29, 1997
            (UNAUDITED)........  4,899,485   $48,995   $7,581,231   $  (600,000)   $(5,123,427)  $ 1,906,799
                                 =========   =======   ==========   ===========    ===========   ===========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes
 
                                       F-4
<PAGE>   41
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      YEAR ENDED            TWENTY-SIX WEEKS ENDED
                                              ---------------------------   -----------------------
                                              DECEMBER 31,   DECEMBER 29,   JUNE 30,     JUNE 29,
                                                  1995           1996         1996         1997
                                              ------------   ------------   --------     --------
                                                                                  (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                           <C>            <C>            <C>         <C>
OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net loss..................................   $ (940,466)   $(2,327,602)   $(447,061)  $(1,681,691)
     Depreciation and amortization..........            0         25,000            0       275,000
     Shares issued for services.............            0              0            0        19,200
     Changes in operating assets and
       liabilities --
       Inventory............................            0       (138,757)           0         6,770
       Other current assets.................       20,000        (71,575)      20,000      (114,361)
       Other assets.........................            0              0       34,527      (177,183)
       Accounts payable.....................      (12,083)       775,228      148,731       (52,689)
       Accrued expenses and salaries and
          wages payable.....................            0        713,519            0      (662,470)
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
          Net cash used for operating
            activities......................     (932,549)    (1,024,187)    (243,803)   (2,387,424)
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
  Purchases of property and equipment.......     (811,969)    (3,443,544)    (996,684)     (448,245)
  Payment of organization costs.............            0              0         (165)       (4,000)
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
          Net cash used for investing
            activities......................     (811,969)    (3,443,544)    (996,849)     (452,245)
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Advances (payments) from shareholder......      637,221       (415,103)     (67,185)      (99,357)
  Net increase in short-term notes
     payable................................            0      2,500,000            0       300,000
  Proceeds from issuance of bank note.......            0      1,000,000            0             0
  Issuance of convertible notes payable.....            0        150,000      100,000             0
  Proceeds from issuance of equity..........      724,980      2,552,580            0     1,868,446
  Principal repayments on bank note.........            0         (5,785)           0       (28,925)
  Payments received on stock
     subscriptions..........................      830,000        945,500      915,000        90,000
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
          Net cash provided by financing
            activities......................    2,192,201      6,727,192      947,815     2,130,164
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND CASH
  EQUIVALENTS...............................      447,683      2,259,461     (292,837)     (709,505)
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, BEGINNING........          417        448,100      448,100     2,707,561
                                               ----------    -----------    ---------   -----------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, ENDING...........   $  448,100    $ 2,707,561    $ 155,263   $ 1,998,056
                                               ==========    ===========    =========   ===========
SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOWS INFORMATION:
  Cash paid for interest....................   $   60,000    $    45,000    $       0   $    65,787
  Cash paid for income taxes................   $        0    $         0    $       0   $         0
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes
 
                                       F-5
<PAGE>   42
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                       NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                    DECEMBER 29, 1996 AND DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
1. DESCRIPTION OF THE BUSINESS AND FORMATION OF THE COMPANY
 
     Hotel Discovery, Inc. (the "Company") owns and operates one restaurant in
Cincinnati Ohio (the "Kenwood Unit"). Prior to the opening of this restaurant on
December 19, 1996, the Company was in the development stage. In August 1997, the
Company reincorporated in the State of Minnesota and changed its name from Hotel
Mexico, Inc. to Hotel Discovery, Inc. and increased the number of authorized
shares to 100,000,000.
 
     On November 13, 1996, the Company was reorganized after Hotel Mexico, Inc.
was incorporated in the state of Ohio and became the owner of Hotel Mexico,
Inc.-predecessor and all the net assets of Kenwood Restaurant Limited
Partnership. The result of the reorganization is that the owners of Hotel
Mexico, Inc.-predecessor and the Partnership became the owners of all the
outstanding stock of Hotel Mexico, Inc.-successor. The reincorporation and
reorganization have been reflected retroactively and all share and per share
amounts have been adjusted.
 
     A demonstration and test restaurant, owned by the principal shareholder of
the Company, which opened in June 1994, was used in the development of the Hotel
Discovery concept. This restaurant operates using the Hotel Mexico name under a
license agreement with the Company.
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
INTERIM FINANCIAL DATA
 
     The unaudited balance sheet as of June 29, 1997 and the related statements
of operations, cash flows and shareholders' equity for the twenty-six week
period ended June 29, 1997 have been prepared in accordance with the accounting
policies in effect as of December 29, 1996 and for the two years ended December
29, 1996. In the opinion of management such interim financial statements contain
all adjustments (all of which are normal and recurring in nature) necessary to
present fairly the Company's financial position and results of operations and
cash flows. The results of operations for the twenty-six week period ended June
29, 1997 is not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the
full year.
 
FISCAL YEAR
 
     The Company has adopted a 52/53 week accounting period ending on the Sunday
nearest December 31 of each year.
 
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
 
     Cash and cash equivalents includes cash on hand, bank deposits and liquid
money market investments with maturities of 90 days or less.
 
INVENTORY
 
     Restaurant food and supplies inventories are stated at the lower of cost
(determined using the first-in first-out method) or market.
 
ADVERTISING COSTS
 
     The Company expenses advertising costs as incurred. Advertising expense was
$0 and $98,673 for 1995 and 1996.
 
                                       F-6
<PAGE>   43
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
PRE-OPENING AND DEVELOPMENT COSTS
 
     Pre-opening costs such as staff training, advertising, rent, and concept
development, menu design, consultant and similar costs of a development nature
are expensed as incurred.
 
PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment acquired are recorded at cost and includes interest
on funds borrowed to finance construction. Capitalized interest in 1996 was
$45,000. Improvements are capitalized, while repair and maintenance expenses are
charged to operations as incurred. Leasehold improvements are being amortized
using the straight line method over the shorter of the estimated useful life or
the lease term. Furniture and equipment are being depreciated on a straight-line
method over 5 to 15 years.
 
INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company accounts for income taxes using the liability method to
recognize deferred income tax assets and liabilities. Deferred income taxes are
determined based upon the temporary differences between the financial statement
carrying amounts and the tax basis of assets and liabilities.
 
STOCK OPTIONS
 
     As permitted by Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123,
Accounting for Stock Based Compensation, the Company has chosen to account for
stock option grants using the intrinsic value method prescribed in APB opinion
No. 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees. No options were granted during
the two years ended December 29, 1996.
 
RECENTLY ISSUED ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
 
     During 1996 the Company adopted Financial Accounting Standards Board
Statement No. 121 "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for
Long-Lived Assets to be Disposed Of" (Statement 121). Statement 121 establishes
accounting standards for the recognition and measurement of impairment of
long-lived assets, certain identifiable intangibles, and goodwill either to be
held or disposed of. The adoption of Statement 121 did not have an impact on the
Company's financial position or results of operations.
 
USE OF ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and the
accompanying notes. Actual results could differ from the estimates.
 
NET LOSS PER COMMON SHARE
 
     Net loss per common share is computed by dividing net loss by the weighted
average number of common shares outstanding and dilutive common equivalent
shares assumed to be outstanding during each period. Common equivalent shares
consist of dilutive options to purchase common stock. However, pursuant to
certain rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the calculation also
includes equity securities, including options and warrants, issued within one
year of an initial public offering with an issue price less than the initial
public offering price, even if the effect is anti-dilutive. The treasury stock
method was used in determining the dilutive effect of such issuances.
 
                                       F-7
<PAGE>   44
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
     The Company will adopt in the fiscal year ending December 28, 1997,
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 128 "Earnings per Share" (SFAS
No. 128), which was issued in February 1997. SFAS No. 128 requires disclosures
of basic earnings per share (EPS) and diluted EPS, which replaces the existing
primary EPS and fully diluted EPS, as defined by APB No. 15. Basic EPS is
computed by dividing net income by the weighted average number of shares of
Common Stock, outstanding during the year. Dilutive EPS is computed similar to
EPS as previously reported provided that, when applying the treasury stock
method to common equivalent shares, the Company must use its average share price
for the period rather than the more dilutive greater of the average share price
or end-of-period share price required by APB No. 15.
 
3. DEBT
 
     The Company borrowed $1,000,000 in August 1996 under a leasehold mortgage
term loan from a bank. The loan bears interest at 9.06%, payments of principal
and interest are due monthly in the amount of $5,785 through October 1999 at
which time the remaining balance is due in full.
 
     In December 1996, the Company borrowed an additional $2,500,000 under a
mortgage term loan from a bank. The loan bears interest at 5.94%, payments of
interest only are due through January 1998 at which time the entire principal is
due. The loan has been classified as short-term as it was repaid in full in
January 1997.
 
     The loans are secured by the leasehold mortgage and substantially all
assets of the Kenwood Unit. Additionally the principal shareholder has
personally guaranteed the loans. Related loan agreements require minimum working
capital, tangible net worth and debt coverage ratios and restrict additional
indebtedness or asset sales. The fair value of the Company's debt approximates
market.
 
     Aggregate maturities of long-term debt are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                             <C>
1997........................................................    $ 69,420
1998........................................................      69,420
1999........................................................     855,375
                                                                --------
                                                                $994,215
                                                                ========
</TABLE>
 
     In May and June 1997, the Company borrowed $2,800,000 under loan agreements
with banks. The loans have been classified as short-term as they were repaid in
full in July 1997.
 
4. CONVERTIBLE PROMISSORY NOTES PAYABLE
 
     In June and July 1996, the Company executed three convertible promissory
notes in the total amount of $150,000. The notes mature on July 1, 1999, bearing
interest at 8.01% per annum. The notes are convertible into 39,600 shares of the
Company's common stock at maturity, at the payee's option.
 
5. INCOME TAXES
 
     Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized based on the difference
between financial statement amounts and tax carrying values of assets and
liabilities. Due to the limited history of the Company's operations, a valuation
allowance was established for the net deferred tax assets. For the two years
ending
 
                                       F-8
<PAGE>   45
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
5. INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)
December 29, 1996, the Company did not record a benefit from income taxes.
Significant components of the Company's deferred tax assets and liabilities are
as follows at December 29, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                             <C>
Deferred tax assets:
  Net operating loss carryforward...........................    $  685,700
  Deferral of pre-opening expenses..........................       336,200
  Other tax deferred items..................................        67,200
                                                                ----------
Total deferred tax assets...................................     1,089,100
Less: valuation allowance...................................     1,089,100
                                                                ----------
Net deferred tax assets.....................................           -0-
Deferred tax liabilities....................................           -0-
                                                                ----------
Net deferred tax assets.....................................    $      -0-
                                                                ==========
</TABLE>
 
     The Company's net operating loss carryforward expires in 2011.
 
     The following is a reconciliation of the tax expense recorded in these
financial statements to the expected tax rate based on statutory rates.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           FOR THE YEARS ENDED
                                                    ---------------------------------
                                                    DECEMBER 29,         DECEMBER 31,
                                                        1996                 1995
                                                    ------------         ------------
<S>                                                 <C>                  <C>
Net loss..........................................  $(2,327,602)          $(940,466)
Expected rate.....................................           40%                 40%
                                                    -----------           ---------
Expected tax benefit..............................     (931,000)           (376,200)
Tax loss attributable to predecessor entities.....           --             218,100
Valuation allowance...............................      931,000             158,100
                                                    -----------           ---------
Tax benefit recognized............................  $       -0-           $     -0-
                                                    ===========           =========
</TABLE>
 
6. SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
STOCK OPTION PLAN
 
     In January 1997, the Board of Directors adopted the 1997 Stock Option and
Incentive Compensation Plan (the "Plan") and reserved 500,000 common shares for
issuance under the Plan. The Plan is administered by a stock option committee of
the Board of Directors which has the discretion to determine the number of
shares granted, the price of the option, the term of the option and the time
period over which the option may be exercised.
 
     As of August 20, 1997 the Company had granted 452,666 options to purchase
the Company's stock for $3.00 per share under the Plan. Additionally, 25,000
options have been granted to a Director outside of the Plan at $3.34 per share.
As of August 20, 1997, 50,000 options are exercisable, the remaining options
become exercisable over the next three years. The total options that will be
exercisable at each year end are: 1997--50,000, 1998--315,999, 1999--459,332 and
2000--477,666.
 
WARRANTS
 
     In 1997, the Company granted 214,995 warrants. The warrants are immediately
exercisable at a price of $3.75 per share and expire in five years.
 
                                       F-9
<PAGE>   46
 
                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
6. SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)
CAPITAL STOCK
 
     In June 1997, in connection with the Company's reincorporation in
Minnesota, the authorized capital of the Company increased to 100,000,000
shares. As allowed under Minnesota law the Board of Directors is authorized to
designate and issue shares in such classes or series (including classes or
series of preferred stock) as it deems appropriate and to establish the rights,
preferences, and privileges of such shares.
 
7. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
 
     The Company has entered into a long-term operating ground lease, which
expires in 2012, for the Kenwood Unit. The agreement requires the Company to pay
all maintenance, taxes, operating expenses and a percentage (4%) of sales over
stated thresholds.
 
     The future minimum base rent payments are:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                             <C>
1997........................................................    $  153,996
1998........................................................       153,996
1999........................................................       153,996
2000........................................................       153,996
2001........................................................       153,996
Thereafter..................................................     1,770,960
                                                                ----------
                                                                $2,540,940
                                                                ==========
</TABLE>
 
     On August 14, 1997, the Company entered into a twelve year lease with Mall
of America Company for a 16,000 square-foot restaurant space in Mall of America.
The minimum annual rent is $405,375 plus a percentage rent for a total annual
rent of up to 6% of gross sales. The minimum rent has been waived for the first
year.
 
8. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
     The principal shareholder, director and executive officer provided
essentially all of the Company's working capital in the development stage. The
working capital was provided by direct advances to the Company and reimbursement
for various business costs and expenses incurred by the shareholder on behalf of
the Company. During the years ended December 29,1996 and December 31, 1995 the
maximum amount of such indebtedness outstanding at any time was $1,213,469, and
$862,891, respectively. At December 29,1996 and December 31, 1995, the amount
outstanding of such indebtedness was $447,787 and $862,891. Included in these
amounts were concept development costs reimbursed to a demonstration restaurant
owned and operated by the principal shareholder in the amount of $278,101 for
the year ended December 29, 1996 and $433,996 for the year ended December 31,
1995. The Company pays interest at 11.5% on these advances. There are no fixed
repayment terms on the advances.
 
