ALL-COMM MEDIA CORP
SB-2/A, 1996-12-24
BUSINESS SERVICES, NEC
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<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON DECEMBER 24, 1996
    
 
                                                      REGISTRATION NO. 333-14339
________________________________________________________________________________
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                            ------------------------
 
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 3
                                       TO
                                   FORM SB-2
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                   UNDER THE
                             SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
    
                            ------------------------
 
                           ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
              (EXACT NAME OF SMALL BUSINESS ISSUER IN ITS CHARTER)
<TABLE>
<S>                              <C>                               <C>
         NEVADA                            7389
(STATE OF INCORPORATION)         (PRIMARY STANDARD INDUSTRIAL           88-0085608
                                  CLASSIFICATION CODE NUMBER)        (I.R.S. EMPLOYER
                                                                    IDENTIFICATION NO.)
</TABLE>
 
                            ------------------------
 
                        400 CORPORATE POINTE, SUITE 780
                         CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA 90230
                                 (310) 342-2800
         (ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE NUMBER OF PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICES)
                            ------------------------
 
                                MR. BARRY PETERS
               CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
                           ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
                        400 CORPORATE POINTE, SUITE 780
                         CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA 90230
                                 (310) 342-2800
           (NAME, ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE NUMBER OF AGENT FOR SERVICE)
                            ------------------------
 
                                   COPIES TO:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                         <C>
  ROBERT A. ZUCCARO, ESQ.                          IRWIN M. ROSENTHAL, ESQ.
JONES, DAY, REAVIS & POGUE                  RUBIN BAUM LEVIN CONSTANT & FRIEDMAN
   599 LEXINGTON AVENUE                              30 ROCKEFELLER PLAZA
 NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10022                          NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10112
      (212) 326-3939                                    (212) 698-7700
</TABLE>
 
                            ------------------------
 
     APPROXIMATE  DATE OF  COMMENCEMENT OF PROPOSED  SALE TO PUBLIC:  As soon as
practicable after this Registration Statement becomes effective.
     If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on
a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to  Rule 415 under the Securities Act  of
1933, as amended (the 'Securities Act') check the following box. [x]
     If  this Form  is filed to  register additional securities  for an offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b)  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 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>                                                                                                PROPOSED MAXIMUM
                                                                                    PROPOSED MAXIMUM        AGGREGATE
              TITLE OF EACH CLASS OF SECURITIES                    NUMBER TO       OFFERING PRICE PER        OFFERING
                       TO BE REGISTERED                          BE REGISTERED     SHARE OR WARRANT(1)       PRICE(1)
<S>                                                             <C>                <C>                   <C>
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share(2).....................      2,415,000         $       4 1/8        $  9,961,875
Representatives' Warrants(3)..................................        210,000         $   --               $   --
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share(5)(6)..................        210,000         $       4 1/8        $    866,250
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share(7).....................      1,381,056         $       4 1/8        $  5,696,856
     Total Registration Fee...................................
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                 AMOUNT OF
              TITLE OF EACH CLASS OF SECURITIES                 REGISTRATION
                       TO BE REGISTERED                             FEE
<S>                                                             <C>
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share(2).....................     $3,019
Representatives' Warrants(3)..................................     $  -0-(4)
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share(5)(6)..................     $  263
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share(7).....................     $1,727
     Total Registration Fee...................................     $5,009(8)
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(1) Estimated solely  for  the  purpose  of  calculating  the  registration  fee
    pursuant to Rule 457(c) under the Securities Act.
    
   
(2) Includes  315,000 shares subject to the Underwriters' over-allotment options
    granted by the Company and certain selling stockholders.
    
   
(3) To be issued  to Cruttenden Roth  Incorporated and LT  Lawrence & Co.,  Inc.
    (collectively, the 'Representatives').
    
   
(4) Pursuant to Rule 457(g), no registration fee is payable.
    
   
(5) Represents shares issuable upon exercise of the Representatives' Warrants.
    
   
(6) Pursuant to Rule 416, the Company is also registering such additional shares
    as  may  become issuable  to the  holders  of the  Representatives' Warrants
    pursuant to the anti-dilution provisions thereof.
    
   
(7) Represents shares to be  sold by certain selling  stockholders on a  delayed
    basis, and not as part of the underwritten offering.
    
   
(8) Of this amount, $5,462 was previously paid.
    
   
                            ------------------------
    
 
     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  OF 1933 OR  UNTIL THIS REGISTRATION  STATEMENT SHALL  BECOME
EFFECTIVE  ON SUCH DATE AS THE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 8(a),
MAY DETERMINE.
 
________________________________________________________________________________



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
                                EXPLANATORY NOTE
    
 
   
     This  registration  statement (the  'Registration Statement')  contains two
prospectuses.  The   first  prospectus   (the  'Prospectus')   relates  to   the
underwritten  public offering (the 'Underwritten  Offering') of 2,100,000 shares
of common stock, par value $.01 per share (the 'Common Stock') of All-Comm Media
Corporation (the 'Company'), 1,750,000 of which are being offered by the Company
and the  remaining  350,000  of  which are  being  offered  by  certain  selling
stockholders  of the Company (the 'Selling Stockholders'), and 315,000 shares of
Common Stock to cover over-allotments, if any, the first 124,173 shares of which
are being offered  by certain selling  stockholders of the  Company (the  'Over-
Allotment  Selling Stockholders') and the remaining  190,827 shares of which are
being offered by the Company. The form of Prospectus in the exact form in  which
it  is to be used after the effective date will be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission  (the  'Commission')  pursuant  to  Rule  424(b)  under  the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the 'Securities Act'). The second Prospectus
(the  'Delayed Prospectus') relates to the  offering (the 'Delayed Offering') of
1,381,056 shares of Common Stock by certain selling stockholders of the  Company
(the   'Delayed  Selling  Stockholders')  on   a  delayed  basis  following  the
Underwritten Offering, but  not as part  of the Underwritten  Offering. Of  such
shares  to be offered  on a delayed  basis, 1,291,588 shares  will be subject to
certain lock-up  arrangements. Following  the Prospectus  are certain  alternate
pages  of the  Delayed Prospectus,  including alternate  front outside  and back
outside cover  pages, an  alternate 'The  Offering' section  of the  'Prospectus
Summary,' an alternate 'Use of Proceeds' section, an alternate first page of the
'Shares  Eligible  for  Future  Sale' section  and  new  sections  entitled 'The
Underwritten  Offering'   and  'Delayed   Selling  Stockholders   and  Plan   of
Distribution.'  Each of the alternate pages  for the Delayed Prospectus included
herein is labeled 'Alternate Page for Delayed Prospectus.' All other sections of
the Prospectus, other than 'Underwriting' and 'The Delayed Offering,' are to  be
used  in the Delayed Prospectus. In addition, cross-references in the Prospectus
will be adjusted in the Delayed Prospectus to refer to the appropriate sections.
    


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
                 SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED DECEMBER  , 1996
    
 
PROSPECTUS
                                                                          [LOGO]
                                2,100,000 SHARES
                           ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
                                  COMMON STOCK
 
   
     This  Prospectus relates  to an  offering (the  'Underwritten Offering') of
2,100,000 shares of common stock, par value $.01 per share (the 'Common Stock'),
of which  1,750,000  shares are  being  offered by  All-Comm  Media  Corporation
('All-Comm'  or the 'Company')  and 350,000 shares are  being offered by certain
stockholders of the Company (the  'Selling Stockholders'). The Company will  not
receive  any of the  proceeds from the sale  of the Common  Stock by the Selling
Stockholders. See  'Principal and  Selling Stockholders.'  The Common  Stock  is
quoted  on The Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM under the symbol 'ALCM.' On December 20,
1996 the last  sale price  of the  Company's Common  Stock, as  reported by  The
Nasdaq  SmallCap MarketSM,  was $4  1/8 per  share. See  'Price Range  of Common
Stock.' Concurrently, 1,381,056 shares  of Common Stock  are being offered  (the
'Delayed Offering') by certain selling stockholders of the Company (the 'Delayed
Selling  Stockholders') on a delayed basis from time to time, and not as part of
this Offering. Of  these shares,  1,291,588 shares  will be  subject to  certain
lock-up arrangements. See 'The Delayed Offering' and 'Shares Eligible for Future
Sale -- Registration Rights and Certain Lock-Up Arrangements.'
    
 
   
     SEE  'RISK  FACTORS'  BEGINNING ON  PAGE  10  FOR A  DISCUSSION  OF CERTAIN
MATERIAL FACTORS THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED BY PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS.
    
                            ------------------------
 
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              DISCOUNTS AND           PROCEEDS TO              SELLING
                                             TO PUBLIC           COMMISSIONS(1)           COMPANY(2)            STOCKHOLDERS
<S>                                    <C>                    <C>                    <C>                    <C>
 Per Share...........................            $                      $                      $                      $
  Total(3)...........................            $                      $                      $                      $
</TABLE>
 
(1) Excludes  (a)  warrants (the  'Representatives' Warrants')  to be  issued to
    Cruttenden Roth Incorporated (the 'Lead  Representative') and LT Lawrence  &
    Co.,   Inc.  (the  'Other  Representative,'   and  together  with  the  Lead
    Representative, the 'Representatives'), each in its individual capacity  and
    not  as representative of the  underwriters (the 'Underwriters') to purchase
    210,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price per share equal to  120%
    of  the initial price to public per  share and (b) a non-accountable expense
    allowance payable to the Representatives equal  to 3% of the gross  proceeds
    of  the  Offering.  The Company  has  agreed to  indemnify  the Underwriters
    against, or  contribute  to  losses arising  out  of,  certain  liabilities,
    including  liabilities under  the Securities  Act of  1933, as  amended (the
    'Securities Act'). See 'Underwriting.'
(2) Before deducting expenses payable by the  Company estimated to be $        ,
    including   the  Representatives'  non-accountable  expense  allowance.  See
    'Underwriting.'
(3) The  Company,  certain  of  the  Selling  Stockholders  and  certain   other
    stockholders (the 'Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders') have granted to the
    Underwriters  options, exercisable  within 45  days of  the date  hereof, to
    purchase, in the aggregate, up to 315,000 additional shares of Common Stock,
    upon the same  terms and conditions  as the shares  of Common Stock  offered
    hereby,  solely  to  cover  over-allotments,  if  any.  If  the Underwriters
    exercise the  over-allotment options  in full,  the total  Price to  Public,
    Underwriting  Discounts and  Commissions, Proceeds  to Company,  Proceeds to
    Selling  Stockholders  and  the  proceeds  to  the  Over-Allotment   Selling
    Stockholders will be $     , $     , $     , $     and $     , respectively.
    The  Company will not receive any proceeds  from the sale of Common Stock by
    the Selling Stockholders  and the Over-Allotment  Selling Stockholders.  See
    'Principal and Selling Stockholders' and 'Underwriting.'
   
                            ------------------------
     The  shares of Common  Stock are being offered  by the several Underwriters
named herein, subject to prior sale, when,  as and if issued to and accepted  by
them,  subject  to the  approval of  certain  legal matters  by counsel  for the
Underwriters and to certain  other conditions. It is  expected that delivery  of
the  shares will be  made against payment  therefor at the  office of Cruttenden
Roth Incorporated, 18301 Von Karman, Suite 100, Irvine, California 92612, on  or
about January   , 1997.
    
                            ------------------------
 
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.
 

                                     [Logo]
 
                                     [Logo]
 
   
                                JANUARY   , 1997
    
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                 [Photographs]
 
     IN CONNECTION WITH THIS OFFERING, THE UNDERWRITERS MAY OVER-ALLOT OR EFFECT
TRANSACTIONS WHICH STABILIZE OR MAINTAIN THE MARKET PRICE OF THE COMMON STOCK ON
THE OVER-THE-COUNTER  MARKET OR  OTHERWISE AT  A LEVEL  ABOVE THAT  WHICH  MIGHT
OTHERWISE  PREVAIL IN  THE OPEN MARKET.  SUCH STABILIZING, IF  COMMENCED, MAY BE
DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME.


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
                         FOR CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY
    
 
   
WITH  RESPECT  TO SALES  OF THE  SECURITIES BEING  OFFERED HEREBY  TO CALIFORNIA
RESIDENTS, SUCH SECURITIES MAY BE SOLD ONLY TO (1) 'ACCREDITED INVESTORS' WITHIN
THE MEANING OF RULE  501 OF REGULATION  D UNDER THE SECURITIES  ACT OF 1933,  AS
AMENDED,  (2) BANKS, SAVINGS  AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS,  TRUST COMPANIES, INSURANCE
COMPANIES, INVESTMENT COMPANIES REGISTERED UNDER  THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT  OF
1940,  PENSION AND  PROFIT SHARING TRUSTS,  ANY CORPORATIONS  OR OTHER ENTITIES,
WHICH, TOGETHER WITH SUCH CORPORATION'S OR OTHER ENTITY'S AFFILIATES, HAVE A NET
WORTH ON A CONSOLIDATED BASIS ACCORDING TO THEIR MOST RECENT REGULARLY  PREPARED
FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  (WHICH  SHALL  HAVE  BEEN  REVIEWED  BUT  NOT NECESSARILY
AUDITED, BY OUTSIDE ACCOUNTANTS) OF  NOT LESS THAN $14,000,000 AND  SUBSIDIARIES
OF THE FOREGOING, (3) ANY CORPORATION, PARTNERSHIP OR ORGANIZATION (OTHER THAN A
CORPORATION,  PARTNERSHIP  OR  ORGANIZATION  FORMED  FOR  THE  SOLE  PURPOSE  OF
PURCHASING  THE  SECURITIES  BEING  OFFERED  HEREBY)  WHO  PURCHASES  AT   LEAST
$1,000,000 AGGREGATE AMOUNT OF THE SECURITIES OFFERED HEREBY, OR (4) ANY NATURAL
PERSON  WHO (A) HAS INCOME OF $65,000 AND A  NET WORTH OF $250,000, OR (B) HAS A
NET WORTH  OF $500,000  (IN  EACH CASE,  EXCLUDING  HOME, HOME  FURNISHINGS  AND
PERSONAL  AUTOMOBILES),  EACH  CALIFORNIA  RESIDENT  PURCHASING  THE  SECURITIES
OFFERED HEREBY WILL NOT SELL OR OTHERWISE TRANSFER SUCH SECURITY TO A CALIFORNIA
RESIDENT UNLESS THE TRANSFEREE COMES WITHIN ONE OF THE AFOREMENTIONED CATEGORIES
AND WILL ADVISE THE TRANSFEREE OF  THIS CONDITION WHICH TRANSFEREE, BY  BECOMING
SUCH, WILL BE DEEMED TO BE BOUND BY THE SAME RESTRICTIONS ON RESALE.
    
 
   
                         FOR WASHINGTON RESIDENTS ONLY
    
 
   
WITH  RESPECT  TO SALES  OF THE  SECURITIES BEING  OFFERED HEREBY  TO WASHINGTON
RESIDENTS, SUCH SECURITIES MAY BE SOLD ONLY TO (1) 'ACCREDITED INVESTORS' WITHIN
THE MEANING OF RULE  501 OF REGULATION  D UNDER THE SECURITIES  ACT OF 1933,  AS
AMENDED,  (2) BANKS, SAVINGS  AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS,  TRUST COMPANIES, INSURANCE
COMPANIES, INVESTMENT COMPANIES REGISTERED UNDER  THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT  OF
1940,  PENSION AND  PROFIT SHARING TRUSTS,  ANY CORPORATIONS  OR OTHER ENTITIES,
WHICH, TOGETHER WITH SUCH CORPORATION'S OR OTHER ENTITY'S AFFILIATES, HAVE A NET
WORTH ON A CONSOLIDATED BASIS ACCORDING TO THEIR MOST RECENT REGULARLY  PREPARED
FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS  (WHICH  SHALL  HAVE  BEEN  REVIEWED  BUT  NOT NECESSARILY
AUDITED, BY OUTSIDE ACCOUNTANTS) OF  NOT LESS THAN $14,000,000 AND  SUBSIDIARIES
OF  THE FOREGOING,  OR (3) ANY  CORPORATION, PARTNERSHIP  OR ORGANIZATION (OTHER
THAN A CORPORATION, PARTNERSHIP OR ORGANIZATION  FORMED FOR THE SOLE PURPOSE  OF
PURCHASING   THE  SECURITIES  BEING  OFFERED  HEREBY)  WHO  PURCHASES  AT  LEAST
$1,000,000 AGGREGATE  AMOUNT  OF  THE  SECURITIES  BEING  OFFERED  HEREBY.  EACH
WASHINGTON  RESIDENT PURCHASING THE  SECURITIES OFFERED HEREBY  WILL NOT SELL OR
OTHERWISE TRANSFER SUCH SECURITY TO A WASHINGTON RESIDENT UNLESS THE  TRANSFEREE
COMES WITHIN ONE OF THE AFOREMENTIONED CATEGORIES AND WILL ADVISE THE TRANSFEREE
OF THIS CONDITION WHICH TRANSFEREE, BY BECOMING SUCH, WILL BE DEEMED TO BE BOUND
BY THE SAME RESTRICTIONS ON RESALE.
    
 
                                       3


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
   
     The following summary is qualified in its entirety by reference to the more
detailed  information, including the financial statements and the notes thereto,
included elsewhere in  this Prospectus. All-Comm  conducts its business  through
two  wholly-owned  operating  subsidiaries:  Stephen  Dunn  &  Associates,  Inc.
('SD&A') and Metro Services Group, Inc. ('Metro'). SD&A was acquired by Alliance
Media  Corporation  ('Alliance'),  which  was  simultaneously  acquired  by  the
Company,  in April  1995. Metro  was acquired  by the  Company in  October 1996.
References to 'All-Comm'  and the 'Company'  include All-Comm Media  Corporation
(and predecessor entities) and its consolidated subsidiaries, Alliance, SD&A and
Metro,  unless the context  otherwise requires. Unless  indicated otherwise, the
information in  this Prospectus  assumes that  the Underwriters'  over-allotment
options will not be exercised. The Company's fiscal year ends on June 30 of each
year.  All  share and  per  share information  has  been adjusted  to  reflect a
one-for-four reverse stock split of the  Common Stock effected August 22,  1995.
On  December 23, 1996,  the Company and certain  of its securityholders effected
changes in the  Company's outstanding  capital stock and  related securities  as
described below under 'The Recapitalization.' All information herein which gives
effect  to the Offering, including pro  forma as adjusted financial information,
also gives effect to  such recapitalization. Certain  capitalized terms used  in
the  Prospectus Summary are defined elsewhere in this Prospectus. Certain totals
contained herein may not add due to rounding adjustments.
    
 
                                  THE COMPANY
 
     All-Comm provides database management services, custom
telemarketing/telefundraising services and other direct marketing services to  a
diverse group of approximately 600 clients located throughout the United States.
These  services include customer and market data analysis, database creation and
analysis, data warehousing,  merge/purge, predictive  behavioral modeling,  list
processing,  brokerage and management, data  enhancement, other direct marketing
information services and custom outbound telemarketing/telefundraising services.
Through this  combination  of  services,  the Company  assists  its  clients  in
defining  target markets  and uses  sophisticated data  analysis to  support and
track the results of clients'  direct marketing campaigns. The Company  believes
its   expertise  in  applying   these  direct  marketing   tools  increases  the
productivity of its clients' marketing expenditures.
 
     The Company's services  have enabled  it to  become a  leading provider  of
database  management services, custom telemarketing/telefundraising services and
other direct marketing services to performing arts and cultural institutions  in
the  United  States.  The  Company's  clients  include  Lincoln  Center  for the
Performing Arts, Kennedy Center for  the Performing Arts, Carnegie Hall,  Boston
Symphony,  New  York University  and numerous  public broadcasting  stations. In
addition, the Company renders database management and direct marketing  services
to  such commercial clients  as The Shubert  Organization, Crain Communications,
The CIT  Group,  Mitsubishi Electronics  and  UNOCAL. Since  January  1996,  the
Company  has  begun  providing services  to  new clients  including  Walt Disney
Company,  Avery  Dennison,  Countrywide  Insurance  and  Nomura  Asset   Capital
Corporation. Giving effect to the Company's acquisition of Metro, on a pro forma
basis,  revenues for the  Company's fiscal year  ended June 30,  1996 were $24.0
million.
 
INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
 
     The use of direct  marketing by businesses to  target and communicate  with
customers has increased over the last few years due in part to the relative cost
efficiency  of direct marketing  compared to mass marketing  methods, as well as
the rapid  development  of more  powerful  and more  cost-effective  information
technology  and  data capture  capabilities. According  to the  Direct Marketing
Association (the 'DMA'), expenditures for direct marketing services in 1995 were
approximately $134.0 billion, the largest component of which, $54.1 billion, was
attributable to telemarketing. The DMA  has estimated that annual  telemarketing
expenditures  may grow  to $78.9  billion by the  year 2000.  According to other
industry sources, total  expenditures for  database management  services in  the
United States, including services used by direct marketing and other industries,
were  estimated to have been $3.2 billion in 1993 and are projected to grow at a
compound annual rate of 29% through 1998.
 
     The  direct  marketing  industry  is  extremely  fragmented.  According  to
industry  sources, there are almost 11,000 direct marketing service and database
service businesses in the United States. The Company believes that most of  such
businesses  are small, specialized companies which offer limited services and/or
limited expertise and industry  specialization. However, industry  consolidation
has  increased in  the last  few years  resulting in  a greater  number of large
companies providing services
 
                                       4
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
similar to those provided by the Company. The Company believes that much of this
consolidation is due to: (i) the economies  of scale expected to be obtained  by
direct  marketing service  providers in  hardware, software  and other marketing
resources;  (ii)  the  objective  of  direct  marketing  service  providers   to
cross-sell services; and (iii) the growing need to coordinate various components
of  direct marketing and  media programs within  a single, reliable environment.
The Company believes these trends are likely  to continue due in part to  client
demand for more cost-effective service to perform increasingly complex functions
that support such marketing and media programs.
 
STRATEGY
 
     All-Comm's  strategy  to  enhance  its position  as  a  value-added premium
provider of database  management, custom telemarketing/telefundraising  services
and other direct marketing services is to:
 
      Increase  revenues  by expanding  the range  of direct  marketing services
      offered and by cross-selling;
 
      Deepen market penetration in new industries and market segments as well as
      those currently served by the Company;
 
      Further develop existing and create new proprietary database software  and
      database management applications;
 
      Increase  capacity for telemarketing/telefundraising  services and enhance
      on-site data and calling systems; and
 
      Pursue strategic acquisitions, joint  ventures and marketing alliances  to
      expand direct marketing services offered and industries served.
 
RECAPITALIZATION
 
   
     On  December  23,  1996, the  Company  and certain  of  its securityholders
effected  changes  in  the  Company's  outstanding  capital  stock  and  related
securities  (the  'Recapitalization'). See  'The Recapitalization'  and 'Certain
Transactions.'
    
 
                            ------------------------
     The Company's  principal executive  offices are  located at  400  Corporate
Pointe,  Suite 780,  Culver City, California  90230 and its  telephone number is
(310) 342-2800.
 
                                       5
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                  THE OFFERING
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                  <C>
Common Stock Offered by the Company................  1,750,000 shares(1)
 
Common Stock Offered by the Selling Stockholders...  350,000 shares(1)
 
Common Stock to be Outstanding Following the
  Offering.........................................  10,008,108 shares(1)(2)(3)
 
Use of Proceeds....................................  The Company will  use the net  proceeds of the  Underwritten
                                                     Offering  for  capital  expenditures,  repayment  of certain
                                                     outstanding indebtedness  and  general  corporate  purposes,
                                                     including possible future acquisitions. The Company will not
                                                     receive any of the proceeds from the sale of Common Stock by
                                                     the  Selling  Stockholders  or  the  Over-Allotment  Selling
                                                     Stockholders in the Underwritten Offering or by the  Delayed
                                                     Selling  Stockholders in  the Delayed Offering.  See 'Use of
                                                     Proceeds' and 'The Delayed Offering.'
 
Dividend Policy....................................  The Company intends  to retain future  earnings, if any,  to
                                                     finance  the  growth  and development  of  its  business and
                                                     therefore does not anticipate  paying cash dividends on  the
                                                     Common  Stock  in  the  foreseeable  future.  See  'Dividend
                                                     Policy.'
 
The Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM Symbol................  ALCM
 
Risk Factors.......................................  See 'Risk Factors' beginning on page 10 for a discussion  of
                                                     certain  material  factors  that  should  be  considered  by
                                                     prospective purchasers of the Common Stock.
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------
 
   
(1) Does not include up to  315,000 shares of Common Stock  that may be sold  by
    the  Company,  certain of  the Selling  Stockholders and  the Over-Allotment
    Selling Stockholders pursuant to  the Underwriters' over-allotment  options.
    See 'Principal and Selling Stockholders' and 'Underwriting.' In satisfaction
    of  certain  pre-existing  contractual  arrangements  with  certain  of  its
    stockholders, the registration  statement of which  this Prospectus forms  a
    part  also includes a prospectus (the  'Delayed Prospectus') with respect to
    the Delayed Offering whereby 1,381,056 shares of Common Stock (the  'Delayed
    Stock')  are being  offered by certain  selling stockholders  ( the 'Delayed
    Selling Stockholders') on  a delayed basis  pursuant to Rule  415 under  the
    Securities  Act,  and not  as part  of the  Underwritten Offering.  See 'The
    Delayed Offering.'
    
 
   
(2) Does not  include up  to  5,080,927 shares  of  Common Stock  issuable  upon
    conversion or exercise of certain securities or other contractual rights, as
    follows:  (i) warrants issued to holders of the Company's Series B Preferred
    Redeemable Convertible  Stock,  par value  $.01  per share  (the  'Series  B
    Preferred  Stock'), which are currently  exercisable for 3,100,000 shares of
    Common Stock; (ii)  the Representatives' Warrants,  exercisable for  210,000
    shares of Common Stock; (iii) warrants to be issued upon consummation of the
    Underwritten   Offering   to  certain   stockholders   of  the   Company  as
    consideration  for  their   agreement  to   certain  lock-up   arrangements,
    exercisable  for  an aggregate  of  up to  160,414  shares of  Common Stock,
    depending on the  extent to which  the Underwriters' over-allotment  options
    are  exercised,  if at  all --  see  'Shares Eligible  for Future  Sale' and
    'Underwriting;' (iv)  all  other  outstanding options,  warrants  and  other
    contractual  rights,  which are  currently exercisable  for an  aggregate of
    1,245,135 shares of  Common Stock; (v)  the promissory notes  issued to  the
    former shareholders of Metro in connection with the Company's acquisition of
    Metro,  which are currently convertible into  an aggregate of 185,874 shares
    of Common Stock --  see 'Certain Transactions;' and  (vi) 179,504 shares  of
    Common  Stock reserved for  issuance but not yet  issued under the Company's
    1991 Stock Option Plan. See 'Management -- Stock Option Plan,'  'Description
    of  Capital Stock'  and 'Underwriting.' Although  no assurance  can be given
    that any of the
    
 
                                                   (footnotes on following page)
 
                                       6
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes from previous page)
   
    foregoing options, warrants or other  contractual rights will be  exercised,
    if  all  of  such  options, warrants  and  other  contractual  rights having
    exercise prices at or below the assumed price to public of $5 per share were
    exercised, the aggregate proceeds to  the Company resulting therefrom  would
    be  approximately $11.5 million. The Company  expects that it would use such
    proceeds, if any, for general corporate purposes, including possible  future
    acquisitions.
    
 
   
(3) Includes  3,168,840 shares  of Common  Stock issued  in connection  with the
    Recapitalization. See 'The Recapitalization.'
    
   
    
 
                                       7
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                         SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION
 
     The following table sets forth (i) summary historical financial data of the
Company as of June 30, 1996 and September 30, 1996, in the case of balance sheet
data, and for the years ended June 30, 1995 and 1996 and the three months  ended
September  30, 1995 and 1996, in the  case of operating data, and (ii) unaudited
summary pro forma as adjusted financial data of the Company as of September  30,
1996,  in the case of balance  sheet data, and for the  year ended June 30, 1996
and the three months ended  September 30, 1996, in  the case of operating  data.
The  unaudited  summary  pro  forma as  adjusted  financial  information  is for
illustrative purposes only and is not necessarily indicative of what the  actual
results  of operations and financial position of  the Company would have been as
of and for the periods indicated, nor does it purport to represent the Company's
future financial  position  and results  of  operations. The  summary  financial
information  should  be read  in conjunction  with 'Management's  Discussion and
Analysis of Financial  Condition and  Results of Operations'  and the  financial
statements  and notes thereto included elsewhere  in this Prospectus. See 'Index
to Financial Statements.'
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER
                                               YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,(1)                         30,(1)
                                         -----------------------------------     ---------------------------------
                                             HISTORICAL           PRO FORMA         HISTORICAL          PRO FORMA
                                         -------------------     AS ADJUSTED     -----------------     AS ADJUSTED
                                         1995(2)      1996          1996          1995       1996         1996
                                         -------     -------     -----------     ------     ------     -----------
                                                                (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE
                                                                  AND PER SHARE AMOUNTS)
<S>                                      <C>         <C>         <C>             <C>        <C>        <C>
OPERATING DATA:(3)
Revenues..............................   $ 3,631     $15,889       $23,983       $3,926     $3,932       $ 6,148
Salaries and benefits.................     3,139      12,712        14,690        3,162      3,303         3,830
Direct costs..........................       102         807         5,357          130        145         1,401
Selling, general and administrative...     1,121       1,843         2,804          387        545           787
Amortization of intangible assets.....        65         362           812           90         96           208
Total operating costs and expenses....     4,887      16,350        24,470        3,914      4,257         6,465
Income (loss) from operations.........    (1,256)       (460)         (487)          13       (325)         (317)
Total other income (expense)..........     1,200        (493)         (599)         (96)       (15)          (42)
Loss from continuing operations before
  income taxes........................       (56)       (953)       (1,086)         (83)      (341)         (358)
Net income (loss).....................   $   110     $(1,094)      $(1,256)      $ (136)    $ (344)      $  (368)
Weighted average common and common
  equivalent shares outstanding(4).... 1,807,540   3,068,278     9,801,118    3,016,028  3,214,884     9,947,724
Net income (loss) per common
  share(5)............................   $  0.06     $ (0.36)      $ (0.13)      $(0.05)    $(0.11)      $ (0.04)
                                         -------     -------     -----------     ------     ------     -----------
                                         -------     -------     -----------     ------     ------     -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  JUNE
                                                                                   30,
                                                                                 1996(1)    SEPTEMBER 30, 1996(1)
                                                                                 -------    ----------------------
                                                                                                        PRO FORMA
                                                                                 ACTUAL     ACTUAL     AS ADJUSTED
                                                                                 -------    -------    -----------
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:(3)
Cash and cash equivalents.....................................................   $ 1,393    $ 1,180      $ 8,642
Working capital...............................................................     1,651      1,580        7,653
Intangible assets at cost, net................................................     7,851      7,755       15,976
Total assets..................................................................    13,301     11,891       28,759
Long-term obligations to related parties less current portion(6)..............     1,517      1,342        2,262
Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock........................................     1,306      1,667           --
Total stockholders' equity....................................................   $ 6,945    $ 6,745      $22,015
</TABLE>
    
 
                                                        (footnotes on next page)
 
                                       8
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes from previous page)
 
(1) Each of SD&A and  Metro had a  fiscal year ending December  31 prior to  its
    acquisition by the Company.
 
(2) Reflects  operations of Alliance and SD&A  for the period beginning with the
    acquisition by the Company of Alliance on April 25, 1995.
 
(3) See 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
    of Operations' for  discussion of  businesses discontinued  and acquired  in
    fiscal 1995 and 1996.
 
   
(4) Pro  forma as adjusted data includes 1,814,000 shares of Common Stock issued
    to the  former  shareholders  of  Metro in  connection  with  the  Company's
    acquisition  of Metro,  1,750,000 shares of  Common Stock being  sold in the
    Underwritten Offering by the  Company and 3,168,840  shares of Common  Stock
    issued  in connection with the Recapitalization,  but does not include up to
    5,080,927 shares of  Common Stock  issuable upon conversion  or exercise  of
    certain  securities or other contractual rights as described in footnote (2)
    under 'Prospectus Summary -- The Offering.'
    
 
(5) Primary and fully diluted income (loss) per common share are the same in all
    periods presented. See Note 2 of Notes to Consolidated Financial  Statements
    of All-Comm.
 
(6) Pro  forma as adjusted  data includes $1.0 million  aggregate face amount of
    promissory notes issued by the Company to the former shareholders of  Metro,
    discounted  to $0.9 million to reflect  an estimated effective interest rate
    of 10%, which is in excess of the stated rate of 6%, in connection with  the
    Company's acquisition of Metro.
 
                                       9


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
     An  investment in the Common Stock offered hereby involves a high degree of
risk. Prospective investors should carefully consider all of the information  in
this Prospectus including the following risk factors.
 
LIMITED BUSINESS HISTORY; ABSENCE OF COMBINED OPERATING HISTORY; LACK OF
CONSOLIDATED PROFITABLE OPERATIONS
 
     All-Comm may be considered to be a new company without an operating history
because  of: (i)  the recent  date of  the acquisitions  of All-Comm's operating
subsidiaries, Metro and SD&A; (ii) the  change in All-Comm's management and  its
board   of  directors  (the  'Board  of   Directors'  and  each  member  thereof
individually a 'Director') arising out of the Company's acquisition of  Alliance
on  April 25, 1995;  and (iii) the related  sale in March  1995 of the Company's
then principal  operating  business, Sports-Tech  International,  Inc.  ('STI').
Accordingly,  there  can  be no  assurance  that  the Company  will  be  able to
successfully manage or integrate Metro  and SD&A and their separate  operations,
employees  and  management  or that  the  Company's overall  operations  will be
successful. As of  June 30,  1996 and  September 30,  1996, the  Company had  an
accumulated   deficit  of   $6,108,010  and   $6,385,991,  respectively.   On  a
consolidated basis, the Company had losses from operations of $0.5 million, $1.3
million and $0.3  million for the  years ended June  30, 1996 and  1995 and  the
three  months  ended September  30,  1996, respectively.  The  Company generated
losses due, in part, to costs in fiscal  1995 and 1996 and the first quarter  of
fiscal  1997  associated  with increased  legal,  accounting  and administrative
expenses  related   to  identifying,   evaluating  and   negotiating   potential
acquisitions  consistent  with  the  Company's  growth  strategy  and  with  the
obtaining of financing for  such acquisitions, some  of which acquisitions  were
never  consummated. Although expenses  related to the  Company's growth strategy
are likely to continue  as the Company pursues  new acquisitions in  furtherance
thereof, the Company believes that by implementing a plan to reduce overhead and
administrative  expenses  and  by  including  earnings  generated  by  Metro and
increasing earnings generated by SD&A, which reported net income of $0.4 million
and $1.2 million, respectively, for the year  ended June 30, 1996 (which in  the
case  of Metro is unaudited), the Company  has the ability to become profitable.
No assurance can  be given as  to whether or  when the Company  will be able  to
attain profitability.
 
RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH ACQUISITION AND GROWTH STRATEGY
 
     As  a key  component of  its growth strategy,  the Company  has pursued and
intends to  continue to  pursue acquisitions  of companies  that provide  direct
marketing,  interactive and other  media services. The  Company acquired SD&A in
April 1995 and Metro in October 1996, for a total of approximately $15.0 million
(not including any  earn-out or other  contingent payments that  may be  payable
after the date of this Prospectus in connection therewith), and seeks to acquire
additional  companies. Execution of  its growth strategy  requires the Company's
management to,  among  other things:  (i)  identify new  industries  and  market
segments  to which the Company can provide  its direct marketing services and in
which the Company can successfully compete; (ii) identify acquisition candidates
who are  willing to  be acquired  at  prices acceptable  to the  Company;  (iii)
consummate  identified  acquisitions;  and  (iv)  obtain  financing  for  future
acquisitions. Certain risks  are inherent  in an acquisition  strategy, such  as
dilution  of outstanding equity securities,  increased leverage and debt service
requirements and  the difficulty  in combining  different company  cultures  and
facilities,  any  of  which  could  materially  adversely  affect  the Company's
operating results or the market price  of the Common Stock prevailing from  time
to  time. The success  of any completed  acquisition will depend  in part on the
Company's  ability  to  effectively  integrate  the  acquired  business,   which
integration   may   involve   unforeseen   difficulties   and   may   require  a
disproportionate amount of  management's attention and  the Company's  financial
and other resources.
 
     The Company is currently considering several acquisitions of companies that
have  a client base  in certain targeted  industries and/or a  business focus on
direct marketing services that complement or expand the Company's current  range
of  direct marketing services in order  to enlarge its core competencies, enable
it to enter new  industries and market segments  and increase its potential  for
cross-selling.  No agreement,  definitive or otherwise,  with respect  to any of
such potential acquisitions has been reached. From time to time the Company has,
and in the future may continue to, enter into
 
                                       10
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
negotiations with respect to potential acquisitions for these purposes, some  of
which  have resulted or may  result in preliminary agreements.  In the course of
the Company's  negotiations  and/or  due diligence,  these  negotiations  and/or
preliminary agreements may be abandoned or terminated. No assurance can be given
that  the Company will complete  the acquisitions currently under consideration,
that additional suitable  acquisition candidates will  be identified, that  such
future  acquisitions  will be  financed and  made on  acceptable terms,  or that
future acquisitions,  if  completed, will  be  successful. In  March  1996,  the
Company's  agreement to acquire Bullseye Database Marketing, Inc. was terminated
and, in February 1996, the Company  abandoned its negotiations to acquire  Forms
Direct, Inc.
 
     The  Company's  business  has  changed  significantly  since  the Company's
acquisitions of Alliance  and SD&A, which  has placed demands  on the  Company's
administrative, operational and financial resources. Any continued growth of the
Company's  client base and its services could  place an additional strain on its
capacity, management  and  operations.  The  Company's  future  performance  and
profitability  will  depend in  part on  its  ability to  successfully implement
improved financial and management  systems, to add capacity  as and when  needed
and  to hire  qualified personnel  to respond  to changes  in its  business. The
failure to implement such systems, add any such capacity or hire such  qualified
personnel  may  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  the  Company's business,
financial condition and results of operations. See 'Management's Discussion  and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.'
 
COMPETITION
 
     Many  of the Company's services, and  service capabilities that the Company
may acquire,  are sold  in  highly competitive  markets  in the  United  States,
including  the markets for  planning and developing  direct marketing strategies
and the  implementation  of  various  direct  marketing  programs  that  include
gathering  information and tracking and  analysis of direct marketing campaigns.
In addition, many formats, including  television, radio and newspapers,  compete
for  the marketing expenditures  of the Company's  clients. The Company competes
with a number of  entities, or divisions  of entities, many  of which have  more
extensive  financial, technical, marketing and  other resources than the Company
and may be  able to respond  more quickly  to new or  emerging technologies  and
other  competitive pressures. Some of these entities have growth strategies that
involve the acquisition of  companies which the Company  may have identified  as
acquisition  candidates. The  Company also competes  with in-house telemarketing
and direct mail operations of certain  of its clients or potential clients.  See
'Business -- Competition.'
 
RAPID TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
 
     The  market for the Company's services is characterized by rapidly changing
technology and frequent new and enhanced services. The Company believes that its
future success will  be highly dependent  upon its ability  to enhance  existing
services and to develop and introduce new services to respond to changing client
needs.  There can  be no assurance  that the Company  can successfully identify,
develop and bring new and enhanced services  to market in a timely manner,  that
such  services will be commercially successful  or that services or technologies
developed by others will not render the Company's services non-competitive.
 
LIMITED PROPRIETARY PROTECTION
 
     The Company  holds no  registered patents,  trademarks or  copyrights.  The
Company  depends  in  part upon  its  know-how and  proprietary  applications of
computer programs and database information systems to differentiate its services
from those  of its  competitors. The  Company also  relies on  a combination  of
contract  rights (including  non-competition agreements with  key employees) and
trade secret laws to protect its  know-how. There can be no assurance,  however,
that  competitors will not obtain unauthorized  access to the Company's know-how
or that  the Company's  contractual  or legal  remedies  will be  sufficient  to
protect the Company's interests.
 
                                       11
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
RISK OF EQUIPMENT FAILURE
 
     SD&A maintains a telemarketing calling center in Berkeley, California which
contributed  16.7% and 13.1%  of the Company's  revenues in fiscal  1996 and the
first quarter of  fiscal 1997,  respectively. Although  SD&A maintains  business
interruption  insurance and  has not  had a  major failure  of equipment  at its
Berkeley calling  center,  the risk  of  such failure  does  exist and,  if  the
Company's  back-up  procedures  prove  inadequate,  such  failure  could  have a
material adverse effect  on the Company's  business. Similarly, Metro  maintains
extensive  computer processing  equipment at  its facilities  in New  York City,
which equipment  represents  the  substantial  majority  of  its  data  services
capability.  Although back-up client files and databases are maintained off-site
and Metro maintains  business interruption  insurance and  has not  had a  major
failure  of its equipment, the  risk of such failure  does exist and, if Metro's
back-up systems  and  databases prove  inadequate,  such failure  could  have  a
material adverse effect on the Company's business.
 
CYCLICALITY
 
     The  direct marketing services industry  relies upon marketing expenditures
by clients. Such expenditures are dependent upon the level of economic activity,
in general,  and the  specific industry  of the  client in  respect of  cyclical
effects  that  may  bear upon  that  industry.  Various segments  of  the direct
marketing industry,  such  as  business  to business  or  business  to  consumer
activity,  may be  affected by business  cycle conditions.  Insofar as marketing
budgets are related to  availability of funds  and general economic  conditions,
product manufacturers or service providers may choose to reduce expenditures for
direct marketing services.
 
RELIANCE UPON SUBSIDIARIES
 
     The  parent  company's  assets  consist  primarily  of  the  stock  of  its
subsidiaries. Accordingly, the Company's ability to meet its cash obligations is
partially  dependent  upon  the  ability  of  its  subsidiaries  to  make   cash
distributions  to the Company. No assurance can be  given that any or all of its
subsidiaries will be  able to make  such cash distributions,  or, if made,  that
such distributions will be adequate to meet the Company's financial obligations.
Accordingly the Company may be dependent upon external financing to continue its
business plan.
 
DEPENDENCE ON LABOR FORCE
 
     As    is   common   in   the    telemarketing   industry,   the   Company's
telemarketing/telefundraising services are labor-intensive and historically have
been characterized  by  a  high  level  of  personnel  turnover.  Unskilled  and
semi-skilled  employees typically  work part-time and  receive relatively modest
hourly wages;  skilled  employees commonly  work  full-time and  command  higher
wages.  Increases in  the turnover  rate would  result in  higher recruiting and
training costs. If the  Company were unable to  recruit and retain a  sufficient
number  of employees, it would be forced  to limit its growth or possibly modify
its operations. The Company  may not be  able to continue to  hire and retain  a
sufficient  number of qualified  personnel, which would  have a material adverse
effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.
See 'Business -- Personnel and Training.'
 
DEPENDENCE UPON KEY PERSONNEL
 
     The Company's  decentralized  management  philosophy  delegates  day-to-day
operating  decisions to  the subsidiary  managers. As  a result,  the Company is
highly dependent  upon the  effectiveness of  a  small group  of people  at  the
subsidiary level and a small group of people at the corporate level. The loss of
any   key  person   could  have  a   significant  bearing   upon  the  Company's
profitability, its ability to consummate future acquisitions and its ability  to
finance, manage or develop marketing programs. The Company's operational success
is  contingent upon  its ability  to retain  and expand  its staff  of qualified
personnel  on  a  timely  basis.  There  can  be  no  assurance  that   adequate
replacements  could be found if the Company were to lose the services of any key
employees. The Company is also dependent upon the specialized skills of  certain
other  personnel  and  may  need  to hire  additional  skilled  personnel  if it
 
                                       12
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
experiences growth in its  business. Competition for  such personnel is  intense
and  the inability to  attract or maintain  qualified employees could materially
and adversely affect the Company's business, financial condition and results  of
operations.
 
     The Company does not maintain key person life insurance.
 
POSSIBLE DECLINE IN EFFECTIVENESS OF TELEMARKETING
 
     Although  the telemarketing  industry has  grown significantly  in the last
five years, advances in new forms  of direct marketing, such as the  development
of interactive commerce through television, computer networks, interactive media
(including  the Internet) and other  media, could have an  adverse effect on the
demand for  telemarketing  as  a  form of  direct  marketing.  As  the  industry
continues  to grow, telemarketing's effectiveness as a direct marketing tool may
also decrease as  a result  of consumer  saturation and  consumer resistance  to
telemarketing  generally.  Although  the Company  attempts  to  monitor industry
trends and to respond accordingly, the Company may not be able to anticipate and
successfully respond to such trends in a timely manner.
 
DEPENDENCE ON RELATIONSHIPS WITH DATA COMPILERS
 
     The  Company's   database  management   services  utilize   both   clients'
proprietary  information and  information licensed  by the  Company from leading
data compilers.  Such  licenses generally  have  a  one year  term.  While  such
information  is presently available  to the Company  from several sources, there
can be no assurance that  the Company will be  able to economically access  such
information  in the future. Failure to do so could have an adverse effect on the
Company's  business,  financial  condition   and  results  of  operations.   See
'Business -- Services -- Database Management Services.'
 
DEPENDENCE ON TELEPHONE AND POSTAL SERVICE
 
     Certain  aspects  of the  direct  marketing services  industry  depend upon
services provided by various local and long distance telephone companies and the
United States Postal Service ('USPS'). Possible future modifications by the USPS
of its rate structure or  increases in the rates  currently paid by the  Company
for  local and long distance  telephone service could have  an adverse effect on
the Company's operating expenses which, in turn, may materially adversely affect
its operating results, to the extent that the Company is unable to pass any such
increase through  to  its  clients. Any  significant  interruption  or  capacity
limitation  in  any such  services  could also  have  an adverse  effect  on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.
 
AMORTIZATION OF INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
   
     Approximately $16.0  million, or  54%,  of the  Company's pro  forma  total
assets  as  of September  30, 1996  consisted of  goodwill and  other intangible
assets arising from the Company's acquisitions of Metro and SD&A. Such  goodwill
and  other  intangible assets  represent  the difference  between  the aggregate
purchase price for  the assets acquired  and the amount  of such purchase  price
allocated  to the tangible assets so acquired  for purposes of the Company's pro
forma balance sheet.  The goodwill is  amortized over a  40-year period and  the
other  intangible  assets  are  amortized over  a  three-  or  five-year period,
depending on the intangible  asset, with the amounts  amortized in a  particular
period  constituting  non-cash expenses  that would  decrease the  Company's net
income (or increase its net  loss) in that period.  The reduction in net  income
(or  increase in  net loss)  resulting from  the amortization  of goodwill  as a
result of past or possible future  acquisitions may have an adverse impact  upon
the market price of the Common Stock prevailing from time to time.
    
 
FLUCTUATIONS IN QUARTERLY OPERATING RESULTS
 
     The  Company's revenues  and operating  results are  subject to significant
fluctuation between  fiscal quarters.  A significant  portion of  the  Company's
quarterly  revenues  is  derived  from new  projects  and  contracts  for direct
marketing services,  the timing  of which  is subject  to a  variety of  factors
outside   the  Company's   control,  such   as  client   marketing  budgets  and
modifications in client strategies.  In part due  to certain seasonal  marketing
patterns  and  subscriptions,  the  Company  generated  net  losses  during  the
 
                                       13
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
second and third quarters of fiscal 1996  and the first quarter of fiscal  1997.
Metro  (which was not  acquired until October 1996)  generated net losses during
its fiscal equivalents  of the  Company's third  and fourth  quarters of  fiscal
1996.  The Company cannot predict the degree  to which, on a consolidated basis,
these trends will continue. Additionally,  the Company periodically incurs  cost
increases due to both hiring and training of new employees and computer capacity
upgrades  in anticipation  of future growth.  In addition, the  size, timing and
integration of possible future  acquisitions may cause substantial  fluctuations
in operating results from quarter to quarter. As a result, operating results for
any fiscal quarter may not be indicative of the results that may be achieved for
any  subsequent fiscal  quarter or  for a  full fiscal  year. These fluctuations
could adversely affect the market price of the Common Stock.
 
POSSIBLE NEED FOR ADDITIONAL FINANCING
 
     In addition  to  the  management  challenges  presented  by  the  continued
implementation  of  the Company's  growth strategy,  future growth  will require
significant capital. The Company's acquisition of SD&A was financed with  seller
financing  and the Company's acquisition of  Metro was financed with both seller
financing and equity. No assurance can be given that the Company will be able to
finance possible future acquisitions on those  or any other terms. Although  the
Company currently estimates that the net proceeds of the Offering, together with
cash  generated  from  operations, will  be  sufficient to  finance  its current
operations and  planned capital  expenditure requirements  through fiscal  1998,
there  can be no assurance that the  Company will not require additional capital
at an earlier date,  especially in light of  the Company's acquisition  program.
The  Company may, from time  to time, seek additional  funding through public or
private financing, including debt or equity financing. There can be no assurance
that adequate funding  will be available  as needed or,  if available, on  terms
acceptable  to the  Company. If  additional funds  are raised  by issuing equity
securities, existing stockholders  may experience  dilution. Insufficient  funds
may require the Company to scale back or eliminate some or a significant part of
its  services  or  possible  future  acquisitions.  See  'Use  of  Proceeds' and
'Management's Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results  of
Operations -- Liquidity and Capital Resources.'
 
LACK OF LONG-TERM CONTRACTS
 
     The  Company's  contracts  or  other  arrangements  with  its  clients  are
generally entered into on a project  by project basis. Moreover, if the  Company
were  to lose  a long-standing client,  replacing such client  with a comparable
client may require significant lead time. In addition, new client programs often
begin with a pilot project  that is smaller in scale  and more limited in  scope
and  has a smaller  marketing budget than  projects conducted with long-standing
clients. Although the  Company believes  that historically SD&A  and Metro  have
achieved satisfactory levels of client retention, no assurance can be given that
the Company will be able to do so in the future.
 
POSSIBLE LIMITATION ON ABILITY TO DO BUSINESS WITH CERTAIN POTENTIAL CLIENTS
 
     The Company may determine from time to time in the exercise of its business
judgment  that it is not prudent to pursue business opportunities with or accept
business from competitors of existing or potential clients or from groups  which
may  have interests adverse  to interests of the  Company's clients. Although to
date such considerations have not  significantly impaired the Company's  ability
to  do  business  with  new  clients,  no  assurance  can  be  given  that these
considerations will not  increase in  the future and  reduce opportunities  that
would otherwise be available to the Company.
 
SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
   
     Sales  of substantial amounts of Common Stock  in the public market, or the
perception that such sales could occur, could adversely affect prevailing market
prices of the Common  Stock. Upon completion of  the Underwritten Offering,  the
Company  will have 10,008,108 shares of  Common Stock outstanding. At such time,
up to an additional 5,080,927 shares of  Common Stock will be issuable upon  the
conversion  or exercise of  outstanding securities or  other contractual rights,
all of which are currently exercisable or convertible.
    
 
                                       14
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
     Of the  Common  Stock  outstanding  as of  the  date  of  this  Prospectus,
5,321,228  shares  will  be  freely  tradeable  without  restriction  under  the
Securities Act or will be eligible for sale in the public market without  regard
to the availability of current public information, volume limitations, manner of
sale  restrictions or notice  requirement under Rule 144(k)  except for any such
shares held  by or  purchased from  persons  deemed to  be 'affiliates'  of  the
Company  which are  subject to certain  resale limitations pursuant  to Rule 144
under the  Securities  Act.  The  remaining 4,686,880  shares  of  Common  Stock
outstanding  will be 'restricted securities' within the meaning of Rule 144 (the
'Restricted Shares'). As  of April  25, 1997,  approximately 837,415  Restricted
Shares  may become  eligible for sale  pursuant to  Rule 144, or  continue to be
eligible for sale under other exemptions from registration, under the Securities
Act.
    
 
   
     Holders of  an  aggregate  of  up to  7,832,897  shares  of  Common  Stock,
consisting  of up to 4,058,532  Restricted Shares outstanding as  of the date of
this Prospectus  and  up  to  3,774,365  Restricted  Shares  issuable  upon  the
conversion  or exercise  of other  securities or  other contractual  rights then
outstanding and then convertible or exercisable,  in each case depending on  the
extent  to which the  Underwriters' over-allotment options  are exercised, if at
all, will have  demand and/or piggyback  rights to have  such Restricted  Shares
registered  under  the Securities  Act pursuant  to various  registration rights
agreements with the Company. The Company, its Directors and officers and certain
of its stockholders and holders of options, warrants, conversion or  contractual
rights  to acquire Common Stock, who will hold in the aggregate up to 10,229,855
Restricted Shares outright or issuable  upon exercise of such rights,  depending
on  the extent to which the  Underwriters' over-allotment options are exercised,
if at all, have agreed to certain lock-up arrangements. The Lead  Representative
may  from  time to  time  in its  sole  discretion release  some  or all  of the
stockholders who have agreed to such lock-up arrangements from the  restrictions
thereof. See 'Shares Eligible for Future Sale.'
    
 
     No  prediction can be made  as to the effect, if  any, that future sales of
additional Common Stock  or the  availability of  such shares  for sale,  either
pursuant  to exercised registration rights  or under Rule 144,  will have on the
market price of the Common Stock  prevailing from time to time. The  possibility
that  substantial amounts of Common  Stock may be sold  in the public market may
adversely affect the market  price of the Common  Stock prevailing from time  to
time  and could impair the  ability of the Company  to raise capital through the
sale of its equity securities.
 
MARKET FOR COMMON STOCK; POSSIBLE VOLATILITY OF STOCK PRICE
 
     Although the Common  Stock is quoted  on The Nasdaq  SmallCap MarketSM,  at
times  the Common Stock has  been and may be  thinly traded. Such quotation does
not provide any assurance that an active public market for the Common Stock will
develop or be sustained. If an active  public market does not develop or is  not
sustained,  the market price and liquidity of  the Common Stock may be adversely
affected. In addition, the stock market in recent years has experienced  extreme
price and volume fluctuations that often have been unrelated or disproportionate
to the operating performance of companies. These fluctuations as well as general
economic  and market  conditions may  adversely affect  the market  price of the
Common Stock prevailing from time to time.
 
GOVERNMENT REGULATION AND PRIVACY ISSUES
 
     The telemarketing industry has  become subject to  an increasing amount  of
federal  and state regulation during the  past five years. The federal Telephone
Consumer Protection  Act of  1991 (the  'TCPA') limits  the hours  during  which
telemarketers  may call consumers  and prohibits the  use of automated telephone
dialing equipment to call certain  telephone numbers. The federal  Telemarketing
and  Consumer  Fraud and  Abuse Prevention  Act of  1994 (the  'TCFAPA') broadly
authorizes the  Federal  Trade  Commission  (the  'FTC')  to  issue  regulations
prohibiting   misrepresentations   in   telemarketing  sales.   The   FTC's  new
telemarketing sales  rules  prohibit  misrepresentations  of  the  cost,  terms,
restrictions,  performance  or  duration  of  products  or  services  offered by
telephone solicitation, prohibit  a telemarketer  from calling  a consumer  when
that  consumer  has  instructed the  telemarketer  not  to contact  him  or her,
prohibit a telemarketer from calling prior to  8:00 a.m. or after 9:00 p.m.  and
specifically  address other  perceived telemarketing  abuses in  the offering of
prizes and the sale of business opportunities or investments. Violation of these
rules may result in injunctive relief, monetary
 
                                       15
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
penalties or disgorgement of  profits and can give  rise to private actions  for
damages.  While the  FTC's new rules  have not  caused the Company  to alter its
operating procedures, additional federal or state consumer-oriented  legislation
could  limit  the telemarketing  activities  of the  Company  or its  clients or
significantly increase the Company's costs of regulatory compliance.
 
     Several of the industries which the Company intends to serve, including the
financial services and healthcare industries, are subject to varying degrees  of
government  regulation. Although compliance with  these regulations is generally
the responsibility of the Company's clients,  the Company could be subject to  a
variety  of enforcement or private actions for its failure or the failure of its
clients to comply with such regulations.
 
     In addition, the  growth of information  and communications technology  has
produced a proliferation of information of various types and has raised many new
issues  concerning the privacy  of such information.  Congress and various state
legislatures have considered legislation which would restrict access to, and the
use of, credit and other personal information for direct marketing purposes. The
direct marketing services industry, including  the Company, could be  negatively
impacted in the event any of these or similar types of legislation are enacted.
 
NO INTENTION TO PAY DIVIDENDS
 
     The  Company does not intend to pay  any cash dividends on its Common Stock
for the foreseeable future. The  Company has not paid  cash dividends on any  of
its  capital stock in at least the last six years. It is anticipated that future
earnings, if any,  will be  used to  finance future  growth of  the Company.  In
addition,  there can  be no assurance  that operations  will generate sufficient
revenues to enable the Company to declare or pay dividends.
 
CERTAIN ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS
 
   
     The Amended  and Restated  Articles  of Incorporation  of the  Company,  as
amended  (the 'Restated Articles'), the by-laws  of the Company, as amended (the
'By-Laws'), and certain  employment agreements between  the Company and  certain
executives may have the effect of hindering, delaying or deterring a third party
acquisition of the Company which may, in turn, adversely affect the market price
of  the Common Stock.  Pursuant to the  terms of the  Restated Articles, certain
business combinations and  reclassifications involving the  Company require  the
approval  of the holders of 75% of  the outstanding Common Stock and the holders
of a  majority  of  the outstanding  Common  Stock  not held  by  the  potential
acquiror.  In addition,  the Restated Articles  establish a  classified Board of
Directors and provide that  Directors may only be  removed upon the  affirmative
vote  of  75% of  the  outstanding Common  Stock.  See 'Management  --  Board of
Directors.' Furthermore, upon a  change in control of  the Company, each of  the
Company's  Chief Executive Officer and President  has the right to terminate his
respective employment  contract,  whereupon  he becomes  entitled  to  severance
payments   equal   to  two   year's   salary.  See   'Management   --  Executive
Compensation -- Employment Agreements.'
    
 
     The Company has unissued preferred stock, which could be issued to a  third
party  selected by current management, or used  as the basis for a stockholders'
rights plan, which  could have  the effect  of deterring  a potential  acquiror.
Pursuant  to the Restated Articles, shares  of the Company's preferred stock may
be issued in the future without further stockholder approval and upon such terms
and conditions, and  having such rights,  privileges and preferences  (including
the  right to vote and the  right to convert into Common  Stock) as the Board of
Directors may determine. Furthermore, certain provisions of the By-Laws may have
the effect of limiting or delaying a change in control of the Company.
 
   
     The effect of such provisions,  together with certain provisions of  Nevada
law  limiting the voting  rights of an  acquiror of a  controlling interest in a
Nevada corporation (such  as the Company),  as well as  restrictions on  certain
business  combinations  (including certain  mergers  and exchanges),  may  be to
reduce the probability of,  or the premiums that  stockholders would receive  in
connection  with, an  acquisition of the  Company. See 'Management  -- Change in
Control Provisions of the Restated Articles and Nevada Corporate Law.'
    
 
                                       16
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
RISK OF DILUTION
 
   
     Purchasers of Common  Stock in  the Underwritten  Offering will  experience
immediate substantial dilution in pro forma net tangible book value per share of
Common  Stock offered hereby in an amount estimated at $4.40 per share of Common
Stock. See 'Dilution.'
    
 
   
     In addition,  up to  5,080,927 shares  of Common  Stock are  issuable  upon
conversion  or exercise  of certain  securities of  or other  contractual rights
granted  by  the  Company,   as  described  in   footnote  (2)  to   'Prospectus
Summary -- The Offering.' No assurance can be given that these options, warrants
or  contractual rights will or will  not be exercised in whole  or in part or at
all. However, if  all of  such options,  warrants and  other contractual  rights
having  exercise prices at or below the  assumed public offering price of $5 per
share were exercised, purchasers  of Common Stock  in the Underwritten  Offering
would  experience immediate substantial dilution in percentage voting power, pro
forma net tangible book value,  and earnings (loss), in  each case per share  of
Common Stock offered hereby.
    
 
     The  Company's acquisitions of  SD&A and Metro  also involved, and possible
future acquisitions may involve, the issuance of additional Common Stock  and/or
payments  based  on  earnings  formulas  which  could  require  the  issuance of
additional Common Stock. See 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of  Financial
Condition  and  Results  of  Operation  --  Liquidity  and  Capital  Resources.'
Moreover, certain employees and Directors of the Company have received, and  may
receive,  options to  purchase Common  Stock at the  discretion of  the Board of
Directors. No assurance can be given that any future share issuances will be  at
a valuation that would avoid potential dilution to existing stockholders.
 
LACK OF UNDERWRITING HISTORY
 
     LT Lawrence & Co., Inc. was organized in February 1992 and first registered
as  a broker-dealer in 1994. Prior to this Offering, LT Lawrence & Co., Inc. has
participated as  a sole  or  co-manager in  four public  offerings.  Prospective
purchasers  of  the Common  Stock  offered hereby  should  consider the  lack of
experience of LT  Lawrence & Co.,  Inc. in  being a manager  of an  underwritten
public offering. See 'Underwriting.'
 
SPECIAL NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
 
     Certain  Statements in the Prospectus Summary  and under the captions 'Risk
Factors,' 'Use of Proceeds,'  'Dilution,' 'Management's Discussion and  Analysis
of  Financial Condition and Results of  Operations,' 'Business' and elsewhere in
this Prospectus constitute  'forward-looking statements' within  the meaning  of
the  Private Securities Litigation  Reform Act of 1995  (the 'Reform Act'). Such
forward-looking statements involve  known and unknown  risks, uncertainties  and
other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of
the  Company, or  industry results, to  be materially different  from any future
results,  performance   or   achievements   expressed   or   implied   by   such
forward-looking  statements. Such  factors include, among  others, the following
general economic and  business conditions: industry  capacity; direct  marketing
and  other industry  trends; demographic changes;  competition; the  loss of any
significant customers;  changes  in  business  strategy  or  development  plans;
availability and successful integration of acquisition candidates; availability,
terms  and deployment of capital; advances in technology; quality of management;
business  abilities  and  judgment  of  personnel;  availability  of   qualified
personnel;  changes in, or  the failure to  comply with, government regulations;
computer, telephone  and  postal costs;  and  other factors  discussed  in  this
Prospectus. See 'Risk Factors.'
 
                                       17
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
                              THE DELAYED OFFERING
    
 
   
     The  Company  had  previously entered  into  contractual  arrangements with
certain of its  stockholders whereby  it agreed to  register certain  securities
owned  by such stockholders for resale under  the Securities Act. As a result of
negotiations with these stockholders, the Company has agreed to satisfy  certain
of  such obligations by  registering the Delayed  Stock, consisting of 1,381,056
shares  of  Common  Stock,  on  behalf  of  the  Delayed  Selling  Stockholders.
Accordingly,  the registration statement  of which this  Prospectus forms a part
also includes the Delayed Prospectus with respect to the offering of the Delayed
Stock by the Delayed  Selling Stockholders on a  delayed basis pursuant to  Rule
415  under the Securities Act, and not  as part of the Underwritten Offering. Of
such Delayed Stock being offered in the Delayed Offering, 1,291,588 shares  will
be  subject to  certain lock-up  arrangements. See  'Shares Eligible  for Future
Sale -- Registration Rights and Certain Lock-Up Arrangements.' The Company  will
not  receive any  proceeds from  the sale  of the  Delayed Stock  by the Delayed
Selling Stockholders.  Expenses  of the  Delayed  Offering, other  than  selling
commissions,  will be  paid by the  Company. Sales  of the Delayed  Stock by the
Delayed Selling Stockholders or the potential for such sales may have an adverse
effect  on  the  market   price  of  the  shares   offered  hereby.  See   'Risk
Factors -- Shares Eligible for Future Sale.'
    
 
                                       18
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
   
     The net proceeds to the Company from the sale of 1,750,000 shares of Common
Stock offered by the Company hereby are estimated to be $7.3 million based on an
assumed  offering  price  of  $5  per share  of  Common  Stock,  after deducting
underwriting discounts  and commissions  and  estimated offering  expenses.  The
Company  will not receive any  of the proceeds from the  sale of Common Stock by
the Selling Stockholders or the Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders pursuant  to
the Underwritten Offering, or by the Delayed Selling Stockholders in the Delayed
Offering.
    
 
   
     Of  such net  proceeds to the  Company, approximately $4.0  million will be
applied to expand the Company's business by investing approximately $2.3 million
for  technology  (including   computer  systems,   software  and   telemarketing
equipment),   approximately  $1.2  million  for  technical  support,  sales  and
marketing personnel and approximately $0.5 million for advertising and promotion
of the  Company's services.  In  addition, approximately  $1.0 million  of  such
proceeds  will be  used to  repay the  promissory notes  (the 'Series  C Notes')
issued to the former  holders of the Series  C Redeemable Convertible  Preferred
Stock,  par value  $.01 per  share (the 'Series  C Preferred  Stock'), issued in
connection with  the repurchase  thereof  as part  of the  Recapitalization  and
approximately $1.0 million of such proceeds will be used to repay the promissory
notes  (the  'Metro  Notes')  issued  to the  former  shareholders  of  Metro in
connection with  the  Company's  acquisition  of Metro.  The  Metro  Notes  bear
interest  at a rate of 6% per annum, mature June 30, 1998 and are convertible at
the option of the holders thereof into 185,874 shares of Common Stock, based  on
a  conversion price of  $5.38 per share. The  Series C Notes  bear interest at a
rate of 8% per annum and  are payable on demand at  any time from and after  the
date  of consummation  of the  Underwritten Offering  or any  other underwritten
public offering of Common Stock,  and in any event mature  June 7, 1998. To  the
extent  the Company  does not  use all  or any  portion of  the $2.0  million of
proceeds from the  Underwritten Offering  to repay  the Metro  Notes and/or  the
Series  C Notes, such proceeds will be  used to augment general working capital,
including, without limitation, for marketing  of the Company's services and  new
business  development on behalf of SD&A and  Metro. The balance will be used for
general corporate  purposes,  including possible  future  acquisitions.  Pending
application  of such net proceeds as described  above, such net proceeds will be
invested in short-term, interest-bearing money market instruments. The foregoing
represents the Company's best estimate of the allocation of the net proceeds  to
the  Company  of the  Underwritten Offering.  Future events  such as  changes in
economic or competitive conditions may  result in the Company reallocating  such
proceeds.  In addition, there  can be no assurance  that the Company's estimates
will prove to be accurate or that unforeseen expenses will not occur.
    
 
   
     In addition,  up to  5,080,927 shares  of Common  Stock are  issuable  upon
conversion  or exercise of certain securities or other contractual rights of the
Company, as described in footnote (2)  to 'Prospectus Summary -- The  Offering.'
Although  no  assurance can  be given  that  any of  these options,  warrants or
contractual rights will or will not be exercised in whole or in part or at  all,
if  all of such  options, warrants and other  contractual rights having exercise
prices at or below the assumed price  to public of $5 per share were  exercised,
the aggregate proceeds to the Company resulting therefrom would be approximately
$11.5  million. The Company expects that it would use such proceeds, if any, for
general corporate purposes, including possible future acquisitions. The exercise
of these options, warrants and contractual rights is not required as a condition
to the sale of any of the shares of Common Stock being offered hereby or in  the
Delayed  Offering and none  of such securities  is being offered  either as part
ofthe Underwritten Offering or as part of the Delayed Offering.
    