9. SALE OF SHARES AND PROPOSED TRANSACTION
 
     In July 1997, the Company sold an additional 499,804 common shares at $3.00
per share.
 
   
     The Board of Directors has initiated the completion of a public offering.
    
 
                                      F-10
<PAGE>   47
 
                                 [PHOTOGRAPHS]
<PAGE>   48
 
             ======================================================
 
     NO DEALER, SALESPERSON OR OTHER PERSON HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY
INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS
PROSPECTUS IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFER MADE BY THIS PROSPECTUS, AND, IF GIVEN
OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING
BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE COMPANY OR THE UNDERWRITER. NEITHER THE DELIVERY OF THIS
PROSPECTUS NOR ANY SALE MADE HEREUNDER SHALL UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES CREATE ANY
IMPLICATION THAT THERE HAS BEEN NO CHANGE IN THE AFFAIRS OF THE COMPANY SINCE
THE DATE HEREOF. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER OR SOLICITATION BY
ANYONE IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION IS NOT AUTHORIZED
OR IN WHICH THE PERSON MAKING SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION IS NOT QUALIFIED TO DO
SO OR TO ANYONE TO WHOM IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION.
 
                          ---------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          PAGE
                                          ----
<S>                                       <C>
Prospectus Summary......................     3
Risk Factors............................     6
Use of Proceeds.........................    11
Dilution................................    12
Dividend Policy.........................    13
Capitalization..........................    13
Management's Discussion and Analysis of
  Financial Condition and Results of
  Operations............................    14
Business................................    17
Management..............................    24
Reorganization..........................    26
Certain Transactions....................    27
Principal Shareholders..................    28
Description of Securities...............    29
Underwriting............................    32
Legal Matters...........................    33
Experts.................................    33
Additional Information..................    34
Index to Financial Statements...........   F-1
</TABLE>
    
 
                          ----------------------------
 
     UNTIL               , 1997 (25 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF THE PROSPECTUS), ALL
DEALERS EFFECTING TRANSACTIONS IN THE REGISTERED SECURITIES, WHETHER OR NOT
PARTICIPATING IN THIS DISTRIBUTION, MAY BE REQUIRED TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS.
THIS IS IN ADDITION TO THE OBLIGATION OF DEALERS TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS WHEN
ACTING AS UNDERWRITERS AND WITH RESPECT TO THEIR UNSOLD ALLOTMENTS OR
SUBSCRIPTIONS.
 
             ======================================================
             ======================================================
                           HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC. LOGO
   
                                2,500,000 UNITS
    
 
   
                         CONSISTING OF 2,500,000 SHARES
    
   
                         OF COMMON STOCK AND 2,500,000
    
                          REDEEMABLE CLASS A WARRANTS
                         ------------------------------
 
                                   PROSPECTUS
                         ------------------------------
                           RJ STEICHEN & COMPANY LOGO
                                            , 1997
 
             ======================================================
<PAGE>   49
 
                                    PART II
                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
 
ITEM 24. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.
 
     The Company is governed by Minnesota Statutes Chapter 302A. Minnesota
Statutes Section 302A.521 provides that a corporation shall indemnify any person
made or threatened to be made a party to any proceeding by reason of the former
or present official capacity of such person against judgments, penalties, fines,
including, without limitation, excise taxes assessed against such person with
respect to an employee benefit plan, settlements, and reasonable expenses,
including attorney's fees and disbursements, incurred by such person in
connection with the proceeding, if, with respect to the acts or omissions of
such person complained of in the proceeding, such person has not been
indemnified by another organization or employee benefit plan for the same
expenses with respect to the same acts or omissions; acted in good faith;
received no improper personal benefit and Section 302A.255, if applicable, has
been satisfied; in the case of a criminal proceeding, had no reasonable cause to
believe the conduct was unlawful; and in the case of acts or omissions by
persons in their official capacity for the corporation, reasonably believed that
the conduct was in the best interests of the corporation, or in the case of acts
or omissions by persons in their capacity for other organizations, reasonably
believed that the conduct was not opposed to the best interests of the
corporation.
 
     As permitted by Section 302A.251 of the Minnesota Statutes, the Articles of
Incorporation of the Company provide that a director shall have no personal
liability to the Company and its shareholders for breach of his fiduciary duty
as a director, to the fullest extent permitted by law.
 
     The Underwriting Agreement contains provisions under which the small
business issuer on the one hand, and the Underwriter, on the other hand, have
agreed to indemnify each other (including officers and directors of the small
business issuer and the Underwriter and any person who may be deemed to control
the small business issuer or the Underwriter) against certain liabilities,
including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
 
ITEM 25. OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION.
 
     The estimated expenses in connection with the issuance and distribution of
the securities registered hereby, other than underwriting discounts and fees,
are set forth in the following table:
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                           <C>
SEC registration fee........................................  $ 10,007
NASD filing fee.............................................     3,875
Nasdaq listing fee..........................................    10,000
Legal fees and expenses.....................................    75,000
Accounting fees and expenses................................    40,000
Blue Sky fees and expenses..................................    20,000
Transfer agent fees and expenses............................     1,000
Printing and engraving expenses.............................    45,000
Miscellaneous...............................................    15,118
                                                              --------
  Total.....................................................  $220,000
                                                              ========
</TABLE>
    
 
ITEM 26. RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES.
 
     In connection with the initial capitalization of the Company in January
1994, the Company sold an aggregate of 1,750 shares of Common Stock to two
"accredited investors" as defined in Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended (the "Securities Act") for nominal consideration. Such shares were
split 825-to-1 in November 1996, and now represent 1,443,750 shares of the
Company. The Company believes that such sale of such Common Stock was exempt
from registration pursuant to Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rules 505
and/or 506 under Regulation D of the Securities Act.
 
                                      II-1
<PAGE>   50
 
     In October 1995, the Company and Kenwood Restaurant Limited Partnership, an
Ohio limited partnership formed in June 1995, raised gross proceeds of $2.5
million in a private placement of 250 shares of Common Stock of the Company
(which shares were split 825-to-1 in November 1996, and now represent 206,250
shares of the Company) and limited partnership interests in the Kenwood
Restaurant Limited Partnership to 19 "accredited investors." In a reorganization
of the Company which occurred in November 1996, the Kenwood Restaurant Limited
Partnership contributed all of its assets to the Company, including the Kenwood
Unit, in exchange for 1,350,000 shares of Common Stock of the Company. The
Company believes that such sale of such securities was exempt from registration
pursuant to Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and Rules 505 and/or 506 under
Regulation D of the Securities Act.
 
     From November 1996 through July 1997, the Company completed private
placements to "accredited investors" of an aggregate of 2,392,889 shares of
Common Stock at $3.00 per share. The net proceeds to the Company were
approximately $5.9 million. The Company believes that such sales of Common Stock
were exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(2) of the Securities Act and
Rule 506 under Regulation D of the Securities Act.
 
                                      II-2
<PAGE>   51
 
ITEM 27. EXHIBITS.
 
                                 EXHIBIT INDEX
 
   
<TABLE>
<C>    <S>
 1.1   Form of Underwriting Agreement (with form of Underwriter's
       Warrant)
 3.1   Articles of Incorporation*
 3.2   By-laws*
 4     Form of Warrant Agreement*
 5     Opinion of Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand, LLP*
10.1   Indenture of Lease dated November 9, 1994 between Phillip E.
       Stephens, Trustee and Kenwood Restaurant, Inc.; First
       Amendment to Lease dated May 3, 1995 by and between Phillip
       E. Stephens, Trustee and Kenwood Restaurant, Inc.; by Second
       Amendment to Lease dated           1996 between Phillip E.
       Stephens, Trustee and Kenwood Restaurant Limited
       Partnership; Second Amendment to Agreement dated October 18,
       1996 between Phillip E. Stephens, Trustee and Kenwood
       Restaurant Limited Partnership; and Addendum to Second
       Amendment to Lease dated October 18, 1996 between Phillip E.
       Stephens, Trustee and Kenwood Restaurant Limited Partnership
       (Kenwood Unit)*
10.2   Lease dated August 4, 1997 between Mall of America Company
       and Hotel Mexico, Inc. (Mall of America Unit)*
10.3   Loan Agreement by and among Kenwood Restaurant Limited
       Partnership and PNC Bank, Ohio, National Association*
10.4   Company's 1997 Stock Option and Compensation Plan*
10.5   Employment Agreement between the Company and Ronald K.
       Fuller dated March 17, 1997*
10.6   Amendment to Company's 1997 Stock Option and Compensation
       Plan
24.1   Consent of Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand, LLP (included in
       Exhibit 5)*
24.2   Consent of Ernst & Young LLP*
25     Powers of Attorney (included on page II-5)
27.1   Financial Data Schedule*
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
 
   
* Previously filed.
    
 
                                      II-3
<PAGE>   52
 
ITEM 28. UNDERTAKINGS.
 
     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Act may be
permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the small business
issuer pursuant to the foregoing provisions or otherwise, the small business
issuer has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange
Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act
and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification
against such liabilities (other than the payment by the small business issuer of
expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the
small business issuer in the successful defense of any action, suit or
proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in
connection with the securities being registered, the small business issuer will,
unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling
precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether
such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and
will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
 
     The undersigned small business issuer hereby undertakes that it will:
 
          (1) File, during any period in which it offers or sells securities, a
     post-effective amendment to this registration statement to (i) include any
     prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act; (ii) reflect
     in the prospectus any facts or events which, individually or together,
     represent a fundamental change in the information in the registration
     statement; and (iii) include any additional or changed material information
     on the plan of distribution.
 
          (2) For determining any liability under the Securities Act, treat the
     information omitted from the form of prospectus filed as part of this
     registration statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in a form
     of prospectus filed by the small business issuer under Rule 424(b)(1) or
     (4) or Rule 497(h) under the Securities Act as part of this registration
     statement as of the time the Commission declared it effective.
 
          (3) For determining any liability under the Securities Act, treat each
     post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus as a new
     registration statement for the securities offered in the registration
     statement, and that offering of the securities at that time as the initial
     bona fide offering of those securities.
 
     The small business issuer hereby undertakes to provide to the Underwriter
at the closing specified in the Underwriting Agreement certificates in such
denominations and registered in such names as required by the Underwriter to
permit prompt delivery to each purchaser.
 
                                      II-4
<PAGE>   53
 
                                   SIGNATURES
 
   
     In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the
registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all
of the requirements for filing on Form SB-2 and has authorized this Amendment
No. 1 to the Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized in the City of Minneapolis, State of
Minnesota, on September 17, 1997.
    
 
                                          HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.
 
                                          By      /s/ STEPHEN D. KING
 
                                          --------------------------------------
                                                     Stephen D. King
                                                Chairman of the Board and
                                                 Chief Executive Officer
 
                               POWER OF ATTORNEY
 
     Each person whose signature appears below constitutes and appoints Stephen
D. King, Ronald K. Fuller or William M. Mower, each or any of them, such
person's true and lawful attorney-in-fact and agent with full power of
substitution and resubstitution for such person and in such person's name, place
and stead, in any and all capacities, to sign any and all amendments (including
post-effective amendments) to this registration statement, and to file the same,
with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, granting unto said attorney-in-fact and
agent full power and authority to do and perform each and every act and thing
necessary or desirable to be done in and about the premises, as fully to all
intents and purposes as such person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that
said attorney-in-fact and agent, or his substitute or substitutes, may lawfully
do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.
 
   
     In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement has been signed by the following
persons in the capacities and on the dates stated.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
             SIGNATURE                              TITLE                        DATE
             ---------                              -----                        ----
<C>                                  <S>                                  <C>
 
        /s/ STEPHEN D. KING          Chairman of the Board and Chief      September 17, 1997
- -----------------------------------  Executive Officer
          Stephen D. King
 
       /s/ RONALD K. FULLER          President, Chief Operating Officer   September 17, 1997
- -----------------------------------  and Director (Chief Financial and
         Ronald K. Fuller            Chief Accounting Officer)
 
         /s/ THOMAS W. ORR           Director                             September 17, 1997
- -----------------------------------
           Thomas W. Orr
 
      /s/ MICHAEL L. KRIENIK         Director                             September 17, 1997
- -----------------------------------
        Michael L. Krienik
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-5

<PAGE>   1
                                                                EXHIBIT 1.1

   
         2,500,000 UNITS CONSISTING OF 2,500,000 SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
    
                                      AND
   
          2,500,000 REDEEMABLE CLASS A COMMON STOCK PURCHASE WARRANTS
    



                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.

                             UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT

                                                              ____________, 1997


R. J. Steichen & Company
One Financial Plaza
120 South Sixth Street
Minneapolis, MN  55402

Ladies and Gentlemen:

   
     Hotel Discovery, Inc., an Minnesota corporation (the "COMPANY"), proposes
to issue and sell to you (the "UNDERWRITER"), an aggregate of 2,500,000 Units
("UNITS"), each Unit consisting of one share of Common Stock ("COMMON STOCK")
and one Redeemable Class A Common Stock Purchase Warrant (the "WARRANT")
exercisable for a period of four (4) years commencing on the effective date of
the Registration Statement to purchase one share of Common Stock of the Company
at a price of $6.50 per share.  The Warrants shall be immediately exercisable
and are detachable and transferable commencing ten (10) trading days after the
effective date of the Registration Statement under the Act or at any earlier
time agreed to by the Underwriter and the Company.  The Warrants shall be
redeemable at the option of the Company at $.01 per Warrant at any time ninety
(90) days after the effective date and upon thirty (30) days' prior notice in
writing of the Company's intention to redeem, provided that the average closing
bid price for the Common Stock exceeds $7.00 per share (subject to adjustment)
for any 14 consecutive trading days prior to such notice, on such other terms
set forth in the Preliminary Prospectus (defined herein).
    

   
     The 2,500,000 Units to be purchased from the Company are referred to
herein as the "FIRM UNITS."  In addition, solely for the purpose of covering
overallotments with respect to the Firm Units, the Company proposes to grant to
the Underwriter, for its account, the option to purchase up to an additional
375,000 Units (the "OPTION UNITS").  The Firm Units and any Option Units
purchased pursuant to this Underwriting Agreement are herein referred to as the
"UNITS."
    


<PAGE>   2

      The Company hereby confirms its agreement with respect to the purchase of
the Units by the Underwriter.

      1.   REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE COMPANY.  The Company
represents and warrants to, and agrees with, the Underwriter as follows:

      (a)  The Company has prepared in conformity in all material respects with
      the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "ACT"),
      and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
      Commission (the "COMMISSION") thereunder, and has filed with the National
      Office of the Commission in Washington, D.C., a registration statement on
      Form SB-2, File No. 333-_________, including a Prospectus relating to the
      Units, and will file with the Commission before the effective date of the
      registration statement one or more amendments thereto.  Copies of such
      registration statement and amendments (including all forms of the
      preliminary prospectus) have been delivered to you.  Any such preliminary
      prospectus (as described in Rule 430 under the Act) included at any time
      as part of such registration statement is herein called a "PRELIMINARY
      PROSPECTUS."  As used herein, the term "REGISTRATION STATEMENT" shall,
      except where the context otherwise requires, mean said registration
      statement (and all exhibits thereto) as amended by all amendments filed
      prior to its effective date; and the term "PROSPECTUS" shall, except
      where the context otherwise requires, mean said final prospectus on file
      with the Commission when the Registration Statement becomes effective
      (except that, if the prospectus filed by the Company pursuant to Rule
      424(b) under Act shall differ from the prospectus included in the
      Registration Statement, the term "PROSPECTUS" shall, except where the
      context otherwise requires, mean the prospectus so filed pursuant to Rule
      424(b) from and after the date on which it shall have been first used.)
      Reference herein to the Registration Statement, to any Preliminary
      Prospectus, to the Prospectus or to any amendment of or supplement to the
      Prospectus includes all documents and information incorporated therein by
      reference.

      (b)  The Commission has not issued any order preventing or suspending the
      use of any Preliminary Prospectus, and each Preliminary Prospectus, at
      the time of filing thereof with the Commission, did not contain any
      untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact
      required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the
      statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they
      were made, not misleading; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that none of the
      representations and warranties in this subparagraph shall apply to
      statements in, or omissions from, any Preliminary Prospectus which are
      based upon and conform to written information furnished to the Company by
      or on behalf of you specifically for use in the preparation thereof.

      (c)  When the Registration Statement becomes effective and at all times
      subsequent thereto up to each Closing Date (defined hereinafter) and upon
      the effective date of any post-effective amendment to the Registration
      Statement, the Registration Statement and the Prospectus, and any
      amendments thereof or supplements thereto, will in all material respects
      conform to the requirements of the Act and of the applicable rules

                                       2
<PAGE>   3



      and regulations of the Commission thereunder (the "RULES AND
      REGULATIONS").  When the Registration Statement becomes effective and at
      all times subsequent thereto, up to each Closing Date and the effective
      date of any post-effective amendment to the Registration Statement,
      neither the Registration Statement (as amended, if the Company shall have
      filed with the Commission any post-effective amendment thereto), nor the
      Prospectus, will include an untrue statement of a material fact or omit
      to state any material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to
      make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under
      which they were made, not misleading; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that the Company
      makes no representations or warranties as to information contained in or
      omitted from the Registration Statement or the Prospectus, or any such
      amendment or supplement, in reliance upon and in conformity with written
      information furnished to the Company by you specifically for use in the
      preparation thereof.  There is no contract or document required to be
      described in the Registration Statement or Prospectus, or to be filed as
      an exhibit to the Registration Statement, which was not described or
      filed as required.

        (d)     [Deleted]

        (e)     Ernst & Young, LLP, the accountants who have examined certain
      financial statements and schedules of the Company, filed and to be filed
      with the Commission as part of the Registration Statement and the
      Prospectus, are independent public accountants within the meaning of the
      Act and the Rules and Regulations.  The financial statements of the
      Company, together with related notes and summaries thereof, set forth in
      the Registration Statement and Prospectus, in all material respects
      present fairly the financial position and results of operations and
      changes in financial position of the Company as of the dates and for the
      periods indicated.  All such financial statements (including the related
      notes) have been prepared in accordance with generally accepted
      accounting principles consistently applied throughout the periods
      concerned except as may be otherwise stated therein.

        (f)     Subsequent to the respective dates as of which information is 
      given in the Registration Statement and Prospectus, and other than as
      described in the Registration Statement and Prospectus, (i) the Company
      has not incurred any material liabilities or obligations, contingent or
      otherwise, or entered into any material transaction, except obligations
      incurred in the ordinary course of business that in the aggregate are not
      material; (ii) the Company has not paid or declared any dividend or other
      distribution on its Common Stock; (iii) there has not been any change in
      the Common Stock or increase in the long-term debt of the Company
      (including any capitalized lease obligation), or any issuance of options,
      warrants, or rights to purchase Common Stock of the Company, or any
      material adverse change in the business, financial position, results of
      operations, key personnel, capitalization, properties, or net worth of the
      Company, considered as a whole; and (iv) no material loss or damage
      (whether or not insured) to the property of the Company has been
      sustained.

                                       3
<PAGE>   4




          (g)   The Company has been duly incorporated and is validly existing
     as a corporation in good standing under the laws of its jurisdiction of
     incorporation, with full power and authority to own its properties and
     conduct its business as it is currently being carried on and as described
     in the Prospectus and is duly qualified to do business as a foreign
     corporation and is in good standing in all states or jurisdictions in which
     the ownership or lease of property or the conduct of its business requires
     such qualification and in which the failure to so qualify would have a
     material adverse effect on its business condition (financial or other), or
     properties.  The Company has all necessary and material authorizations,
     approvals and orders of and from all governmental regulatory officials and
     bodies to own its properties and conduct its business as described in the
     Prospectus and is conducting its business in substantial compliance with
     all applicable laws, rules and regulations of the jurisdictions in which it
     is conducting business.

          (h)      The Company is not in violation of its articles of
     incorporation, bylaws, or other governing documents and is not in default
     in the performance of any obligation, agreement or condition contained in
     any lease agreement or in any bond, debenture, note or any other evidence
     of indebtedness or in any material contract, indenture, loan agreement or
     license where such default would have a material adverse effect on the
     business condition (financial or other) or properties of the Company,
     considered as a whole which violation or default has not been waived. The
     consummation of the transactions herein contemplated and the fulfillment of
     the terms hereof will not conflict with or result in a material breach of
     any of the terms or provisions of, or constitute a material default under,
     the articles of incorporation or bylaws, or other governing documents of
     the Company, or any indenture, mortgage, agreement or other instrument to
     which the Company is a party or by which it is bound, or to which any
     property of the Company is subject, or conflict with or violate any law or
     any order, rule or regulation, applicable to the Company of any court, or
     of any federal or state regulatory body or administrative agency, having
     jurisdiction over the Company or any of its properties which conflict,
     breach or default has not been waived.

          (i)      The Company will, as of each Closing Date, have the duly
     authorized and outstanding capitalization set forth in the Prospectus.  The
     outstanding Common Stock of the Company is duly authorized and validly
     issued, fully paid and nonassessable.  The Common Stock of the Company
     conform in all material respects in substance to all statements in relation
     thereto contained in the Registration Statement and the Prospectus.  The
     Company has all requisite power and authority (corporate and other) to
     issue, sell, and deliver the Units, including the Common Stock issuable
     upon exercise of the Warrants in accordance with and upon the terms and
     conditions set forth in this Agreement and in the Registration Statement
     and Prospectus; and all corporate action required to be taken by the
     Company for the due and proper authorization, issuance, sale, and delivery
     of the Units, including the Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the
     Warrants, has been validly and sufficiently taken.


                                       4
<PAGE>   5




          (j)     The Company has full legal power, right and authority
     (corporate and other) to enter into this Underwriting Agreement and to
     perform and discharge its obligations hereunder, and this Underwriting
     Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and delivered on behalf of the
     Company and is the valid and binding obligation of the Company, subject, as
     to the enforcement of remedies, to applicable bankruptcy, insolvency,
     moratorium and other laws affecting the rights of creditors generally, and
     except as enforceability of the indemnification or contribution provisions
     may be limited by federal or state securities laws or principles of public
     policy.

          (k)     The Company will apply the proceeds of the sale of the Units
     by it substantially to the purposes set forth in the Prospectus.

          (l)     To the best of the Company's knowledge, no approval,
     authorization, consent or order of any public board or body (other than in
     connection with or in compliance with the provisions of the Act and the
     securities or Blue Sky laws of various jurisdictions) is legally required
     for the sale of the Units by the Company.

          (m)     The Company has no subsidiaries.

          (n)     The Company has good and marketable title, free and clear of
     all liens, encumbrances, equities, charges or claims, to all of the
     property, real and personal, described in the Registration Statement and
     Prospectus as being owned by it, except as otherwise set forth in the
     Registration Statement and Prospectus and except for such as are not in the
     aggregate material in relation to the property of the Company considered as
     a whole and do not materially affect the value of such property, and,
     except as otherwise stated in the Registration Statement and Prospectus,
     has valid and binding leases to the real and/or personal property described
     in the Registration Statement and Prospectus as under lease to it with such
     exceptions as could not materially interfere with the conduct of the
     business.

          (o)   There are no actions, suits or proceedings or investigations
     pending before any court or governmental agency, authority or body to which
     the Company is a party or of which the business or property of the Company
     is the subject which, if decided adversely, would have a material adverse
     effect on the general affairs, condition (financial or other), business,
     properties, net worth, or results of operations of the Company, and, to the
     best of the Company's knowledge, no such actions, suits or proceedings are
     threatened.

          (p)   The Company has not taken or will not take, directly or
     indirectly, any action designed to or which has constituted or which might
     reasonably be expected to cause or result in stabilization or manipulation
     as defined in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, of the price
     of the Company's securities to facilitate the sale or resale of the Units.


                                       5
<PAGE>   6




          (q)   The Company has not, directly or indirectly, at any time during
     the past five years (i) made any contributions to any candidate for
     political office, or failed to disclose fully any contribution in violation
     of law, or (ii) made any payment to any state, Federal or foreign
     governmental officer or official, or other person charged with similar
     public or quasi-public duties, other than payments required or permitted by
     applicable law.

          (r)   Except as described in the Prospectus and to the best knowledge
     of the Company, the Company owns or possesses the right to utilize all the
     patents, patent applications, trademarks, service marks, trade names,
     trademark registrations, service mark registrations, copyrights, licenses,
     inventions, trade secrets, and similar rights necessary for the present
     conduct of its business as described in the Prospectus, without any known
     conflict with the asserted rights of others in respect of such matters.
     Except as may be stated in the Prospectus, the Company has not received any
     notice of any infringement of, or license or similar fees for, any patents,
     patent applications, trademarks, service marks, trade names, trademark
     registrations, service mark registrations, copyrights, licenses,
     inventions, trade secrets, or other similar rights of others, or any claim
     with respect thereto, which would have a material adverse effect on the
     business of the Company.

          (s)  The Company has filed all necessary federal, state and foreign
     income and franchise tax returns or if not filed, has obtained all
     necessary extensions and has paid all taxes as shown as due on any such
     returns; and the Company has no knowledge of any material tax deficiency
     which has been asserted against the Company, and, to the best of the
     Company's knowledge, the Company has no material obligation to pay any
     taxes except as may be stated in the Prospectus.

          (t)  All prior offers or sales of the securities of the Company were
     exempt from registration under the Act and all applicable state blue sky
     laws.

          (u)  No securities of the Company have been sold within three years
     prior to the date hereof, except as set out in Item 26 of Part II of the
     Registration Statement.

          (v)  The Company knows of no outstanding claims for services in the
     nature of a finder's fee or origination fee with respect to the sale of the
     Units or Underwriter's Warrants (defined hereinafter) hereunder resulting
     from its acts for which the Underwriter may be responsible. The Company
     will indemnify the Underwriter for and hold the Underwriter harmless
     against any claim for such finder's fees or origination fees.

          (w) All material contracts or agreements are properly filed as an
     exhibit to the Registration Statement. Each contract to which the Company 
     is a party and which is filed as a part of or incorporated by reference
     into the Registration Statement has been duly and validly executed, is
     in full force and effect in all material respects in accordance with its
     terms, and none of such contracts have been assigned by the Company, and
     the Company knows of no present situation or condition or fact which would
     prevent compliance by the Company with the terms of such contracts, as
     amended to date.  Except for amendments

                                       6
<PAGE>   7



      or modifications of such contracts in the ordinary course of business,
      the Company has no intention of exercising any right which it may have to
      cancel any of its obligations under any of such contracts, and has no
      knowledge that any other party to any of such contracts has any intention
      not to render full performance under such contracts.

          (x)  The Company maintains insurance which is in full force and
      effect, of the types and in an amount, in the judgment of the Company and
      except as otherwise disclosed in the Prospectus, which is reasonable for
      its present business taking into account its operations and assets,
      including, but not limited to, insurance covering all personal property
      owned or leased by the Company against theft, damage, destruction, acts
      of vandalism and all other risks customarily insured against.

          (y)  The Company maintains a system of internal accounting controls
      sufficient to provide reasonable assurances that (i) transactions are
      executed in accordance with management's general or specific
      authorizations, (ii) transactions are recorded as necessary to permit
      preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
      accounting principles and to maintain accountability for assets, (iii)
      access to assets is permitted only in accordance with management's
      general or specific authorization, and (iv) the recorded accountability
      for assets is compared with existing assets at reasonable intervals and
      appropriate action is taken with respect to any differences.