 
                                       19


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                          PRICE RANGE OF COMMON STOCK
 
     The Common Stock is quoted on The Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM under the symbol
'ALCM.'  Prior to  August 1995,  when the Company  changed its  name to All-Comm
Media Corporation, the  Common Stock  was quoted  under the  symbol 'SPTK.'  The
following  table sets forth the  high and low sales  prices for the Common Stock
for the fiscal quarters indicated, as  furnished by the National Association  of
Securities  Dealers, Inc. ('NASD'),  adjusted to reflect  a one-for-four reverse
stock split of the Common Stock effected August 22, 1995:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    HIGH             LOW
                                                                                ------------     ------------
 
<S>                                                                             <C>              <C>
Fiscal 1997
     Second Quarter (through December 20)....................................   $5 9/16          $3 3/16
     First Quarter...........................................................    6 1/8            4 5/8
Fiscal 1996
     Fourth Quarter..........................................................   $6 3/8           $2 1/8
     Third Quarter...........................................................    4 7/16           3
     Second Quarter..........................................................    5                1 7/8
     First Quarter...........................................................    8 1/4            3 5/8
Fiscal 1995
     Fourth Quarter..........................................................   $9 3/4           $6 1/2
     Third Quarter...........................................................    8                5 1/4
     Second Quarter..........................................................    6 3/4            3 1/2
     First Quarter...........................................................    6                3
</TABLE>
    
 
     As of November 15, 1996, there were approximately 850 registered holders of
record of the Common Stock.
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
     The Company has not paid any cash dividends on any of its capital stock  in
at  least the last six years. The  Company intends to retain future earnings, if
any, to finance the  growth and development of  its business and therefore  does
not  anticipate paying  cash dividends on  the Common Stock  for the foreseeable
future. See 'Risk Factors -- No Intention to Pay Dividends.'
 
                                       20
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                 CAPITALIZATION
 
   
     The following table sets  forth the capitalization of  the Company: (i)  at
September 30, 1996; (ii) pro forma to give effect to the acquisition of Metro as
if  it had occurred  on September 30, 1996;  and (iii) pro  forma as adjusted to
give effect to such acquisition, the Recapitalization, the Underwritten Offering
and the application of the net proceeds to the Company therefrom as if each such
event had occurred on September 30, 1996. The following table should be read  in
conjunction  with 'Management's  Discussion and Analysis  of Financial Condition
and Results of Operations' and  the Company's consolidated financial  statements
and the Notes thereto included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                                -----------------------------------
                                                                                                         PRO FORMA
                                                                                ACTUAL     PRO FORMA    AS ADJUSTED
                                                                                -------    ---------    -----------
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                             <C>        <C>          <C>
Long-term obligations to related parties less current portion(1).............   $ 1,342     $ 2,262       $ 2,262
                                                                                -------    ---------    -----------
Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock, $.01 par value, consisting of:
     6,200 shares of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock issued and
       outstanding actual and pro forma; none issued and outstanding pro
       forma as adjusted; and
     2,000 shares of Series C Convertible Preferred Stock issued and
       outstanding actual and pro forma; none issued and outstanding pro
       forma as adjusted.....................................................     1,667       1,667        --
                                                                                 -------     ------
Stockholders' equity:
     Convertible Preferred Stock, $.01 par value; 50,000 shares authorized at
       September 30, 1996; 8,200 redeemable shares issued and outstanding
       actual and pro forma; none issued and outstanding pro forma as
       adjusted..............................................................     --          --           --
     Common Stock, $.01 par value; 36,250,000 shares authorized at September
       30, 1996; 3,303,207 issued and 3,291,407 outstanding; 5,117,207 issued
       and 5,105,407 outstanding pro forma; 10,036,047 issued and 10,024,247
       outstanding pro forma as adjusted(2)..................................        33          51           100
Additional paid-in capital...................................................    13,317      20,555        28,595
Accumulated deficit..........................................................    (6,470)     (6,470)       (6,545)
Less 11,800 shares of common stock in treasury, at cost......................      (135)       (135)         (135)
                                                                                -------    ---------    -----------
     Total stockholders' equity..............................................     6,745      14,001        22,015
                                                                                -------    ---------    -----------
          Total capitalization...............................................   $ 9,754     $17,930       $24,277
                                                                                -------    ---------    -----------
                                                                                -------    ---------    -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------
 
*  Less than $1,000.
 
(1) The  pro forma  and pro  forma as  adjusted data  each include  $1.0 million
    aggregate face  amount of  promissory notes  issued by  the Company  to  the
    former shareholders of Metro in connection with the Company's acquisition of
    Metro.  The promissory notes, which have a  stated interest rate of 6%, were
    discounted to $0.9 million to  reflect an estimated effective interest  rate
    of 10%.
 
   
(2) Includes  the  following issuances:  (a) pro  forma  -- 1,814,000  shares of
    Common Stock issued to former shareholders  of Metro in connection with  the
    Company's  acquisition of Metro and (b) pro  forma as adjusted -- the shares
    described in clause (a)  above plus the 1,750,000  shares being sold in  the
    Underwritten  Offering by the  Company plus (i) the  conversion of all 6,200
    shares of Series B  Preferred Stock into 2,480,000  shares of Common  Stock,
    (ii)  the  exchange of  3,000,000 warrants  issued  in conjunction  with the
    Series C Preferred Stock into 600,000 shares of Common Stock and the related
    repurchaseof all 2,000  shares of  Series C Preferred  Stock for  promissory
    notes  in  an  aggregate principal  amount  of  $1.0 million  and  (iii) the
    conversion of $145,753 in interest on  the Series B Preferred Stock and  the
    Series  C Preferred  Stock into  88,840 shares  of Common  Stock (calculated
    based on  conversion on  December  23, 1996).  Also includes  an  additional
    16,139 shares of Common Stock which have been approved for issuance but will
    not  be issued until completion of  appropriate documentation by the persons
    to whom such  shares are  to be  issued. Does  not include  up to  5,080,927
    shares  of  Common Stock  issuable upon  conversion  or exercise  of certain
    securities or other contractual  rights as described  in footnote (2)  under
    'Prospectus Summary -- The Offering.'
    
 
                                       21
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                    DILUTION
 
   
     Purchasers  of the Common Stock offered hereby will experience an immediate
substantial dilution in the  pro forma net tangible  book value of their  Common
Stock  from  the assumed  initial  price to  public of  $5  per share.(1)  As of
September 30, 1996, after giving pro forma effect to the Metro acquisition,  the
Company  had a deficit in pro forma net tangible book value of $(0.3) million or
$(0.06) per share of Common  Stock. The deficit in  pro forma net tangible  book
value  per share represents  the amount by which  total liabilities exceed total
net tangible  assets, divided  by the  number of  outstanding shares  of  Common
Stock.  As of September 30, 1996, after  giving effect to the application of the
estimated net proceeds to the Company from  the sale of the 1,750,000 shares  of
Common  Stock by  the Company  at an  assumed initial  offering price  of $5 per
share, after deducting the estimated underwriting discounts and commissions  and
estimated,  expenses of  the Underwritten  Offering payable  by the  Company and
after giving  effect to  the Recapitalization,  the pro  forma as  adjusted  net
tangible  book value of  the Company would  have been $6.0  million or $0.60 per
share of Common Stock.  This represents an immediate  increase in pro forma  net
tangible book value of $0.66 per share to existing stockholders and an immediate
dilution  of  $4.40  per  share  to  new  investors  purchasing  shares  in  the
Underwritten Offering. The following table illustrates the dilution per share as
described above:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                <C>       <C>
Assumed initial price to public.................................................................              $5.00
Deficit in pro forma net tangible book value before the Underwritten Offering...................   $(0.06)
Increase attributable to new investors..........................................................     0.66
                                                                                                   ------
Pro forma as adjusted net tangible book value after the Underwritten Offering...................               0.60
                                                                                                             ------
Dilution in pro forma net tangible book value to new investors..................................              $4.40
                                                                                                             ------
                                                                                                             ------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     Based on the foregoing assumptions, the  following table sets forth, as  of
September  30,  1996,  giving  effect  to  the  Underwritten  Offering  and  the
Recapitalization, the  number  of shares  of  Common Stock  purchased  from  the
Company,   the  total  consideration  paid  to   the  Company  by  the  existing
stockholders and the  new investors  purchasing shares  of Common  Stock in  the
Underwritten Offering and the average price per share paid by each group:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            SHARES PURCHASED      TOTAL CONSIDERATION      AVERAGE
                                                           -------------------    --------------------    PRICE PER
                                                             NUMBER        %        AMOUNT         %        SHARE
                                                           ----------    -----    -----------    -----    ---------
<S>                                                        <C>           <C>      <C>            <C>      <C>
Existing stockholders(2)................................    8,274,247     82.5%   $18,352,056     67.7%     $2.22
New investors(2)........................................    1,750,000     17.5      8,750,000     32.3      $5.00
                                                           ----------    -----    -----------    -----
     Total..............................................   10,024,247    100.0%   $27,102,056    100.0%     $2.70
                                                           ----------    -----    -----------    -----
                                                           ----------    -----    -----------    -----
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     In  addition, up to 5,080,927 shares of  Common Stock are issuable upon the
exercise of certain options, warrants and other contractual rights. No assurance
can be given that these options, warrants or contractual rights will or will not
be exercised in whole  or in part or  at all. However, if  all of such  options,
warrants  and contractual rights were exercised,  purchasers of the Common Stock
in the Underwritten Offering would experience immediate and substantial dilution
in percentage  voting power,  pro forma  net tangible  book value  and  earnings
(loss), in each case per share of Common Stock.
    
- ------------
   
(1) The  Underwritten  Offering  being  made by  the  Company  pursuant  to this
    Prospectus is not the Company's initial public offering.
    
   
(2) Does not  include up  to  5,080,927 shares  of  Common Stock  issuable  upon
    conversion or exercise of certain securities or other contractual rights, as
    follows:  (i) warrants issued to holders  of Series B Preferred Stock, which
    are currently exercisable  for 3,100,000  shares of Common  Stock; (ii)  the
    Representatives'  Warrants, exercisable for 210,000  shares of Common Stock;
    (iii) warrants to be issued  upon consummation of the Underwritten  Offering
    to  certain stockholders of the Company as consideration for their agreement
    to certain  lock-up arrangements,  exercisable  for an  aggregate of  up  to
    160,414  shares  of  Common Stock,  depending  on  the extent  to  which the
    Underwriters' over-allotment options are exercised, if at all -- see 'Shares
    Eligible for Future  Sale' and  'Underwriting;' (iv)  all other  outstanding
    options,   warrants  and  other  contractual  rights,  which  are  currently
    exercisable for an aggregate  of 1,245,135 shares of  Common Stock; (v)  the
    promissory  notes issued to  the former shareholders  of Metro in connection
    with the Company's  acquisition of  Metro, which  are currently  convertible
    into  an  aggregate  of  185,874  shares of  Common  Stock  --  see 'Certain
    Transactions;' and (vi) 179,504 shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance
    but not  yet  issued  under  the  Company's  1991  Stock  Option  Plan.  See
    'Management  --  Stock  Option  Plan,' 'Description  of  Capital  Stock' and
    'Underwriting.'
    
 
                                       22
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
               PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
   
     The following unaudited  Pro Forma Condensed  Combined Balance Sheets  have
been  prepared based upon  the unaudited interim  condensed consolidated balance
sheet of  the  Company  as of  September  30,  1996 and  the  unaudited  interim
condensed  balance sheet of Metro  as of September 30,  1996 and give effect to:
(i) the Company's acquisition of Metro; (ii) the Recapitalization; and (iii) the
application of the estimated net proceeds  to the Company from the  Underwritten
Offering  (after deducting underwriting discounts  and commissions and estimated
expenses of the Underwritten  Offering payable by the  Company), as if each  had
occurred  as of September 30, 1996.  The following unaudited Pro Forma Condensed
Combined Statements of Operations for the  fiscal year ended June 30, 1996  have
been  prepared  based  on  the  audited  historical  consolidated  statement  of
operations of the Company  for the year  ended June 30,  1996 and the  unaudited
historical statements of operations of Metro for the last six months of the year
ended  December 31, 1995 and  the six months ended  June 30, 1996. The following
unaudited Pro Forma Condensed  Combined Statements of  Operations for the  three
months  ended  September 30,  1996  have been  prepared  based on  the unaudited
interim condensed consolidated statement of  operations of the Company for  such
period  and the unaudited interim condensed statement of operations of Metro for
such period. All of  such unaudited Pro Forma  Condensed Combined Statements  of
Operations give effect to the acquisition of Metro, the Recapitalization and the
Underwritten Offering as if each such event had occurred as of July 1, 1995. Pro
forma  adjustments for each such pro  forma financial statement are described in
the accompanying notes.
    
     The following unaudited pro forma condensed combined financial  information
is  not necessarily indicative of the  actual results of operations or financial
condition of the Company that would  have been reported if the events  described
above had occurred as of July 1, 1995 or September 30, 1996, as the case may be,
nor  does  such  information  purport  to indicate  either  the  results  of the
Company's future operations or the Company's future financial condition. In  the
opinion  of management,  all adjustments  necessary to  present fairly  such pro
forma financial information have been made.
     The pro forma condensed  combined financial information  should be read  in
conjunction  with 'Capitalization' and 'Management's  Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations' and with the financial statements
and notes thereto included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
 
                                       23
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED BALANCE SHEETS
                            AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                  (UNAUDITED)
                                 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   HISTORICAL
                                                        --------------------------------           PRO FORMA
                                                        ALL-COMM MEDIA    METRO SERVICES    -----------------------
                                                         CORPORATION       GROUP, INC.      ADJUSTMENTS    COMBINED
                                                        --------------    --------------    -----------    --------
<S>                                                     <C>               <C>               <C>            <C>
                                                      ASSETS
Current assets:
     Cash and cash equivalents.......................      $  1,180           $  349          $ 7,263(A)   $ 8,642
                                                                                                 (150)(B)
     Accounts receivable net of allowance for
       doubtful account of $6 for
       All-Comm Media Corporation....................         1,864            1,839               --        3,704
     Other current assets............................           561               55               --          616
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
                                                              3,606            2,243            7,113       12,961
     Property and equipment at cost, net.............           494              243               --          737
     Intangible assets at cost, net..................         7,755               --            8,070(B)    15,976
                                                                                                  150(B)
     Other assets....................................            36               50               --           86
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
          Total assets...............................      $ 11,891           $2,536          $15,333      $29,759
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
                                       LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
     Short-term borrowings...........................      $    102               --          $ 1,000(D)   $ 1,102
     Trade accounts payable..........................           317           $2,189               --        2,506
     Accrued salaries and wages......................           421               --               --          421
     Other accrued expenses..........................           485               --               --          485
     Income taxes payable............................            --               10               --           10
     Capital lease obligation, current portion.......            --               59               --           59
     Long-term obligations to related party, current
       portion.......................................           700               --               --          700
     Related party payable...........................            --               25               --           25
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
          Total current liabilities..................         2,026            2,283            1,000        5,309
Long-term obligations to related party, less current
  portion............................................         1,342               --              920(B)     2,262
Capital lease obligation less current portion........            --              113               --          113
Other liabilities....................................           111               34              (84)(D)       61
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
          Total liabilities..........................         3,478            2,430            1,836        7,744
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
Redeemable convertible preferred stock...............         1,667               --           (1,667)(D)       --
                                                        --------------                      -----------
Stockholders' equity:
     Common stock....................................            33                1               18(A)       101
                                                                                                   18(B)
                                                                                                   (1)(B)
                                                                                                   32(D)
     Additional paid-in capital......................        13,317               --            7,245(A)    28,594
                                                                                                7,238(B)
                                                                                                   75(C)
                                                                                                 (948)(D)
                                                                                                1,667(D)
     Retained earnings (accumulated deficit).........        (6,470)             105             (105)(B)   (6,545 )
                                                                                                  (75)(C)
     Treasury stock..................................          (135)              --               --         (135 )
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
          Total stockholders' equity.................         6,745              106           15,164       22,015
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
               Total liabilities and stockholders'
                 equity..............................      $ 11,891           $2,536          $15,333      $29,759
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
                                                        --------------       -------        -----------    --------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    
 
 See accompanying Notes to these unaudited pro forma condensed combined balance
                                    sheets.
 
                                       24
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
              NOTES TO PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED BALANCE SHEETS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
   
     The unaudited  Pro  Forma Condensed  Combined  Balance Sheets  present  the
historical  balance sheets of All-Comm and Metro and pro forma adjustments as if
the Underwritten Offering and the acquisition of Metro by the Company had  taken
place  as of September  30, 1996. The pro  forma purchase accounting adjustments
are summarized as follows:
    
   
          (A) Represents $8.8 million in cash  proceeds to the Company from  the
     Underwritten  Offering of 1,750,000 shares of Common Stock at $5 per share,
     less estimated offering costs of $1.5 million.
    
          (B) Represents the purchase of Metro, which had net tangible assets of
     $0.1 million, for $8.2 million (1,814,000 shares of Common Stock valued  at
     $4  per share  and $1.0 million  aggregate face amount  of promissory notes
     issued by the Company to the  former shareholders of Metro; the  promissory
     notes,  which have a  stated interest rate  of 6%, were  discounted to $0.9
     million to  reflect  an  estimated  effective interest  rate  of  10%).  In
     connection  with the acquisition, the Company obtained three year covenants
     not to compete from the former shareholders of Metro. Acquisition costs are
     estimated to be $0.2 million.
          The acquisition  was  accounted  for  as a  purchase  and  assets  and
     liabilities  were recorded  at fair  market values,  which approximated net
     book values. The purchase is summarized as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                          <C>        <C>
Value of stock paid.......................................................   $ 7,256
Promissory notes payable..................................................       920
                                                                             -------
     Total purchase price.................................................     8,176
Acquisition costs.........................................................       150
                                                                             -------
     Total cost...........................................................               8,326
Less fair market value of:
     Assets acquired......................................................    (2,536)
     Liabilities assumed..................................................     2,430
                                                                             -------
     Net tangible assets..................................................                (105)
                                                                                        ------
Costs in excess of tangible net assets....................................               8,220
Less estimated value of:
     Covenants not to compete.............................................                 650
     Proprietary software.................................................                 250
                                                                                        ------
Goodwill..................................................................              $7,320
                                                                                        ------
                                                                                        ------
</TABLE>
 
   
          (C) Represents the estimated value  of warrants issued by the  Company
     in  connection  with  the  Underwritten  Offering  to  certain  holders  of
     Restricted Shares and warrants having registration rights relating  thereto
     in consideration for such holders consent to certain modifications of their
     respective  registration rights. See 'Shares Eligible for Future Sale.' The
     expense is non-recurring and will be charged in the fiscal quarter in which
     the Underwritten Offering is consummated.
    
   
          (D) Represents  (i)  conversion  of  all  6,200  shares  of  Series  B
     Preferred  Stock into  2,480,000 shares of  Common Stock,  (ii) exchange of
     3,000,000 warrants issued in conjunction with the Series C Preferred  Stock
     for  600,000 Shares of Common Stock and the related repurchase of all 2,000
     shares of Series  C Preferred Stock  for promissory notes  in an  aggregate
     principal  amount of $1.0 million, which notes  bear interest at 8% and are
     repayable on demand at any time from and after the date of consummation  of
     the  Underwritten Offering,  or any  other underwritten  public offering of
     Common Stock, and in any event mature June 7, 1998 and (iii) conversion  of
     $145,753  in interest  on the  Series B  Preferred Stock  and the  Series C
     Preferred Stock into  88,840 shares  of Common Stock  (calculated based  on
     conversion on December 23, 1996).
    
 
                                       25
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
             PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                    FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1996
                 AND THE THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                  (UNAUDITED)
               (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AND PER SHARE AMOUNTS)
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 1996
                      ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                 HISTORICAL                        PRO FORMA
                      --------------------------------   ----------------------------
                      ALL-COMM MEDIA    METRO SERVICES
                        CORPORATION      GROUP, INC.      ADJUSTMENTS       COMBINED
                      ---------------   --------------    -----------       ---------
<S>                   <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>
Revenues.............   $    15,889         $8,094                --        $  23,983
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
Salaries and
  benefits...........        12,712          1,978                --           14,690
Direct costs.........           807          4,550                --            5,357
Selling, general and
  administrative.....         1,843            961                --            2,804
Professional fees....           626            181                --              806
Amortization of
  intangible
  assets.............           362             --        $      450 (A)          812
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
    Total operating
      costs and
      expenses.......        16,350          7,670               450           24,470
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
Income (loss) from
  operations.........          (460)           424              (450)            (487)
Gain from sale of
  land...............            --             --                --               --
Interest income......            12             --                --               12
Interest expense.....          (505)            --              (106)(B)         (611)
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
Income (loss) before
  income taxes.......          (953)           424              (556)          (1,086)
Provision for income
  taxes..............          (141)           (29)               -- (C)         (170)
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
Net income (loss)....   $    (1,094)        $  395        $     (556)       $  (1,256)
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
                      ---------------       ------        -----------       ---------
    Primary and fully
      diluted loss
      per share......        $(0.36)                                           $(0.13)
Weighted average
  common and common
  equivalent shares
  outstanding........     3,068,278                        6,732,840 (D)    9,801,118
                      ---------------                     -----------       ---------
                      ---------------                     -----------       ---------
 <CAPTION>
                                  THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                      -------------------------------------------------------------
                                 HISTORICAL                       PRO FORMA
                      -------------------------------    --------------------------
                      ALL-COMM MEDIA   METRO SERVICES
                       CORPORATION      GROUP, INC.      ADJUSTMENTS      COMBINED
                      --------------   --------------    -----------      ---------
<S>                   <C>              <C>               <C>              <C>
Revenues............. $     3,932          $2,216                         $   6,148
                      --------------       ------                         ---------
Salaries and
  benefits...........       3,303             527                             3,830
Direct costs.........         145           1,256                             1,401
Selling, general and
  administrative.....         545             242                               787
Professional fees....         168              69                               238
Amortization of
  intangible
  assets.............          96              --         $     112(A)          208
                      --------------       ------        -----------      ---------
    Total operating
      costs and
      expenses.......       4,257           2,095               112           6,465
                      --------------       ------        -----------      ---------
Income (loss) from
  operations.........        (325)            121              (112)           (317)
Gain from sale of
  land...............          90              --                                90
Interest income......          10              --                                10
Interest expense.....        (115)             --               (27)(B)        (142)
                      --------------       ------        -----------      ---------
Income (loss) before
  income taxes.......        (340)            121              (139)           (359)
Provision for income
  taxes..............          (4)             (5)                 (C)           (9)
                      --------------       ------        -----------      ---------
Net income (loss).... $      (344)         $  116         $    (139)      $    (368)
                      --------------       ------        -----------      ---------
                      --------------       ------        -----------      ---------
    Primary and fully
      diluted loss
      per share......      $(0.11)                                           $(0.04)
Weighted average
  common and common
  equivalent shares
  outstanding........   3,214,884                         6,732,840(D)    9,947,724
                      --------------                     -----------      ---------
                      --------------                     -----------      ---------
</TABLE>
    
     See accompanying Notes to these unaudited pro forma condensed combined
                           statements of operations.

                                       26
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
         NOTES TO PRO FORMA CONDENSED COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
     The unaudited Pro Forma Condensed Combined Statements of Operations for the
year  ended June 30, 1996  combine the results of  operations of the Company for
its fiscal year ended June 30, 1996 with the results of operations of Metro  for
the  year then ended.  The unaudited Pro Forma  Condensed Combined Statements of
Operations for the three months ended September 30, 1996 combine the results  of
operations  of the Company for  the three months then  ended with the results of
operations of Metro for the three months then ended. The revenues and results of
operations of  the combined  businesses  included in  such pro  forma  financial
statements  are not considered by management to be indicative of the anticipated
results of the  business for the  periods subsequent to  the acquisition by  the
Company,  nor are they considered to be  indicative of the results of operations
which might have been attained for the period presented.
   
     The pro forma  purchase accounting  adjustments reflect the  effect on  the
combined  results for the fiscal  year ended June 30,  1996 and the three months
ended September 30, 1996 as  if the Underwritten Offering, the  Recapitalization
and  the acquisition of Metro by the Company had taken place as of July 1, 1995.
The adjustments are summarized as follows:
    
          (A) Reflects amortization of $8.2 million in excess of costs over  the
     fair  value of the net tangible  assets acquired, including $0.7 million in
     the aggregate in covenants not to  compete and $0.3 million in  proprietary
     software.  The covenants are amortized over their three year durations, the
     proprietary software over its expected benefit period of five years and the
     remainder of the excess of costs over fair value over its expected  benefit
     period of 40 years.
   
          (B)  Reflects interest expense incurred on $1.0 million aggregate face
     amount of 6%  promissory notes issued  to former shareholders  of Metro  in
     connection  with the Company's acquisition of Metro, which promissory notes
     were discounted to $0.9 million to reflect an estimated effective  interest
     rate  of 10%  and assumes repayment  from the proceeds  of the Underwritten
     Offering of the promissory notes issued to the former holders of the Series
     C Preferred Stock in connection with the Recapitalization.
    
   
          (C) Prior to  its acquisition  by All-Comm,  Metro had  elected to  be
     taxed  under the provisions of Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of
     1986, as amended  (the 'Code') and,  as a result,  Metro's federal  taxable
     income  or  loss and  tax  credits were  passed  through to  Metro's former
     shareholders. Metro's provision for income taxes resulted from income taxes
     due on  taxable  income  for  states which  did  not  recognize  Metro's  S
     corporation  status. No pro  forma tax provision has  been made for federal
     taxes in the pro forma condensed  combined statements of operations due  to
     the availability of All-Comm's net operating loss carryforwards.
    
   
          (D) Pro forma primary and fully diluted earnings per share include the
     effect  of issuance of  (i) 1,814,000 shares of  Common Stock in connection
     with the Company's acquisition  of Metro, (ii)  1,750,000 shares of  Common
     Stock  in  connection with  the Underwritten  Offering and  (iii) 3,168,840
     shares of Common Stock in connection with the Recapitalization, as if  each
     such  event  had occurred  on July  1,  1995. Pro  forma net  income (loss)
     attributable to  common  stockholders  does  not  reflect  a  non-recurring
     dividend  upon conversion of the Series B  Preferred Stock and the Series C
     Preferred Stock and  accumulated interest  thereon in  connection with  the
     Recapitalization  estimated to be $8.5 million. This charge is non-cash and
     does not impact net income (loss).
    
 
                                       27
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                            SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
     The following selected financial data of  the Company as of June 30,  1996,
in  the case of  balance sheet data, and  for the years ended  June 30, 1995 and
1996, in  the case  of operating  data,  have been  derived from  the  Company's
audited consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
The  following selected financial data of the  Company as of September 30, 1996,
in the case of balance sheet data, and for the three months ended September  30,
1995  and  1996, in  the  case of  operating data,  have  been derived  from the
Company's unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements included
elsewhere in  this Prospectus.  Operating  results for  the three  months  ended
September  30, 1996 are not necessarily  indicative of the results of operations
for any subsequent period.
     The following selected financial data of Metro as of December 31, 1995,  in
the  case of balance sheet  data, and for the years  ended December 31, 1994 and
1995, in the  case of  operating data, have  been derived  from Metro's  audited
financial  statements  included  elsewhere  in  this  Prospectus.  The  selected
financial data of  Metro presented below  as of  and for the  nine months  ended
September  30, 1995 and 1996 have  been derived from Metro's unaudited financial
statements included elsewhere  in this Prospectus.  Metro's unaudited  financial
statements  include all  adjustments, consisting  of normal  recurring accruals,
that the  Company  considers  necessary  for  a  fair  presentation  of  Metro's
financial  position  and  results  of operations  for  those  periods. Operating
results for  the  nine months  ended  September  30, 1996  are  not  necessarily
indicative of the results of operations for any subsequent period.
     The  data set forth below should  be read in conjunction with 'Management's
Discussion and Analysis of  Financial Condition and  Results of Operations'  and
the   financial  statements  and  notes   thereto  included  elsewhere  in  this
Prospectus.
 
ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                             YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,(1)         SEPTEMBER 30,(1)
                                                            ------------------------    ------------------------
                                                             1995(2)         1996          1995          1996
                                                            ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
                                                             (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AND PER SHARE AMOUNTS)
<S>                                                         <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
OPERATING DATA:(3)
     Revenues............................................   $    3,631    $   15,889    $    3,926    $    3,932
     Salaries and benefits...............................        3,139        12,712         3,162         3,303
     Direct costs........................................          102           807           130           145
     Selling, general and administrative.................        1,121         1,843           387           545
     Professional fees...................................          459           626           145           168
     Amortization of intangible assets...................           65           362            90            96
     Total operating costs and expenses..................        4,887        16,350         3,914         4,257
     Income (loss) from operations.......................       (1,256)         (460)           13          (325)
     Total other income (expenses).......................        1,200          (493)          (96)          (15)
     Loss from continuing operations before income
       taxes.............................................          (56)         (953)          (83)         (340)
     Provision for income taxes..........................          (75)         (141)          (53)           (4)
     Loss from continuing operations before discontinued
       operations........................................         (131)       (1,094)         (136)         (344)
     Net gain from discontinued operations...............          241            --            --            --
     Net income (loss)...................................   $      110    $   (1,094)   $     (136)   $     (344)
     Weighted average common and common equivalent shares
       outstanding.......................................    1,807,540     3,068,278     3,016,028     3,214,884
     Net income (loss) per common share(4)...............   $     0.06    $    (0.36)   $    (0.05)   $    (0.11)
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       28
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 JUNE 30, 1996    SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                                 -------------    ------------------
                                                                                           (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                              <C>              <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:(3)
     Cash and cash equivalents................................................      $ 1,393            $  1,180
     Working capital..........................................................        1,651               1,580
     Intangible assets at cost, net...........................................        7,851               7,755
     Total assets.............................................................       13,301              11,891
     Long-term obligations to related party less current portion..............        1,517               1,342
     Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock...................................        1,306               1,667
     Total stockholders' equity...............................................      $ 6,945            $  6,745
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------
(1) SD&A had a fiscal year  ending December 31 prior  to its acquisition by  the
    Company.
(2) Reflects  operations of Alliance and SD&A  for the period beginning with the
    Company's acquisition of Alliance on April 25, 1995.
(3) See 'Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
    of Operations' for  discussion of  businesses discontinued  and acquired  in
    1995.
(4) Primary  and fully diluted income  (loss) per common share  are the same for
    all periods  presented.  See  Note  2 of  Notes  to  Consolidated  Financial
    Statements of All-Comm.
 
METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER
                                                   YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,(1)            30,(1)
                                                   --------------------------- ---------------------------
                                                       1994          1995          1995          1996
                                                   ------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
OPERATING DATA:
     Revenues..................................... $    5,914    $    8,096    $  5,714      $  5,769
     Direct costs.................................      3,290         4,653       3,330         3,175
     Salaries and wages...........................      1,672         1,792       1,315         1,567
     Selling, general and administrative..........        868           899         652           746
     Total operating expenses.....................      5,964         7,520       5,448         5,662
     Income (loss) before provision for income
       taxes......................................        (50)          576         266           107
     Provision for income taxes(2)................          7            35          16             5
     Net income (loss)............................ $      (57)    $     541    $    250      $    101
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          DECEMBER 31, 1995(1)    SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                          --------------------    ------------------
                                                                                        (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                       <C>                     <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
     Cash..............................................................          $    8                 $  349
     Working capital (deficit).........................................             178                    (40)
     Total assets......................................................           2,505                  2,536
     Total shareholders' equity (deficit)..............................          $  235                 $  106
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
(1) Metro  had a fiscal year ending December  31 prior to its acquisition by the
    Company.
(2) Prior to its acquisition by the Company, Metro had elected to be taxed under
    the provisions of Subchapter S of the Code and, as a result, Metro's federal
    taxable income or loss and tax credits were passed through to Metro's former
    shareholders. Metro's provision for income taxes resulted from income  taxes
    due  on  taxable  income  for  states  which  did  not  recognize  Metro's S
    corporation status.
 
                                       29


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
                 FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
     The  following discussion  should be  read in  conjunction with All-Comm's,
Metro's and SD&A's financial statements and notes thereto included elsewhere  in
this  Prospectus  and the  other  financial and  operating  information included
elsewhere  in   this  Prospectus.   Certain   statements  under   this   caption
'Management's  Discussion  and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results of
Operations' constitute 'forward-looking  statements' under the  Reform Act.  See
'Risk  Factors -- Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements.' For a more
complete understanding  of  the Company's  operations,  see 'Risk  Factors'  and
'Business.'
 
OVERVIEW
 
     The Company acquired Alliance, which simultaneously acquired SD&A, on April
25,  1995. Accordingly, the Company's  consolidated statements of operations and
consolidated statements of  cash flows  include the operations  of Alliance  and
SD&A  starting on April 25, 1995. Because the Company's fiscal year ends on June
30 of  each  year,  only  approximately two  months  of  Alliance's  and  SD&A's
operations  were included in the Company's results of operations for fiscal 1995
but their results  of operations  for the entire  year were  included in  fiscal
1996.
 
     In  addition, because the  Company acquired Metro  in October 1996, Metro's
operations are  not included  in any  of the  Company's historical  consolidated
financial  statements contained in this Prospectus, but are included separately.
See 'Index to Financial  Statements.' For certain  pro forma condensed  combined
financial  information which gives effect to  the acquisition of Metro, see 'Pro
Forma Condensed  Combined  Financial  Information.' In  order  to  conform  with
industry  standards and to provide for  a more meaningful comparison between the
Company's  historical  financial  statements   and  such  pro  forma   financial
information  (and  future financial  statements),  the Company  has reclassified
certain accounts. See Note  2 of Notes to  Consolidated Financial Statements  of
All-Comm.
 
     The  Company has accounted  for the acquisitions of  Alliance and SD&A, and
will account  for  the  acquisition  of Metro,  under  the  purchase  method  of
accounting.
 
     During  1991,  under  the prior  management,  the Company  acquired  a 100%
interest in STI and  changed the Company's name  from Bristol Holdings, Inc.  to
Sports-Tech,  Inc. In  1993, the  Company acquired  the business  of High School
Gridiron Report  ('HSGR').  STI  and  HSGR  supplied  information  services  and
technology  as well as academic, athletic and video data to high school, college
and professional coaches and student athletes. In November 1994, after a  failed
business  strategy,  the  prior  management of  the  Company  discontinued these
operations through the sale of STI and  the cessation of the HSGR operation  and
the  Company's consolidated financial statements were reclassified to report the
net assets,  operating results,  gain on  disposition and  cash flows  of  these
operations   as  discontinued   operations.  In   August  1995,   following  the
acquisitions of  Alliance and  SD&A, the  Company again  changed its  name  from
Sports-Tech, Inc. to All-Comm Media Corporation.
 
     As  a  result  of  the  Alliance  and  SD&A  acquisitions  and discontinued
operations, the Company's results of operations  for fiscal years 1995 and  1996
are  not directly comparable and the  Company's historical results of operations
may not be indicative of future results.
 
     The Company's revenues  in fiscal 1995  and fiscal 1996  and for the  three
months ended September 30, 1995 and 1996 consisted principally of fees earned by
the  Company from telemarketing and  telefundraising campaigns conducted on-site
at client locations and  off-site at the Company's  calling center in  Berkeley,
California.  Revenues from on-site  campaigns are recorded  when pledged cash is
received by  the Company's  clients. Revenues  from operations  at the  Berkeley
calling   center  are   recorded  when   the  services   are  provided.  On-site
telemarketing and telefundraising  fees are  generally based on  an agreed  upon
percentage  of amounts received by  a client from a  campaign. Off-site fees are
typically based on  an agreed upon  amount per contact  with a potential  donor.
During  fiscal 1995 and 1996  and for the three  months ended September 30, 1995
and 1996, the Company's  margins relating to  off-site campaigns were  generally
higher than margins relating to on-site campaigns.
 
     For  fiscal 1995 and 1996 and for the three months ended September 30, 1995
and 1996, salaries and  benefits were the  Company's principal expense  category
and  accounted for 86.5%, 80.0%, 80.5% and 84.0%, respectively, of revenues, and
64.2%, 77.8%, 80.8% and 77.6%, respectively, of total operating expenses.
 
                                       30
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Selling, general and administrative expenses were the Company's second most
significant expense category in  fiscal 1995 and fiscal  1996 and for the  three
months  ended September  30, 1995  and 1996. Such  expenses include  the cost of
services the  Company provides  to  manage its  operating subsidiaries,  and  in
fiscal  1995 and for the three months ended September 30, 1995, its discontinued
operations. These expenses include  rent, depreciation, public relations  costs,
insurance  premiums and costs  relating to the  identification and evaluation of
potential acquisitions and financing sources (excluding professional fees).
 
     Direct costs include telephone, postage  and other sales expenses  relating
to  the Berkeley calling center and  costs associated with advertising for staff
for on-site campaigns. Professional fees  include fees for outside  consultants,
accountants  and  attorneys  principally related  to  acquisition  and financing
efforts and recurring audit and public reporting requirements.
 
     Amortization of intangible assets relates to intangible assets acquired  in
the  simultaneous  acquisitions of  Alliance  and SD&A  on  April 25,  1995. The
purchase prices for these acquisitions were substantially in excess of the  book
value  of  the  acquired  assets.  As  a  consequence,  these  acquisitions have
generated  significant  goodwill  and  have  generated,  and  will  continue  to
generate,  significant  levels  of  amortization.  Although  amortization  is  a
non-cash charge, it  decreases reported  net income (or  increases reported  net
losses).   Accordingly,  the   faster  the   Company  expands   by  making  such
acquisitions, the  more  likely it  will  be to  incur  additional  amortization
charges.  See Notes  2 and  3 of Notes  to Consolidated  Financial Statements of
All-Comm.
 
   
     Interest expense for fiscal 1995 and  fiscal 1996 and for the three  months
ended  September  30, 1995  and 1996  includes interest  on indebtedness  of the
Company to  the former  owner of  SD&A (the  'SD&A Seller  Debt'). See  'Certain
Transactions   --   Transactions   Under  Current   Management   After  Alliance
Acquisition --  Transactions With  Mr.  Dunn.' In  1996, interest  expense  also
includes  amounts payable to the holders of the Series B Preferred Stock and the
Series C Preferred Stock.
    
 
     As of September 30, 1996, the  Company had consolidated net operating  loss
carryforwards  of $2.0 million  which may offset future  income for U.S. federal
income tax purposes. The Company incurs state income taxes on taxable income  at
the subsidiary level which cannot be reduced by losses incurred at the corporate
level.
 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
     The  following  table  sets  forth for  the  fiscal  periods  indicated (i)
information  derived  from   the  Company's   audited  historical   consolidated
statements of operations for the fiscal years ended June 30, 1995 and 1996, (ii)
information  derived from the Company's unaudited interim condensed consolidated
statements of operations for the three months ended September 30, 1995 and  1996
and  (iii)  information  derived  from the  unaudited  historical  statements of
operations of Metro for the  nine months ended September  30, 1995 and 1996,  in
each case expressed as a percentage of revenues.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         ALL-COMM MEDIA      ALL-COMM MEDIA        METRO SERVICES
                                                          CORPORATION         CORPORATION           GROUP, INC.
                                                        ----------------    ----------------      ----------------
                                                                              THREE MONTHS          NINE MONTHS
                                                        YEAR ENDED JUNE     ENDED SEPTEMBER       ENDED SEPTEMBER
                                                              30,                 30,                   30,
                                                        ----------------    ----------------      ----------------
                                                        1995       1996     1995       1996       1995       1996
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
<S>                                                     <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
Revenues.............................................   100.0%     100.0%   100.0%     100.0%     100.0%     100.0%
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
Salaries and benefits................................    86.5       80.0     80.5       84.0       23.0       27.2
Direct costs.........................................     2.8        5.1      3.3        3.7       58.3       55.0
Selling, general and administrative..................    30.9       11.6      9.8       13.9       11.4       12.9
Professional fees....................................    12.7        3.9      3.7        4.3        2.7        3.0
Amortization of intangible assets....................     1.8        2.3      2.3        2.4         --         --
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
        Total operating costs and expenses...........   134.6      102.9     99.7      108.3       95.4       98.2
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
Income (loss) from operations........................   (34.6)      (2.9)     0.3       (8.3)       4.6        1.8
Other income (expense)...............................    33.1       (3.1)     2.4       (0.4)        --         --
Provision for income taxes...........................    (2.1)      (0.9)    (1.4)      (0.1)      (0.3)      (0.1)
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
Income (loss) from continuing operations before
  discontinued operations............................    (3.6)      (6.9)    (3.5)      (8.8)       4.4        1.8
Net gain from discontinued operations................     6.6         --       --         --         --         --
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
Net income (loss)....................................     3.0%      (6.9)%   (3.5)%     (8.8)%      4.4%       1.8%
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
                                                        -----      -----    -----      -----      -----      -----
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       31
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 AND 1995
 
     Revenues  of $3,932,000 in  the three months ended  September 30, 1996 (the
'Current Period') increased by $6,000 over  revenues of $3,926,000 in the  three
months  ended September  30, 1995  (the 'Prior  Period'). Revenues  from on-site
telemarketing and telefundraising campaigns  totaled $3,417,000 and  $3,421,000,
respectively,  or 86.9% and 87.1% of revenues  in the Current and Prior Periods,
respectively. Revenues from  off-site campaigns totaled  $516,000 and  $505,000,
respectively,  or 13.1% and 12.9% of  revenues, respectively, in the Current and
Prior Periods. During the  three months ended September  30, 1995 and 1996,  the
Company's  margins  relating to  off-site campaigns  were generally  higher than
margins relating to on-site campaigns.
 
     Salaries and  benefits of  $3,303,000 in  the Current  Period increased  by
$142,000  over the Prior Period total  of $3,161,000. Salaries and benefits also
increased as a percentage of revenues, from 80.5% in the Prior Period, to  84.0%
in  the Current Period. Telemarketing sales  labor expense increased by $152,000
in the Current  Period. This  increase was largely  due to  the commencement  of
on-site campaigns for new clients in the Current Period (which generally require
a higher labor expense in the early years). Off-site and administrative salaries
at  SD&A increased by $58,000, the  majority of which, $32,000, was attributable
to salaries  of newly-hired  telemarketing sales  representatives to  staff  the
relocated  and  expanded  Berkeley  calling center,  and  the  balance  of which
included the salary of a  newly-hired human resources director. These  increases
were  partially offset by  a $68,000 reduction  in parent company administrative
salaries in the Current Period as compared to the Prior Period.
 
     Direct costs of $145,000  in the Current Period  increased by $15,000  over
direct  costs of $130,000 in the  Prior Period, primarily attributable to higher
telephone costs incurred for off-site campaigns.
 
     Selling, general and  administrative expenses  of $545,000  in the  Current
Period  increased by $158,000,  or 41%, over comparable  expenses of $387,000 in
the Prior Period. Of the increase, $101,000 was attributable to SD&A and $57,000
to corporate administration. At SD&A, travel expense increased by $47,000 in the
Current Period principally  as a  result of  bringing campaign  managers to  Los
Angeles  for  training on  SD&A's new  on-site software.  Of the  SD&A increase,
$11,000 was a one-time moving and additional rent expense due to relocating  the
off-site  calling center  in August 1996  and the remaining  increase of $43,000
resulted principally from  an increase  in printing,  promotion and  advertising
expenses.  At the parent  company level, public  relations expenses increased by
$41,000 due to the hiring  of a new firm in  the Current Period. Parent  company
travel  expenses increased by $12,000 due to increased acquisition and financing
efforts. Directors fees of $9,000 were incurred for a September 1996 meeting; no
such meeting was held in the Prior Period. Net decreases of $5,000 resulted from
reductions in director  and officer insurance  premiums and other  miscellaneous
items.
 
     Professional  fees of $168,000  in the Current  Period increased by $23,000
over professional  fees of  $145,000 in  the Prior  Period. The  Current  Period
included  a  non-recurring charge  of approximately  $76,000 in  consulting fees
attributable to the value of warrants acquired by former consultants during  the
period.  The  Prior  Period  included accounting  and  legal  fees  incurred for
finalization of issues related to prior operations of the Company.
 
     Amortization  of  intangible  assets  of  $96,000  in  the  Current  Period
increased   by  $6,000  over  amortization  of  $90,000  in  the  Prior  Period.
Amortization of the goodwill and  a covenant-not-to-compete associated with  the
Alliance and SD&A acquisitions on April 25, 1995 increased in the Current Period
due  to an increase in  goodwill of $850,000 as of  June 30, 1996 resulting from
payments made to the former  owner of SD&A based  on the achievement of  defined
results of operations of SD&A for the year then ended.
 
     The Company recorded a net gain of $90,000 from the sale of its undeveloped
parcel  of land in Laughlin, Nevada in  August 1996, which gain was recorded net
of commissions and related selling expenses.
 
   
     Interest expense of  $115,000 in  the Current Period  increased by  $16,000
compared to $99,000 in the Prior Period due to amounts payable to the holders of
the  Series B Preferred  Stock and the  Series C Preferred  Stock in the Current
Period, principal  payments  on the  SD&A  seller  debt and  reductions  in  the
interest rate.
    
 
                                       32
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
     The provision for income taxes of $4,000 in the Current Period decreased by
$49,000  compared to  $53,000 in the  Prior Period.  Despite consolidated losses
from continuing operations, the  provision resulted from  state and local  taxes
incurred  on taxable income at the operating subsidiary level which could not be
offset by  losses incurred  at the  parent company  level. As  a result  of  the
foregoing  factors, the Company's net loss increased from $136,000 (or $0.05 per
share) in the  Prior Period  to $344,481  (or $0.11  per share)  in the  Current
Period.
    
 
ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
FISCAL YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1996 AND 1995
 
     Revenues  of $15.9 million  in fiscal 1996 increased  by $12.3 million over
fiscal 1995  revenues,  principally due  to  the inclusion  of  a full  year  of
operations  of SD&A in fiscal 1996 as compared  with the period from the date of
acquisition (April  25, 1995)  to June  30,  1995 in  fiscal 1995.  Fiscal  1996
revenues  from off-site campaigns  totaled $2.7 million  (16.7% of revenues) and
revenues from on-site telemarketing and telefundraising campaigns totaled  $13.2
million  (83.3% of revenues). During fiscal 1995 and 1996, the Company's margins
relating to off-site campaigns  were generally higher  than margins relating  to
on-site campaigns.
 
     Salaries  and benefits  of $12.7 million  in fiscal 1996  increased by $9.6
million over salaries and benefits of  $3.1 million in fiscal 1995,  principally
due  to the inclusion of a full year of  operations of SD&A in fiscal 1996. As a
percentage of revenues, however,  salaries and benefits  declined from 86.5%  to
80.0%  because, in fiscal 1995  and fiscal 1996, the Company  had a full year of
administrative  salaries  and   benefits  at  the   corporate  level  but   only
approximately two months of revenues from the operations of SD&A in fiscal 1995.
 
     Direct  costs of $0.8 million in fiscal 1996 increased by $0.7 million over
direct costs of $0.1 million in fiscal 1995, principally due to the inclusion of
costs associated with the Berkeley calling  center operations for all of  fiscal
1996  as well as $0.2 million in costs associated with advertising for staff for
on-site campaigns in fiscal 1996.
 
     Selling, general and administrative expenses of $1.8 million in fiscal 1996
increased by  $0.7 million,  or 64.4%,  over $1.1  million of  such expenses  in
fiscal  1995, principally due to  the inclusion of a  full year of operations of
SD&A in fiscal  1996. Professional  fees of $0.6  million in  1996 increased  by
approximately  $0.2 million, or 36.2%, over professional fees of $0.5 million in
fiscal 1995, principally due to legal and accounting fees incurred in connection
with the evaluation of potential acquisitions and financing sources.
 
     Amortization of intangible assets of $0.4 million in fiscal 1996  increased
by  $0.3 million over amortization of  approximately $65,000 in fiscal 1995, due
to the amortization  of the  goodwill and  a covenant-not-to-compete  associated
with the Alliance and SD&A acquisitions on April 25, 1995.
 
     The  Company had other expense  of $0.5 million in  fiscal 1996 compared to
other income  of  $1.2 million  in  fiscal 1995,  a  decrease of  $1.7  million,
principally due to increases in fiscal 1996 interest expense related to the SD&A
Seller  Debt. In fiscal 1995, the Company  had nonrecurring net gains from sales
of securities of $1.6 million, which were partially offset by a loan  commitment
fee of $0.3 million in connection with the original purchase of such securities.
See  'Certain  Transactions  --  Transaction Under  Former  Management  Prior to
Alliance Acquisition -- Florida Gaming Corporation Loan.'
 
     The provision for  income taxes  in fiscal  1996 of  $141,000 increased  by
approximately  $66,000, or 88.1%, over the provision for income taxes of $75,000
in  1995.  The  provision  for  income  taxes  increased,  despite  losses  from
continuing  operations, as a result of state and local taxes incurred on taxable
income at the operating subsidiary level.  Under applicable tax law, such  taxes
at  the operating subsidiary level could not be offset by losses incurred at the
corporate level.
 
     The gain on sale of, and loss from, discontinued operations in fiscal  1995
relates  to the  STI and  HSGR operations  which were  either sold  or closed in
fiscal 1995 as a condition precedent to the acquisition of Alliance. No  amounts
related to discontinued operations were incurred in fiscal 1996.
 
     As  a result of the  foregoing factors, the Company had  a net loss of $1.1
million in fiscal 1996 as compared to net income of $0.1 million in 1995.
 
                                       33
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 AND 1995
 
     Metro  generates   revenues  from   the   development  and   marketing   of
information-based  services  used  primarily in  direct  marketing  programs and
fundraising campaigns. These  services, which are  usually integrated,  include:
(i)   database  management,  which  includes  updating  and  maintaining  client
databases; (ii) data processing; (iii) list  services; and (iv) as an  ancillary
service  (through outsourcing), creating, printing and mailing of brochures. See
'Business -- Services.'  Metro recognizes  revenues as  services are  performed.
Revenues of $5.8 million for the first nine months of 1996 increased by $55,000,
or  1.0%compared to $5.7  million for the  first nine months  of the prior year,
notwithstanding the loss of Metro's two largest clients. Such clients were to be
acquired by other firms during  the first quarter of 1996  and, as a result,  no
longer  required  Metro's  services.  On a  combined  basis,  those  two clients
accounted for  17.0%, 13.1%  and 2.0%  of Metro's  revenues for  the year  ended
December  31,  1995 and  the  nine months  ended  September 30,  1995  and 1996,
respectively. The loss of  such revenues in  the first nine  months of 1996  was
offset  by $0.8  million in  revenues from new  clients during  the same period.
Subsequent to June 30, 1996, one  such client resumed business with Metro  after
its proposed acquisition was not consummated.
 
     Salaries  and benefits of $1.6 million  for the nine months ended September
30, 1996 increased  by approximately $0.3  million, or 19.2%,  compared to  $1.3
million  for the first nine months of the prior year. The increase was primarily
due to staffing  increases in  the 1996  period in  connection with  anticipated
client activity as well as the opening of a Los Angeles sales office.
 
     Direct  costs for Metro are  principally the costs of  lists and other data
purchased for clients from  third parties. Direct costs  for Metro also  include
commissions  payable to third party list owners  for lists rented to clients, as
well as printing  and fulfillment costs  incurred on behalf  of clients.  Direct
costs  of  $3.2 million  for the  first nine  months of  1996 decreased  by $0.2
million, or 4.7%, from direct costs of $3.3 million for the comparable period in
1995 reflecting the approximately equal revenues in both years. As a  percentage
of  revenues,  direct costs  decreased  from 58.3%  to  55.0%, which  levels are
consistent with historical patterns.
 
     Selling, general  and administrative  expenses  for Metro  are  principally
comprised  of rent, promotion,  insurance, utilities, and  postage and delivery.
Selling, general and administrative expenses of $0.8 million for the first  nine
months  of 1996 increased by approximately  $95,000, or 14.5%, from $0.7 million
for the first nine months  of 1995. The increase  was principally the result  of
increases  in  promotional  expenses relating  to  advertising  and depreciation
expenses related to  fixed asset additions,  partially offset by  a decrease  in
rent  expense relating  to the  expiration of a  lease for  the Company's former
facilities which the Company had sublet at a loss.
 
     Prior to its acquisition by All-Comm,  Metro had elected to be taxed  under
the  provision of  Subchapter S of  the Code  and, as a  result, Metro's federal
taxable income or  loss and tax  credits were passed  through to Metro's  former
shareholders.  Metro's provision for income taxes resulted from income taxes due
on taxable  income for  states which  did not  recognize Metro's  S  corporation
status.
 
     Primarily  as a result  of the foregoing  factors, Metro had  net income of
approximately $80,000 for the first nine  months of 1996 compared to net  income
of approximately $0.2 million for the first nine months of 1995.
 
METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
 
     Revenues  of $8.1 million in 1995 increased by $2.2 million, or 36.9%, over
revenues of $5.9 million in 1994, principally due to increases in revenues  from
database  management  and  list  brokerage, and  increasing  penetration  of the
financial services sector. In 1995, 17.0% of Metro's revenues were generated  by
two clients as compared to 10.9% in 1994.
 
     Salaries and benefits of $1.8 million in 1995 increased by $0.1 million, or
7.2%, over $1.7 million in 1994, principally due to merit pay increases in 1995.
As a percentage of revenues, however, salaries and benefits decreased from 28.3%
in  1994  to 22.1%  in  1995, principally  due  to Metro's  limiting  its hiring
activities in 1995  to active  projects rather  than hiring  in anticipation  of
growth as had been done in 1994.
 
                                       34
 

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<PAGE>
     Direct  costs of $4.7 million in 1995  increased by $1.4 million, or 41.4%,
from direct  costs of  $3.3 million  in 1994,  principally as  a result  of  the
related  increases in  revenues. As  a percentage  of revenues,  however, direct
costs increased from 55.6% in 1994 to 57.5% in 1995, which levels are consistent
with historical patterns.
 
     Selling, general  and  administrative  expenses of  $0.9  million  in  1995
increased  by approximately $31,000, or 3.6%, compared to the 1994 level, due in
part to increased travel and  entertainment expenses associated with the  growth
of Metro's out-of-state business.
 
     Prior  to its acquisition by All-Comm, Metro  had elected to be taxed under
the provision of  Subchapter S of  the Code  and, as a  result, Metro's  federal
taxable  income or loss  and tax credits  were passed through  to Metro's former
shareholders. Metro's provision for income taxes resulted from income taxes  due
on  taxable  income for  states which  did not  recognize Metro's  S corporation
status.
 
     Principally as  a result  of the  foregoing factors,  the Company  had  net
income  of $0.5 million in 1995 compared  to a net loss of approximately $57,000
in 1994.
 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
 
     The  parent  company's  assets  consist  primarily  of  the  stock  of  its
subsidiaries.  At September 30, 1996 and June 30, 1996, on a consolidated basis,
the Company had  cash and  cash equivalents of  $1.2 million  and $1.4  million,
respectively,  and accounts receivable, net of allowances for doubtful accounts,
of $1.9 million and $2.7 million, respectively. On August 16, 1996, the  Company
sold its land in Laughlin, Nevada for $1.0 million in cash.
 
   
     The  Company generated  losses from  operations of  $1.3 million  in fiscal
1995, $0.5 million in fiscal  1996, and $0.3 million  in the Current Period.  In
April  1996, at the parent company level,  the Company was unable to satisfy its
payroll and other compensation obligations solely as a result of the prohibition
on the  upstreaming of  cash  from SD&A  contained  in the  operating  covenants
agreement,  terminated in  June 1996,  with Mr.  Dunn, the  seller of  SD&A. The
Company met these and its other  liquidity requirements in fiscal 1995 and  1996
and  the Current Period principally through  financing activities in the form of
private placements of Common Stock, preferred stock and warrants. In the Current
Period, $0.5 million was used in  the Company's financing activities. In  fiscal
1996,  the Company's financing activities provided  $1.6 million. See Note 13 of
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements of  All-Comm. At June 30, 1996,  SD&A
had  a $0.5 million  line of credit with  a bank, which was  fully drawn at such
date. During the Current  Period, the Company repaid  $0.4 million on the  line.
The  Company is exploring the possible replacement of such line of credit with a
larger credit facility with a different  institution. No assurance can be  given
that  the Company will be able to  obtain such a replacement credit facility, or
that any  such replacement  credit facility  will be  larger than  the  existing
facility.
    
 
     The  Company  used $0.4  million in  cash for  operating activities  in the
Current Period.  Due  to seasonal  decreases  in revenues  and  certain  related
expenses  between the fourth  and first fiscal quarters,  at September 30, 1996,
accounts receivable relating to  the SD&A operation  decreased $0.8 million  and
trade  accounts payable and accrued  liabilities decreased $0.9 million compared
to levels at June 30, 1996. In  part due to certain seasonal marketing  patterns
and subscriptions, revenues are expected to decrease during the second and third
fiscal  quarters. However, starting in October  1996, the Company will recognize
the results of operations  of Metro. The fourth  calendar quarter, which is  the
Company's  second fiscal quarter,  has historically been  Metro's strongest. The
Company cannot  predict the  degree to  which, on  a consolidated  basis,  these
trends will continue.
 
     In  fiscal  1996,  the Company  used  $0.9  million in  cash  for operating
activities, principally due to  net losses incurred during  the first full  year
following  the acquisition  of SD&A.  While the  SD&A operations  generated both
income from operations  and net  income during  fiscal 1996,  such amounts  were
offset by legal, accounting and other expenditures of approximately $1.4 million
incurred  by the  parent company  in connection  with the  implementation of the
Company's  business  strategy,  including   identification  and  evaluation   of
potential  acquisitions and financing sources, and obligations associated with a
prior registration statement and other remaining obligations associated with the
activities of  the  prior management.  The  Company's management  has  satisfied
substantially all known remaining
 
                                       35
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
payment  obligations arising from activities of the prior management. Additional
cash used in  fiscal 1996 resulted  from an increase  in accounts receivable  at
SD&A of $0.6 million due to increases in sales.
 
     In the Current Period, net cash of $0.6 million was provided from investing
activities.  In  fiscal  1996,  the  Company  used  $0.6  million  in  investing
activities, most of which  ($0.5 million) was a  contingent cash payment to  Mr.
Stephen  Dunn, the former shareholder and current President of SD&A, as a result
of SD&A's meeting specified financial targets with respect to such fiscal  year.
Capital  expenditures in fiscal 1996 of  $0.1 million were principally leasehold
improvements to increase the usable space  at SD&A's offices. The Company  moved
its  Berkeley calling  center in  August 1996  at a  cost of  approximately $0.1
million. Purchases of property and equipment of $0.2 million resulted  primarily
from  the Company's relocation  and expansion of its  Berkeley calling center in
August 1996. The Company intends to refinance approximately $0.14 million of the
expansion and  relocation  costs through  bank  borrowings under  SD&A's  credit
facility.
 
     On  April 25, 1995, Alliance and SD&A were acquired for 1,025,000 shares of
Common  Stock  valued  at  $2.7  million  plus  approximately  $0.5  million  of
acquisition  costs. Liabilities assumed as a result of such acquisitions totaled
$6.7 million including the SD&A Seller Debt in the original aggregate  principal
amount  of $4.5 million, payable with interest at prime over a four year period.
Payments due in  fiscal 1996  on the SD&A  Seller Debt  originally totaled  $1.5
million, payable in quarterly installments. Additional contingent payments of up
to $0.85 million per year over the three year period ending June 30, 1998 may be
required  to be  made to  Mr. Dunn  based on  achievement of  defined results of
operations of SD&A. At the  Company's option, up to  one half of the  additional
contingent  payments may  be made  with restricted  Common Stock  of the Company
subject to certain  registration rights.  SD&A achieved its  defined results  of
operations  during fiscal 1996  and $0.425 million  was paid in  cash and $0.425
million   accrued   in   stock,   as   of   June   30,   1996.   See    'Certain
Transactions   --   Transactions   Under  Current   Management   After  Alliance
Acquisition -- Transactions with Mr. Dunn.'
 
     In October 1995, the Company increased  its cash balances by entering  into
an  option agreement whereby, in consideration of  a cash payment to the Company
of $0.15 million, an unaffiliated third party was granted an option to  purchase
the Company's undeveloped land in Laughlin, Nevada, for $2.0 million. The option
agreement  expired on April  8, 1996, and  was extended until  July 8, 1996. The
Company bought back the option in July 1996 for $0.15 million, pursuant to a put
provision in the  option agreement.  On August  16, 1996  the land  was sold  to
another  unaffiliated third  party, by  auction, for  $1.0 million  in cash. The
Company received proceeds of $0.9 million from the sale, net of commissions  and
related selling expenses.
 
     In  June  1996,  the Company  completed  a private  placement  with certain
accredited investors  of 6,200  shares  of Series  B  Preferred Stock  for  $3.1
million and 2,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock for $1.0 million.
 
     In  addition, the Company  issued warrants to  the holders of  the Series B
Preferred Stock to purchase a  total of 3,100,000 shares  of Common Stock at  an
exercise price of $2.50 per share exercisable for three years, starting with and
subject  to the  availability of  shares following  stockholder authorization of
additional common shares.  The Company also  issued warrants to  holders of  the
Series  C Preferred  Stock to  purchase 3,000,000 shares  of Common  Stock at an
exercise price of $3.00 per share exercisable for three years, starting with and
subject to the  availability of  shares following  stockholder authorization  of
additional common shares.
 
     The  proceeds of  the sale  of Series  B Preferred  Stock and  the Series C
Preferred Stock were used  by the Company to  pay approximately $2.0 million  on
account  of  the  SD&A Seller  Debt.  The  remaining $2.1  million  of long-term
obligations to Mr. Dunn are payable in 36 monthly principal payments of  $58,333
plus  interest at 8%,  beginning September 19,  1996. In June  1996, the Company
paid $0.8  million  in  connection  with the  repurchase  of  10,000  shares  of
previously  outstanding Series A Preferred Stock issued in the private placement
in May 1996. The balance of the proceeds are being used for working capital  and
general corporate purposes.
 
   
     Due  to contingent  payments earned  as of  June 30,  1996 based  on SD&A's
earnings,  amortization  expense  will  increase  by  $22,000  in  fiscal  1997.
Additional  contingent payments may be  due at the end  of fiscal 1997 and 1998,
which will continue to increase amortization expense in subsequent years.  Also,
the  acquisition of Metro in October  1996 will result in increased amortization
expense during fiscal  1997, currently estimated  to be $0.3  million in  fiscal
1997.
    
 
                                       36
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Due  to prepayment  and restructuring  in June  1996, interest  on the SD&A
Seller  Debt  will   decrease  significantly  in   fiscal  1997.  See   'Certain
Transactions   --   Transactions   Under  Current   Management   After  Alliance
Acquisition -- Transactions with Mr. Dunn.'
 
     In July  1996,  All-Comm publicly  announced  the proposed  acquisition  of
Metro.  The announcement contained a  forward-looking statement that the Company
expected Metro's revenues 'to be comfortably in excess of $10.0 million for  the
fiscal  year ending  June 30, 1997.'  Such forward-looking statement  is only an
estimate and is  not a guarantee  of future results.  Metro's revenues for  such
year  may vary from the  estimate and such variations  may be material. Numerous
factors, many of  which are beyond  the Company's control,  could cause  Metro's
actual  revenues for such year to be materially different from those expected at
the time of the public announcement. Such factors include those listed under the
heading 'Risk  Factors,'  in particular  those  under the  subheadings  'Limited
Operating  History; Absence of Combined  Operating History; Lack of Consolidated
Profitable Operations,' 'Risks Associated with Acquisition and Growth Strategy,'
'Lack of  Long-Term  Contracts,'  'Government Regulation  and  Privacy  Issues,'
'Rapid  Technological  Change,'  'Risk  of  Equipment  Failure,'  'Cyclicality,'
'Competition,' 'Dependence upon Key Personnel' and 'Dependence on  Relationships
with Data Suppliers.'
 
   
     In  October 1996,  in connection  with the  Metro acquisition,  the Company
issued promissory notes to the former shareholders of Metro in an aggregate face
amount of $1.0 million. Such notes bear interest at 6% per annum, are  scheduled
to mature June 30, 1998 and are convertible at the option of the holders thereof
into 185,874 shares of Common Stock. The Company intends to repay such notes out
of the proceeds of the Underwritten Offering. See 'Use of Proceeds.'
    
 
   
     In  December  1996, in  connection with  the recapitalization,  the Company
issued promissory notes to the former holders of the Series C Preferred Stock in
an aggregate principal amount  of $1.0 million. Such  notes bear interest at  8%
per  annum and  are payable on  demand at  any time from  and after  the date of
consummation of  the Underwritten  Offering, or  any other  underwritten  public
offering  of Common  Stock, and in  any event  mature June 7,  1998. The Company
intends to repay such  notes out of the  proceeds of the Underwritten  Offering.
See 'The Recapitalization' and 'Use of Proceeds.'
    
 
   
     The Company believes that the net proceeds of the Underwritten Offering and
funds available from operations, including the operations of Metro, and from the
August  1996 sale of the Laughlin, Nevada land should be adequate to finance its
operations and enable the Company to meet interest and debt obligations  through
its  fiscal  year  ending  June  30, 1998.  In  conjunction  with  the Company's
acquisition and  growth  strategy,  additional  financing  may  be  required  to
complete   such  acquisitions  and  to  meet  potential  contingent  acquisition
payments. There can be  no assurance, however, that  such capital, if  required,
will  be available  on terms  acceptable to  the Company,  if at  all. See 'Risk
Factors -- Possible Need for Additional Financing.'
    
 
     The Company generated losses due, in part, to costs in fiscal 1995 and 1996
and in  the  first quarter  of  fiscal  1997 associated  with  increased  legal,
accounting  and administrative  expenses related to  identifying, evaluating and
negotiating potential acquisitions consistent with the Company's growth strategy
and with  the  obtaining of  financing  for  such acquisitions,  some  of  which
acquisitions  were never consummated. Although expenses related to the Company's
growth strategy are likely to continue  as the Company pursues new  acquisitions
in  furtherance thereof,  the Company  believes that  by implementing  a plan to
reduce overhead and administrative expenses and by including earnings  generated
by Metro and increasing earnings generated by SD&A, which reported net income of
$0.4  million and $1.2 million,  respectively, for the year  ended June 30, 1996
(which in the case of Metro is unaudited), the Company has the ability to become
profitable. No assurance can be given as to whether or when the Company will  be
able to attain profitability.
 
   
     The  Company will  incur a  non-recurring non-cash  charge estimated  to be
$75,000 in the fiscal quarter in which the Underwritten Offering is consummated,
as a  result of  the issuance  by the  Company of  warrants exercisable  for  an
aggregate of up to 160,414 shares of Common Stock to certain stockholders of the
Company  as  consideration for  the agreement  of  such stockholders  to certain
lock-up arrangements. The estimated charge is based on the estimated fair  value
of  such warrants. Such warrants  are exercisable at an  exercise price equal to
the initial price  to public of  the Common Stock  in the Underwritten  Offering
(except  in the  case of warrants  exercisable for  an aggregate of  up to 9,386
shares of Common Stock to be issued  to two stockholders, the exercise price  of
which is $1.00 above
    
 
                                       37
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
such  initial price to  public). In addition,  up to 5,080,927  shares of Common
Stock  are  issuable  upon  exercise  of  certain  options,  warrants  or  other
contractual   rights,  depending  on  the  extent  to  which  the  Underwriters'
over-allotment options are exercised,  if at all. Although  no assurance can  be
given  that any of  such options, warrants  or other contractual  rights will or
will not be exercised  in whole or in  part or at all,  if all of such  options,
warrants  and other  contractual rights having  exercise prices at  or below the
assumed price to public for the Common Stock of $5 per share were exercised, the
aggregate proceeds to  the Company  resulting therefrom  would be  approximately
$11.5  million. The Company expects that it would use such proceeds, if any, for
general corporate purposes, including possible future acquisitions.
    
 
METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
 
     Metro's primary source  of working  capital is cash  provided by  operating
activities.  In the year  ended December 31,  1995 and the  first nine months of
1996, Metro generated  cash from operating  activities of approximately  $39,000
and $0.7 million, respectively. The cash provided by operating activities in the
first nine months of 1996 was generated largely from increases in collections of
accounts   receivable.  Metro's  days  revenue  in  accounts  receivable,  which
typically ranges from 70 days  to 100 days, is expected  to continue and is  not
expected  to significantly impact the Company's liquidity. Cash at September 30,
1996 was approximately $0.3 million. Metro  had no committed lines of credit  at
such date and does not have any current plans to obtain any such commitment.
 
     Metro's  capital  expenditures  consist  primarily  of  computer  hardware,
software and related equipment and  office equipment. Investments in such  fixed
assets  in 1995 and the first nine months of 1996 were approximately $43,000 and
$0.2 million, respectively, including a  purchase of computer equipment under  a
capital  lease obligation. Metro  expects to receive  from All-Comm between $1.7
million and $2.0 million of the net proceeds of the Offering for investments  in
such fixed assets, principally computer hardware and software.
 