          (z)  All material transactions between the Company and its officers,
      directors, promoters, and its shareholders who beneficially own 5% or
      more of any class of the Company's voting securities required to be
      disclosed in the Prospectus have been accurately disclosed in the
      Prospectus, and the terms of each such transaction are fair to the
      Company and no less favorable to the Company than the terms that could
      have been obtained from unrelated parties.

     2.   PURCHASE OF THE UNITS BY THE UNDERWRITER.

          (a)   On the basis of the representations and warranties herein
     contained, but subject to the terms and conditions herein set forth, the
     Company agrees to sell to the Underwriter, and the Underwriter agrees to
     purchase from the Company, the Firm Units.  The purchase price for each
     Firm Unit shall be $4.60 per Unit.

   
          (b)   The Company hereby grants to the Underwriter, for its account,
     an option to purchase from the Company, solely for the purpose of covering
     overallotments in the sale of Firm Units, all or any portion of an
     aggregate of 375,000 Option Units for a period of 45 days from the date
     hereof at the same purchase price per Option Unit as the purchase price per
     Firm Unit set forth in Section 2(a) above.
    

     3.   DELIVERY OF AND PAYMENT FOR UNITS.  Delivery of certificates for the
Firm Units and payment therefor shall be made at the offices of Maslon Edelman
Borman & Brand, PLLP (or such other place as mutually may be agreed upon), at
10:00 a.m., Minneapolis, Minnesota

                                       7
<PAGE>   8



time, on or before the third full business day following the effective date of
the Registration Statement (the "FIRST CLOSING DATE").

     The option to purchase Option Units granted in Section 2(b) hereof may be
exercised at any time (but not more than once) during the 45-day term thereof
by written notice to the Company from you.  Such notice shall set forth the
aggregate number of Option Units as to which the option is being exercised, and
the time and date, not earlier than either the First Closing Date or the second
business day after the day on which the option shall have been exercised but
not later than the third full business day after the date of such exercise, as
determined by you, when the Option Units are to be delivered (the "SECOND
CLOSING DATE").  Delivery and payment for such Option Units to be purchased by
you are to be at the offices set forth above for delivery and payment of the
Firm Units.  The First Closing Date and the Second Closing Date are sometimes
herein individually called the "CLOSING DATE" and collectively called the
"CLOSING DATES."

     Delivery of facsimile certificates for the Units shall be made by or on
behalf of the Company to you against payment by you of the purchase price
therefor by wire transfer or certified or official bank check in clearing house
funds to the order of the Company.  The certificates for such Units shall be
registered in such names and denominations as you shall have requested at least
two full business days prior to the applicable Closing Date.  Time shall be of
the essence and delivery at the time and place specified in this Agreement is a
further condition to your obligations hereunder.

     4.   COVENANTS OF THE COMPANY.  The Company covenants and agrees with each
Underwriter that:

          (a)   The Company will use its best efforts to cause the Registration
     Statement to become and remain effective, up to each Closing Date.  The
     Company will notify you promptly of any request by the Commission for any
     amendment of or supplement to the Registration Statement or the Prospectus
     or for additional information, will prepare and file with the Commission,
     promptly upon your request, any amendments of or supplements to the
     Registration Statement or Prospectus which, in your reasonable opinion, may
     be necessary or advisable in connection with the distribution of the Units;
     and will not file any amendments and supplements to the Registration
     Statement as originally filed with the Commission unless it shall first
     have delivered copies of such amendments or supplements to you, or file any
     such amendment or supplement to which you shall have reasonably objected in
     writing to the Company.  The Company will immediately advise you by
     telephone, confirming such advice in writing (i) when notice is received
     from the Commission that the Registration Statement has become effective,
     (ii) of any order suspending the effectiveness of the Registration
     Statement or of any proceedings or examination under the Act, as soon as
     the Company is advised thereof, and (iii) of any order or communication of
     any public authority addressed to the Company suspending or threatening to
     suspend qualification of the Units for sale in any state.  The Company will
     use its best efforts to prevent the issuance of any stop order or other
     such order, and,

                                       8
<PAGE>   9



     should a stop order or other such order be issued, to obtain as soon as
     possible the lifting thereof.

          (b)  If, at any time when a prospectus relating to the Units is
     required to be delivered under the Act, any event shall have occurred as a
     result of which, in the opinion of counsel for the Company or in the
     reasonable opinion of counsel for you, the Prospectus, as then amended or
     supplemented, includes an untrue statement of a material fact or omits to
     state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make
     the statements therein not misleading, or if it is necessary at any time to
     amend or supplement the Prospectus to comply with the Act, the Company will
     notify you promptly and prepare and file with the Commission an appropriate
     amendment or supplement.

          (c)  The Company will use its best efforts to take or cause to be
     taken all necessary action and furnish to whomever you may reasonably
     direct such information as may be required in qualifying the Units for
     offering and sale under the Blue Sky or securities laws of such states as
     you and the Company shall designate.  The Company shall not, however, be
     required to register or qualify as a foreign corporation or as a dealer in
     securities or, except as to matters and transactions related to the
     offering or sale of the Units, consent to service of process in any state.

          (d)  The Company will furnish to the Underwriter, from time to time 
     and without charge, copies of the Registration Statement, each     
     Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus (including all documents from which
     information is incorporated by reference), and all amendments of and
     supplements to any of such documents, in each case as soon as available
     and in such quantities as you may from time to time reasonably request for
     the purposes contemplated by the Act.  The Company authorizes the 
     Underwriter and all dealers to whom any of the Units may be sold by the
     Underwriter to use the Preliminary Prospectuses and Prospectuses supplied,
     as from time to time amended or supplemented, in connection with the sale
     of the Units as and to the extent permitted by federal and applicable
     state and local securities laws.

          (e)  The Company will furnish to you two copies of the Registration 
     Statement and all amendments thereof which are signed and include all 
     exhibits and schedules.

          (f)  The Company will, for a period of two (2) years after the
     Effective Date, furnish directly to you as soon as the same shall be sent
     to shareholders generally, copies of all annual or interim shareholder
     reports of the Company, and will, for the same period, also furnish you
     with the following:

               (i)  two copies of any report, application, or document (other
          than exhibits, which, however, will be furnished on request) which the
          Company shall file with the Commission or any securities exchange;


                                       9
<PAGE>   10




               (ii)    as soon as the same shall be sent to shareholders
          generally, copies of each communication which shall be sent to
          shareholders; and

               (iii)   from time to time such other information concerning the
          Company as you may reasonably request, provided that the Company shall
          not be required to furnish any information pursuant hereto that is not
          furnished to its shareholders or not otherwise made publicly
          available.

          (g)  The Company will, for a period of two (2) years after the
     Effective Date, furnish directly to you, quarterly profit and loss
     statements, reports of the Company's cash flow filed by the Company with
     the Commission.

          (h)  The Company will make generally available to its security holders
     as soon as practicable, but in any event not later than eighteen months
     after the effective date of the Registration Statement, a statement of
     earnings of the Company (which need not be audited) complying with Section
     11(a) of the Act and the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder
     (including, at the option of the Company, Rule 158).

          (i)   Whether or not this Agreement becomes effective or is terminated
     or cancelled or the sale of the Units to you is consummated, and regardless
     of the reason for or cause of any such termination, cancellation, or
     failure to consummate, the Company will pay or cause to be paid (A) all
     expenses (including any transfer taxes) incurred in connection with the
     delivery to you of the Units, (B) all expenses and fees (including, without
     limitation, fees and expenses of the Company's accountants and counsel,
     excluding, however, fees of the Underwriter' counsel) in connection with
     the preparation, printing, filing, delivery, and shipping of the
     Registration Statement (including the financial statements therein and all
     amendments, schedules, and exhibits thereto), each Preliminary Prospectus,
     the Prospectus, and any amendment thereof or supplement thereto, (C) all
     fees and expenses, including all Company counsel fees, (D) fees and
     expenses of the Underwriter's counsel, incurred in connection with the
     qualification of the Units for offering and sale by the Underwriter or by
     dealers under the securities or Blue Sky laws of the states and other
     jurisdictions which you and the Company mutually shall designate in
     accordance with Section 4(c) hereof, (E) subject to the further provisions
     of this Section 4(i), all fees and expenses, including all counsel fees,
     excluding, however, fees of the Underwriter's counsel, incurred in
     connection with the review of the offering by the National Association of
     Securities Dealers, Inc. and listing fees, if any, (F) all costs and
     expenses incident to qualification with The Nasdaq SmallCap Market, (G)
     postage and express charges and other expenses in connection with delivery
     of the Preliminary and Final Prospectus to the Underwriter, and (H) all
     other costs and expenses incident to the performance of the Company's
     obligations hereunder that are not otherwise specifically provided for
     herein.  In addition to and not in lieu of the foregoing, the Company shall
     pay to the Underwriter on each Closing Date, for out-of-pocket expenses
     (including fees of Underwriter's counsel), a nonaccountable expense
     allowance equal to two percent (2%) of the aggregate purchase price for the
     Units sold to the Underwriter on each Closing

                                       10
<PAGE>   11



      Date.  If the Underwriter withdraws from the sale of the Units as herein
      proposed for any reason other than its inability to sell the Units and
      through no other fault of its own, or if the sale of the Units as herein
      proposed is abandoned by the Company, the Company will reimburse the
      Underwriter in the amount of all accountable expenses (including fees and
      disbursements of counsel) incurred by the Underwriter in connection with
      the contemplated purchase, offer, and sale of the Units, including
      without limitation, expenses incurred in their investigation, preparation
      to market, and marketing of the Units, and in contemplation of performing
      and in performance of its obligations hereunder, up to an aggregate of
      $30,000, such expenses and fees to be evidenced by appropriate receipts,
      invoices, or other documentation.

          (j)  The Company will cause each officer and director of the Company
     to furnish to the Underwriter, on or prior to the date of this Agreement, a
     letter or letters, in form and substance satisfactory to counsel for the
     Underwriter, pursuant to which each such person shall agree not to offer
     for sale, sell, distribute or otherwise dispose of any securities of the
     Company for a period of 180 days from the date hereof.  The Company will
     use its best efforts to cause each significant Shareholder of the Company
     (as reasonably determined by the Underwriter) to furnish to the 
     Underwriter, on or prior to the date of this Agreement, a letter or 
     letters, in form and substance satisfactory to counsel for the
     Underwriter, pursuant to which each such Shareholder shall agree not to
     offer for sale, sell, distribute or otherwise dispose of any securities
     of the Company for a period of 90 days from the date hereof.

          (k)  The Company will not, during the 180 days following the effective
     date of the Registration Statement, except with your prior written consent,
     offer for sale, sell, distribute, or otherwise dispose of any Common Stock
     or sell or grant options, rights, or warrants with respect to any Common
     Stock (except for the grants, options, rights, warrants or convertible
     securities pursuant to the Company's 1997 Stock Option and Incentive
     Compensation Plan), otherwise than in accordance with this Agreement or as
     contemplated by the Prospectus.

          (l)  The Company authorizes the Underwriter and all dealers to whom
     any of the Units may be sold by the Underwriter in connection with the
     distribution of the Units, to use the Prospectus as from time to time
     amended or supplemented in connection with the offering and sale of the
     Units and in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Act and the
     applicable Rules and Regulations and applicable state Blue Sky or
     securities laws.

          (m)  The Company shall not request an effective date nor allow the
     Registration Statement to be declared effective without the prior approval
     of the Underwriter.

          (n)  Within the time during which the Prospectus is required to be
      delivered under the Act, the Company will comply, at its own expense,
      with all requirements imposed upon it by the Act, by the Rules and
      Regulations, by the Exchange Act, and by any order of the Commission, so
      far as necessary to permit the continuance of sales or dealings in the
      Units.

          (o)  The Company shall file an application and take all other steps
      necessary to have the Units actually listed on The Nasdaq SmallCap Market
      on or prior to the effective date of the Registration Statement under the
      Act.

                                       11
<PAGE>   12




           (p)  The Company will reserve and keep available that maximum number
      of its authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock which are issuable
      upon exercise of Warrants and the Underwriter's Warrant during the term
      of the Warrants and the Underwriter's Warrant.

           (q)  Prior to the Closing Date, no discussions will be held by
      officers, directors or any other affiliate or associate of the Company
      with any member of the news media and no news release or other publicity
      about the Company will be permitted without prior approval of the
      Company's and the Underwriter's respective legal counsel.

           (r)  The Company shall have obtained a CUSIP number for the Units
      (and its components) prior to the effective date of the Registration
      Statement under the Act.

           (s)  The Company shall supply to the Underwriter, and its legal 
      counsel, at the Company's cost, one complete bound volume of all of
      the documents relating to the public offering, within a reasonable time
      after the Closing Date, not to exceed four (4) months.  The volume shall
      be hard cover bound in book format.

           (t)  The Company will apply the proceeds from the sale of the Units
      by it to the purposes and in the manner set forth in the Registration
      Statement and, pending such application, shall invest such net proceeds
      only in one or more of the following, except as otherwise provided by
      prior written consent of the Underwriter:  (i) interest-bearing
      obligations issued by the United States Government or issued by an agency
      or instrumentality of the United States Government and guaranteed by the
      United States Government and having a maturity not in excess of one year,
      (ii) interest-bearing domestic commercial paper having a maturity of not
      more than 365 days and, at the time of purchase by the Company, rated
      investment grade by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. or Standard & Poor's
      Corporation, (iii) interest-bearing certificates of deposit issued by a
      commercial bank chartered by the United States Government or by any state
      of the United States having shareholders' equity of at least $500,000,000
      except that the foregoing notwithstanding, the Company may invest no more
      than $100,000 of such net proceeds in certificates of deposit issued by
      any such commercial bank regardless of shareholders' equity, and (iv)
      shares or other units of interest in a registered open-ended investment
      company the assets of which aggregate at least $200,000,000 and are
      invested solely in so-called "money market" obligations.