     Prior  to its acquisition by All-Comm, Metro  had elected to be taxed under
the provisions of Subchapter  S of the  Code and, as  a result, Metro's  federal
taxable  income or loss  and tax credits  were passed through  to Metro's former
shareholders. Metro's provision for income taxes resulted from income taxes  due
on  taxable  income for  states which  did not  recognize Metro's  S corporation
status. In  addition, in  order to  permit its  shareholders to  meet their  tax
obligations resulting from Metro's 1995 operations, during the first nine months
of  1996 Metro paid dividends of approximately $0.2 million to its shareholders.
As a  result  of All-Comm's  acquisition  of Metro,  Metro  is no  longer  an  S
corporation. During the first nine months of 1996, Metro advanced $50,000 to one
of  its shareholders. In addition,  during the first nine  months of 1996, Metro
repaid   a   loan   from   a    related   party   of   $6,797.   See    'Certain
Transactions   --   Transactions   Under  Current   Management   After  Alliance
Acquisition.'
 
NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
 
     Financial and Accounting  Standards Board ('FASB')  Statement of  Financial
Accounting  Standards  No. 121,  'Accounting  for the  Impairment  of Long-Lived
Assets for  Long-Lived  Assets  to  be Disposed  of,'  which  is  effective  for
financial  statements for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1995, is not
anticipated to have a  material effect on  the Company's consolidated  financial
statements.
 
     Statement  of  Financial  Accounting  Standards  No.  123,  'Accounting for
Stock-Based  Compensation'  ('SFAS  123'),  which  is  effective  for  financial
statements  for fiscal years beginning after  December 15, 1995, establishes new
financial accounting and reporting standards for stock-based compensation plans.
Entities  will  be  allowed  to   measure  compensation  cost  for   stock-based
compensation  under SFAS 123 or APB Opinion No. 25, 'Accounting for Stock Issued
to Employees.' The Company has elected  to continue the accounting treatment  of
such  compensation pursuant to APB Opinion No. 25. However, effective for fiscal
1997 the Company  is required to  make pro  forma disclosure of  net income  and
earnings per share as if the provisions of SFAS 123 had been applied.
 
                                       38
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                    BUSINESS
 
     All-Comm provides database management services, custom
telemarketing/telefundraising  services and other direct marketing services to a
diverse group of approximately 600 clients located throughout the United States.
These services include customer and market data analysis, database creation  and
analysis,  data warehousing,  merge/purge, predictive  behavioral modeling, list
processing, brokerage and management,  data enhancement, other direct  marketing
information services and custom outbound telemarketing/telefundraising services.
Through  this  combination  of  services, the  Company  assists  its  clients in
defining target  markets and  uses sophisticated  data analysis  to support  and
track  the results of clients' direct  marketing campaigns. The Company believes
its  expertise  in   applying  these  direct   marketing  tools  increases   the
productivity of its clients' marketing expenditures.
 
     The  Company's value-added  premium services  have enabled  it to  become a
leading provider of database management services, custom
telemarketing/telefundraising services and  other direct  marketing services  to
performing  arts and cultural  institutions in the  United States. The Company's
clients include Lincoln Center for the  Performing Arts, Kennedy Center for  the
Performing  Arts, Art Institute of Chicago,  Dallas Symphony, Carnegie Hall, New
York Philharmonic,  Los Angeles  Philharmonic, Boston  Symphony, Atlanta  Opera,
Detroit  Symphony, New  York University,  UCLA and  numerous public broadcasting
stations. In  addition,  the  Company renders  database  management  and  direct
marketing services to such commercial clients as The Shubert Organization, Crain
Communications,  The  CIT Group,  3Com  Corporation, Mitsubishi  Electronics and
UNOCAL. Since January  1996, the  Company has  begun providing  services to  new
clients  including  Seattle Art  Museum,  Walt Disney  Company,  Avery Dennison,
Countrywide Insurance and Nomura Asset Capital Corporation.
 
     The Company utilizes industry  specific knowledge and proprietary  database
software  applications developed at its data center  in New York City to produce
customized data management and direct  marketing solutions for its clients.  The
Company's  custom  telemarketing/telefundraising  services  are  conducted  both
on-site at client-provided facilities and  also at the Company's calling  center
in  Berkeley,  California. By  providing these  services,  the Company  seeks to
become an integral  part of its  clients' marketing programs  which the  Company
believes  fosters long-term client relationships  and provides opportunities for
recurring revenues and business growth.
 
THE DIRECT MARKETING INDUSTRY
 
     Overview. Direct  marketing is  used for  a variety  of purposes  including
lead-generation  and prospecting for the acquisition of new customers, enhancing
existing customer relationships,  exploring the potential  for new products  and
services and establishing new products. Unlike traditional mass marketing, which
aims  at a  broad audience and  focuses on  creating image and  general brand or
product awareness, successful direct  marketing requires the identification  and
sophisticated  analysis of relationships between  customers and their purchasing
patterns. Such patterns enable businesses to  more easily identify and create  a
customized  message aimed  at a highly  defined audience.  This communication is
intended to produce  more favorable  responses from customers  or prospects  who
have  been  approached  in a  more  individualized  manner as  compared  to mass
marketing. Previously, direct marketing activity consisted principally of direct
mail,  but  now  has  expanded  into  the  use  of  multiple  mediums  including
telemarketing,  print, television,  radio, video, CD-ROM,  on-line services, the
Internet and a variety of other interactive marketing formats.
 
     The analysis,  enhancement  and  management  of  customer  information  and
related marketing data are integral to the successful implementation of a direct
marketing  program. Database management  capabilities allow for  the creation of
lists of  customers with  specific,  identifiable attributes.  Direct  marketers
utilize  such lists to  customize messages and  marketing programs that generate
new customers whose purchasing patterns can be statistically analyzed to isolate
key determinants. In turn, this enables direct marketers to continually evaluate
and adjust their marketing programs, and  to measure customer response rates  in
order  to assess returns  on marketing expenditures,  which the Company believes
increases the effectiveness of such marketing programs.
 
     Database management covers a range of services, including general marketing
consultation, execution of marketing programs  and the creation and  development
of  customer  databases  and sales  tracking  and data  analysis  software. Data
analysis software consolidates and analyzes customer profile
 
                                       39
 

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<PAGE>
information to find common characteristics among buyers of certain products. The
results of such tracking and analysis are used to define and match customer  and
product  attributes from millions of available  database files for future direct
marketing applications.  The process  is  one of  continual refinement,  as  the
number  of  points  of  contact  with  customers  increases,  together  with the
proliferation of mediums available to reach customers.
 
     Telemarketing/telefundraising  projects   generally   require   significant
amounts  of customer information supplied by  the client or third party sources.
Custom telemarketing/  telefundraising  programs  seek to  maximize  a  client's
direct   marketing  project  results  by   utilizing  appropriate  databases  to
communicate with a  highly specific audience  having identifiable  demographics.
This  customization is  often achieved  through sophisticated  and comprehensive
data analysis which identifies  psychographic, cultural and behavioral  patterns
and preferences, in specific geographic markets.
 
     Industry  Growth. The use  of direct marketing  by businesses has increased
over the last few years  due in part to the  relative cost efficiency of  direct
marketing  compared to mass marketing, as well  as the rapid development of more
powerful  and  more  cost-effective  information  technology  and  data  capture
capabilities.  According to industry sources,  over the next decade, demographic
shifts and changes in lifestyle, combined with a proliferation of new  marketing
mediums,  are expected  to create  higher demand  for marketing  information and
services that provide  businesses with direct  access to their  customers and  a
more  efficient means of  targeting specific audiences  and developing long-term
customer relationships. According to the DMA, expenditures for direct  marketing
services  in 1995  were approximately $134.0  billion, the  largest component of
which, $54.1 billion, was attributable  to telemarketing. The DMA has  estimated
that  annual telemarketing  expenditures may grow  to $78.9 billion  by the year
2000. According  to  other industry  sources,  total expenditures  for  database
management  services in  the United  States, including  services used  by direct
marketing and other industries, were estimated to have been $3.2 billion in 1993
and are projected to grow at a compound annual rate of 29% through 1998.
 
     The Company believes that  more businesses will  seek to utilize  marketing
information  systems and data  analysis, enhancement and  management to identify
customer  attributes  and  behaviors,  in   order  to  apply  direct   marketing
methodologies  to a wider  range of marketing  and media applications. Corporate
marketing departments often lack the  technical expertise to create, manage  and
control  these aspects of the direct marketing process. As a result, the Company
believes that there is a growing trend among direct marketers to utilize or rely
on service providers to implement direct marketing programs.
 
     Industry  Consolidation.  The  direct   marketing  industry  is   extremely
fragmented.  According  to  industry  sources, there  are  almost  11,000 direct
marketing service  and database  service businesses  in the  United States.  The
Company  believes that most of such  businesses are small, specialized companies
which  offer   limited   services   and/or  limited   expertise   and   industry
specialization.  However, industry consolidation  has increased in  the last few
years resulting  in  a greater  number  of large  companies  providing  services
similar  to those provided  by the Company.  See ' --  Competition.' The Company
believes that much of this consolidation is  due to: (i) the economies of  scale
expected  to  be obtained  by direct  marketing  service providers  in hardware,
software and other marketing resources;  (ii) the objective of direct  marketing
service  providers  to  cross-sell  services;  and  (iii)  the  growing  need to
coordinate various components of  direct marketing and  media programs within  a
single,  reliable environment. The  Company believes these  trends are likely to
continue due in part to client demand for more cost-effective service to perform
increasingly complex functions that support such marketing and media programs.
 
GROWTH STRATEGY
 
     As the markets for the  Company's services continue to demand  increasingly
sophisticated database management services, custom telemarketing/telefundraising
services  and other direct  marketing services, the  Company believes that there
are significant growth  opportunities to  continue to expand  its business.  The
Company seeks to become a leading provider of these services by providing a more
comprehensive  approach  to  servicing  the  needs  of  its  clients'  marketing
programs. Accordingly, the key elements of the Company's growth strategy are  as
follows:
 
     Increase  Revenues  by  Expanding  the Range  of  Services  Offered  and by
Cross-Selling. The Company intends to generate additional revenues from existing
clients by offering a wider range of direct
 
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marketing  services  while  maintaining  its   current  level  of  quality   and
performance.  To effect  this strategy, the  Company is focused  on assembling a
sophisticated spectrum  of direct  marketing services,  including enhancing  and
expanding   outbound   custom  telemarketing/telefundraising   services,  market
research, training, marketing, consulting, and database management services  and
making  available to  its clients  an array  of ancillary  services that include
electronic and  other  multimedia  mediums, including  the  Internet  and  other
on-line  services, for inclusion within their marketing programs. In particular,
the Company will  utilize its  technological and industry  expertise to  provide
flexible  solutions  designed  to  meet  its  clients'  specialized requirements
through an  integrated  approach  to  direct  marketing  programs  and  improved
coordination  between  its  database capabilities  and  its  value-added premium
telemarketing services.
 
     Deepen Market Penetration. The Company  intends to capitalize on its  areas
of  core  competencies  and  industry specific  expertise,  particularly  in the
performing arts  and cultural  markets,  which it  believes  will enable  it  to
maintain  a competitive  advantage within these  markets. For  example, the live
entertainment and  events  marketing  industry  spends  substantial  amounts  on
advertising  and direct marketing  programs which utilize  many of the Company's
services, such as audience analysis,  customer profiling, database creation  and
management,  list  processing services,  telemarketing  for products  and ticket
sales, and direct marketing support for media events, retail and catalog  sales.
The   Company  believes  its   expertise  in  database   management  and  custom
telemarketing will permit  it, over  time, to gain  an increasing  share of  the
industries which it currently serves.
 
     The  Company also intends to apply  its expertise and know-how with respect
to industries  served to  a more  limited  extent by  the Company.  The  Company
believes  that its broad and well-known client base, and its quality service and
performance, will  enable  the  Company  to  gain  further  acceptance  in  such
industries  as  publishing,  live  entertainment  and  events  marketing, public
broadcasting, financial services (including credit card, home mortgage and  home
equity  services), education,  travel and leisure  and healthcare,  all of which
have been identified by the Company as potential growth areas for the  Company's
direct marketing services.
 
     Further  Develop Existing and Create  New Proprietary Software and Database
Management Applications. The Company intends to continue to develop existing and
new proprietary  software  products  and services  that  allow  customized  data
processing  and  enhancement of  a  client's direct  marketing  databases. These
software products and services also  improve the effectiveness of  telemarketing
programs  and  the  management of  client  information. The  Company  intends to
continue to expand  its direct  marketing service  offerings, particularly  with
software  designed to create and manage large relational and/or multidimensional
databases, and  its ability  to  integrate such  data with  different  marketing
programs developed in collaboration with its clients.
 
     Increase  Capacity for  Telemarketing/Telefundraising Services  and Enhance
On-Site Data and Calling Systems. The Company has recently expanded its  calling
center  facilities in Berkeley, California  to accommodate more calling stations
and upgraded  technology in  order  to increase  revenues, improve  margins  and
afford  greater  efficiency in  client  direct marketing  programs.  The Company
intends to implement similar technological improvements at its on-site locations
through new technology configurations and software systems that link information
with client databases and direct marketing programs and to further upgrade  both
the Berkeley calling center and these on-site locations as needed.
 
     Pursue  Strategic Acquisitions, Joint Ventures and Marketing Alliances. The
Company believes that as the direct marketing industry consolidates, breadth  of
skills,  industry knowledge and size will  be increasingly critical to providing
value-added premium services.  As a result,  the Company intends  to expand  its
direct  marketing service  capabilities to  increase its  breadth of  skills and
industry knowledge  and  help clients  to  improve their  returns  on  marketing
expenditures.  Although  the  Company  is  not  seeking  to  enter  any specific
geographic market, the Company believes that it can enter new geographic markets
and increase its penetration of  its targeted industries by acquiring  companies
with  clients in such  new geographic markets and  targeted industries and whose
business focus  will complement  and/or expand  the Company's  current range  of
direct  marketing services.  As a result,  the Company seeks  and is considering
acquisitions in order to  enlarge its core  competencies in database  management
and  custom telemarketing/telefundraising services and to increase its potential
for cross-selling and providing other direct marketing services in such areas as
customer response and fulfillment,  direct mail and  electronic and on-line  and
Internet  marketing services.  No agreement,  definitive or  otherwise, has been
reached
 
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with respect to any acquisition currently being considered and no assurance  can
be   given  that  the  Company  will  complete  either  the  acquisitions  under
consideration or any other acquisition,  or that any acquisition, if  completed,
will  be  successful. See  'Risk Factors  --  Risks Associated  with Acquisition
Strategy.'
 
     The Company also  intends to continue  to grow internally  by investing  in
systems,  technology and personnel development to enable its clients to utilize,
within a single environment,  various services such  as database creation,  data
warehousing,   database  management  and  decision  support  capabilities,  list
processing, modeling,  and  response  measurement and  analysis.  Because  these
services  provide the fundamental  support systems for  the direct marketing and
media selection  processes,  the  Company  will  seek  to  expand  its  base  of
technology  and know-how, and  its telemarketing services,  often in conjunction
with direct mail, television, print and various electronic mediums.
 
SERVICES
 
     The  Company's   operating   businesses  provide   comprehensive   database
management  services,  custom telemarketing/telefundraising  services  and other
direct marketing services. The principal advantages of these customized services
include: (i) the ability to expand and adapt a database to the client's changing
business needs; (ii) the  ability to have these  services operate on a  flexible
basis  consistent with the client's goals;  and (iii) the integration with other
direct marketing services  of database management  services and list  processing
services,  which is  necessary to  keep a  given database  current. Some  of the
services offered by the Company are described below.
 
     Database  Management  Services.  The  Company's  broad  range  of  database
management  services begins with the Company's approach to database creation and
development. This includes several planning  stages and analytical processes  by
which all of the client's customer and operational files are analyzed. Utilizing
both  proprietary applications and commercial software, the Company consolidates
all of  the separate  information and  relationships across  multiple files  and
converts  the  client's raw  information into  a  consolidated format.  Once the
client's customer data  is consolidated  and the database  created, the  Company
enhances  the data  by utilizing  a wide  selection of  demographic, geographic,
census  (age,   approximate  income   level,  education   level  and   household
composition)  and lifestyle information  for over 95  million households and 153
million individuals  to identify  patterns and  probabilities of  behavior.  The
Company  licenses this information from a variety of leading data compilers. See
'Risk Factors -- Dependence on Relationships with Data Compilers.'
 
     The combination  of each  client's  proprietary customer  information  with
these  external data files provides a  customized profile of a client's customer
base, enabling the client,  through the use of  the Company's behavior  modeling
and  analysis services, to design a  direct marketing program for its customers.
Through the development of a scoring model, the client can segment its  database
and  determine its best customers and  prospects in each marketplace. The entire
process results in a customized direct marketing program that can be targeted to
distinct audiences  with a  high  propensity to  buy  the client's  products  or
services.  Because  of the  dynamic nature  and  complexity of  these databases,
clients frequently  request that  the  Company update  such databases  with  the
results  of recent marketing  programs and periodically  perform list processing
services as part of the client's ongoing direct marketing efforts.
 
     Data Processing.  The  Company's  primary data  processing  service  is  to
manage,  on a  cost-effective basis  from the  Company's data  center, all  or a
portion of a client's marketing information processing needs. After migrating  a
client's  raw data to the Company's data center, the Company's technology allows
the client to  continue to  request and  access all  available information  from
remote  sites. Further, the database can  be verified for accuracy and overlayed
with external data elements to further identify specific consumer behavior.
 
     Other data  processing services  provided include  migration (takeover  and
turnover)  support  for  database  maintenance  or  creation,  merge/purge, data
overlay and  postal qualification.  The Company  also offers  on-line and  batch
processing capacity, technical support, and data back-up and recovery.
 
     List  Services. List processing includes  the preparation and generation of
comprehensive name  and  address  lists  which  are  used  in  direct  marketing
promotions.  The Company's  state-of-the-art data  center in  New York  City and
large volume  processing  capabilities  allow  the  Company  to  meet  the  list
 
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processing  needs of its  clients through its  advanced list processing software
applications,  list  brokerage  and  list  management  operations.  The  Company
customizes list processing solutions by utilizing a variety of licensed software
products  and  services,  such  as  Address  Conversion  and  Reformat,  Address
Standardization and Enhanced Merge/Purge, as well as National Change of  Address
(NCOA),  Delivery Sequence File  and Locatable Address  Conversion System. Other
licensed products include databases used for  suppressions such as the DMA  Mail
Preference File and the American Correctional Association Prison Suppress File.
 
     The   Company  also  offers  an   array  of  list  acquisition  techniques.
Approximately 12,000 lists are  available for rental in  the list industry.  The
Company's  account  managers,  most  of whom  are  hired  from  existing Company
accounts, use  their  industry  experience as  well  as  sophisticated  computer
profiles  to recommend particular lists  for customer acquisition campaigns. The
Company  acquires  hundreds  of  millions  of  records  annually  for   customer
acquisition  campaigns.  The  Company  also manages  over  75  lists  for rental
purposes on behalf of list owners.
 
     Database Product Development. To  further leverage its database  management
and  list processing  services, the  Company has  developed a  new product using
client/server technology. The product is a scalable, three-tiered  client/server
data  warehouse  system that  provides desktop,  real-time decision  support and
marketing analysis to a  non-technical user. This  application is an  intuitive,
graphical  user interface tool  that offers both flexibility  and the ability to
access and  analyze large  customer  files exceeding  100 million  records.  The
incorporation  of third-party software, relational and multidimensional database
technology in an  open system  environment is  intended to  allow the  Company's
clients  to take advantage  of the latest  developments in high-speed computing,
utilizing both single  and multi-processor  hardware, as well  as the  Company's
experience  in  the development  and integration  of database  marketing systems
applications. See 'Risk Factors -- Rapid Technological Change.'
 
     Custom Telemarketing/Telefundraising Services. Custom
telemarketing/telefundraising services are  designed according  to the  client's
existing  database and any other  databases which may be  purchased or rented on
behalf of  the  client to  create  a  direct marketing  program  or  fundraising
campaign  to achieve specific  objectives, such as  renewing annual memberships,
season ticket purchases, enlarging the  general constituency of an  institution,
capital  projects financing,  establishing a  new donor  pledge base, soliciting
donations and  other programs  which may  be annually  recurring or  limited  in
duration.  After designing  the program  according to  the marketing information
derived from the  database analysis, it  is conceptualized in  terms of  message
content  and  values  to be  contained  in  the offer  or  solicitation,  and an
assessment is made of  other supporting elements,  such as the  use of a  direct
mail letter campaign, to precede the initial contact call.
 
     Typically,  a campaign is  designed in collaboration  with a client, tested
for accuracy and responsiveness and  adjusted accordingly, after which the  full
campaign  is commenced.  The full  campaign runs  for a  mutually agreed period,
which can be shortened or extended depending on the results achieved.
 
     A  distinguishing  feature  of  the  custom   telemarketing/telefundraising
campaign  is  that it  can be  implemented either  on-site at  a client-provided
facility or at  the Company's  calling center in  Berkeley, California.  On-site
campaigns  are generally based on what  is called a 'relationship' or 'affinity'
sale. Telemarketing campaigns often require multiple calls whereby a caller must
be knowledgeable about the organization and the subject matter and will seek  to
engage   a  prospect  selected  from  the   client's  database  in  an  extended
conversation which serves  to: (i)  gather information; (ii)  convey the  offer,
describe its merits and cost, and solicit gifts or donations; and (iii) conclude
with  a purchase, donation or pledge. Telefundraising from the Company's calling
center usually involves campaigns that do not use the multiple call format,  but
instead  use computer  driven predictive dialing  systems which  are designed to
maximize the  usage rate  for all  telephones as  the system  works through  the
calling database.
 
     Market  Analysis. The  Company's market  research services  include problem
conceptualization, program design, data gathering from relational databases  and
data  tabulation  and results  analysis, conducted  through telephone,  mail and
focus groups. Through the  use of data capture  technology, the Company is  also
able  to obtain  data from a  statistically projectable sample  of market survey
contacts.  The  Company   then  tabulates  and   analyzes  fielded  data   using
multi-variate  statistical techniques,  and produces  detailed reports  that can
answer clients' marketing questions and suggest further avenues of inquiry where
appropriate.
 
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<PAGE>
     Direct Mail Support  Services. The Company's  direct mail support  services
include preparing and coordinating direct marketing database services and custom
telemarketing/telefundraising   services  for  use  in  addressing  and  mailing
materials to  current and  potential  customers of  the Company's  clients.  The
Company  obtains name and address data  from clients and other external sources,
processes the data to  eliminate duplicates, corrects  errors, sorts for  postal
discounts  and  electronically  prepares the  data  for other  vendors  who will
address pre-printed materials,  in some  cases with  personalized greetings  and
messages.
 
     Custom   Value-Added  Premium  Services.   The  Company  offers  additional
value-added  premium  services,  such  as  strategic  marketing,  planning   and
consulting  services, and  management training  to complement  its core database
management services,  custom  telemarketing/telefundraising services  and  other
direct marketing services.
 
MARKETING AND SALES
 
     The  Company's  marketing  strategy  is  to  offer  customized  value-added
solutions to its clients' database management, telemarketing/telefundraising and
other direct  marketing  requirements.  Historically,  the  Company's  operating
businesses  have acquired new  clients and marketed  their services primarily by
attending trade  shows,  advertising  in industry  publications,  responding  to
requests  for proposals, pursuing client referrals and cross-selling to existing
clients. The Company targets those companies that it believes have the  greatest
propensity  to  generate  recurring  revenues because  of  their  ongoing direct
marketing needs, and also those companies  which have large customer bases  that
can  benefit  from targeted  direct marketing  database services  and customized
telemarketing/telefundraising services.
 
     The   Company   markets   its   database   management   services,    custom
telemarketing/telefundraising  services  and  other  direct  marketing  services
through a  sales  force  consisting  of both  salaried  and  commissioned  sales
persons.  In many  instances, account  representatives, when  servicing the same
client,   will   coordinate   such   client's   database   management,    custom
telemarketing/telefundraising  and/or other direct marketing  needs in an effort
to provide  the  highest  performance possible  and  to  identify  cross-selling
opportunities.
 
     Account  representatives are responsible for keeping existing and potential
clients informed of the results  of recent marketing campaigns, industry  trends
and  new developments in the Company's  technical database resources. Often, the
Company develops  an initial  pilot  program for  new  or potential  clients  to
demonstrate  the  Company's abilities  and  the effectiveness  of  its services.
Access to data captured  during such pilot programs  allows the Company and  its
clients  to identify previously unrecognized  target market opportunities and to
modify  or  enhance  the  client's  marketing  effort  on  the  basis  of   such
information.  Additionally,  the Company  is able  to  provide its  clients with
current updates on the progress of ongoing direct marketing programs.
 
     Pricing for database management services, custom
telemarketing/telefundraising services and  other direct  marketing services  is
dependent  upon the complexity of the services required. In general, the Company
establishes pricing for clients  by detailing a broad  range of service  options
and  quotation proposals for specific components  of a direct marketing program.
These quotes are based in part on the volume of records to be processed and  the
level  of  customization  required.  Additionally,  if  the  level  of  up-front
customization is high, the Company  charges a one-time development fee.  Pricing
for data processing services is dependent upon the anticipated range of computer
resource  consumption. Typically, clients are charged  a flat or stepped-up rate
for data  processing  services  provided  under  multi-year  contracts.  If  the
processing  time, data storage, retrieval  requirements and output volume exceed
the budgeted amounts, the client may be subject to an additional charge. Minimum
charges and early  termination charges  are typically included  in contracts  or
other arrangements between the Company and the client.
 
     On-site  telemarketing and  telefundraising fees  are generally  based on a
mutually agreed percentage of amounts received  by the Company's clients from  a
campaign.  Off-site fees  are typically  based on  a mutually  agreed amount per
contact with a potential donor.
 
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PERSONNEL AND TRAINING
 
     The Company believes that  the quality and training  of its employees is  a
key  element  of  client satisfaction.  The  Company further  believes  that its
strategy of recruiting  personnel with industry  specific experience,  technical
knowledge or particular affinities or experience related to the client's purpose
or activities, particularly with respect to its custom
telemarketing/telefundraising on-site calling services, attracts a high-quality,
effective  and dedicated work  force. The Company  offers extensive in-house and
on-the-job training programs  for its  personnel, including  instruction on  the
nature   and   purpose  of   the  specific   database  management   projects  or
telemarketing/telefundraising campaigns, as well as regular briefings concerning
regulatory matters relating to privacy issues and proper telemarketing and  data
capture  techniques. With respect to telemarketing projects, calls are typically
made from a lead provided  by the client or  other third party sources.  Callers
are  always required to identify themselves  and the institution they represent,
in advance  of any  dialogue. Since  calls  are meant  to be  non-intrusive  and
friendly,  it often takes two or more calls to a customer to confirm a purchase,
renewal, new subscription or contribution.
 
     In addition,  as is  typical  in the  telemarketing  industry as  a  whole,
approximately  80%  of  the  Company's  service  representatives  are  part-time
employees who  are compensated  on  an hourly  basis  with a  commission  and/or
performance  bonus. The Company's decision to use calling facilities provided by
a client relates in part to the  Company's high level of dedication to  customer
service  and  to the  localized  talent pool  found by  the  Company to  be most
effective for  promoting  employee retention.  As  of September  30,  1996,  the
Company  had  approximately 100  full-time employees.  In addition,  during peak
periods, the  Company has  employed  as many  as  1,000 part-time  or  temporary
employees.  None of the Company's employees is  represented by a labor union and
the Company believes it has satisfactory relations with its employees.
 
CLIENT BASE
 
   
     The Company  believes that  its  large and  diversified  client base  is  a
primary  asset which contributes to stability  and the opportunity for growth in
revenues. The Company has approximately 600 clients who utilize various database
management services,  custom  telemarketing/telefundraising services  and  other
direct  marketing  services. These  clients are  comprised  of leading  arts and
cultural  institutions,  advocacy  groups,  and  commercial  companies  in   the
publishing,  live  entertainment  and  events  marketing,  public  broadcasting,
financial services  (including  credit  card,  home  mortgage  and  home  equity
services),  education, travel and  leisure and healthcare  industries. No single
client accounted for more than 6% of such total revenue in fiscal 1996 or in the
three months ended September 30, 1996 on a pro forma basis.
    
 
QUALITY ASSURANCE
 
     Each of  the Company's  operating  businesses has  consistently  emphasized
quality  service and extensive  employee training. In  particular, the Company's
quality assurance  program  with respect  to  its  telemarketing/telefundraising
services   includes   the   selection   and   training   of   qualified  calling
representatives, the  training  and  professional  development  of  call  center
management  personnel, monitoring of  calls and sales  verification and editing.
Both the Company  and its  clients are  able to  perform real  time on-site  and
remote  call monitoring to maintain  quality and efficiency. Sales confirmations
may be recorded  (with customer  consent), and calls  may also  be monitored  by
management personnel to verify the accuracy and authenticity of transactions.
 
     The  Company diligently pursues  its policies of good  practice and has had
satisfactory experience with regulators concerning its activities. Although  the
telemarketing  industry  has had,  in certain  instances,  a history  of abusive
practices, many  of  which have  been  targeted  at the  elderly  or  uneducated
segments  of the population,  the individuals targeted  by the Company generally
consist of  affinity  group  members  who are  receptive  to  the  calls,  often
volunteering  valuable marketing  information to  the institution  for which the
representative is calling.
 
COMPETITION
 
     The direct marketing  services industry  in which the  Company operates  is
highly  competitive  and fragmented,  with  no single  dominant  competitor. The
Company regularly competes  with companies that  have more extensive  financial,
marketing  and  other  resources  and substantially  greater  assets  than those
 
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of the  Company, thereby  enabling  such competitors  to  have an  advantage  in
obtaining  client  contracts where  sizable asset  purchases or  investments are
required.  The  Company  also   competes  with  in-house  database   management,
telemarketing/telefundraising  and  direct  mail operations  of  certain  of its
clients or potential clients.
 
     Competition is  based  on  the  quality and  reliability  of  products  and
services,  technological  expertise, historical  experience, ability  to develop
customized solutions for clients, technological capabilities and price. Based on
these factors, together with its extensive list of nationally known clients  and
the  longevity of  the Company's  relationships with  many of  such clients, the
Company believes that it competes favorably, especially in the performing  arts,
and  cultural  sectors.  The  Company's principal  competitors  in  the database
management services field are Acxiom, Inc., Dimac Corporation, Direct  Marketing
Technology, Fair - Isaac, Inc., Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. and May & Speh,
Inc. The Company's principal competitors in the custom
telemarketing/telefundraising field are Arts Marketing, Inc. and Ruffalo, Cody &
Associates,  and, with  respect to the  operation of calling  centers, The Share
Group and Great Lakes Communications.
 
COMPETITIVE STRENGTHS
 
     Customized Value-Added Premium Services. The Company believes that many  of
its  services can be distinguished from those  of its competitors because of the
custom nature and value-added component it provides within the client's  overall
marketing  process.  This customization  and  value-added component  arises from
enhancing and integrating data provided by  or generated for clients to  achieve
the  most  productive  and  cost-effective marketing  program  for  the client's
particular goals  and target  audience.  The Company,  as a  value-added  custom
service  provider, not only collaborates on message content but also assists its
client in  identifying which  medium or  mix of  mediums, such  as print,  mail,
telephone,  television, on-line computer network or  other media, is best suited
to implement the client's marketing program.
 
     Large Number  of  Long-Term  Client  Relationships  and  Recurring  Revenue
Streams.  The Company has approximately 600 clients and believes that the reason
a substantial  majority of  its clients  have  been clients  for many  years  is
because  of its ability to continue to  provide quality service with added value
on a customized basis, and because such services produce satisfying results  for
such clients. This relationship has benefited the Company in its ability to gain
knowledge of and experience with a client's customer base and market dynamics as
well as in-depth knowledge of the industry in which the client participates. The
Company  seeks recurring revenues by becoming  an integral part of such clients'
marketing programs by offering a wide breadth of ongoing interrelated  services.
Although  many of the Company's arrangements with  clients are entered into on a
project by project basis, it has been the Company's experience that its database
management clients cannot easily change service providers due to the breadth and
nature of the ongoing  services provided by the  Company, largely because  these
services  often become  a key element  of the clients'  marketing operations and
there are significant  costs associated  with making  such a  change. See  'Risk
Factors -- Lack of Long-Term Contracts.'
 
     Continuity  of Management,  Industry Specific  Expertise and  Investment in
Technical Personnel. The  Company believes  that its  industry focused  approach
creates  a competitive  advantage over  other providers  of database management,
custom  telemarketing/telefundraising  services   and  other  direct   marketing
services  who have a more generalized approach.  The Company has hired and seeks
to hire  many  individuals  with  extensive  industry  specific  experience  who
understand  the nature of the clients' customers  and donors and the dynamics of
the marketplace  in  which  the  clients operate.  The  Company  considers  such
personnel  better able to apply the  Company's proprietary know-how and software
programs to meet the client's direct marketing and data processing needs.
 
     State-of-the-Art Technology. The  Company's investment in  state-of-the-art
technology  has enabled it to provide premium  quality service to its clients to
whom the use  of timely,  accurate data  is critical  for the  success of  their
direct  marketing  programs.  This  is particularly  true  with  respect  to the
Company's database  management  services  that  are  designed  to  drive  higher
response rates within the specific time period allotted for a marketing program.
In  addition, much of the data processing  which is outsourced to the Company by
its clients requires prompt turnaround time  for marketing decisions to be  made
in the development and application of time sensitive customer information.
 
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TECHNOLOGICAL RESOURCES AND FACILITIES
 
     The Company maintains a state-of-the-art outbound
telemarketing/telefundraising   calling  center  in  Berkeley,  California.  The
Berkeley calling  center increases  the efficiency  of its  outbound calling  by
using  an EIS Systems  predictive dialing system supported  by a UNIX-based call
processing server system and networked computers. The predictive dialing system,
using relational  database  software,  supports 72  outbound  telemarketers  and
maximizes calling efficiency by reducing the time between calls for each calling
station  and reducing the number of  calls connected to wrong numbers, answering
machines and electronic devices. The system provides on-line real time reporting
of caller  efficiency and  client program  efficiency as  well as  flexible  and
sophisticated  reports analyzing caller sales results and client program results
against Company and client selected parameters. The Berkeley calling center  has
the  capacity to serve up to 15  separate clients or projects simultaneously and
can produce 27,000 valid contacts per week (1,400,000 per year) or 3,400 calling
hours per week  (176,800 per  year) on  a single  shift basis.  A valid  contact
occurs  when the caller  speaks with the  intended person and  receives a 'yes,'
'no' or  'will consider'  response. The  existing platform  can be  expanded  to
accommodate  100 predictive  dialing stations  with a  single shift  capacity of
approximately 1,900,000 valid contacts per year.
 
   
     The Company leases all of its real property. The Company leases  facilities
for  its headquarters  in Culver  City, California.  The Company  also maintains
sales and service offices in New York City and Los Angeles, California, its data
center in  New York  City  and its  telemarketing  calling center  in  Berkeley,
California.  The  Company's  administrative  office   for   its   telemarketing/
telefundraising  operations  in  Los  Angeles,  California  is located in office
space  leased   from   Mr.  Dunn,   which  lease  the  Company  believes  is  on
terms  no less  favorable than  those that  would be  available from independent
third  parties.  See  'Certain   Transactions  --  Transactions  Under   Current
Management  After  Alliance  Acquisition  -- Transactions  with  Mr.  Dunn.' The
Company believes  that all  of its  facilities  are in  good condition  and  are
adequate  for its current needs through  fiscal 1998. However, further increases
in  off-site  telemarketing/telefundraising  activities  could  necessitate  the
leasing  of additional  space for calling  center expansion.  If such additional
space were to be needed, the Company  believes it would be readily available  at
commercially  reasonable rates and on commercially reasonable terms. The Company
also believes that its technological resources, including the mainframe computer
and other data processing and data storage computers and electronic machinery at
its data center in New York City,  as well as its related operating,  processing
and  database software,  are all adequate  for its current  needs through fiscal
1998. Nevertheless, the Company intends  to expand its technological  resources,
including  computer  systems,  software, telemarketing  equipment  and technical
support with proceeds from the Underwritten Offering. See 'Use of Proceeds.' Any
such expansion may require the leasing of additional operating office space.
    
 
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
 
     The  Company  relies   upon  its  trade   secret  protection  program   and
non-disclosure  safeguards  to  protect its  proprietary  computer technologies,
software applications and systems know-how. In the ordinary course of  business,
the Company enters into license agreements and contracts which specify terms and
conditions  prohibiting  unauthorized  reproduction or  usage  of  the Company's
proprietary technologies  and software  applications. In  addition, the  Company
generally  enters into  confidentiality agreements with  its employees, clients,
potential clients and suppliers with access to sensitive information and  limits
the  access  to  and  distribution  of  its  software  documentation  and  other
proprietary information.  No assurance  can be  given that  steps taken  by  the
Company  will be adequate to deter misuse or misappropriation of its proprietary
rights or  trade secret  know-how.  The Company  believes  that there  is  rapid
technological  change  in  its  business and,  as  a  result,  legal protections
generally  afforded  through  patent  protection  for  its  products  are   less
significant  than the knowledge,  experience and know-how  of its employees, the
frequency of product  enhancements and  the timeliness and  quality of  customer
support in the usage of such products.
 
GOVERNMENT REGULATION AND PRIVACY ISSUES
 
     The  telemarketing industry has  become subject to  an increasing amount of
federal and state  regulation during the  past five years.  The TCPA limits  the
hours  during which  telemarketers may call  consumers and prohibits  the use of
automated   telephone   dialing    equipment   to    call   certain    telephone
 
                                       47
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
numbers.  The TCFAPA broadly authorizes the FTC to issue regulations prohibiting
misrepresentations in  telemarketing sales.  The FTC's  new telemarketing  sales
rules  prohibit misrepresentations of the cost, terms, restrictions, performance
or duration of products or services offered by telephone solicitation,  prohibit
a  telemarketer from  calling a consumer  when that consumer  has instructed the
telemarketer not to  contact him or  her, prohibit a  telemarketer from  calling
prior  to 8:00 a.m. or after 9:00  p.m. and specifically address other perceived
telemarketing abuses  in  the  offering  of prizes  and  the  sale  of  business
opportunities  or investments. Violation of these rules may result in injunctive
relief, monetary  penalties or  disgorgement of  profits and  can give  rise  to
private actions for damages.
 
     While  the  FTC's  new rules  have  not  caused the  Company  to  alter its
operating procedures, additional federal or state consumer-oriented  legislation
could  limit  the telemarketing  activities  of the  Company  or its  clients or
significantly increase the Company's costs of regulatory compliance.
 
     Several of the industries which the Company intends to serve, including the
financial services, and healthcare industries, are subject to varying degrees of
government regulation. Although compliance  with these regulations is  generally
the  responsibility of the Company's clients, the  Company could be subject to a
variety of enforcement or private actions for its failure or the failure of  its
clients to comply with such regulations.
 
     In  addition, the growth  of information and  communications technology has
produced a proliferation of information of various types and has raised many new
issues concerning the privacy  of such information.  Congress and various  state
legislatures have considered legislation which would restrict access to, and the
use of, credit and other personal information for direct marketing purposes. The
direct  marketing services industry, including  the Company, could be negatively
impacted in the event any of these or similar types of legislation are enacted.
 
     Currently  the  Company  trains  its  service  representatives  and   other
personnel to comply with the regulations of the TCPA, the TCFAPA and the FTC and
the  Company  believes  that  it  is in  substantial  compliance  with  all such
regulations.
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
   
     The Company is, and,  from time to  time may be, a  party to routine  legal
proceedings  incidental to its business. The  outcome of these legal proceedings
is not expected to have a material adverse effect on the consolidated  financial
condition,  operating  results,  or  liquidity  of  the  Company,  based  on the
Company's current understanding of the relevant facts and law.
    
 
                                       48


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
 
     The  Company's executive officers, Directors  and significant employees and
their positions with the Company are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME                                   AGE                                 POSITION
- ------------------------------------   ---   ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                    <C>   <C>
Barry Peters........................   56    Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer
E. William Savage...................   54    Director, President, Chief Operating Officer, Secretary and Treasurer
J. Jeremy Barbera...................   40    Director and Vice President of All-Comm and President and Chief
                                               Executive Officer of Metro
Stephen Dunn........................   46    Vice President of All-Comm and President and Chief Executive Officer
                                               of SD&A
Robert M. Budlow....................   35    Vice President of All-Comm and Executive Vice President and Chief
                                               Operating Officer of Metro
Scott A. Anderson...................   39    Chief Financial Officer
Thomas Scheir.......................   43    Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of SD&A
S. James Coppersmith................   63    Director
Seymour Jones.......................   65    Director
C. Anthony Wainwright...............   63    Director
</TABLE>
 
     Mr. Peters has been  Chairman of the Board  and Chief Executive Officer  of
the  Company since the acquisition of Alliance in April 1995 and has 26 years of
experience in business  development and  corporate finance.  Prior thereto,  Mr.
Peters  served as  Chairman and  Chief Executive  Officer of  Alliance, which he
co-founded, since its  formation in 1994.  Prior to the  formation of  Alliance,
from  1972  to  1993, Mr.  Peters  served  as the  Managing  Director  of Vector
Holdings, Inc.  and  its  predecessor companies,  an  investment  concern  which
specialized  in sponsoring management  groups for buyouts  and restructurings of
companies including:  ESB Ray-O-Vac  Corp.,  Time, Inc.,  Avco/Embassy  Pictures
Corp.,  Signal Companies, Inc., ITT  Corporation, Borg-Warner Corporation and F.
Schumacher & Co., Inc.
 
     Mr. Savage  has been  a Director  and President,  Chief Operating  Officer,
Secretary  and Treasurer  of the  Company since  the acquisition  of Alliance in
April 1995 and has  27 years of executive  business experience with emphasis  on
operations,  marketing  and business  development. Prior  thereto, he  served as
President of Alliance,  which he  co-founded, since  its formation  in 1994.  In
addition,  Mr. Savage has been serving since 1991 as a director and as President
of Movie Theatre Associates,  Inc. and Movie Theatre  Holdings, Inc., a  general
partner and a limited partner, respectively, of Movie Theatre Investors Ltd., an
investment partnership that owns and operates movie theatres.
 
     Mr.  Barbera has been  a Director and  Vice President of  the Company since
October 1996  and President  and  Chief Executive  Officer  of Metro  since  its
formation  in 1987. Mr.  Barbera has 15  years of experience  in data management
services, and over 20 years of experience in the entertainment marketing area.
 
     Mr. Dunn has been  Vice President of the  Company since September 1996  and
has  also  been  President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  SD&A,  which  he
co-founded, since  its formation  in  1983. Previously,  Mr.  Dunn served  as  a
consultant for the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee for the Olympic Arts
Festival,  as Director of Marketing for the  New World Festival of the Arts, and
as Director of Marketing for the Berkeley Repertory Theater.
 
     Mr. Budlow has been  Vice President of the  Company since October 1996  and
Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of Metro since 1990. He has
10  years  of  experience  in  database  management  services  and subscription,
membership and donor renewal programs.
 
     Mr. Anderson has been Chief Financial Officer of the Company since May 1996
and was Controller from May 1995 to May 1996 and a Director of the Company  from
May 1996 to August 1996. Prior thereto, from December 1994 to April 1995, he was
associated  with the accounting firm of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., and, from 1988
to 1994, he was  a manager in  the assurance department of  an affiliate of  the
accounting  firm of Deloitte &  Touche, LLP. Mr. Anderson  is a Certified Public
Accountant.
 
                                       49
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     Mr. Scheir has  been Vice  President and  Chief Operating  Officer of  SD&A
since  September 1996. Prior thereto, from 1990  to September 1996, he was Chief
Financial Officer of SD&A, and from 1983 to 1990, he served as Business  Manager
of  SD&A.  Prior to  joining  SD&A, Mr.  Scheir was  List  Manager with  the San
Francisco Symphony's marketing department.
 
     Mr. Coppersmith has been a Director  of the Company since June 1996.  Since
1994,  Mr. Coppersmith has  been Chairman of  the Board of  Trustees of Boston's
Emerson College. Until his retirement in 1994, he held various senior  executive
positions   with  Metromedia  Broadcasting  where   he  managed  its  television
operations in Los  Angeles, New York,  and Boston, and  served as President  and
General  Manager  of Boston's  WCVB-TV,  an ABC  affiliate  owned by  The Hearst
Corporation. Mr. Coppersmith  also serves  as a  director for  WABAN, Inc.,  Sun
America  Asset Management Corporation, Chyron Corporation, Uno Restaurant Corp.,
Kushner/Locke, Inc., and The Boston Stock Exchange.
 
     Mr. Jones  has  been a  Director  of the  Company  since June  1996.  Since
September  1995,  Mr. Jones  has  been a  professor  of Accounting  at  New York
University. Prior thereto, from  April 1974 to September  1995, Mr. Jones was  a
senior  partner of the accounting firm of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P. Mr. Jones has
over 35 years of  accounting experience and  over 10 years  of experience as  an
arbitrator  and as an  expert witness, particularly  in the area  of mergers and
acquisitions.
 
     Mr. Wainwright has  been a Director  of the Company  since August 1996  and
also  served as a Director of the Company from the acquisition of Alliance until
May 1996. Prior thereto, he was a director of Alliance. Mr. Wainwright also  has
been  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer  of the advertising firm Harris Drury
Cohen, Inc. since 1995. Prior thereto, from 1994 to 1995, he served as a  senior
executive  with Cordiant  P.L.C.'s Compton Partners,  a unit  of the advertising
firm Saatchi & Saatchi  World Advertising, and, from  1989 to 1994, as  Chairman
and  Chief Executive Officer of Campbell Mithun  Esty, a unit of the advertising
firm Saatchi  & Saatchi  World Advertising,  in New  York. Mr.  Wainwright  also
serves  as a director  of Gibson Greeting, Inc.,  Del Webb Corporation, American
Woodmark Corporation and Specialty Retail Group, Inc.
 
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
  Classification of Board
 
     The Board of Directors of the Company currently consists of six members and
is divided into  three classes  (designated Class I,  Class II  and Class  III).
Class  I consists  of Messrs.  Peters and Savage,  Class II  consists of Messrs.
Jones and Barbera and Class III consists of Messrs. Coppersmith and  Wainwright,
each  of whom will serve until the annual  meetings of the Company to be held in
1996, in the case of the Class I  and Class II Directors, and 1997, in the  case
of  the Class III Directors. At the 1996  annual meeting of the Company, each of
the Class I and Class  II Directors will stand  for re-election for terms  which
will expire in 1998, in the case of the Class I Directors, and 1999, in the case
of  the  Class II  Directors. At  each  annual stockholders'  meeting, Directors
nominated to  the class  of Directors  whose  term is  expiring at  that  annual
meeting  will be elected for a term  of three years, and the remaining Directors
will continue in  office until  their respective terms  expire. Accordingly,  at
each annual meeting at least two of the Company's six Directors will be elected,
and each Director will be required to stand for election once every three years.
In  addition, the Restated  Articles provide that Directors  may only be removed
upon the affirmative vote of 75% of the outstanding Common Stock.
 
  Compensation of Directors
 
     Directors who are not employees of the Company currently receive an  annual
retainer  fee of  $10,000 for serving  on the  Board of Directors  and an annual
retainer fee of $1,500 for  serving as a member  of any committee thereof.  Such
Directors  will also be  reimbursed for their  reasonable expenses for attending
board and  committee meetings.  Any Director  who  is also  an employee  of  the
Company  is not  entitled to any  compensation or reimbursement  of expenses for
serving as a Director of the Company or a member of any committee thereof.
 
                                       50
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
  Committees
 
     The Board of  Directors has  established two directorate  committees --  an
audit review committee (the 'Audit Committee'), comprised of Messrs. Coppersmith
and   Jones,  and  a  compensation  committee  (the  'Compensation  Committee'),
comprised of Messrs.  Coppersmith and  Wainwright, all of  whom are  independent
Directors  and are  not eligible  to receive options  or other  rights under any
employee stock or other benefit plan for so long as such Director is a member of
the Compensation  Committee (other  than  the right  of  each such  Director  to
receive  options exercisable for 15,000 shares  of Common Stock granted in April
of each year, if such Director is  then serving in such capacity, pursuant to  a
resolution  adopted  by the  Board  of Directors).  The  functions of  the Audit
Committee are to recommend annually to the Board of Directors the appointment of
the independent public accountants of the Company, discuss and review the  scope
and  the fees of the  prospective annual audit, review  the results thereof with
the Company's independent  public accountants, review  compliance with  existing
major  accounting and financial policies of  the Company, review the adequacy of
the financial organization  of the Company,  review management's procedures  and
policies  relative to the adequacy of the Company's internal accounting controls
and compliance with federal and state laws relating to accounting practices, and
review and  approve (with  the  concurrence of  a  majority of  the  independent
Directors  of the  Company) transactions, if  any, with  affiliated parties. The
functions of the Compensation Committee are to formulate the Company's policy on
compensation of executive officers,  to review and  approve annual salaries  and
bonuses  for all  officers, to  review, approve  and recommend  to the  Board of
Directors the terms  and conditions  of all  employee benefit  plans or  changes
thereto, and to administer the Company's stock option plans.
 
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
  Summary Compensation Table
 
     The following table (the 'Summary Compensation Table') provides information
relating  to compensation for the fiscal years  ended June 30, 1996 and June 30,
1995 for the Chairman of the Board  and Chief Executive Officer and each of  the
other  executive officers  of the Company  whose compensation is  required to be
disclosed by the rules  and regulations of the  Commission during such years  as
shown in the table (collectively, the 'Named Executive Officers').

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       FISCAL                 ANNUAL COMPENSATION
                                        YEAR        ----------------------------------------
                                        ENDED                                 OTHER ANNUAL
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION          JUNE 30,(1)    SALARY($)    BONUS($)    COMPENSATION($)
- ----------------------------------   -----------    ---------    --------    ---------------
 
<S>                                  <C>            <C>          <C>         <C>
Barry Peters .....................       1996        100,626          --              --
  Chairman of the Board and Chief        1995         26,442          --              --
  Executive Officer
E. William Savage ................       1996        100,626          --              --
  President, Chief Operating             1995         26,442          --              --
  Officer, Secretary and Treasurer
Stephen Dunn .....................       1996        228,462          --              --
  Vice President of All-Comm and         1995         42,308          --              --
  President and Chief Executive
  Officer of SD&A
Thomas Scheir ....................       1996        128,461          --              --
  Executive Vice President of SD&A       1995         21,635          --              --
 
<CAPTION>
                                           LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                   --------------------------------------
                                            AWARDS              PAYOUTS
                                   ------------------------   -----------
                                                 SECURITIES
                                   RESTRICTED    UNDERLYING
                                     STOCK        OPTIONS/        LTIP          ALL OTHER
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION        AWARDS($)      SARS(#)      PAYOUTS($)    COMPENSATION($)
- ---------------------------------- ----------    ----------    ----------    ---------------
<S>                                  <C>         <C>           <C>           <C>
Barry Peters .....................    32,058       150,000            --              --
  Chairman of the Board and Chief         --            --            --              --
  Executive Officer
E. William Savage ................    32,058       150,000            --              --
  President, Chief Operating              --            --            --              --
  Officer, Secretary and Treasurer
Stephen Dunn .....................        --         5,000            --              --
  Vice President of All-Comm and          --            --            --              --
  President and Chief Executive
  Officer of SD&A
Thomas Scheir ....................        --        12,500            --              --
  Executive Vice President of SD&A        --            --            --              --
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
(1) Prior  to  the acquisition  of Alliance  in  April 1995,  none of  the Named
    Executive Officers was  an officer  or employee of  the Company.  Therefore,
    compensation  for each of the Named Executive Officers is shown only for the
    prior two fiscal  years. In  addition, because the  acquisition of  Alliance
    took  place in  April 1995,  the compensation  shown for  each of  the Named
    Executive Officers for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1995 reflects only two
    months of compensation in such fiscal year.
 
                                       51
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     In October  1996,  the  Company  acquired Metro.  Based  on  their  current
arrangements  with the Company, if Messrs. Jeremy Barbera, Vice President of the
Company and President and Chief Executive  Officer of Metro, and Robert  Budlow,
Vice  President of the Company  and Executive Vice President  of Metro, had been
executive officers of the  Company at the beginning  of fiscal 1996, they  would
have  been among the  most highly compensated executive  officers of the Company
for such fiscal year. Based on their current arrangements with the Company,  the
Company expects that Messrs. Barbera and Budlow will be among the Company's most
highly compensated executive officers for fiscal 1997. See
'Management -- Executive Compensation -- Employment Contracts.'
 
  Stock Option Grants
 
     The  table below provides information relating  to stock options granted to
the Named Executive Officers during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          INDIVIDUAL GRANTS(1)                            POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                     --------------------------------------------------------------      VALUE AT ASSUMED ANNUAL
                                      NUMBER OF        % OF TOTAL                                            RATES OF STOCK
                                      SECURITIES      OPTIONS/SARS                                       PRICE APPRECIATION FOR
                                      UNDERLYING       GRANTED TO       EXERCISE OR                          OPTION TERM(2)
                                     OPTIONS/SARS     EMPLOYEES IN     BASE PRICE($)     EXPIRATION    ---------------------------
NAME                                  GRANTED(#)     FISCAL YEAR(3)    (PER SHARE(4))       DATE            5%             10%
- ----------------------------------   ------------    --------------    --------------    ----------    ------------    -----------
<S>                                  <C>             <C>               <C>               <C>           <C>             <C>
Barry Peters......................      150,000            29%             $ 2.00         12/01/02       $122,130       $ 284,615
E. William Savage.................      150,000            29%               2.00         12/01/02        122,130         284,615
Stephen Dunn......................        5,000             1%               3.38         01/08/99          2,660           5,586
Thomas Scheir.....................       12,500             2%               2.00         12/01/02         10,178          23,718
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
   
(1) Since June 30, 1996 through  the date hereof, options currently  exercisable
    for  300,000 shares of Common Stock have  been granted to each of Mr. Peters
    and  Mr.   Savage.  On   December   23,  1996,   in  connection   with   the
    Recapitalization,  options covering 150,000 of each such 300,000 shares were
    cancelled at no cost to the  Company. No other additional options have  been
    granted during this period to any of the Named Executive Officers.
    
 
(2) Potential realizable value was calculated using an assumed annual compounded
    growth  rate over the term of the option of 5% and 10%, respectively. Use of
    this model should  not be  viewed in  any way as  a forecast  of the  future
    performance  of the Common Stock, which  will be determined by future events
    and unknown factors.
 
(3) During  the  fiscal  year  ended  June  30,  1996,  all  employees  and  all
    non-employee  Directors of the Company received stock options for a total of
    525,003 shares of Common Stock.
 
(4) Exercise price is the closing sales price of the Common Stock as reported on
    The Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM on the date of the grant.
 
     The following  table  sets  forth information  regarding  the  exercise  of
options  during the Company's fiscal year ended June 30, 1996 and the number and
value of  securities underlying  unexercised  stock options  held by  the  Named
Executive Officers as of June 30, 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        NUMBER OF
                                                                                        SECURITIES
                                                                                        UNDERLYING
                                                                                       UNEXERCISED     VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                                       OPTIONS/SARS        IN-THE-MONEY
                                                                                        AT FISCAL        OPTIONS/SARS AT
                                                                                           YEAR          FISCAL YEAR END
                                                              SHARES                      END(#)              ($)(1)
                                                            ACQUIRED ON     VALUE      ------------    --------------------
                                                             EXERCISE      REALIZED    EXERCISABLE/        EXERCISABLE/
NAME                                                            (#)          ($)       UNEXERCISABLE      UNEXERCISABLE
- ---------------------------------------------------------   -----------    --------    ------------    --------------------
<S>                                                         <C>            <C>         <C>             <C>
Barry Peters.............................................      --             --         150,000/0           506,250/0
E. William Savage........................................      --             --         150,000/0           506,250/0
Stephen Dunn.............................................      --             --           5,000/0            10,000/0
Thomas Scheir............................................      --             --          12,500/0            42,188/0
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
(1) Fair market value of $5 3/8 per share at June 30, 1996 was used to determine
    the value of in-the-money options.
 
  Stock Option Plan
 
     The  following summary  of the material  features of the  1991 Stock Option
Plan is qualified  in its entirety  by reference to  the full text  of the  1991
Stock Option Plan.
 
     Purpose,  Participants, Effective Date and Duration.  On April 15, 1992 the
Company's stockholders  ratified and  approved  the All-Comm  Media  Corporation
(formerly,  Bristol Holdings,  Inc.) 1991 Stock  Option Plan  (the 'Stock Option
Plan'). The purpose of the Stock Option Plan is to advance the interests of  the
Company by providing an additional incentive to attract and retain qualified and
competent  employees upon whose efforts and  judgment the success of the Company
is largely dependent, through stock ownership in the form of options to  acquire
Common Stock ('Options'). The
 
                                       52
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Stock  Option Plan will terminate 10 years from the date of its adoption, unless
earlier terminated by the  Board of Directors. Termination  of the Stock  Option
Plan  will not affect awards  made prior to termination,  but awards will not be
made after termination.
 
     Eligibility. Officers, directors and employees of, and consultants to,  the
Company,  its  subsidiaries and  other companies  in which  the Company  holds a
substantial ownership interest (collectively, the 'Optionees'), are eligible  to
be  granted Options under the Stock Option  Plan. Participation is solely at the
discretion  of   the   Option   Plan   Committee   (as   defined   below   under
' -- Administration').
 
     Shares  Subject to  the Stock  Option Plan. The  total number  of shares of
Common Stock  that  may  be subject  to  Options  under the  Stock  Option  Plan
(including  any Options granted and outstanding as of November 15, 1996) may not
exceed 1,450,000 or such other number as the Board of Directors may, in its sole
discretion, determine from time to time,  of which 179,504 remain available  for
issuance  (the 'Reserved Shares').  These shares may  be authorized but unissued
shares or treasury shares. In the event of  any change in the number or kind  of
Common   Stock  outstanding  pursuant  to  a  reorganization,  recapitalization,
exchange  of  shares,  stock  dividend  or  split  or  combination  of   shares,
appropriate  adjustments to the Reserved Shares and the number of shares subject
to outstanding grants or awards, in the exercise price per share of  outstanding
Options  and in  the kind  of shares  which may  be distributed  under the Stock
Option Plan, will be made. Under the  Stock Option Plan, there is no maximum  or
minimum  number of  shares that may  be covered  by Options granted  to a single
person. Shares will be  deemed issued under  the Stock Option  Plan only to  the
extent actually issued pursuant to an award or settled in cash or shares. To the
extent  that an award  under the Stock  Option Plan lapses  or is forfeited, any
shares subject to  such award will  again become available  for grant under  the
terms of the Stock Option Plan.
 
   
     As  of November 15, 1996, Options for  1,109,807 shares of Common Stock had
been granted and were outstanding under the Stock Option Plan at exercise prices
ranging from $2.00 to $16.00, and 179,504 shares of Common Stock were  available
for grants of Options under the Stock Option Plan.
    
 
     Administration.  The  Stock  Option  Plan is  administered  by  a committee
appointed by the Board  of Directors (the 'Option  Plan Committee'). The  Option
Plan  Committee consists  of three  or more  persons appointed  by the  Board of
Directors, each of whom  may be a 'disinterested  person' within the meaning  of
former  Rule 16b-3(d)(3)  promulgated by the  Staff of the  Commission under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as  amended (the 'Exchange Act'), as such  Rule
was  in effect  prior to  May 1, 1991.  Because the  Board of  Directors has not
appointed such an Option Plan Committee, as  required by the terms of the  Stock
Option  Plan, the  term 'Option  Plan Committee' refers  to the  entire Board of
Directors.
 
     Subject to the terms  of the Stock Option  Plan, the Option Plan  Committee
has authority to:
 
          (i)  construe and interpret the provisions of the Stock Option Plan or
     of any Option  or Option  Agreement (as  defined below),  adopt, amend  and
     rescind  all  rules,  regulations  and procedures  and  otherwise  make any
     determinations which it deems necessary or advisable for the administration
     of  the  Stock   Option  Plan,  such   interpretations,  rule  making   and
     determinations  to be final,  conclusive and binding  on all persons having
     any interest therein;
 
          (ii) determine who shall be granted Options;
 
          (iii) determine the  number of  shares with respect  to which  Options
     shall  be granted and the exercise price  per share of any Options granted;
     and
 
          (iv) subject to the terms of the Stock Option Plan, specify the  terms
     and  conditions of any Options  granted, including, without limitation, (A)
     prescribing the date or dates on  which an Option becomes exercisable,  (B)
     providing  that an  Option accrues  or becomes  exercisable in installments
     over a period of years or upon the attainment of stated goals, or both, and
     (C) relating an Option  to the continued employment  of the Optionee for  a
     stated period of time, provided that such terms and conditions are not more
     favorable to an Optionee than those expressly permitted in the Stock Option
     Plan.
 
     Stock  Options. The  Option Plan  Committee may  grant awards  to Optionees
under the Stock Option Plan solely in  the form of Options. With regard to  each
Option, the Option Plan Committee
 
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determines  the number  of shares  of Common  Stock subject  to the  Option, the
exercise price of the Option, and the manner and time of exercise of the Option.
Options granted under  the Stock  Option Plan are  non-qualified stock  options,
which  are  not  entitled to  special  tax treatment  afforded  'incentive stock
options,' as defined in Section 422 of the Code.
 
     The duration of  the Options  granted under the  Stock Option  Plan may  be
specified   pursuant  to   each  respective  stock   option  agreement  ('Option
Agreement'), but in no event can any Option be exercisable after the  expiration
of  10  years  after  the date  of  grant.  The Option  Plan  Committee,  in its
discretion, may  provide  that  any  Option is  exercisable  during  its  entire
duration  or during any lesser period of  time. The option exercise price may be
paid in cash,  by certified  or cashier's check,  by money  order, surrender  of
Common  Stock, or a combination of the foregoing. The Stock Option Plan includes
provisions that limit  the duration of  an Option following  the termination  of
employment of an Optionee for a reason other than death, disability (as defined)
or cause (as defined) and that terminate unexercised Options upon termination of
the  Optionee's  employment for  cause (as  defined).  The resale  of securities
obtained under the Stock Option Plan is subject to limitations of the Securities
Act and must be sold in connection with a registration statement or pursuant  to
Rule  144  of the  Securities Act.  In addition,  the Stock  Option Plan  is not
qualified under Section 401(a) of the Code.
 
     As a condition  of any  sale or  issuance of  Shares upon  exercise of  any
Option,  the Stock Option Committee may require such agreements or undertakings,
if any, as the Stock Option Committee may deem necessary or advisable to  assure
compliance with any federal or state securities law or regulation including, but
not limited to, the following: (a) a representation and warranty by the Optionee
to  the Company,  at the  time any  Option is  exercised, that  such Optionee is
acquiring the shares to be issued to such Optionee for investment and not with a
view to, or for sale  in connection with, the  distribution of any such  shares;
and  (b) a representation, warranty or agreement to be bound by any legends that
are, in the opinion of the  Stock Option Committee, necessary or appropriate  to
comply  with the provisions of any law  or regulation deemed by the Stock Option
Committee to be applicable to the issuance  of the shares and are endorsed  upon
the  Share  certificates. Furthermore,  an Option  is  only transferable  by the
Optionee by will or the laws of descent and distribution.
 
     The following description of the federal income tax consequences of Options
is general and does not purport to be complete.
 
     Tax Treatment of Options.  An Optionee realizes no  taxable income when  an
Option  is granted. Instead, the difference between the fair market value of the
Common Stock subject  to the  Option and  the exercise  price paid  is taxed  as
ordinary  compensation income  when the Option  is exercised.  The difference is
measured and taxed as of the date of  exercise if the stock is not subject to  a
'substantial  risk of forfeiture,' or as of the  date or dates on which the risk
terminates in other cases. An Optionee may  elect to be taxed on the  difference
between  the exercise price and the fair market value of the Common Stock on the
date of  exercise, even  though some  or all  of the  Common Stock  acquired  is
subject  to a substantial risk of forfeiture. Gain on the subsequent sale of the
Common Stock is taxed as capital gain. The Company receives no tax deduction  on
the  grant of an  Option, but is entitled  to a tax  deduction when the Optionee
recognizes taxable income on or after exercise of the Option, in the same amount
as the income recognized by the Optionee.
 
     Parachute Payments. Under certain circumstances, an accelerated vesting  or
the  cash out of Options in connection  with the events discussed below might be
deemed an 'excess parachute  payment' for purposes of  the golden parachute  tax
provisions  of Section 280G of  the Code. To the extent  it is so considered, an
Optionee may be subject  to a 20% excise  tax and the Company  may be denied  an
income tax deduction.
 
     Effect  of Certain Corporate Transactions. Unless otherwise provided in any
Option Agreement, each  outstanding Option  shall become  immediately and  fully
exercisable (i) if there occurs any transaction (which shall include a series of
transactions  occurring within 60  days or occurring pursuant  to a plan), which
has the  result  that  stockholders  of  the  Company  immediately  before  such
transaction  cease to own at least 51% of  the voting stock of the Company or of
any  entity  which  results  from  the   participation  of  the  Company  in   a
reorganization,  consolidation,  merger, liquidation  or  any form  of corporate
transaction; (ii) if  the stockholders of  the Company shall  approve a plan  of
merger,  consolidation, reorganization, liquidation or  dissolution in which the
Company does not survive (unless
 
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<PAGE>
the approved merger, consolidation,  reorganization, liquidation or  dissolution
is  subsequently abandoned); or  (iii) if the stockholders  of the Company shall
approve a plan  for the sale,  lease, exchange  or other disposition  of all  or
substantially  all the property and  assets of the Company  (unless such plan is
subsequently abandoned). The Stock Option Committee may, in its sole discretion,
accelerate the date on which any Option may be exercised and may accelerate  the
vesting  of  an Option  that is  not immediately  exercisable. The  Stock Option
Committee, in its sole  discretion, by giving a  written cancellation notice  to
all  Optionees may cancel,  effective upon the  date of the  consummation of any
corporate transaction described  in clauses  (ii) and (iii),  above, any  Option
which  remains unexercised on such date. Such cancellation notice shall be given
a reasonable period of time prior to the proposed date of such cancellation  and
may  be  given either  before or  after stockholder  approval of  such corporate
transaction.
 
     Amendments to Stock Option Plan. The Board of Directors may modify,  revise
or  terminate the Stock  Option Plan at any  time and from  time to time, except
that no amendment of the Stock Option Plan or any Option issued under the  Stock
Option  Plan shall  substantially impair  any Option  previously granted  to any
Optionee without the  consent of such  Optionee, or make  any other change  that
requires stockholder approval under applicable law.
 
  Options Issuable to Directors
 
     Pursuant  to a resolution of the Board  of Directors, in April of each year
commencing in April 1996, each non-employee Director who is then serving in such
capacity is granted options exercisable for 15,000 shares of Common Stock at  an
exercise  price equal to the market price  of the Common Stock prevailing on the
date such options are granted.
 