      5.   CONDITIONS OF UNDERWRITER'S OBLIGATIONS.  The obligations of the
Underwriter herein shall be subject to the accuracy of the representations and
warranties on the part of the Company herein as of the date hereof, and as of
each Closing Date, to the accuracy of the written statements of Company officers
made pursuant to the provisions hereof, to the performance by the Company of its
obligations hereunder and to the following additional conditions:


                                       12
<PAGE>   13




     (a)  The Registration Statement shall have become effective not later than
5:00 P.M., Minneapolis, Minnesota time, on the date of this Agreement or on such
later time and date as shall be satisfactory to the Underwriter, no stop order
suspending the effectiveness of the Registration Statement or any amendment
thereof or supplement or the qualification of the Units for offering or sale
shall have been issued and no proceedings for that purpose shall have been
instituted or shall be pending or shall be threatened by the Commission or by
any state securities authority, and any request of the Commission for additional
information (to be included in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus or
otherwise) shall have been complied with to the Underwriter's satisfaction.

     (b)  The Underwriter shall not have advised the Company that the
Registration Statement or Prospectus, or any amendment thereof or supplement
thereto, contains an untrue statement of fact that, in the Underwriter's
reasonable opinion, is material, or omits to state a fact that, in your
reasonable opinion, is material and is required to be stated therein or is
necessary to make the statements therein not misleading provided that this
Section 5(b) shall not apply to statements in, or omissions from, the
Registration Statement or Prospectus, or any amendment thereof or supplement
thereto that are based upon and conform to written information provided by the
Underwriter specifically for use in the Registration Statement or Prospectus.

     (c)  On or prior to each Closing Date, the form and validity of the Units,
the legality and sufficiency of the corporate proceedings and matters relating
to the incorporation of the Company and other matters incident to the issuance
of the Units, the form of the Registration Statement and the Prospectus and of
any amendments thereof or supplements thereto filed prior to such Closing Date
(other than financial statements and schedules and other financial or
statistical data included therein), the authorization, execution, and delivery
of this Agreement and the description of the Units contained in the Prospectus
shall have been reasonably approved by the Underwriter.  In connection with such
determination, the Company shall have furnished to the Underwriter such
documents as you may have requested for the purpose of enabling the Underwriter
to pass upon such matters.

     (d)  On each Closing Date there shall have been furnished to the
Underwriter, the favorable opinion (addressed to the Underwriter) of Maslon
Edelman Borman & Brand, a Professional Limited Liability Partnership, counsel
for the Company, dated such Closing Date, and in form reasonably satisfactory to
counsel for the Underwriter, to the effect that:

          (i)  The Company is a corporation duly incorporated, validly existing
     and in good standing under the laws of the State of Minnesota, with
     corporate power and authority to own or lease its properties and conduct
     its business as described in the Prospectus. The Company has no
     subsidiaries other than as described in the Prospectus.


                                       13
<PAGE>   14




     (ii)  The authorized capital stock of the Company as of the date of this
Agreement is as set forth in the Prospectus.  The outstanding shares of the
Common Stock of the Company have been duly authorized and validly issued and
are fully paid and nonassessable.  The Units (and their components) have been
duly authorized and, upon issuance, delivery and payment therefor as described
in this Agreement, will be validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable.  The
shares of Common Stock underlying the Warrants have been duly authorized and
reserved for issuance and when issued, sold and delivered in accordance with
the terms of the Warrant, will be validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable.
The issuance, sale and delivery of the Underwriter's Warrant has been duly
authorized and the shares (the "WARRANT SHARES") of Common Stock issuable upon
the exercise thereof have been reserved for issuance upon such exercise.  The
Warrant Shares, when issued, sold and delivered in accordance with the terms of
the Underwriter's Warrant, will be validly issued, fully paid and
nonassessable.  No preemptive rights of, or rights of refusal in favor of,
stockholders of the Company exist with respect to the Units (or any component
thereof), the Underwriter's Warrant or the Warrant Shares, or the issue and
sale thereof, pursuant to the Company's Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws.

     (iii)  The authorized securities of the Company conform as to legal matters
in all material respects to the description thereof set forth in the Prospectus
under the caption "Description of Securities."  The certificates representing
the Warrants and the Common Stock are in proper form under the Minnesota
Business Corporation Act.

     (iv)  The Registration Statement has become effective under the Securities
Act and, to such counsel's knowledge, no stop order suspending the effectiveness
of the Registration Statement or suspending or preventing the use of the
Prospectus is in effect and, to our knowledge, no proceedings for that purpose
have been instituted or are pending by the Commission.

     (v)   The Registration Statement and the Prospectus comply as to form in
all material respects with the requirements of the Securities Act and with the
Rules and Regulations, except the financial statements, the notes thereto and
the related schedules and other financial and statistical data contained
therein, as to which we express no opinion.

     (vi) Counsel knows of no contracts, leases, documents or pending legal
proceedings that are required to be described in the Prospectus or to be filed
as exhibits to the Registration Statement that are not so described or filed.

     (vii) The Underwriting Agreement, the Warrant Agreement and the
Underwriter's Warrant have been duly authorized by all requisite corporate
action,

                                       14
<PAGE>   15



            executed and delivered by the Company and constitute the valid and
            binding obligations of the Company enforceable in accordance with
            their respective terms.

                 (viii) The execution and delivery of the Underwriting
            Agreement and the issue and sale of the Underwriter's Warrant, the
            Units (and their components) and the shares underlying the Warrant
            will not violate or conflict with the Articles of Incorporation or
            the Bylaws of the Company or any material provision of any material
            contract or instrument filed as an exhibit to the Registration
            Statement to which the Company is a party or by which the Company
            is bound (other than any violation of or conflict with any
            financial tests or covenants contained therein, as to which counsel
            need express no opinion) or any law of the United States or the
            State of Minnesota, any rule or regulation of any governmental
            authority or regulatory body of the United States or the State of
            Minnesota, or any judgment, order or decree known to us and
            applicable to the Company of any court or governmental authority.

                 (ix) No holders of capital stock of the Company, or securities
            convertible into capital stock of the Company, have the right to
            cause the Company to include such holder's capital stock in the
            Registration Statement pursuant to the Company's Articles of
            Incorporation or Bylaws or any contract or agreement.

                 (x) No consent, approval, authorization or order of, and no
            notice to or filing with, any governmental agency or body or any
            court is required to be obtained or made by the Company for the
            issue and sale of the Units pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement,
            except such as have been obtained or made and such as may be
            required under applicable state securities or blue sky laws or by
            the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., as to which
            we express no opinion.

               Although counsel to the Company cannot guarantee the accuracy and
completeness of the statements contained in the Registration Statement or in the
Prospectus, on the basis of discussions and meetings with officers of the
Company, representatives of the Company's independent auditors, the Underwriter
and counsel to the Underwriter, our participation in the preparation of the
Registration Statement and the Prospectus, our examination of the documents
referred to in the Registration Statement and in the Prospectus, and our
procedures forming the basis of the opinions expressed above, nothing came to
our attention that led us to believe that the Registration Statement, as of the
date it was declared effective, contained an untrue statement of a material fact
or omitted to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary
to make the statements therein not misleading, or that the Prospectus, as of its
date or on the date hereof, contained or contains an untrue statement of a
material fact or omitted or omits to state a material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading (provided that we
express no view with respect to the content of financial statements, the


                                       15
<PAGE>   16



      notes thereto and the related schedules and other financial or
      statistical data included in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus
      or as to statements in the Registration Statement or Prospectus which are
      based on and conform to written information furnished to the Company by
      or on your behalf specifically for use in the preparation thereof).

           In rendering such opinion, such counsel may rely (A) as to questions
      of the law of jurisdictions other than the State of Minnesota or the
      United States upon an opinion or opinions (dated the Closing Date,
      addressed to the Underwriter and in form satisfactory to the Underwriter)
      of counsel acceptable to the Underwriter and (B) as to matters of fact,
      to the extent they deem proper, on certificates of appropriate officers
      of the Company, of the transfer agent and registrar for the Units and of
      public officials; PROVIDED, such opinions and certificates must be
      attached to the opinion of counsel.

               (e)   At the time of execution of this Agreement, the
      Underwriter shall have received from Ernst & Young, LLP, a letter dated
      the date of such execution, in form and substance satisfactory to the
      Underwriter, to the effect that they are independent accountants with
      respect to the Company within the meaning of the Act and the applicable
      published instructions, and Regulations thereunder, and further stating in
      effect that:

                    (i)  In their opinion, the audited financial statements
               included in the Registration Statement and Prospectus covered by
               their report included therein, comply as to form in all material
               respects with the applicable requirements of the Act and the
               published instructions, and Regulations, thereunder.

                    (ii)  On the basis of (A) a reading of the minutes of the
               shareholders' and directors' meetings of the Company since
               inception, (B) inquiries of certain officials of the Company
               responsible for financial and accounting matters, (C) a reading
               of the Company's monthly operating statements subsequent to
               December 31, 1996, and (D) other specified procedures and
               inquiries (but not an audit in accordance with generally accepted
               auditing standards), nothing came to their attention causing them
               to believe that:

                         (1) that the unaudited financial statements of the
                    Company, contained in the Prospectus and any amendment
                    thereof or supplement thereto, do not comply as to form, in
                    all material respects, with the applicable accounting
                    requirements of the Act and the published Rules and
                    Regulations or were not prepared in conformity with
                    generally-accepted accounting principles and practices
                    applied on a basis consistent in all material respects with
                    those followed in the preparation of, the audited financial
                    statements of the Company included therein; or

                         (2) that the unaudited amounts of revenues, income
                    before provision for income taxes, net income and ratio of
                    earnings to fixed charges of the Company contained in the
                    Prospectus, or any amendment

                                       16
<PAGE>   17



                  thereof or supplement thereto, were not derived from
                  financial statements prepared in conformity with
                  generally-accepted accounting principles and practices
                  applied on a basis consistent in all material respects with
                  those followed in the preparation of the audited financial
                  statements of the Company included therein; or

                       (3) that the unaudited pro forma financial statements of
                  the Company and recently-acquired companies, if any,
                  contained in the Prospectus or any amendment thereof or
                  supplement thereto, were not properly compiled in accordance
                  with generally-accepted accounting principles or did not
                  provide for all adjustments necessary for a fair presentation
                  of the information purported to be shown thereby; or

                       (4) with respect to the period subsequent to December
                  31, 1996, there were, at a specified date, not more than five
                  (5) business days prior to the date of the letter, any
                  changes or any material increases or decreases in capital
                  stock, long-term or short-term debt or shareholders' equity,
                  decreases in net assets, net current assets, or net worth or
                  any material decrease, as compared with the corresponding
                  period of the prior year, in revenues or net income of the
                  Company as compared with the amounts shown in the December
                  31, 1996 balance sheet included in the Registration
                  Statement, except as disclosed or referred to in the
                  Prospectus and Registration Statement.

                  (iii)  Certain information set forth on the cover of the
            Prospectus, and in the Prospectus under the headings "Prospectus
            Summary," "Summary Financial Information," "Risk Factors," "Use of
            Proceeds," "Dilution," "Capitalization," "Management's Discussion
            and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,"
            "Business," "Management," "Reorganization," "Certain Transactions,"
            "Principal Shareholders" and "Description of Securities" and that
            are expressed in dollars (or percentages derived from dollar
            amounts) or numbers have been compared to accounting records of the
            Company which were subject to the internal accounting controls of
            the Company and are in agreement with such records or computations
            made therefrom, excluding any questions of legal interpretation.

            (f)   The Underwriter shall have received from Ernst & Young, LLP, a
      letter dated as of each Closing Date, to the effect that such accountants
      reaffirm, as of such Closing Date, and as though made on such Closing
      Date, the statements made in the letter furnished by such accountants
      pursuant to subparagraph (e) of this Section 5, except that the specified
      date referred to in such letter will be a date not more than five (5)
      business days prior to such Closing Date.



                                       17

<PAGE>   18




     (g)   At each Closing Date, the Company shall have performed all material
obligations and satisfied all material conditions on its part to be performed or
satisfied on or prior thereto (except any condition satisfaction of which shall
have been waived as herein provided) and compliance with the provisions of this
subparagraph (g) shall be evidenced by a certificate of an executive officer of
the Company.

     (h)   On each Closing Date there shall have been furnished to you a
certificate, dated as of such Closing Date and addressed to the Underwriter,
signed by the principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the
Company to the effect that:

          (i)  the representations and warranties and covenants of the Company
     in this Agreement are true and correct in all material respects as if made
     at and as of such Closing Date and the Company has complied in all material
     respects with all the agreements and satisfied all the material conditions
     on its part to be performed or satisfied hereunder at or prior to such
     Closing Date;

          (ii)  no stop order or other order suspending the effectiveness of the
     Registration Statement or any amendment or supplement thereto or the
     qualification of the Units for offering or sale has been issued and, to the
     Company's knowledge, no proceedings for that purpose have been instituted
     or are pending or, to the knowledge of the respective signers thereof, are
     threatened by the Commission or any state or regulatory body;

          (iii)  neither the Registration Statement, as of the date it was
     declared effective, nor the Prospectus, as of its date and the Closing
     Date, included any untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state
     a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
     statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were
     made, not misleading; (B) since the effective date of the Registration
     Statement, no event has occurred which should have been set forth in an
     amendment or supplement to the Prospectus which has not been set forth in
     such an amendment or supplement; (C) subsequent to the respective dates as
     of which information is given in the Registration Statement and Prospectus
     and except as set forth in or contemplated by the Prospectus, the Company
     has not incurred any material liability or obligation, direct or
     contingent, whether or not in the ordinary course of business, or entered
     into any material transaction, outside of the ordinary course of business,
     and there has not been any material change in the Common Stock, or any
     increase in the short-term or long-term debt, including any capitalized
     lease obligation (other than in the ordinary course of its business and in
     an amount which is not material) or any issuance of options, warrants,
     convertible securities or other rights to purchase the Common Stock of the
     Company or any material adverse change in the general affairs, business,
     key personnel, capitalization or financial position of the Company
     considered as a whole (other than the issuance of Common Stock pursuant to
     existing options); and subsequent to the date of the Underwriting
     Agreement, the Company has not

                                       18
<PAGE>   19



          sustained any material loss or damage to its property or interference
          with its business by strike, fire, flood, accident or other calamity,
          whether or not any of the foregoing is insured, that would have a
          material adverse effect upon the Company considered as a whole, (D)
          the projection of the Company previously presented to the Underwriter
          showing that the Company will be able to meet the maintenance
          requirements for listing on The Nasdaq SmallCap Market for a period of
          24 months from the date hereof, were prepared in good faith and
          continue to represent the signers' best present estimate of the
          Company's financial condition following the Closing of the sale of the
          Units.