  Employment Contracts
 
     Effective as  of  July  1,  1995,  the  Company  entered  into  a  separate
employment  agreement with each  of Mr. Barry  Peters and Mr.  E. William Savage
providing for  Mr.  Peters'  employment  as Chairman  of  the  Board  and  Chief
Executive Officer of the Company and for Mr. Savage's employment as President of
the  Company, respectively. Each such agreement  provides for an initial term of
employment of three  years expiring on  June 30,  1998 and is  renewable for  an
additional  three-year term at  the discretion of  the employee covered thereby,
subject to  termination as  provided therein.  The base  salary for  Mr.  Peters
during  the term  of his  employment agreement is  $137,500 for  the first year,
$195,000 for the second year  and $270,500 for the  third year. The base  salary
for  Mr. Savage during the term of  his employment agreement is $125,000 for the
first year, $175,000 for  the second year  and $245,000 for  the third year.  In
addition,  pursuant to the  terms of the relevant  employment agreement, each of
Mr. Peters and Mr. Savage has options to acquire 300,000 shares of Common  Stock
at  an exercise price of $2.50 per share  for the first 150,000 shares and $3.00
per share  for the  remaining 150,000  shares, which  exercise prices  were  set
pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors on September 26, 1996. At the
end  of  each  year, or  as  otherwise may  be  deemed appropriate  in  the sole
discretion of the Board of Directors, each  of Mr. Peters and Mr. Savage may  be
paid  a bonus, payable in whole  or part in Common Stock  at the election of the
employee. In addition, each year the Board of Directors may grant to each of Mr.
Peters and Mr. Savage such number of options to purchase shares of Common  Stock
at  such prices as the Board of Directors  may determine from time to time to be
appropriate. During the  first year  of his  employment, Mr.  Peters elected  to
receive less than the full amount of cash salary due to him under his employment
agreement  and was paid a total  of $100,626 in cash and  $32,058 in the form of
16,029 shares of Common Stock. During the second year of Mr. Peters'  employment
up to and including September 30, 1996, Mr. Peters again elected to receive less
than  the full amount of  cash salary due to  him under his employment agreement
and was paid a total of $18,750 in cash. Similarly, during the first year of his
employment, Mr. Savage  elected to  receive less than  the full  amount of  cash
salary  due  to him  under  his employment  agreement and  was  paid a  total of
$100,626 in cash  and $32,058  in the  form of  16,029 shares  of Common  Stock.
During  the second year of Mr. Savage's employment up to and including September
30, 1996, Mr. Savage again elected to receive less than the full amount of  cash
salary due to him under his employment agreement and was paid a total of $18,750
in  cash. The  Company has not  entered into any  supplemental arrangements with
Messrs. Peters and/or Savage to
 
                                       55
 

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<PAGE>
compensate either of them for accepting less than the cash salaries due to  them
under  their respective employment agreements. Each of Mr. Peters and Mr. Savage
has agreed  in his  respective  employment agreement  not  to compete  with  the
Company or engage in any business similar to that of the Company during the term
of such employment agreement. In the event Mr. Peters or Mr. Savage, as the case
may be, is terminated for other than good cause, or if Mr. Peters or Mr. Savage,
as  the case  may be,  resigns for  'good reason'  (as defined  below), then Mr.
Peters or Mr. Savage, as the case may be, will be entitled to receive  severance
pay  in an amount equal to (i) one year's base salary then in effect, payable in
accordance with normal  payroll practices for  the remainder of  the term,  plus
(ii)  the amount determined  under clause (i) but  payable in a  lump sum on the
effective date of such termination.
 
     For purposes of each of Mr. Peters' and Mr. Savage's respective  employment
agreement, 'good reason' includes a Change in Control of the Company (as defined
therein),  which is deemed to occur if  (a) after a merger or consolidation, the
Company is not the surviving corporation  and the Company's stockholders do  not
continue  to own at  least 80% of the  Company's assets, (b) there  is a sale of
substantially all of the assets of  the Company, (c) the stockholders approve  a
plan for the liquidation or dissolution of the Company, (d) any person becomes a
30%  or  more beneficial  owner  of the  outstanding  Common Stock,  or  (e) the
employee ceases  to be  a Director  for  any reason,  other than  his  voluntary
resignation or voluntary election not to stand for re-election as a Director.
 
     Effective  as of  April 25, 1995,  SD&A entered into  a separate employment
agreement with each of Mr. Stephen Dunn and Mr. Thomas Scheir providing for  Mr.
Dunn's  employment as  President of  SD&A and  Mr. Scheir's  employment as Chief
Financial Officer of  SD&A, respectively.  Each such agreement  provides for  an
initial  term expiring  on April  25, 1997  and is  renewable for  an additional
one-year term at  the discretion  of the  employee covered  thereby, subject  to
termination as provided therein. The base salary for Mr. Dunn during the term of
his employment agreement is $225,000 for the first year, $250,000 for the second
year  and $275,000 for the third year. The base salary for Mr. Scheir during the
term of his employment is $125,000 for  the first year, $150,000 for the  second
year  and $175,000  for the third  year. At  the end of  each year,  in the sole
discretion of the board of  directors of SD&A, each of  Mr. Dunn and Mr.  Scheir
may  be paid a cash bonus. The agreements also provide for other fringe benefits
as may be approved by the board of  directors of SD&A. Each of Mr. Dunn and  Mr.
Scheir  has agreed in his respective employment agreement not to (i) own, become
employed by, or become a partner of any similar business during the term of  his
employment  agreement,  except that  each  may own  1%  or less  of  any similar
business or  (ii) compete  with  SD&A for  a period  of  three years  after  the
termination of his employment.
 
     Effective  as of October 1, 1996,  Metro entered into a separate employment
agreement with  each of  Mr. Jeremy  Barbera, Mr.  Robert Budlow  and Ms.  Janet
Sautkulis  providing  for  Mr.  Barbera's  employment  as  President  and  Chief
Executive Officer of Metro, Mr. Budlow's employment as Executive Vice  President
and  Chief Operating Officer of Metro and Ms. Sautkulis' employment as Executive
Vice President and General Manager  of Metro, respectively. Each such  agreement
provides  for an  initial term expiring  on September 30,  1999 (the 'Employment
Term') and is renewable  for an additional three-year  term unless Metro or  the
employee gives written notice to the other party, at least sixty (60) days prior
to  the expiration  of the Employment  Term, of  its intention not  to renew the
employment agreement. The base salary for Mr. Barbera during the Employment Term
is $150,000 for the first  year, $200,000 for the  second year and $250,000  for
the  third year. Pursuant to the  relevant employment agreement, the base salary
for each of Mr. Budlow and Ms. Sautkulis during the Employment Term is  $125,000
for  the first  year, $165,000 for  the second  year and $200,000  for the third
year. Pursuant to the terms of the  relevant agreement, during each year of  the
Employment  Term, Mr. Barbera, Mr. Budlow and Ms. Sautkulis are each eligible to
receive raises and  bonuses based  upon the  achievement of  earnings and  other
targeted  criteria if  and as  determined by  the Compensation  Committee of the
Board of Directors. The agreements also provide for the granting to Mr. Barbera,
Mr. Budlow  and Ms.  Sautkulis of  options to  acquire Common  Stock if  and  as
determined by the Option Plan Committee. Each of Mr. Barbera, Mr. Budlow and Ms.
Sautkulis  has agreed in his  or her respective employment  agreement (i) not to
compete with Metro or  to be associated with  any other similar business  during
the  Employment Term, except that Mr. Barbera,  Mr. Budlow and Ms. Sautkulis may
each own up to 5%  of the outstanding common  stock of certain corporations,  as
described  more  fully  in  the relevant  employment  agreement,  and  (ii) upon
termination of employment with Metro, not to solicit or
 
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<PAGE>
encourage certain clients  of Metro  (as more  fully described  in the  relevant
employment  agreement),  to  cease doing  business  with  Metro, and  not  to do
business with any other similar business, for  a period of three years from  the
date of such termination. Metro has the right to terminate the employment of Mr.
Barbera,  Mr.  Budlow or  Ms. Sautkulis,  as the  case may  be, 'for  cause' (as
defined below),  after giving  notice  to such  employee,  in which  event  such
employee will be entitled only to receive his or her salary at the rate provided
above to the date on which termination takes effect, plus any compensation which
is  accrued but unpaid on the date of termination. In the event of a disposition
after October  1,  1996 of  the  properties and  business  of Metro  by  merger,
consolidation,  sale of assets, sale of stock, or otherwise, Metro has the right
to assign each employment  agreement and all of  Metro's rights and  obligations
thereunder  to the acquiring or surviving  corporation. If, for any reason, such
employment agreements are  not assigned  to, or  assumed by,  such acquiring  or
surviving   corporation,  the  employee  covered   thereby  may  terminate  such
employment agreement by giving written notice  thereof within six months of  the
date  of any such acquisition or disposition,  and upon such termination, or, if
the employment agreement  is terminated  by Metro without  cause, such  employee
will  be  entitled to  receive severance  pay  consisting of  a single  lump sum
distribution (with no  present value  adjustment) equal  to the  base salary  as
provided  above  for  the  year  then  in  effect  for  a  period  of  one year,
notwithstanding that such  one-year period  might extend  beyond the  Employment
Term.
 
     For  purposes of  each of  Mr. Barbera's,  Mr. Budlow's  and Ms. Sautkulis'
respective employment contract, 'for  cause' includes circumstances whereby  the
relevant  employee shall (i) be convicted of a felony crime, (ii) commit any act
or omit to take  any action in bad  faith and to the  detriment of Metro,  (iii)
commit  an act of moral turpitude to the  detriment of Metro, (iv) commit an act
of fraud against  Metro, or  (v) materially breach  any term  of the  employment
agreement  and fail to  correct the breach  within 10 days  after written notice
thereof; provided that in the  case of clauses (ii),  (iii) or (iv) above,  such
determination  must be made by  the Board of Directors  after a meeting at which
such employee shall have been given an opportunity to explain such actions.
 
  Consulting Agreements
 
     On April 15, 1996, the Company  entered into an agreement with Mr.  Seymour
Jones  to  retain his  services as  a  financial consultant  and advisor  to the
Company on a non-exclusive basis for a period of one year. Effective July  1996,
the  agreement was terminated. Notwithstanding such termination, pursuant to the
terms of such agreement,  in August 1996 Mr.  Jones purchased from the  Company,
for  $2,500 in the  aggregate, warrants exercisable for  50,000 shares of Common
Stock at an exercise price of $2.50 per share for the first 25,000 shares, $3.00
per share for  the next  15,000 shares  and $3.50  per share  for the  remaining
10,000  shares. The warrants  are currently exercisable and  expire on April 15,
2000.
 
     On April 17,  1996, the Company  entered into an  agreement with Mr.  James
Coppersmith  to retain his services as a financial consultant and advisor to the
Company on a non-exclusive basis for a period of one year. Effective July  1996,
the  agreement was terminated. Notwithstanding such termination, pursuant to the
terms of such agreement,  in September 1996 Mr.  Coppersmith purchased from  the
Company,  for $2,500 in the aggregate, warrants exercisable for 50,000 shares of
Common Stock  at an  exercise price  of $2.50  per share  for the  first  25,000
shares,  $3.00 per share for the next 15,000  shares and $3.50 per share for the
remaining 10,000 shares. The  warrants are currently  exercisable and expire  on
May 15, 2000.
 
     On  June 3, 1996, the Company entered into an agreement with Mr. C. Anthony
Wainwright to retain his services as  a financial consultant and advisor to  the
Company  on a non-exclusive basis for a period of two years. As compensation for
such services, Mr. Wainwright is entitled to receive the sum of $1,000 per month
for the term of  the agreement plus all  out-of-pocket expenses incurred by  Mr.
Wainwright   in  the   performance  of   such  services,   provided  that  prior
authorization from the Company shall have been received with respect to any such
expense. In addition, pursuant  to the terms of  such agreement, Mr.  Wainwright
has  the right, which right,  as of the date hereof,  has not been exercised, to
purchase from the Company, for $2,500 in the aggregate warrants exercisable  for
50,000  shares of Common Stock  at an exercise price of  $4.00 per share for the
first 25,000 shares, $4.50 per  share for the next  15,000 shares and $5.00  per
share  for the  remaining 10,000  shares. The warrants  may be  exercised over a
four-year period  commencing June  3,  1996. The  agreement is  only  assignable
without  the prior written consent of the other  party in the event of a sale of
all or substantially all of the business of the
 
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party desiring  to  assign  the  agreement.  The  agreement  also  provides  for
indemnification  of  Mr. Wainwright  and  his affiliates  (and  their respective
directors, officers,  stockholders,  general and  limited  partners,  employees,
agents  and controlling  persons and  the successors and  assigns of  all of the
foregoing) by the Company for any losses or claims arising out of the  rendering
of  the services  provided for  in the agreement,  other than  for negligence or
willful misconduct.
 
   
CHANGE IN CONTROL PROVISIONS OF THE RESTATED ARTICLES AND NEVADA CORPORATE LAW
    
 
   
     Restated  Articles.  The  Restated   Articles  require  certain   specified
supermajority  stockholder approvals  (the 'Business  Combination Special Vote')
for 'Business Combinations' with an  'Other Entity,' which is defined  generally
as  any corporation, person  or other entity  (excluding certain employee plans)
that is  not  controlled by  or  under common  control  with the  Company.  Such
Business  Combinations include: (i) any merger  or consolidation of the Company,
or any of its  affiliates, with or  into any other  corporation; (ii) any  sale,
lease,  exchange, loan, distribution, dividend or other disposition of all, or a
substantial part,  of the  assets of  the  Company; or  (iii) any  sale,  lease,
exchange,  loan,  distribution,  dividend  or other  disposition  of  all,  or a
substantial part,  of  the assets  of  another  entity in  exchange  for  equity
securities  of the Company  or its affiliates.  The Business Combination Special
Vote required to approve a Business Combination is the affirmative vote of  both
(i)  the holders of 75% of the outstanding  shares of stock entitled to vote for
the election of Directors, and (ii) the holders of a majority of the outstanding
shares of stock entitled to vote for the election of Directors, other than those
beneficially owned by the Other Entity.
    
 
     A Business Combination Special Vote is  not required to approve a  Business
Combination,  if certain conditions  are met which include,  but are not limited
to: (i) that the consideration to be received by the holders of the Common Stock
is not less than (a)  the highest per share price  paid by such Other Entity  in
acquiring  any shares of  Common Stock and  (b) the highest  market price of the
Common Stock (I)  during the  30 trading days  immediately prior  to the  public
announcement  of such  Business Combination and  (II) during  the thirty trading
days immediately prior to the public announcement or the commencement, whichever
occurs first, of the acquisition of any Common Stock by such Other Entity;  (ii)
that  after such Other Entity has acquired 10% of the Common Stock, and prior to
the consummation of such Business Combination, the Board of Directors shall have
included at all times one or more  Directors of the Company who shall have  been
in office on October 1, 1988 (a 'Continuing Director'), or a Director designated
as  a Continuing Director by such  Director or other Continuing Directors; (iii)
that after such Other  Entity has acquired  10% of the  Common Stock, the  Other
Entity  has  not  (a)  received  the  benefit,  directly  or  indirectly (except
proportionately, as a stockholder), of any loans, advances, guarantees,  pledges
or  other  financial  assistance or  any  tax  credits or  other  tax advantages
provided by the Company or (b) received the benefit, directly or indirectly,  or
the  extension of trade  terms by the  Company, which are  less favorable to the
Company than those  made available to  a majority of  the Company's clients  for
similar  products; and (iv) except as may have been approved by a unanimous vote
of the  entire  Board of  Directors,  made any  major  change in  the  Company's
business or equity capital structure.
 
     The  Restated  Articles  further provide  that  certain 'Reclassifications'
require the affirmative vote (the  'Reclassification Special Vote') of both  (i)
the  holders of 75% of the outstanding shares  of stock entitled to vote for the
election of Directors  and (ii)  the holders of  a majority  of the  outstanding
shares  of stock entitled to vote for the election of Directors other than those
beneficially owned by any Other  Entity. Such Reclassifications include (a)  any
reclassification  of  securities (including  any  reverse stock  split), reverse
capitalization, reorganization, issuer tender offer,  purchase of shares by  the
Company  or by its  affiliates, exchange offer by  the Company or  by any of its
affiliates, or any other  transaction designed to  reduce materially, or  having
the  effect of reducing materially, the percentage  of Common Stock which is not
held by affiliates of the  Company or (b) the adoption  of any plan or  proposal
for  the liquidation or dissolution of the Company. The Reclassification Special
Vote is  only  required  if there  is  an  Other Entity  for  which  a  Business
Combination  Special  Vote  would  be  required  in  the  event  of  a  Business
Combination, and  it  is not  required  if  any such  amendment  is  unanimously
recommended to the stockholders by the Continuing Directors.
 
     Other  provisions of  the Restated  Articles and  the By-Laws  may have the
effect of  limiting, or  delaying, a  change in  control of  the Company.  These
provisions include: provisions of the By-Laws
 
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<PAGE>
which  provide for 60 days' notice by the stockholders of any business they wish
to conduct at a  stockholders' meeting, a prohibition  of stockholder action  by
written  consent, and provisions of the Restated Articles that limit the ability
to remove Directors. See 'Risk Factors -- Certain Anti-Takeover Provisions'  and
' -- Board of Directors.'
 
   
     Nevada  Corporate  Law.   Under Sections  78.378 to  78.3793 of  the Nevada
General Corporation  Law  (the  'NGCL')  NGCL  (the  'Control  Share  Act'),  an
'acquiring  person,'  who  acquires  a  'controlling  interest'  in  an 'issuing
corporation,' may not exercise voting rights on any 'control shares' unless such
voting rights are conferred by a majority vote of the disinterested stockholders
of the issuing corporation at a  special meeting of such stockholders held  upon
the request and at the expense of the
acquiring  person. If the control shares are accorded full voting rights and the
acquiring person acquires  control shares  with a majority  or more  of all  the
voting  power, any  stockholder, other than  the acquiring person,  who does not
vote for authorizing voting rights for the control shares, is entitled to demand
payment for the  fair value of  such stockholder's shares,  and the  corporation
must  comply  with  the demand.  For  purposes of  these  provisions, 'acquiring
person' means (subject to certain exceptions) any person who, individually or in
association with others, acquires or offers to acquire, directly or  indirectly,
a  controlling interest in an  issuing corporation. 'Controlling interest' means
the ownership of outstanding voting shares of an issuing corporation  sufficient
to  enable the  acquiring person,  individually or  in association  with others,
directly or  indirectly,  to  exercise  (i) one-fifth  or  more  but  less  than
one-third,  (ii) one-third  or more  but less  than a  majority, and/or  (iii) a
majority or more of the voting power of the issuing corporation in the  election
of directors. Voting rights must be conferred by a majority of the disinterested
stockholders  as each  threshhold is  reached and/or  exceeded. 'Control Shares'
means those  outstanding  voting  shares  of an  issuing  corporation  which  an
acquiring  person acquires or offers  to acquire in an  acquisition or within 90
days immediately  preceding  the  date  when  the  acquiring  person  became  an
acquiring person. 'Issuing corporation' means a corporation that is organized in
Nevada,  has 200 or more stockholders (at  least 100 of whom are stockholders of
record and residents of Nevada) and does business in Nevada directly or  through
an  affiliated  corporation.  The  above  does  not  apply  if  the  articles of
incorporation or by-laws of the corporation in effect on the 10th day  following
the  acquisition of a  controlling interest by an  acquiring person provide that
said provisions  do not  apply. The  Restated Articles  and the  By-laws do  not
expressly opt out of the restrictions imposed by such provisions.
    
 
   
     Sections  78.411 to  78.444 of the  NGCL (the  'Business Combinations Act')
restrict the  ability of  a 'resident  domestic corporation'  to engage  in  any
combination  with  an 'interested  stockholder'  for three  years  following the
interested  stockholder's  date  of  acquiring   the  shares  that  cause   such
stockholder  to become an interested stockholder,  unless the combination or the
purchase of shares by the interested stockholder on the interested stockholder's
date of acquiring the shares that cause such stockholder to become an interested
stockholder is  approved by  the board  of directors  of the  resident  domestic
corporation  before that date.  If the combination  was not previously approved,
the interested stockholder may effect a combination after the three-year  period
only  if such stockholder receives approval from a majority of the disinterested
shares or the  offer meets certain  fair price criteria.  For purposes of  these
provisions,  'resident domestic corporation' means a Nevada corporation that has
200 or more stockholders. The provisions of the Business Combinations Act do not
apply, however, to any combination of a resident domestic corporation which does
not, as  of  the  date of  acquiring  shares,  have a  class  of  voting  shares
registered  with the Commission under Section 12 of the Exchange Act, unless the
corporation's  articles   of   incorporation  provide   otherwise.   'Interested
stockholder,' when used in reference to any resident domestic corporation, means
any  person, or its subsidiaries,  who is (i) the  beneficial owner, directly or
indirectly, of 10% or more of the voting power of the outstanding voting  shares
of  the resident domestic corporation  or (ii) an affiliate  or associate of the
resident domestic corporation and,  at any time  within three years  immediately
before  the date in question, was  the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly,
of 10%  or more  of the  voting  power of  the then  outstanding shares  of  the
resident  domestic corporation.  These provisions  do not  apply to corporations
that so elect in a charter amendment approved by a majority of the disinterested
shares. Such a charter  amendment, however, does not  become effective until  18
months  after its passage  and would apply only  to stock acquisitions occurring
after its effective date. The Restated Articles do not expressly opt out of  the
restrictions imposed by such provisions.
    
 
                                       59


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                       PRINCIPAL AND SELLING STOCKHOLDERS
 
   
     The following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial
ownership of Common Stock as of December 23, 1996 and as adjusted to reflect the
sale  of shares of Common Stock offered hereby by: (i) each Director and each of
the Named Executive Officers; (ii) all  executive officers and Directors of  the
Company  as a group; (iii) each person  known by the Company to own beneficially
more than  5% of  the outstanding  shares  of Common  Stock; (iv)  each  Selling
Stockholder;  and  (v)  each  Over-Allotment  Selling  Stockholder.  All  of the
following information gives  effect to the  Recapitalization, which occurred  on
December 23, 1996.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       COMMON STOCK             COMMON STOCK
                                                                                    BENEFICIALLY OWNED       BENEFICIALLY OWNED
                                                                                        AFTER THE                AFTER THE
                                                                                       UNDERWRITTEN        UNDERWRITTEN OFFERING
                                                    COMMON STOCK                    OFFERING ASSUMING          ASSUMING FULL
                                                 BENEFICIALLY OWNED                 NO EXERCISE OF THE        EXERCISE OF THE
                                                    PRIOR TO THE                   UNDERWRITERS' OVER-      UNDERWRITERS' OVER-
                                                    UNDERWRITTEN                        ALLOTMENT                ALLOTMENT
                                                      OFFERING          SHARES           OPTIONS                  OPTIONS
                                                --------------------     BEING     --------------------    ----------------------
                   NAME(1)                       NUMBER      PERCENT    OFFERED     NUMBER      PERCENT     NUMBER        PERCENT
- ----------------------------------------------  ---------    -------    -------    ---------    -------    ---------      -------
<S>                                             <C>          <C>        <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>            <C>
DIRECTORS AND NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Barry Peters(2)...............................    526,536       6.2%      --         526,536       5.1%      526,536         5.0%
E. William Savage(3)..........................    522,868       6.1       --         522,868       5.1       522,868         5.0
S. James Coppersmith(4).......................     50,000       1.0       --          50,000      *           50,000        *
Seymour Jones(4)..............................     25,000      *          --          25,000      *           25,000        *
C. Anthony Wainwright(5)......................     68,408      *          --          68,408      *           68,408        *
J. Jeremy Barbera(6)..........................  1,199,924      14.3       --       1,199,924      11.9     1,199,924        11.6
Stephen Dunn(7)...............................    138,716       1.7       --         138,716       1.4       138,716         1.4
Thomas Scheir(8)..............................     12,875      *          --          12,875      *           12,875        *
All Directors and executive officers as a
  group (9 persons)...........................  2,586,482      28.2       --       2,586,482      23.9     2,586,482        23.2
 
5% STOCKHOLDERS(9)
Naomi Bodner(10)..............................  2,040,891      21.8       --       2,040,891      18.3     2,040,891        18.0
Laura Huberfeld(10)...........................  2,040,891      21.8       --       2,040,891      18.3     2,040,891        18.0
Robert Budlow(11).............................    599,962       7.2       --         599,962       6.0       599,962         5.9
 
SELLING STOCKHOLDERS AND OVER-ALLOTMENT
  SELLING STOCKHOLDERS
Alan I. Annex.................................      3,433      *         3,433        --          --          --            --
Bais Kaila Torah H.S.(12).....................     22,829      *        10,000        12,829      *           12,829        *
Kenneth Berg(13)..............................     36,968      *        16,838        20,130      *           --            --
Marguerite E. Cascio(14)......................     10,492      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Congregation Ahavas Tzdokoh Vchesed
  Inc.(15)....................................     68,223      *        20,000        48,223      *           48,223        *
Stephen A. Cooper and Randy E. Cooper, as
  joint tenants...............................      9,242      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Sheldon Finkel(13)............................      6,722      *         3,062         3,660      *           --            --
ForwardIssue Ltd.(13)(16).....................     18,484      *          --          27,726      *           20,795        *
Juliet Gal....................................      9,242      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Maxine Ganer..................................      9,242      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Barbara M. Henagan............................      9,242      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Norton Herrick(13)............................    110,902       1.3     50,513        60,389      *           --            --
Seymour Huberfeld(17).........................     45,658      *        20,000        25,658      *           25,658        *
Harry Karten..................................     18,484      *        18,484        --          --          --            --
Jewish Communal Fund..........................     35,416      *        30,795         4,621      *            4,621        *
Marshall Kiev.................................      1,718      *         1,718        --          --          --            --
The Lederer Family Trust(14)..................     10,492      *         4,621         5,871      *            5,871        *
Thierry Liverman..............................      4,621      *         2,311         2,310      *            2,310        *
Jonathan Mayer(18)............................     13,697      *         6,000         7,697      *            7,697        *
Millennium Capital Corp.(13)(19)..............     19,000      *         4,270        14,730      *            9,625        *
David Miller(13)..............................     18,484      *         8,419        10,065      *           --            --
Moshe Mueller(20).............................     54,789      *         1,000        53,789      *           53,789        *
Charles Nebenzahl(21).........................     45,658      *        16,000        29,658      *           29,658        *
Ohr Somayach Tannbaum Education Center(22)....     45,658      *        20,000        25,658      *           25,658        *
Lee M. Polster(14)............................     10,492      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Ronald M. Resch(14)...........................     10,492      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Mark Schachner(13)............................     18,484      *         8,419        10,065      *           --            --
Shekel Hakodesh(23)...........................     54,789      *         6,915        47,085      *           47,085        *
Andrea Tessler................................      1,718      *         1,718        --          --          --            --
G. Van Mourik & J. Van Mourik Revocable
  Trust.......................................      4,621      *         2,311         2,310      *            2,310        *
Claudia Kaufmann Walters(13)..................      9,242      *         4,209         5,033      *           --            --
Whale Securities Co., L.P.(13)(24)............     19,300      *         4,270        15,030      *            9,925        *
Yeshiva of Telshe Alumni(25)..................     45,658      *        20,000        25,658      *           25,658        *
Zapco Holdings, Inc...........................      9,242      *         4,621         4,621      *            4,621        *
Zapco Holdings, Inc. Deferred Compensation
  Plan Trust..................................      9,242      *         9,242        --                      --            --
Mark Zborowski(26)............................     19,722      *        18,484         1,238      *            1,238        *
</TABLE>
    
 
                                                        (footnotes on next page)
 
                                       60
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes from previous page)
 
*   Less than 1%.
 
   
 (1) Unless  otherwise indicated in  these footnotes, each  stockholder has sole
     voting and investment power with  respect to the shares beneficially  owned
     and  all addresses are  in care of  the Company. All  share amounts reflect
     beneficial ownership determined pursuant to  Rule 13d-3 under the  Exchange
     Act.  All  information  with  respect  to  beneficial  ownership  has  been
     furnished by the respective Director, executive officer or stockholder,  as
     the case may be.
    
 
   
 (2) Includes  300,000 beneficially owned  shares of Common  Stock issuable upon
     the exercise  of currently  exercisable  warrants and  31,375  beneficially
     owned  shares of Common Stock owned by family members with respect to which
     Mr. Peters disclaims beneficial ownership.
    
 
   
 (3) Includes 300,000 beneficially  owned shares of  Common Stock issuable  upon
     the  exercise  of currently  exercisable  warrants and  21,878 beneficially
     owned shares of Common Stock owned by family members with respect to  which
     Mr. Savage disclaims beneficial ownership.
    
 
   
 (4) Includes 25,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
 (5) Includes 15,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise  of currently  exercisable options  and 50,000  beneficially owned
     shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of a contractual right to
     purchase warrants  exercisable  for  such  Common  Stock  pursuant  to  Mr.
     Wainwright's consulting agreement with the Company.
    
 
   
 (6) Includes  111,524 beneficially owned  shares of Common  Stock issuable upon
     conversion of a convertible promissory note of the Company in the aggregate
     face amount  of $600,000  issued  to Mr.  Barbera  in connection  with  the
     Company's acquisition of Metro.
    
 
   
 (7) Includes  5,000  beneficially owned  shares of  Common Stock  issuable upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
 (8) Includes 12,500 beneficially  owned shares  of Common  Stock issuable  upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
 (9) The  address for each of the 5%  Stockholders (other than Mr. Budlow) is as
     follows: c/o  Broad Capital  Associates, Inc.,  152 West  57th Street,  New
     York, New York 10019.
    
 
   
(10) 1,000,000  of  this 5%  Stockholder's  total number  of  beneficially owned
     shares of Common Stock are issuable upon exercise of currently  exercisable
     warrants subject to this 5% Stockholder's sole investment power and 117,500
     beneficially  owned shares  of Common Stock  are beneficially  owned by the
     Laura   Huberfeld/Naomi   Bodner    Partnership   (the    'Bodner/Huberfeld
     Partnership')  and  are  issuable upon  exercise  of  currently exercisable
     warrants subject to  a shared investment  power. Each of  Naomi Bodner  and
     Laura  Huberfeld  disclaims beneficial  ownership of  the shares  of Common
     Stock beneficially  owned by  the  other and  the  shares of  Common  Stock
     beneficially owned by the Bodner/Huberfeld Partnership.
    
   
    
 
   
(11) Includes  55,762 beneficially  owned shares  of Common  Stock issuable upon
     conversion of a convertible promissory note of the Company in the aggregate
     face amount  of  $300,000 issued  to  Mr.  Budlow in  connection  with  the
     Company's acquisition of Metro.
    
   
    
 
   
(12) Includes  12,500 beneficially  owned shares  of Common  Stock issuable upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(13) The number of  shares subject  to the  Underwriters' over-allotment  option
     from  this  stockholder is  as set  forth next  to such  stockholder's name
     below:
    
 
                                              (footnotes continued on next page)
 
                                       61
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
(footnotes continued from previous page)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     SHARES SUBJECT TO
                           NAME                              UNDERWRITERS OVER-ALLOTMENT OPTION
- ----------------------------------------------------------   ----------------------------------
<S>                                                          <C>
     Kenneth Berg.........................................                  20,130
     Sheldon Finkel.......................................                   3,660
     ForwardIssue, Ltd....................................                   4,621
     Norton Herrick.......................................                  60,389
     Millennium Capital Corp..............................                   5,105
     David Miller.........................................                  10,065
     Mark Schachner.......................................                  10,065
     Claudia Kaufmann Walters.............................                   5,033
     Whale Securities Co., L.P............................                   5,105
                                                                        ----------
          Total...........................................                 124,173
                                                                        ----------
                                                                        ----------
</TABLE>
 
     In addition,  the Company  has granted  to the  Underwriters an  option  to
     purchase  up to 190,827 shares of Common Stock to cover over-allotments, if
     any. See 'Underwriting.'
 
   
(14) 1,250 of this  Selling Stockholder's  beneficially owned  shares of  Common
     Stock are issuable upon the exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(15) Includes  37,500 beneficially  owned shares  of Common  Stock issuable upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(16) After  the  Underwritten  Offering,  (i)   assuming  no  exercise  of   the
     Underwriters' over-allotment option, 9,242, and (ii) assuming full exercise
     of  the Underwriters' over-allotment option,  6,932, of this Over-Allotment
     Selling Stockholder's total number of  beneficially owned shares of  Common
     Stock will be issuable upon exercise of then exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(17) Includes 25,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
   
    
 
   
(18) Includes  7,500 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(19) Includes 9,625  beneficially owned  shares of  Common Stock  issuable  upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(20) Includes 30,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(21) Includes 25,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(22) Includes 25,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(23) Includes 30,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(24) Includes  9,925  beneficially owned  shares of  Common Stock  issuable upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(25) Includes 25,000 beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
(26) Includes 1,238  beneficially owned  shares of  Common Stock  issuable  upon
     exercise of currently exercisable warrants.
    
   
    
 
                                       62
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                              THE RECAPITALIZATION
 
   
     On  December  23,  1996, the  Company  and certain  of  its securityholders
effected  changes  in  the  Company's  outstanding  capital  stock  and  related
securities  whereby: (i) all 6,200 outstanding  shares of the Series B Preferred
Stock were converted in accordance with  their terms and without the payment  of
additional  consideration into 2,480,000 shares of  Common Stock; (ii) all 2,000
outstanding shares  of the  Series C  Preferred Stock  were repurchased  by  the
Company  for $1.0 million aggregate principal  amount of promissory notes; (iii)
warrants issued  to the  holders of  the  Series C  Preferred Stock,  which  are
currently  exercisable for 3,000,000 shares of  Common Stock, were exchanged for
an aggregate of 600,000 shares of Common Stock; (iv) all accrued interest on the
Series B  Preferred Stock  and the  Series C  Preferred Stock  ($145,753 in  the
aggregate  at December  23, 1996)  were converted  into 88,840  shares of Common
Stock; (v) agreements to  issue warrants exercisable for  an aggregate of up  to
1,038,503 shares of Common Stock, which the Company entered into with certain of
its  securityholders  in consideration  for  such securityholders'  agreement to
certain lockup arrangements, were rescinded; and (vi) options currently held  by
two  of the  Company's executive  officers to  purchase an  aggregate of 300,000
shares of Common Stock were  cancelled at no cost  to the Company. See  'Certain
Transactions.'  Upon conversion of the Series  B Preferred Stock and accumulated
interest thereon into Common Stock on December 23, 1996, the Company incurred  a
non-cash, non-recurring dividend for the difference between the conversion price
and  the market  price of the  Common Stock  estimated to be  $8.5 million. This
dividend will not impact  net income (loss), but  will impact net income  (loss)
attributable to common stockholders in the calculation of earnings per share.
    
 
                                       63
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
TRANSACTIONS UNDER CURRENT MANAGEMENT AFTER ALLIANCE ACQUISITION
 
     The  Company believes that  all of the  following transactions were entered
into on terms as favorable to the Company as those that could have been obtained
from unaffiliated third parties. The Company  does not currently have any  plans
to  enter into additional transactions with affiliated parties. Any transactions
with affiliates  that may  be proposed  in the  future will  be subject  to  the
approval  of a majority of the disinterested  members of the Board of Directors.
In connection with future acquisitions, the Company may enter into  arrangements
with  the sellers, who may later become affiliates of the Company as a result of
the consummation of such acquisitions.
 