          (i)  The Underwriter shall receive a Blue Sky Memorandum reasonably
     satisfactory to the Underwriter from Doherty, Rumble & Butler, P.A.,
     confirming that all requisite action for the offer and sale of the Units in
     all jurisdictions requested has been taken.

   
          (j)  The Underwriter shall have received "lock up" agreements, in form
     and substance acceptable to the Underwriter, from (i) all directors,
     officers and five percent or greater shareholders of the Company 
     restricting the sale, assignment or other conveyance of any securities of
     the Company without the prior written consent of the Underwriter for       
     a period of 180 days from the effective date of the Registration Statement
     under the Act, and (ii) from all significant shareholders of the Company
     (as reasonably determined by the Underwriter) restricting the sale,
     assignment or other conveyance of any securities of the Company without
     the prior written consent of the Underwriter for a  period of 90 days from
     the effective date of the Registration Statement  under the Act.
    

          (k)  The Company's Units (and the securities comprising the Units)
     shall be listed on The Nasdaq SmallCap Market on or prior to the effective
     date of the Registration Statement under the Act.

          (l)  Prior to the First Closing, the number of issued and outstanding
     shares of common stock of the Company shall not exceed 5,399,289 shares,
     and there shall be no  change in the capitalization of the Company without
     the prior written consent of the Underwriter.

          (m)  The Company's Units (and the securities comprising the Units)
     shall be registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
     pursuant to Form 8-A, on or prior to the effective date of the Registration
     Statement under the Act.

          (n)  The Company shall have furnished to the Underwriter and Doherty,
     Rumble & Butler, P.A., counsel for the Underwriter, such further
     certificates and documents as the Underwriter's counsel may reasonably
     request, relating to the fulfillment of the conditions set forth in this
     Section 5.

     All such opinions, certificates, letters and documents will be in
compliance with the provisions hereof only if they are reasonably satisfactory
to the Underwriter and to counsel for the Underwriter.  The Company will
furnish you with such conformed copies of such opinions, certificates, letters,
and other documents as you shall reasonably request.  The Underwriter may

                                       19
<PAGE>   20



waive in writing the performance of any one or more of the conditions specified
in this Section 5 or extend the time for their performance.

     If any of the conditions specified in this Section 5 shall not have been
fulfilled when and as required by this Agreement to be fulfilled, this
Agreement and all obligations of the Underwriter hereunder may be cancelled by
the Underwriter at, or at any time prior to, each Closing Date.  Any such
cancellation shall be without liability of the Underwriter to the Company or
any liability of the Company to the Underwriter, except pursuant to Section
4(i) hereof.  Notice of such cancellation shall be given to the Company in
writing, or by telefax or telephone confirmed in writing.

     The Underwriter may waive in writing the performance of any one or more of
the foregoing conditions or extend the time for their performance.

     6.   EFFECTIVE DATE AND TERMINATION.

          (a)  This Agreement shall become effective at immediately after the
     time at which the Registration Statement shall have become effective under
     the Act.

          (b)  Until the First Closing Date, this Agreement may be terminated by
     you by giving notice to the Company, if (i) the Company shall have
     sustained a loss or damage by fire, flood, accident, or other calamity
     which is material to the property, business, or condition (financial or
     other) of the Company considered as a whole, any properties of the Company
     shall have become a party or subject to litigation material to the Company
     considered as a whole, or there shall have been, since the respective dates
     as of which information is given in the Registration Statement or the
     Prospectus, any material adverse change or development in the general
     affairs, condition (financial or other), business, key personnel,
     capitalization, properties, results of operations or net worth, of the
     Company considered as a whole, whether or not arising in the ordinary
     course of business, which loss, damage, or change, in your judgment, shall
     render it inadvisable to proceed with the delivery of the Units, whether or
     not such loss shall have been insured, (ii) trading in securities generally
     on the New York Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange, The Nasdaq
     National Market, The Nasdaq SmallCap Market or the over-the-counter market
     shall have been suspended or minimum prices shall have been established on
     such exchange or market by the Commission or by such exchange, (iii) a
     general banking moratorium shall have been declared by federal or state
     authorities, or (iv) there shall have been such a serious, unusual and
     material adverse change in general economic, political, or financial
     conditions or the effect of international conditions on the financial
     markets in the United States shall be such as, in your reasonable judgment,
     makes it inadvisable to proceed with the delivery of the Units.  Any
     termination of this Agreement pursuant to this Section 6 shall be without
     liability of the Company to the Underwriter, except as otherwise provided
     in Sections 4(i), 7 and 8 hereof, and without liability of the Underwriter
     to the Company, except as provided in Sections 7 and 8 hereof.


                                       20
<PAGE>   21




     (c)   Any notice referred to in this Section 6 may be given at the address
specified in Section 11 hereof in writing or by telegraph or telephone, and if
by telegraph or telephone, shall be immediately confirmed in writing.


     7.    INDEMNIFICATION.

           (a) The Company agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the
      Underwriter and each person, if any, who controls the Underwriter within
      the meaning of the Act against any losses, claims, damages or
      liabilities, joint or several, to which such Underwriter or such
      controlling person may become subject, under the Act or otherwise,
      insofar as such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or actions in
      respect thereof) arise out of or are based upon (i) any untrue statement
      or alleged untrue statement of a material fact made by the Company in
      Section l hereof or contained (A) in the Registration Statement, any
      Preliminary Prospectus, or the Prospectus, or any amendment thereof or
      supplement thereto, or (B) in any Blue Sky application or other document
      executed by the Company specifically for that purpose or based upon and
      conforming to written information furnished by the Company filed in any
      state or other jurisdiction in order to qualify any or all of the Units
      under the securities laws thereof (any such application, document or
      information being hereinafter called a "BLUE SKY APPLICATION"), or (ii)
      the omission or alleged omission to state in the Registration Statement,
      any Preliminary Prospectus, or the Prospectus, or any amendment thereof
      or supplement thereto, or in any Blue Sky Application a material fact
      required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements
      therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made,
      not misleading; and will reimburse the Underwriter, its officers and
      directors and each such controlling person for any legal or other
      expenses reasonably incurred by the Underwriter, its officers and
      directors or such controlling person in connection with investigating or
      defending any such loss, claim, damage, liability or action; provided,
      however, that the Company will not be liable in any such case to the
      extent, but only to the extent, that any such loss, claim, damage or
      liability arises out of or is based upon an untrue statement or alleged
      untrue statement or omission or alleged omission made in reliance upon
      and in conformity with written information furnished to the Company
      through you or on your behalf specifically for use in the preparation of
      the Registration Statement or any amendment thereof or supplement
      thereto, or any such Blue Sky Application or any such Preliminary
      Prospectus or the Prospectus or any such amendment thereof or supplement
      thereto; and provided, further, that the foregoing indemnity agreement is
      subject to the condition that, insofar as it relates to any untrue
      statement, alleged untrue statement, omission or alleged omission made in
      any Preliminary Prospectus but eliminated or remedied in the Prospectus
      (as amended or supplemented), such indemnity agreement shall not inure to
      the benefit of the Underwriter (or to the benefit of any person who
      controls the Underwriter), if the person asserting any loss, liability,
      claim or damage purchased the Units which are the subject thereof and a
      copy of the Prospectus (as then supplemented or amended) was not sent or
      given to such person with or prior to the written confirmation of the
      sale of such Units to such person.



                                       21
<PAGE>   22




           (b) The Underwriter will indemnify and hold harmless the Company,
      each of its directors, each of its officers who has signed the
      Registration Statement, and each person, if any, who controls the Company
      within the meaning of the Act, against any losses, claims, damages or
      liabilities, joint or several, to which the Company or any such director
      or officer, or controlling person, may become subject, under the Act or
      otherwise, insofar as such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or
      actions in respect thereof) arise out of or are based upon (i) any untrue
      statement or alleged untrue statement of a material fact contained (A) in
      the Registration Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, or the
      Prospectus, or any amendment thereof or supplement thereto, or (B) in any
      Blue Sky Application, or (ii) the omission or alleged omission to state
      in the Registration Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus
      or any amendment thereof or supplement thereto or in any Blue Sky
      Application a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to
      make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under
      which they were made, not misleading, in each case to the extent, but
      only to the extent, that such untrue statement or alleged untrue
      statement or omission or alleged omission was made in reliance upon and
      in conformity with written information furnished to the Company through
      you specifically for use with reference to the Underwriter in the
      preparation of the Registration Statement or any amendment thereof or
      supplement thereto or any such Blue Sky Application or any such
      Preliminary Prospectus or the Prospectus or any such amendment thereof or
      supplement thereto; and will reimburse the Company, any such director or
      officer, or controlling person, for any legal or other expenses
      reasonably incurred by the Company or any such director or officer, or
      controlling person, in connection with investigating or defending any
      such loss, claim, damage, liability or action.  This indemnity agreement
      will be in addition to any liability which the Underwriter may otherwise
      have.

           (c) Promptly after receipt by an indemnified party under this
      Section 7 of notice of the commencement of any action, such indemnified
      party will, if a claim in respect thereof is to be made against any
      indemnifying party under this Section 7, notify in writing the
      indemnifying party of the commencement thereof; no indemnification shall
      be available to any party who shall fail to give notice as provided in
      this Section 7(c) if the party to whom notice was not given was unaware
      of the proceeding to which such notice would have related and was
      prejudiced by the failure to give such notice, but the omission so to
      notify such indemnifying party of any such action, suit or proceeding
      shall not relieve it from any liability that it may have to any
      indemnified party for contribution or otherwise than under this section.
      In case any such action is brought against any indemnified party, and the
      indemnified party notifies an indemnifying party of the commencement
      thereof, the indemnifying party will be entitled to participate therein,
      and, to the extent that it may wish, jointly with any other indemnifying
      party similarly notified, to assume the defense thereof, with counsel who
      shall be to the reasonable satisfaction of such indemnified party, and
      (notwithstanding subparagraphs (a) and (b) of this Section 7) after
      notice from the indemnifying party to such indemnified party of its
      election so to assume the defense thereof, the indemnifying party will
      not be liable to such indemnified party under this Section 7 for any
      legal or other expenses subsequently incurred by such indemnified party



                                       22
<PAGE>   23



     in connection with the defense thereof other than reasonable costs of
     investigation except as provided below.  The indemnified party shall have
     the right to employ its counsel in any such action, but the fees and
     expenses of such counsel shall be at the expense of such indemnified party
     unless (i) the employment of counsel by such indemnified party has been
     authorized in writing by the indemnifying parties, (ii) the indemnified
     party shall have reasonably concluded that there may be a conflict of
     interest between the indemnifying parties, or any of them, and the
     indemnified party in the conduct of the defense of such action (in which
     case the indemnifying parties shall not have the right to direct the
     defense of such action on behalf of the indemnified party) or (iii) the
     indemnifying parties shall not have employed counsel to assume the defense
     of such action within a reasonable time after notice of the commencement
     thereof, in each of which cases the fees and expenses of counsel shall be
     at the expense of the indemnifying parties; provided, however, that the
     indemnifying parties shall not be liable for the fees and expenses of more
     than one counsel for the indemnified parties. Any such indemnifying party
     shall not be liable to any such indemnified party on account of any
     settlement of any claim or action effected by the indemnified party without
     the consent of such indemnifying party.

     8. CONTRIBUTION.  In order to provide for just and equitable contribution
in circumstances in which indemnification provided for in Section 7 is
unavailable, each indemnifying party shall contribute to the aggregate losses,
claims, damages, expenses and liabilities to which the indemnified parties may
be subject in such proportion so that the Underwriter is responsible for that
portion (the "UNDERWRITING PORTION") represented by the percentage that the
underwriting commissions appearing on the cover page of the Prospectus bear to
the public offering price (net of Underwriting Commissions) appearing thereon
and the Company is responsible for the remaining portion (the "RESIDUAL
PORTION"); provided, however, (i) that no person guilty of fraudulent
misrepresentation (within the meaning of Section 11(f) of the Act) will be
entitled to contribution from any person who was not guilty of such fraudulent
misrepresentation; and (ii) if such allocation is not permitted by applicable
law, then the relative fault of the Company, its directors, officers and
controlling persons, on the one hand, and the Underwriter, its officers,
directors and its controlling persons, on the other, in connection with the
statements or omissions which resulted in such damages and other relevant
equitable considerations shall also be considered.  The relative fault shall be
determined by reference to, among other things, whether in the case of an untrue
statement of a material fact or the omission to state a material fact, such
statement or omission relates to information supplied by the Company or by the
Underwriter and the parties' relative intent, knowledge, access to information,
and opportunity to correct or prevent such untrue statement or omission.  The
Company and the Underwriter agree that it would not be just and equitable if the
respective obligations of the Company on the one hand, and the Underwriter, on
the other, to contribute pursuant to this Section 8 were to be determined by pro
rata or per capita allocation of the aggregate damages (even if the Underwriter,
its officers, directors and its controlling persons in the aggregate were
treated as one entity for such purpose) or by any other method of allocation
that does not take account of the equitable considerations referred to in this
Section 8.  For purposes of this Section 8, the term "DAMAGES" shall include any
legal or other expense reasonably incurred by the indemnified party in
connection with investigating or defending any action or claim that is the

                                       23
<PAGE>   24



subject of the contribution provisions of this Section 8.  Notwithstanding the
provisions of this Section 8, the Underwriter, its officers, directors and its
controlling persons in the aggregate shall not be required to contribute any
amount in excess of the amount by which the total purchase price of the Units
purchased by it, directly or indirectly, from the Company pursuant to this
Agreement exceeds the amount of any damages that the Underwriter, its officers,
directors and its controlling persons in the aggregate have otherwise been
required to pay by reason of such untrue statement or omission.  For purposes
of this Section 8, each person, if any, who controls the Underwriter within the
meaning of the Act shall have the same rights to contribution as the
Underwriter, and each person, if any, who controls the Company within the
meaning of the Act, each officer who shall have signed the Registration
Statement and each director of the Company shall have the same rights to
contribution as the Company.  Each party entitled to contribution agrees that,
upon the service of a summons or other initial legal process upon it in any
action instituted against it in respect of which contribution may be sought, it
will promptly give written notice of such service to the party or parties from
whom contribution may be sought, but the omission so to notify such party or
parties of any such service shall not relieve the party from whom contribution
may be sought from any obligation it  may have hereunder or otherwise.  In case
any such action, suit, or proceeding is brought against any party, and such
person so notifies a contributing party of the commencement thereof, the
contributing party will be entitled to participate therein with the notifying
party and any other contributing party similarly notified.

     9. SURVIVAL OF INDEMNITIES, CONTRIBUTION, WARRANTIES AND REPRESENTATIONS.
The respective indemnity and contribution agreements of the Company and the
Underwriter contained in Sections 7 and 8 hereof, the representations,
warranties, and covenants of the Company contained in Sections 1 and 4 hereof
and the representations and warranties of the Underwriter contained in Section
14 hereof shall remain operative and in full force and effect, regardless of
any termination or cancellation of this Agreement or any investigation made by
or on behalf of the Underwriter or the Company or any of their respective
directors or officers, or any controlling person referred to in said Sections 7
and 8, and shall survive the delivery of, and payment for, the Units.

     10. NOTICES.  Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Agreement,
all notices and other communications hereunder shall be in writing and, if
given to the Underwriter, shall be mailed, delivered or telefaxed to R. J.
Steichen & Company, One Financial Plaza, 120 South Sixth Street, Minneapolis,
MN  55402, Attention:  President, with a copy to Girard P. Miller, Doherty,
Rumble & Butler, P.A., 150 South Fifth Street, Suite 3500, Minneapolis, MN
55402, or if given to the Company, shall be mailed, delivered or telefaxed to
it at Hotel Discovery, Inc., 7701 France Avenue South, Suite 217, Edina, MN
55435, Attention:  President, with a copy to William M. Mower, Maslon Edelman
Borman & Brand, a Professional Limited Liability Partnership, 90 South Seventh
Street, Suite 3300, Minneapolis, MN  55402.

   
     11. UNDERWRITER'S WARRANTS.  Upon payment of a purchase price of $50 by
the Underwriter, the Company will issue and deliver to R. J. Steichen &
Company, for its account, Warrants to purchase Common Stock in an amount equal
to 250,000 shares of Common Stock.  Such Warrants shall be issued on the
Closing Date and shall be dated as of the Closing Date.
    



                                       24
<PAGE>   25



Such Warrants shall be exercisable commencing one (1) year after the Effective
Date for a period of four years thereafter at a price per share of $6.00.  Such
Warrant shall contain such terms and conditions as contained in the form of
Underwriter's Warrant attached hereto and labeled Appendix A.

     12.  INFORMATION FURNISHED BY UNDERWRITER.  The statements relating to
stabilization activities of the Underwriter on the inside front cover of the
Preliminary Prospectus and the Prospectus, and under the caption "UNDERWRITING"
in any Preliminary Prospectus and in the Prospectus, and, to the extent the
same relate to you, in any Blue Sky application, constitute the written
information furnished by or on behalf of you referred to in Section 1 hereof
and in paragraphs (a) and (b) of Section 7 hereof.

     13.  PARTIES.  This Agreement is made solely for the benefit of the
Underwriter, the Company, any director, officer, or controlling person referred
to in Sections 7 and 8 hereof, and their respective personal representatives,
successors and assigns, and no other person shall acquire or have any right by
virtue of this Agreement.  The term "personal representatives, successors and
assigns," as used in this Agreement, shall not include any purchaser of Units
(as such purchaser) from the Underwriter.

     14.  REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES AND COVENANTS OF THE UNDERWRITER.  The
Underwriter represents, warrants to and agrees with the Company that:

          (a) The Underwriter is a corporation duly incorporated and validly
     existing in good standing under the laws of the jurisdiction in which it is
     incorporated.

          (b) The Underwriter is duly registered as a broker-dealer under the
     Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and under the securities laws
     of Minnesota and of such other states in which it intends to offer or sell
     the Units, if such registration is required in any such other state, and is
     a member in good standing of the National Association of Securities
     Dealers, Inc., and no proceedings have been initiated or threatened to
     suspend any such registration or membership.

          (c) The execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement by the
     Underwriter, and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby,
     have been duly authorized by the Underwriter, and at the time of its
     execution, performance, or consummation, will not constitute or result in
     any breach or violation of any of the terms, provisions or conditions of,
     or constitute a default under, any federal statute or regulation
     (including, without limitation, the net capital requirements under Rule
     15c-1 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934) or any statute or regulation
     of any state in which it intends to offer or sell the Units, or any order,
     judgment, decree, rule or regulation of any court or governmental agency or
     body having jurisdiction over the Underwriter or any of its activities or
     property; and other than registration of the Units under the Act and
     applicable states securities laws and subject to the favorable review by
     the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., no consent, approval,
     authorization or order of any

                                       25
<PAGE>   26



      court or governmental agency or body is required for the consummation of
      the transactions contemplated hereby.

           (d) There is not now pending or threatened against the Underwriter
      or any control person of the Underwriter any action or proceeding either
      in any court of competent jurisdiction or before the Commission, National
      Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. or the securities authorities of
      any state, based upon any action or failure to act on the part of the
      Underwriter or any controlling person of an Underwriter that would
      restrict the Underwriter's ability to perform its obligations hereunder.

           (e) The Units will be offered by the Underwriter only to persons
      resident in Minnesota and such other states as are mutually designated by
      the Underwriter and the Company pursuant to Section 4(c) hereof.  All of
      such persons shall be persons and entities for whom the purchase of the
      Units is a suitable investment and the Underwriter shall employ or engage
      no Selected Dealer, sales person, agent or representative in the offer or
      sale of the Units, which Selected Dealer, sales person, agent or
      representative is not properly registered and licensed for the purpose of
      such offer or sale.  All such registrations and licenses shall remain in
      full force and effect until after the Closing Dates.

           (f) The Underwriter agrees that neither the Underwriter nor any
      officer or other person employed by the Underwriter or any Selected
      Dealer will provide any information or make any representations to
      offerees of the Units, other than such information and representations as
      are either contained in the Prospectus or the Registration Statement or
      are not inconsistent with information set forth in the Prospectus or the
      Registration Statement.

           (g) The Underwriter agrees that in the event the Underwriter learns
      of any circumstances or fact which it believes would make any Preliminary
      Prospectus, the Prospectus, or the Registration Statement inaccurate or
      misleading in any material respect, it will immediately bring such
      circumstances or facts to the attention of the Company.

     15. GOVERNING LAW.  This Agreement shall be governed by and construed and
enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of Minnesota.


                                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.


                                             By _____________________________
                                                   Its ______________________

                                                         "COMPANY"




                                       26


<PAGE>   27




The foregoing Agreement is hereby
confirmed  and  accepted  as of the
date first above written:

R. J. STEICHEN & COMPANY


By _________________________________
     Authorized Officer

____________________________________
     Print Name

     "UNDERWRITER"






                                       27
<PAGE>   28





                                   APPENDIX A


                             UNDERWRITER'S WARRANT

<PAGE>   29





                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.


                         COMMON STOCK PURCHASE WARRANT


   
     Hotel Discovery, Inc., an Minnesota corporation (the "COMPANY"), hereby
agrees that, for value received, R. J. STEICHEN & COMPANY, or its assigns, is
entitled, subject to the terms set forth below, to purchase from the Company at
any time or from time to time after ____________, 1998, and before 4:30 p.m.,
Minneapolis, Minnesota time, on __________, 2002 Two Hundred Fifty Thousand
(250,000) shares of the $.01 par value Common Stock of the Company, at an
exercise price of $6.00 per Share, subject to adjustment as provided herein.
    

     1. EXERCISE OF WARRANT.  The purchase rights granted by this Warrant shall
be exercised (in minimum quantities of 100 shares) by the holder surrendering
this Warrant with the form of exercise attached hereto duly executed by such
holder, to the Company at its principal office, accompanied by payment, in cash
or by cashier's check payable to the order of the Company, of the purchase
price payable in respect of the Shares being purchased.  If less than all of
the Shares purchasable hereunder is purchased, the Company will, upon such
exercise, execute and deliver to the holder hereof a new Warrant (dated the
date hereof) evidencing the number of Shares not so purchased.  As soon as
practicable after the exercise of this Warrant and payment of the purchase
price, the Company will cause to be issued in the name of and delivered to the
holder hereof, or as such holder may direct, a certificate or certificates
representing the Shares purchased upon such exercise.  The Company may require
that such certificate or certificates contain on the face thereof a legend
substantially as follows:

      "The transfer of the shares represented by this certificate is
      restricted pursuant to the terms of a Common Stock Purchase
      Warrant dated____________, 1997, issued by Hotel Discovery,
      Inc., a copy of which is available for inspection at the offices
      of Hotel Discovery, Inc.  Transfer may not be made except in
      accordance with the terms of the Common Stock Purchase Warrant.
      In addition, no sale, offer to sell or transfer of the shares
      represented by this certificate shall be made unless a
      Registration Statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as
      amended (the "ACT"), with respect to such shares is then in effect
      or an exemption from the registration requirements of the Act is
      then in fact applicable to such shares."




___________________________

      THIS WARRANT IS SUBJECT TO THE RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFER SET FORTH
      AT THE BOTTOM OF PAGE 8 HEREOF.

<PAGE>   30




     2. NEGOTIABILITY AND TRANSFER.  This Warrant is issued upon the following
terms, to which each holder hereof consents and agrees:

            (a)  Except where directed by a court of competent
                 jurisdiction pursuant to the dissolution or liquidation of a
                 corporate holder hereof, for the period ending one year from
                 _______________, 1997, title to this Warrant may not be sold,
                 transferred, assigned or hypothecated, except that within such
                 one-year period title to this Warrant may be transferred only
                 to R. J. Steichen & Company (the "UNDERWRITER"), or to a
                 person who is both an officer and shareholder, or both an
                 officer and employee, of the Underwriter, or to a successor
                 (or both an officer and shareholder, or both an officer and
                 employee) in interest to the business of the Underwriter, by
                 endorsement (by the holder hereof executing the form of
                 assignment attached hereto) and delivery in the same manner as
                 in the case of a negotiable instrument transferable by
                 endorsement and delivery subject to the requirements of
                 Section 4 hereof.

            (b)  Until this Warrant is duly transferred on the
                 books of the Company, the Company may treat the registered
                 holder of this Warrant as absolute owner hereof for all
                 purposes without being affected by any notice to the contrary.

            (c)  Each successive holder of this Warrant, or of any
                 portion of the rights represented thereby, shall be bound by
                 the terms and conditions set forth herein.

     3. ANTIDILUTION ADJUSTMENTS.  If the Company shall at any time hereafter
subdivide or combine its outstanding shares of Common Stock, or declare a
dividend payable in Common Stock, the exercise price in effect immediately prior
to the subdivision, combination or record date for such dividend payable in
Common Stock shall forthwith be proportionately increased, in the case of
combination, or proportionately decreased, in the case of subdivision or
declaration of a dividend payable in Common Stock, and the number of Shares
purchasable upon exercise of this Warrant, immediately preceding such event,
shall be changed to the number determined by dividing the then current exercise
price by the exercise price as adjusted after such subdivision, combination or
dividend payable in Common Stock and against the number of Shares purchasable
upon the exercise of this Warrant immediately preceding such event, so as to
achieve an exercise price and number of Shares purchasable after such event
proportional to such exercise price and number of Shares purchasable immediately
preceding such event.  No adjustment in exercise price shall be required unless
such adjustment would require an increase or decrease of at least five cents
($0.05) in such price; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that any adjustments which are not
require to be so made shall be carried forward and taken into account in any
subsequent adjustment.  All calculations hereunder shall be made to the nearest
cent or to the nearest one-hundredth of a share, as the case may be.


                                       2
<PAGE>   31




      No fractional Shares are to be issued upon the exercise of the Warrant,
but the Company shall pay a cash adjustment in respect of any fraction of a
Share which would otherwise be issuable in an amount equal to the same fraction
of the market price per share of Common Stock on the day of exercise as
determined in good faith by the Company.

      In case of any capital reorganization or any reclassification of the
Common Stock of the Company, or in the case of any consolidation with or merger
of the Company into or with another corporation, or the sale of all or
substantially all of its assets to another corporation, which is effected in
such a manner that the holders of Common Stock shall be entitled to receive
stock, securities or assets with respect to or in exchange for Common Stock,
then, as a part of such reorganization, reclassification, consolidation, merger
or sale, as the case may be, lawful provision shall be made so that the holder
of the Warrant shall have the right thereafter to receive, upon the exercise
hereof, the kind and amount of shares of stock or other securities or property
which the holder would have been entitled to receive if, immediately prior to
such reorganization, reclassification, consolidation, merger or sale, the
holder had held the number of Shares which were then purchasable upon the
exercise of the Warrant.  In any such case, appropriate adjustment (as
determined in good faith by the Board of Directors of the Company) shall be
made in the application of the provisions set forth herein with respect to the
rights and interest thereafter of the holder of the Warrant, to the end that
the provisions set forth herein (including provisions with respect to
adjustments of the exercise price) shall thereafter be applicable, as nearly as
reasonably may be, in relation to any shares of stock or other property
thereafter deliverable upon the exercise of the Warrant.

      When any adjustment is required to be made in the exercise price, initial
or adjusted, the Company shall forthwith determine the new exercise price, and

      (a)  prepare and retain on file a statement describing in
           reasonable detail the method used in arriving at the new exercise
           price; and

      (b)  cause a copy of such statement to be mailed to the holder of
           the Warrant as of a date within ten (10) days after the date when
           the circumstances giving rise to the adjustment occurred.

      4.   REGISTRATION RIGHTS.  Prior to making any disposition of the Warrant
or of any Shares purchased upon exercise of the Warrant, the holder will give
written notice to the Company describing briefly the manner of any such proposed
disposition.  The holder will not make any such disposition until (i) the
Company has notified him that, in the opinion of its counsel, registration under
the Act is not required with respect to such disposition, or (ii) a Registration
Statement covering the proposed distribution has been filed by the Company and
has become effective.  The Company agrees that, upon receipt of written notice
from the holder hereof with respect to such proposed distribution, it will use
its best efforts, in the consultation with the holder's counsel, to ascertain as
promptly as possible whether or not registration is required, and will advise
the holder promptly with respect thereto, and the holder will cooperate in
providing the Company with information necessary to make such determination.



                                       3
<PAGE>   32




     If, at any time prior to the expiration of seven (7) years from the date
hereof, the Company shall propose to file any Registration Statement (other
than any registration on Forms S-4, S-8 or any other similarly inappropriate
form or Registration Statement with respect to an initial public offering in
which there are no selling shareholders) under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, covering a public offering of the Company's Units or shares, it will
notify the holder hereof at least thirty (30) days prior to each such filing
and will include in the Registration Statement (to the extent permitted by
applicable regulation), the shares purchased by the holder or purchasable by
the holder upon the exercise of the Warrant to the extent requested by the
holder hereof.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the number of shares of the
holders of the Warrants proposed to be registered thereby shall be reduced pro
rata with any other selling shareholder (other than the Company) upon the
reasonable request of the managing underwriter of such offering.  If the
Registration Statement or Offering Statement filed pursuant to such thirty (30)
day notice has not become effective within six months following the date such
notice is given to the holder hereof, the Company must again notify such holder
in the manner provided above.

     At any time prior to the expiration of five (5) years from the date
hereof, and provided that a registration statement on Form S-3 (or its
equivalent) is then available to the Company, and on a one-time basis only, if
the holders of 50% or more of the Warrants and/or the Shares acquired upon
exercise of the Warrants request the registration of the Shares on Form S-3 (or
its equivalent), the Company shall promptly thereafter use its best efforts to
effect the registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, of all
such shares which such holders request in writing to be so registered, and in a
manner corresponding to the methods of distribution described in such holders'
request.

     All expenses of any such registrations referred to in this Section 4,
except the fees of counsel to such holders and underwriting commissions or
discounts, filing fees, and any transfer or other taxes applicable to such
shares, shall be borne by the Company.

     Upon effectiveness of a Registration Statement which includes Common Stock
purchased or purchasable upon the exercise of this Warrant in accordance with a
valid demand under this Section 4, the rights under this Warrant of all holders
to make another such demand shall terminate.  Each purchaser or transferee of a
portion of this Warrant is responsible to determine whether his or her demand
rights under this paragraph have been terminated by such an exercise.  Any
Warrants issued upon transfers subsequent to such an exercise shall have all of
the demand registration provisions under this Section 4 deleted.

     The Company will mail to each record holder, at the last known post office
address, written notice of any exercise of the rights granted under this
paragraph 4, by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, and
each holder shall have twenty (20) days from the date of deposit of such notice
in the U.S. Mail to notify the Company in writing whether such holder wishes to
join in such exercise.

     The Company will furnish the holder hereof with a reasonable number of
copies of any prospectus included in such filings and will amend or supplement
the same as required during the



                                       4
<PAGE>   33



period of required use thereof.  The Company will maintain, at its expense, the
effectiveness of any Registration Statement or the Offering Statement filed by
the Company, whether or not at the request of the holder hereof, for at least
six (6) months following the effective date thereof.

     In the case of the filing of any Registration Statement, and to the extent
permissible under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and controlling
precedent thereunder, the Company and the holder hereof shall provide cross
indemnification agreements to each other in customary scope covering the
accuracy and completeness of the information furnished by each.

     The holder of the Warrant agrees to cooperate with the Company in the
preparation and filing of any such Registration Statement or Offering
Statement, and in the furnishing of information concerning the holder for
inclusion therein, or in any efforts by the Company to establish that the
proposed sale is exempt under the Act as to any proposed distribution.

     5.     RIGHT TO CONVERT.

            (a)  The holder of this Warrant shall have the right
                 to require the Company to convert this Warrant (the
                 "CONVERSION RIGHT"), at any time after ________________, 1998
                 and prior to its expiration, into Common Stock as provided for
                 in this Section 5.  Upon exercise of the Conversion Right, the
                 Company shall deliver to the holder (without payment by the
                 holder of any exercise price) that number of shares of Common
                 Stock equal to the quotient obtained by dividing (x) the value
                 of the Warrant at the time the Conversion Right is exercised
                 (determined by subtracting the exercise price for one Warrant
                 Share in effect immediately prior to the exercise of the
                 Conversion Right from the Fair Market Value (as determined
                 below) for one Warrant Share immediately prior to the exercise
                 of the Conversion Right) by (y) the Fair Market Value of one
                 share of Common Stock immediately prior to the exercise of the
                 Conversion Right.

            (b)  The Conversion Right may be exercised by the
                 holder, at any time or from time to time, prior to its
                 expiration, on any business day, by delivering a written
                 notice (the "CONVERSION NOTICE") to the Company at the offices
                 of the Company exercising the Conversion Right and specifying
                 (i) the total number of shares of Common Stock the
                 Warrantholder will purchase pursuant to such conversion, and
                 (ii) a place, and a date not less than five (5) nor more than
                 twenty (20) business days from the date of the Conversion
                 Notice, for the closing of such purchase.

            (c)  At any closing under Section 5(b) hereof, (i) the
                 holder will surrender the Warrant, (ii) the Company will
                 deliver to the holder a certificate or certificates for the
                 number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon such
                 conversion, together with cash, in lieu of any fraction of a
                 share, and (iii) the Company will deliver to the holder a new
                 Warrant representing the




                                       5
<PAGE>   34



                 number of shares, if any, with respect to which the Warrant
                 shall not have been converted.

            (d)  "FAIR MARKET VALUE" of a share of Common Stock as
                 of a particular date (the "DETERMINATION DATE") shall mean:

                 (i)   If the Company's Common Stock is
                       traded on an exchange or is quoted on The Nasdaq
                       National Market or The Nasdaq SmallCap Market, then the
                       average closing or last sale prices, respectively,
                       reported for the ten (10) business days immediately
                       preceding the Determination Date.

                 (ii)  If the Company's Common Stock is not traded on an 
                       exchange or on The Nasdaq National Market or The Nasdaq
                       SmallCap Market, but is traded in the over-the-counter
                       market, then the average of the closing bid and asked
                       prices reported for the ten (10) business days
                       immediately preceding the Determination Date.

                 (iii) If the Company's Common Stock is not publicly
                       traded and there has been a bona fide sale for cash on
                       an arm's-length basis within 45 days prior to the
                       Determination Date of such Common Stock by the Company
                       privately to one or more investors unaffiliated with
                       the Company (a "Qualifying Sale"), then the most recent
                       such sales price; and

                 (iv)  If the Company's Common Stock is not publicly
                       traded and there has been no Qualifying Sale, then the
                       appraised fair market value of such stock, as
                       determined by mutual agreement of the Company and the
                       holder of the Warrant; or if the parties cannot agree
                       to such valuation, then each of the Company and the
                       holder shall select an arbitrator and such arbitrators
                       shall select a third, and such three arbitrators shall
                       determine (in accordance with the Commercial
                       Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration
                       Association, such expenses to be borne equally by the
                       parties) the fair market value (without any discount
                       for lack of marketability or minority interest) of a
                       share of Common Stock of the Company.


     6. NOTICES.  The Company shall mail to the registered holder of the
Warrant, at his or her last known post office address appearing on the books of
the Company, not less than fifteen (15) days prior to the date on which (a) a
record will be taken for the purpose of determining the holders of Common Stock
entitled to dividends (other than cash dividends) or subscription rights, or (b)
a record will be taken (or in lieu thereof, the transfer books will be closed)
for the purpose of determining the holders of common stock entitled to notice of
and to vote at a meeting of shareholders at which any capital reorganization,
reclassification of common stock, consolidation, 



                                       6
<PAGE>   35

merger, dissolution, liquidation, winding up or sale of
substantially all of the Company's assets shall be considered and acted upon.

     7. RESERVATION OF COMMON STOCK.  A number of shares of Common Stock
sufficient to provide for the exercise of the Warrant and the shares of Common
Stock included therein upon the basis herein set forth shall at all times be
reserved for the exercise thereof.

     8. MISCELLANEOUS.  Whenever reference is made herein to the issue or sale
of shares of Common Stock, the terms "COMMON STOCK" or "SHARES" shall include
any stock of any class of the Company other than preferred stock that has a
fixed limit on dividends and a fixed amount payable in the event of any
voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company.

     The Company will not, by amendment of its Articles of Incorporation or
through reorganization, consolidation, merger, dissolution or sale of assets,
or by any other voluntary act or deed, avoid or seek to avoid the observance or
performance of any of the covenants, stipulations or conditions to be observed
or performed hereunder by the Company, but will, at all times in good faith,
assist, insofar as it is able, in the carrying out of all provisions hereof and
in the taking of all other action which may be necessary in order to protect
the rights of the holder hereof against dilution.

     Upon written request of the holder of this Warrant, the Company will
promptly provide such holder with a then current written list of the names and
addresses of all holders of warrants originally issued under the terms of, and
concurrent with, this Warrant.

     The representations, warranties and agreements herein contained shall
survive the exercise of this Warrant.  References to the "holder of" include
the immediate holder of shares purchased on the exercise of this Warrant, and
the word "holder" shall include the plural thereof.  This Common Stock Purchase
Warrant shall be interpreted under the laws of the State of Minnesota.

     All Shares or other securities issued upon the exercise of the Warrant
shall be validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable, and the Company will
pay all taxes in respect of the issuer thereof.

     Notwithstanding anything contained herein to the contrary, the holder of
this Warrant shall not be deemed a stockholder of the Company for any purpose
whatsoever until and unless this Warrant is duly exercised.


                                       7
<PAGE>   36




     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Warrant has been duly executed by Hotel
Discovery, Inc., this_____day of_________, 1997.


                                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.


                                             By _____________________________
                                                     Its ____________________









      THE SECURITIES EVIDENCED HEREBY HAVE NOT BEEN REGISTERED UNDER THE
      SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, OR APPLICABLE STATE SECURITIES LAW.  THESE
      SECURITIES HAVE BEEN ACQUIRED FOR INVESTMENT AND MAY NOT BE
      OFFERED FOR SALE, SOLD, ASSIGNED, TRANSFERRED, PLEDGED, ASSIGNED
      OR  OTHERWISE DISPOSED OF, AND NO TRANSFER OF THE SECURITIES WILL
      BE MADE BY THE COMPANY OR ITS TRANSFER AGENT, IN THE ABSENCE OF
      SUCH REGISTRATION OR AN OPINION OF COUNSEL ACCEPTABLE TO THE
      COMPANY THAT SUCH REGISTRATION IS NOT REQUIRED.



                                       8
<PAGE>   37




                            WARRANT EXERCISE FORM

                  To be signed only upon exercise of Warrant.

     The undersigned, the holder of the within Warrant, hereby irrevocably
elects to exercise the purchase right represented by such Warrant for, and to
purchase thereunder,_________________ shares of Common Stock of Hotel Discovery,
Inc. to which such Warrant relates and herewith makes payment of $_________
therefor in cash or by certified check, and requests that such shares be issued
and be delivered to,_______________, the address for which is set forth below
the signature of the undersigned.

Dated:____________


__________________________              _____________________________________
(Taxpayer's I.D. Number)                Signature)

                                        _____________________________________
                                        (Address)
                                        _____________________________________


                               _________________



                                ASSIGNMENT FORM

             To be signed only upon authorized transfer of Warrant.

     FOR VALUE RECEIVED, the undersigned hereby sells, assigns, and transfers
unto ________ the right to purchase shares of Common Stock of Hotel Discovery,
Inc. to which the within Warrant relates and appoints ____________, attorney, to
transfer said right on the books of Hotel Discovery, Inc. with full power of
substitution in the premises.

Dated: ________________________

                                          _____________________________________
                                          (Signature)

                                          _____________________________________
                                          (Address)
                                          _____________________________________


<PAGE>   38






                             CASHLESS EXERCISE FORM
        (To be executed upon exercise of Warrant pursuant to Section 5)


     The undersigned hereby irrevocably elects a cashless exercise of the right
of purchase represented by the within Common Stock Purchase Warrant for, and to
purchase thereunder, ______________________ shares of Common Stock, as provided
for in Section 5 therein.

     If said number of shares shall not be all the shares purchasable under the
within Common Stock Purchase Warrant, a new Warrant is to be issued in the name
of said undersigned for the balance remaining of the shares purchasable
thereunder rounded up to the next higher number of shares.

     Please issue a certificate or certificates for such Common Stock in the
name of, and pay any cash for any fractional shares to:



NAME                    ________________________________________________________
                        (Please Print Name)


ADDRESS                 ________________________________________________________

                        ________________________________________________________


SOCIAL SECURITY NO. ______________________________________________________




SIGNATURE ____________________________________________________________


                        NOTE:  The above signature should correspond exactly
                        with the name on the first page of this Common Stock
                        Purchase Warrant or with the name of the assignee
                        appearing in the assignment form on the preceding page.



<PAGE>   1

                                                                EXHIBIT 10.6


                             HOTEL DISCOVERY, INC.

                                  AMENDMENT TO
                             1997 STOCK OPTION AND
                               COMPENSATION PLAN


     1.    INCREASE IN NUMBER OF SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN. Section 5.1 of the
1997 Stock Option and Compensation Plan is hereby amended to read in its
entirety as follows:

          5.1    NUMBER OF SHARES. Subject to adjustment as provided in Section
     11.6, the number of shares of Common Stock which may be issued under the
     Plan shall not exceed 750,000 shares of Common Stock.

     2.    EFFECTIVE DATE. This Amendment became effective as of September 12,
1997. 


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