     Transactions with Mr. Dunn. In connection  with the acquisition of SD&A  on
April  25,  1995, Alliance  issued promissory  notes  in an  aggregate principal
amount of $4.5 million to Mr. Dunn.  Interest on such notes was payable  monthly
at  a rate equal to the prime rate of Bank of America, N.T. & S.A., as in effect
from time to time, subject  to a maximum of 10%  and a minimum of 8%.  Principal
payments  were due quarterly,  and originally $1.5 million  was due in quarterly
installments during fiscal 1996.  All of the outstanding  common shares of  SD&A
were  initially pledged  to collateralize such  notes but were  released in June
1996. In connection with  such notes, an  operating covenants agreement  between
the Company and Mr. Dunn included, among other things, provisions requiring that
SD&A  have  a minimum  level  of working  capital  and cash  levels,  subject to
periodic increases based on sales, before dividend payments could be made to the
parent company. In June 1996, the operating covenants agreement was terminated.
 
     Prior to October 1995,  the Company made all  principal payments when  due.
Each of the principal payments due October 1, 1995, January 1, 1996 and April 1,
1996  were deferred as they became due and thereafter from time to time. In June
1996, principal  payments  of  approximately  $2.0 million  were  made  and  the
remaining  obligations were restructured such that the remaining $2.1 million is
now payable in installments of $58,333 per month, plus interest at 8%,  starting
September 19, 1996.
 
     In connection with the Company's acquisition of SD&A, additional contingent
payments  of up to $850,000 per year over the period ending June 30, 1998 may be
required to be  paid by  the Company  to Mr. Dunn  based on  the achievement  of
certain  defined results of operations  of SD&A. At the  Company's option, up to
half of each such additional contingent payment may be paid through the issuance
of shares of Common Stock, the number  of such shares to be determined based  on
the  then current  market price of  the Common  Stock; the balance  of each such
contingent payment is required  to be paid  in cash. In  June 1996, the  Company
paid  Mr. Dunn  $425,000 in  cash in partial  payment of  the contingent payment
earned by Mr. Dunn for the year ended  June 30, 1996 and in September 1996,  the
Company paid the remainder by issuing to Mr. Dunn 96,748 shares of Common Stock.
 
     SD&A  leases  its  corporate business  premises  from Mr.  Dunn.  The lease
requires monthly rental  payments of $11,805  through January 1,  1999, with  an
option  to renew. SD&A incurs all costs of insurance, maintenance and utilities.
Total rent paid by SD&A to Mr. Dunn during 1996 and from the date of acquisition
to June 30, 1995 was approximately $138,000 and $26,000, respectively.
 
     Indebtedness  of  Management.  In  February  1996,  Mr.  Barbera,  then   a
shareholder of Metro, borrowed $50,000 from Metro. Interest on such indebtedness
accrues  at a rate of 6% per annum. The principal of such indebtedness, together
with accrued interest thereon, is repayable in four equal quarterly installments
starting March 31, 1998.
 
   
     Transactions with  Former Shareholders  of Metro.  In connection  with  the
Company's  acquisition of  Metro, effective as  of October 1,  1996, the Company
issued promissory  notes  in an  aggregate  face  amount of  $1,000,000  to  Mr.
Barbera,  Mr. Budlow and  Ms. Sautkulis, the former  shareholders of Metro. Such
promissory notes have a stated  interest rate of 6%  per annum, mature June  30,
1998  and are  convertible at  the option  of the  holders thereof  into 185,874
shares of Common  Stock, based  on a  conversion price  of $5.38  per share.  In
addition,  the  holders of  such notes  have the  right, at  any time  after the
earlier of January  1, 1997  and the  consummation by  the Company  of a  public
offering  of Common  Stock, to  demand, upon  10 days  notice, repayment  of all
principal of and all accrued interest on such notes.
    
 
     Bank Credit Line.  Mr. Dunn is  currently a guarantor  of SD&A's  unsecured
credit  line. If such credit line is  replaced with another credit facility, the
Company does not currently  expect that Mr.  Dunn would be  a guarantor of  such
replacement   credit  facility.   See  'Management's   Discussion  of  Financial
 
                                       64
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Condition   and    Results   of    Operations   --    Liquidity   and    Capital
Resources -- All-Comm Media Corporation.'
 
   
     Recapitalization  Transactions.  On  December  23,  1996,  the  Company and
certain of its  securityholders effected  changes in  the Company's  outstanding
capital  stock and related securities whereby:  (i) all 6,200 outstanding shares
of the Series B  Preferred Stock were converted  in accordance with their  terms
and  without the  payment of additional  consideration into  2,480,000 shares of
Common Stock,  including the  shares held  by  each of  Naomi Bodner  and  Laura
Huberfeld, in their individual capacities (each a beneficial holder of more than
10% of the outstanding Common Stock), and the Bodner/Huberfeld Partnership; (ii)
all 2,000 outstanding shares of the Series C Preferred Stock were repurchased by
the Company from the holders thereof, including Newark Sales Corp. and Saleslink
Ltd.  (prior to the Recapitalization, each a  beneficial holder of more than 10%
of the outstanding Common Stock), for promissory notes in an aggregate principal
amount of $1.0 million, which promissory notes bear interest at a rate of 8% and
are repayable on demand at any time  from and after the date of consummation  of
the  Underwritten Offering, or any other  underwritten public offering of Common
Stock, and  in any  event mature  June 7,  1998; (iii)  warrants issued  to  the
holders  of  the Series  C  Preferred Stock,  including  Newark Sales  Corp. and
Saleslink Ltd., exercisable for 3,000,000 shares of Common Stock, were exchanged
for an aggregate of 600,000 shares of Common Stock; (iv) all accrued interest on
the Series B Preferred Stock and the  Series C Preferred Stock ($145,754 in  the
aggregate  at December  23, 1996)  were converted  into 88,840  shares of Common
Stock; (v) agreements to  issue warrants exercisable for  an aggregate of up  to
1,038,503  shares  of Common  Stock,  which the  Company  had entered  into with
certain of  its  securityholders  in  consideration  for  such  securityholders'
agreement  to  certain lock-up  arrangements, were  rescinded; and  (vi) options
currently held  by  two  of  the  Company's  principal  executive  officers  and
Directors,  Barry  Peters and  E. William  Savage, to  purchase an  aggregate of
300,000 shares of  Common Stock at  an exercise  price of $3.00  per share  were
cancelled  at no  cost to the  Company. See 'The  Recapitalization' and 'Certain
Transactions.'
    
 
TRANSACTIONS UNDER FORMER MANAGEMENT PRIOR TO ALLIANCE ACQUISITION
 
     Former Company Counsel. Robert L. McDonald,  Sr., a former director of  the
Company  who resigned in  April 1995, is  a senior partner  of McDonald, Carano,
Wilson, McCune, Bergin, Frankovich &  Hicks ('McDonald Carano'), former  general
counsel  to  the Company.  The  total amount  of fees  paid  by the  Company for
services rendered by McDonald  Carano for the fiscal  years ended June 30,  1995
and  1994 did not exceed 5% of the firm's total revenues. Additionally, Mr. A.J.
Hicks, a partner in McDonald Carano, previously served as Assistant Secretary to
the Company and to its subsidiaries.
 
     Investment Banking Services. Marshall S.  Geller, a former director of  the
Company  who  resigned  in  April  1995 and  former  chairman  of  its Executive
Committee, was a Senior Managing Director of Golenberg & Geller, Inc., a private
merchant banking firm. The former management of the Company retained Golenberg &
Geller, Inc. during the 1995 and 1994 fiscal years to perform investment banking
and financial advisory  services. The  amount of fees  paid by  the Company  for
services  rendered by Mr. Geller's firm for the fiscal years ended June 30, 1995
and 1994 were $5,700 and $21,000,  respectively. At that time, the Company  also
retained  Golenberg & Geller,  Inc. and Whale Securities  Co., L.P. ('Whale') to
perform investment banking  and financial advisory  services in connection  with
the  acquisition by  the Company of  Alliance. In connection  with the Company's
acquisition of Alliance, a finder's fee in the aggregate amount of $200,000  was
paid  as follows: $100,000  to Golenberg &  Geller, Inc.; $50,000  to Whale; and
$50,000 to Millennium Capital  Corp., one of the  co-finders in the  transaction
('Millennium').  In  addition,  each of  Mr.  Geller, Mr.  Golenberg,  Whale and
Millennium received 9,375 shares of Common  Stock and a warrant exercisable  for
6,250 shares of Common Stock over a period of three years from the date of issue
at an exercise price of $8.00 per share in further payment for their services.
 
     Florida  Gaming Corporation Loan.  On July 15,  1994, in order  to fund the
exercise price  of the  warrant which  the Company  owned to  acquire shares  of
Florida Gaming Corporation ('FGC'), the former management of the Company entered
into  a loan agreement (the  'FGC Loan') for $1,000,000  with a group of lenders
(the 'Lenders'),  which  included  Messrs. Marshall  Geller  (former  director),
Arnold  Rosenstein (former president),  and Neil Rosenstein  (former Chairman of
the Board and Chief Executive  Officer) (the 'Affiliated Lenders'). The  Company
borrowed  the $1,000,000  available under the  Loan Agreement on  July 22, 1994.
Borrowings   were   secured   by   a    pledge   of   the   common   stock    of
 
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<PAGE>
FGC  issuable upon exercise of the warrant.  Each of the Affiliated Lenders lent
the Company 20% of the total FGC Loan, or $200,000.
 
     Pursuant to the  terms of the  FGC Loan, borrowings  accrued interest at  a
rate  of 7.75%  per annum.  In addition,  the Company  was obligated  to pay the
Lenders, pro rata, a  commitment fee of  $0.3 million, and  to pay the  Lenders'
attorneys'  fees and other expenses incurred in connection with the extension of
the FGC Loan. The FGC Loan, including interest of $9,000 and the commitment fee,
was repaid prior  to September 21,  1994. During  the period from  July 1994  to
March 1995, the Company sold the FGC common stock.
 
     Mortgage  Loan to Subsidiary. On June  9, 1994, under the former management
of  the  Company,  All-Comm  Holdings,  Inc.  (formerly  named  Bullhead  Casino
Corporation),  a wholly-owned subsidiary of  the Company, borrowed $350,000 from
the Company's former chief executive officer  and its president, evidenced by  a
promissory  note and secured  by a mortgage  on its parcel  of land in Laughlin,
Nevada. All-Comm Holdings, Inc.  loaned the borrowed funds  to the Company.  The
note was due July 31, 1995 with interest at the rate of 7.75% per annum, but was
repaid in October 1994.
 
     Purchase of Property and Equipment. In April 1995, prior to the acquisition
of Alliance, the Company's former chairman purchased property and equipment, for
$11,000,  owned by the Company  having a cost of $160,000  and net book value of
$6,000.
 
     Indebtedness of Former Management. Pursuant to the terms of his  employment
agreement  with the  Company, which  has expired,  Arnold Rosenstein  was issued
25,000 shares of Common Stock in exchange for a promissory note in the principal
amount of $0.2 million. The promissory note accrued interest at 10.5% per  annum
payable  at maturity on  November 1, 1994.  On January 21,  1994, Mr. Rosenstein
paid $133,333, per  resolutions of  the Company's  Board of  Directors, for  the
early  retirement of the $0.2 million note  receivable for shares issued to him.
The $66,667 allowance  was charged  to additional  paid-in capital  in the  1994
fiscal  year.  Also,  on December  31,  1993,  accrued interest  of  $87,500 was
discounted to $58,334 and paid to the Company.
 
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<PAGE>
                          DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK
 
     The following is a summary of  the material terms of the Company's  capital
stock  which are contained in  the Restated Articles and  the By-Laws, which are
filed as exhibits to  the Registration Statement of  which this Prospectus is  a
part.  Reference is made to such exhibits for a more complete description of the
Company's capital stock.
 
COMMON STOCK
 
  General
 
   
     The Company is  authorized to issue  36,250,000 shares of  Common Stock  in
accordance  with an amendment to its Restated Articles approved by the Company's
Board of Directors and stockholders effective August 1996. The shares of  Common
Stock being sold by the Delayed Selling Stockholders in the Delayed Offering and
by  the Selling Stockholders and the  Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders in the
Underwritten Offering are,  and the  shares of Common  Stock being  sold by  the
Company in the Underwritten Offering (when issued  against  payment  therefor in
accordance with the Underwriting Agreement)  will   be,   legally  issued, fully
paid  and nonassessable.
    
 
  Quorum and Voting Rights
 
   
     Each share of Common  Stock is entitled  to one vote on  all matters as  to
which  the holders of Common Stock are entitled to vote. The affirmative vote of
a majority of the stock having voting power present or represented by a proxy at
a meeting  at which  a quorum  is present  is required  as to  any matter  which
requires  the  approval of  the  holders of  Common  Stock, other  than  (i) the
approval of certain Business Combinations  and Reclassifications (as such  terms
are defined above in 'Management -- Change in Control Provisions of the Restated
Articles and Nevada Corporate Law'), (ii) the amendment of certain provisions of
the  Restated Articles,  and (iii)  the amendment  of certain  provisions of the
By-Laws, which require the  approval of 75% of  the outstanding shares of  stock
entitled  to vote for the election of Directors. In the case of certain Business
Combinations  and  Reclassifications,  the  approval   of  a  majority  of   the
outstanding shares of stock entitled to vote for the election of Directors other
than  those beneficially owned by the other party to the Business Combination is
required.
    
 
     At any meeting of the stockholders of  the Company at which the holders  of
Common  Stock are entitled  to vote, the presence,  in person or  by proxy, of a
majority of the  stock issued  and outstanding,  and entitled  to vote  thereat,
constitutes  a quorum.  No action  may be  taken at  any meeting,  other than to
adjourn such meeting, unless a quorum of each class entitled to vote is present.
 
  Dividends
 
     The Board of Directors  may cause dividends  to be paid  to the holders  of
Common Stock from time to time out of funds legally available therefor. When and
as dividends are declared, they may be payable in cash, in property or in shares
of Common Stock. See 'Risk Factors -- No Intention to Pay Dividends.'
 
  Registration Rights
 
     The  Company has granted  to certain of its  securityholders rights to have
certain shares of Common  Stock held by or  issuable to such persons  registered
for resale under the Securities Act.
 
PREFERRED STOCK
 
  General
 
     The  Company has authorized  50,000 shares of  Convertible Preferred Stock,
which the Company has issued from time to time in the form of designated  series
as set forth below.
 
   
     Series  A Preferred Stock. In May 1996, the Company issued 10,000 shares of
Series A Convertible Preferred  Stock. Subsequently, in  June 1996 these  shares
were  repurchased and canceled as  a condition precedent to  the purchase of the
Series B  Preferred  Stock and  the  Series C  Preferred  Stock by  the  holders
thereof,  and  are currently  held  by the  Company  as authorized  but unissued
shares.
    
 
   
     Series B Preferred Stock. In June 1996, the Company issued 6,200 shares  of
Series  B  Preferred Stock.  The  Company also  issued  warrants (the  'Series B
Warrants') to the holders of Series B Preferred Stock exercisable for  3,100,000
shares    of   Common    Stock   at   an    exercise   price    of   $2.50   per
    
 
                                       67
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
share for three years. In December 1996, all of the outstanding shares of Series
B Preferred  Stock were  converted into  2,480,000 shares  of Common  Stock,  in
accordance  with the  terms thereof, as  part of the  Recapitalization. See 'The
Recapitalization.' Notwithstanding the conversion of all of the shares of Series
B Preferred Stock into Common Stock in connection with the Recapitalization, the
Series B Warrants remain outstanding and in full force and effect. In  addition,
pursuant  to an agreement  dated June 7, 1996  with the holders  of the Series B
Preferred Stock and the  Series B Warrants,  the Company agreed  to file, on  or
before  October  5,  1996  (120  days  after  the  date  of  such  agreement), a
registration statement on  Form S-3 or  Form S-1  for the public  resale by  the
holders  of the shares of Common Stock  issuable upon conversion of the Series B
Preferred Stock or upon exercise  of the Series B  Warrants. The holders of  the
Series  B Warrants and the holders of the  shares of Common Stock into which the
Series B  Preferred Stock  was  converted continue  to have  these  registration
rights  with respect to the shares of Common Stock issued upon conversion of the
Series B Stock and the shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of  the
Series  B Warrants; however, the requirement  to have the registration statement
relating thereto filed by October 5, 1996 has been waived by the holders of  the
Series  B Warrants. See 'Shares Eligible  for Future Sale -- Registration Rights
and Certain Lock-Up Arrangements -- Holders of Series B Preferred Stock.'
    
 
   
     Series  C  Preferred  Stock.  In   September  1996,  the  Company   issued,
retroactive  to June 1996, 2,000 shares of Series C Preferred Stock. The Company
also issued warrants (the 'Series  C Warrants') to the  holders of the Series  C
Preferred  Stock exercisable for 3,000,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise
price of  $3.00  per  share for  three  years.  In December  1996,  all  of  the
outstanding  shares of Series C Preferred  Stock were repurchased for promissory
notes in  an  aggregate principal  amount  of $1.0  million,  and the  Series  C
Warrants were exchanged for 600,000 shares of Common Stock, in each case as part
of the Recapitalization. See 'The Recapitalization.' In addition, pursuant to an
agreement  dated September 10, 1996, but effective  as of June 7, 1996, with the
holders of the Series C Preferred Stock  and the Series C Warrants, the  Company
agreed  to file, on or before October  7, 1996, a registration statement on Form
S-3 or Form S-1  for the public resale  by the holders of  the shares of  Common
Stock  issuable upon conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock or upon exercise
of the Series C Warrants. The holders  of the shares of Common Stock into  which
the  Series C Warrants were exchanged continue to have these registration rights
with respect to the shares of Common Stock issued upon exchange of the Series  C
Warrants;  however, the requirement to  have the registration statement relating
thereto filed by October 7, 1996 has been waived by the holders of the Series  B
Warrants.  See  'Shares  Eligible for  Future  Sale --  Registration  Rights and
Certain Lock-Up Arrangements -- Holders of Series B Preferred Stock.'
    
 
OTHER OPTIONS AND WARRANTS
 
   
     In addition to the  Series B Warrants and  the Series C Warrants  described
above,  the Company, on various  dates ranging from April  21, 1995 to September
26, 1996, issued to several persons  383,077 warrants (the 'Warrants') that  are
fully  vested as of the date of this Prospectus including the warrants issued to
Mr. Coppersmith and  Mr. Jones  in connection with  their respective  consulting
agreements with the Company, see 'Management -- Executive
Compensation  -- Consulting Agreements,' and  the Other Warrants described under
'Shares Eligible  for Future  Sale --  Registration Rights  and Certain  Lock-up
Arrangements  -- Warrants.'  Each Warrant  entitles the  holder to  one share of
Common Stock  at exercise  prices ranging  from $1.60  to $8.00  per share.  The
Warrants  expire on dates ranging from April  21, 1998 to February 26, 2001. The
Company granted to the holders of 118,077 of the Warrants piggyback registration
rights, as described more fully below.
    
 
   
     The Company  has  also granted  to  Mr. Wainwright,  by  the terms  of  his
consulting  agreement with the Company, the  right to purchase from the Company,
for $2,500,  warrants  exercisable for  50,000  shares  of Common  Stock  at  an
exercise  price of $4.00 per share for  the first 25,000 shares, $4.50 per share
for the next 15,000 shares and $5.00 per share for the remaining 10,000  shares.
These  warrants, if purchased, will  be exercisable at the  time of purchase and
will   expire    on   June    3,   2000.    See   'Management    --    Executive
Compensation -- Consulting Agreements.'
    
 
   
     In  connection with  the Company's acquisition  of HSGR, in  June 1993, the
Company issued options to the former owners of HSGR. These options are currently
exercisable for 2,250  shares of Common  Stock in the  aggregate at an  exercise
price of $16.00 per share. The options expire in June 1998.
    
 
                                       68
 

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<PAGE>
   
     Upon  consummation  of the  Underwritten Offering,  the Company  will issue
warrants exercisable  for an  aggregate of  160,414 shares  of Common  Stock  to
certain  stockholders  as  consideration  for  such  stockholders'  agreement to
certain of the lock-up arrangements described under 'Shares Eligible for  Future
Sale.'  These warrants will  be exercisable for  a period of  two or three years
after the date of  Closing at an  exercise price equal to  the initial price  to
public  of the Common  Stock in the  Underwritten Offering (except  that, in the
case of warrants exercisable for up to 9,386 shares of Common Stock to be issued
to two stockholders, the  exercise price with respect  to such warrants will  be
$1.00 above such initial price to public).
    
 
LIMITATION OF DIRECTORS LIABILITY; INDEMNIFICATION
 
   
     The  Restated Articles provide  that Directors and  officers of the Company
shall not be personally  liable to the Company  or its stockholders for  damages
for  breach of fiduciary duty  as a Director or officer,  except for (i) acts or
omissions which involve intentional misconduct, fraud, or a knowing violation of
law or (ii) the payment of dividends  in violation of the provisions of  Chapter
78  of the  NGCL. The  Restated Articles  further provide  that, if  the NGCL is
amended to  authorize  corporate  action further  eliminating  or  limiting  the
personal  liability of Directors and officers,  then the liability of a Director
or officer of  the Company shall  be eliminated  or limited to  the full  extent
permitted  by the NGCL. Any repeal or modification  of all or any portion of the
limitation on liability contained in  the Restated Articles by the  stockholders
of  the Company shall not adversely affect any right or protection of a Director
or officer of the Company with respect to any acts or omissions occurring  prior
to the time of such repeal or modification.
    
 
     The  By-Laws provide for  indemnification of the  officers and Directors of
the Company, as the case may be, against any liability, cost or expense incurred
by such Director or officer by reason of  the fact that such person is or was  a
Director,  officer, employee or agent of the  Company, except to the extent that
such indemnification is prohibited by Chapter 78 of the NGCL.
 
     Section 78.751 of the NGCL provides that a corporation may, and in  certain
cases,  must, indemnify any person who was or is a party, or is threatened to be
made a party, to any threatened, pending or completed action, suit or proceeding
(other than certain actions by, or in  right of, the Corporation), by reason  of
the  fact that such person  is or was a director,  officer, employee or agent of
the corporation, or is  or was serving  at the request of  the corporation as  a
director,  officer, employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint
venture, trust or other enterprise, against expenses, including attorneys' fees,
and, in the case of a  non-derivative action, judgments, fines and amounts  paid
in  settlement, actually and  reasonably incurred by  such person, in connection
with the action, suit or proceeding, if,  in either type of action, such  person
acted  in good faith and in a manner which such person reasonably believed to be
in, or not opposed to, the best interests of the corporation. The termination of
any action, suit  or proceeding  by judgment, order,  settlement, conviction  or
upon  a plea of nolo contendere or its  equivalent does not, of itself, create a
presumption that the person did not act in good faith and in a manner which such
person reasonably believed to be  in, or not opposed  to, the best interests  of
the  corporation and  that, with respect  to any criminal  action or proceeding,
such person  had reasonable  cause to  believe that  such person's  conduct  was
unlawful.
 
     Indemnification  may not  be made, in  a derivative action,  for any claim,
issue or matter  as to  which such  a person  had been  adjudged by  a court  of
competent  jurisdiction, after exhaustion of all appeals therefrom, to be liable
to the  corporation, or  for  amounts paid  in  settlement to  the  corporation,
unless,  and only to the extent that, the  court in which the action or suit was
brought or other  court of  competent jurisdiction  determines upon  application
that,  in view of  all the circumstances of  the case, the  person is fairly and
reasonably entitled to indemnity for such expenses as the court deems proper.
 
     The Company's By-Laws provide that  the expenses of officers and  Directors
incurred  in defending a  civil or criminal  action, suit or  proceeding must be
paid by  the corporation  as they  are incurred,  and in  advance of  the  final
disposition  of the action, upon receipt of  an undertaking by, or on behalf of,
the Director or officer to repay the amount if it is ultimately determined by  a
court  of  competent  jurisdiction  that  such  person  is  not  entitled  to be
indemnified by  the corporation,  unless  ordered by  a  court or  advanced  (as
described  above), any indemnification must be  made by the corporation, only as
authorized in the specific case,  upon a determination that the  indemnification
of  the Director, officer, employee or agent is proper in the circumstances. The
determination must be made either by the
 
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<PAGE>
stockholders, or  by the  Board of  Directors by  a majority  vote of  a  quorum
consisting  of Directors who were not parties to the act, suit or proceeding. If
a majority vote of a quorum consisting of Directors who were not parties to  the
act,  suit or proceeding so  orders, or if a  quorum consisting of Directors who
were not  parties  to  the act,  suit  or  proceeding cannot  be  obtained,  the
determination must be made by independent legal counsel in a written opinion.
 
     Insofar  as indemnification for Directors, officers and controlling persons
of the Company with respect to liabilities arising under the Securities Act  may
be granted pursuant to the provisions described above, or otherwise, the Company
has been advised that, in the opinion of the Commission, such indemnification is
against  public policy  as expressed  in the  Securities Act  and is, therefore,
unenforceable.
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
     The Transfer Agent and Registrar for the Common Stock is Continental  Stock
Transfer  & Trust  Company and  its address  is 2  Broadway, New  York, New York
10004.
 
                                       70
 

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<PAGE>
                        SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
     The following discussion of shares eligible for future sale excludes up  to
5,080,927 shares of Common Stock (subject to lock-up provisions described below)
which  may be  issued pursuant  to currently  outstanding options,  warrants and
contractual rights.
 
   
     Upon completion of the Underwritten Offering, the Company will have a total
of  10,008,108  shares   of  Common   Stock  outstanding   (10,189,935  if   the
Underwriters'  over-allotment options are exercised in full). As  of the date of
this Prospectus, 5,321,228  shares  of the  outstanding Common Stock,  including
the  2,100,000 shares of Common Stock offered hereby (plus an additional 315,000
shares  if  the  Underwriters' over-allotment options are exercised in full) and
the  1,386,056   shares  of  Common  Stock  being  sold  by  the Delayed Selling
Stockholders   in  the  Delayed   Offering  will  be  freely  tradeable  without
restriction  or  registration  under  the Securities Act or will be eligible for
sale  in the public market without regard to the availability of current  public
information,  volume  limitations,  manner  of  sale   restrictions   or  notice
requirements under Rule 144(k), in each case  by persons other than 'affiliates'
(as defined under  the Securities Act) of the Company.
    
 
   
     All  the remaining 4,686,880 Restricted Shares  were issued and sold by the
Company in private transactions in reliance upon the exemption from registration
contained in Section 4(2)  of the Securities Act  and are restricted  securities
under  Rule 144 of the Securities Act.  Restricted Shares may not be sold unless
they are  registered  under  the Securities  Act  or  are sold  pursuant  to  an
applicable  exemption  from registration,  including  pursuant to  Rule  144. In
general, under Rule  144 as  currently in effect,  beginning 90  days after  the
Underwritten Offering, a person (or persons whose shares are aggregated) who has
beneficially   owned  Restricted  Shares  for  at  least  two  years,  including
affiliates of the Company, would be entitled to sell in brokers' transactions or
to market makers  within any three-month  period a number  of Restricted  Shares
that does not exceed the greater of (i) 1% of the then outstanding shares of the
Common  Stock (approximately 100,081 shares, based on the number of shares to be
outstanding after  the  Underwritten  Offering,  assuming  no  exercise  of  the
Underwriters'  over-allotment options) or (ii) the average weekly trading volume
of the Common  Stock on The  Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM  during the four  calendar
weeks  preceding  the  date  on which  notice  of  the sale  is  filed  with the
Commission. Sales under  Rule 144  are also subject  to certain  manner of  sale
provisions,   notice  requirements  and  the   availability  of  current  public
information about the Company. A person who  is not an affiliate of the  Company
at  any time during the 90 days preceding a sale, and who has beneficially owned
Restricted Shares for at least three  years, is currently entitled to sell  such
Restricted  Shares  under  Rule 144(k)  without  regard to  the  availability of
current public information, volume limitations,  manner of sale restrictions  or
notice  requirements.  However,  under  Rule  144,  Restricted  Shares  held  by
affiliates must continue,  after the three-year  holding period, to  be sold  in
brokers'  transactions or  to market  makers subject  to the  volume limitations
described above. The above is a summary of Rule 144 and is not intended to be  a
complete  description  thereof.  As  of April  25,  1997,  approximately 837,415
Restricted Shares may become eligible for sale pursuant to Rule 144, or continue
to be eligible  for sale  under other  exemptions from  registration, under  the
Securities Act.
    
 
   
     Holders  of  an  aggregate  of  up to  7,832,897  shares  of  Common Stock,
consisting of 4,068,532  Restricted Shares outstanding  as of the  date of  this
Prospectus  and up  to 3,774,365 Restricted  Shares issuable  upon conversion or
exercise of other securities  or other contractual  rights then outstanding  and
then  convertible or exercisable, in each case  depending on the extent to which
the Underwriters' over-allotment  options are  exercised, if at  all, will  have
demand  and/or piggyback rights to have  such Restricted Shares registered under
the Securities Act pursuant to  various registration rights agreements with  the
Company.  See '  -- Registration Rights  and Certain  Lock-Up Arrangements.' The
Company, its Directors and officers and certain of its stockholders and  holders
of  options, warrants, conversion or contractual rights to acquire Common Stock,
who will hold in  the aggregate up to  10,229,855 Restricted Shares outright  or
issuable  upon exercise  of such  rights, depending on  the extent  to which the
Underwriters' over-allotment  options  are  exercised,  if  at  all  (10,227,545
Restricted  Shares if the Underwriters'  over-allotment options are exercised in
full), have agreed  that they  will not,  directly or  indirectly, offer,  sell,
offer  to  sell, contract  to  sell, pledge,  grant  any option  to  purchase or
otherwise dispose of or  transfer (or announce any  offer, sale, offer of  sale,
pledge,  contract of sale, grant of any  option to purchase or other disposition
or transfer of) any  shares of Common  Stock or any capital  stock or any  other
securities  convertible into  or exercisable  for, or  any right  to purchase or
acquire, Common
    
 
                                       71
 

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Stock or any other capital stock, for a period of nine months after the date  of
this  Prospectus, subject to termination if the final Prospectus relating to the
Underwritten Offering  is  not filed  with  the  Commission by  March  31,  1997
pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act (such period being the 'Lock-Up
Period'),  without  the prior  written consent  of  the Lead  Representative, on
behalf of the Underwriters, except (x) in the case of the Company, with  respect
to  (i) private issuances in connection with acquisitions if the holders thereof
agree to be bound by the foregoing nine-month restriction to the same extent  as
the  Company and (ii) grants  of Options and other  rights pursuant to the Stock
Option Plan and issuances of Common Stock pursuant to the exercise of  currently
outstanding employee options and (y) in the case of the holders, with respect to
bona  fide gifts  of shares  of Common Stock  or securities  convertible into or
exchangeable for Common Stock  provided that the donee  agrees in writing to  be
bound  by the  foregoing provisions.  See '  -- Registration  Rights and Certain
Lock-up Arrangements.'
    
 
   
     The Lead  Representative may  from  time to  time  in its  sole  discretion
release  some  or all  of  the stockholders  who  have executed  such  a lock-up
agreement from the restrictions thereof. The determination whether to grant such
a release will be made by the Lead Representative on a case-by-case basis, based
on such considerations as the  Lead Representative may deem relevant,  including
but not limited to market conditions and public demand for additional securities
of the Company. In connection with any such release, the Lead Representative may
negotiate   with  any   such  stockholder  for   the  purchase   (for  the  Lead
Representative's own account or the account of others) of the securities held by
such stockholder at  prices which  may or  may not  relate to  the then  current
market price of the Common Stock. Although as of the date of this Prospectus, no
definitive  agreement has been  reached between the  Lead Representative and any
stockholder regarding  the  release of  any  such lock-up  agreement,  the  Lead
Representative  has indicated to the Company  and certain representatives of the
holders (the 'Holders') of the  shares of Common Stock  into which the Series  B
Preferred Stock was converted and the Series B Warrants that it would be willing
to  release, following consummation of the Underwritten Offering, some or all of
the Common Stock held or beneficially owned by such Holders from the  provisions
of  the lock-up agreements entered into by  such Holders prior to the expiration
of the Lock-up Period in  the event that: (i)  the financial performance of  the
Company  following  the  Underwritten  Offering  is  satisfactory  to  the  Lead
Representative, in  its  sole  discretion;  and  (ii)  the  Lead  Representative
determines,  in its sole discretion, that the  level of investor interest in the
Common Stock is sufficient so  as to permit the sale  of shares of Common  Stock
released  from the provisions of such lock-up  agreements on terms that the Lead
Representative determines would not adversely affect the prevailing market price
of the Common Stock at the time of any such sale. Although no agreement (oral or
written) exists between the Lead Representative and such Holders for the sale of
any Common Stock  upon release  of shares from  the provisions  of such  lock-up
agreements  by or through  the Lead Representative,  in the event  that the Lead
Representative were to act  as placement agent  in respect of  any such sale  of
Common  Stock on  behalf of  such Holders,  such services  would be  provided on
customary terms and  conditions with a  standard commission. As  of the date  of
this  Prospectus,  there is  no agreement  (oral  or written)  with any  of such
Holders as to the specific date that  any release of shares from the  provisions
of  such lock-up  arrangements would be  granted or  as to the  number of shares
subject to such lock-up arrangements that would be so released.
    
 
     The Company currently expects  to file a  registration statement under  the
Securities  Act to register shares reserved  for issuance under the Stock Option
Plan. Shares  issued pursuant  to the  Stock  Option Plan  or upon  exercise  of
outstanding  Options after  the effective  date of  such registration statement,
other than shares held by  affiliates of the Company  (which are subject to  the
resale   restrictions  of  Rule  144),   generally  will  be  tradeable  without
restriction  under  the  Securities  Act,  subject  to  the  lock-up  provisions
described above.
 
REGISTRATION RIGHTS AND CERTAIN LOCK-UP ARRANGEMENTS
 
     The following summaries are qualified in their entirety by the full text of
the   various  registration  rights  ageements  and  other  registration  rights
provisions filed  as  exhibits  to  the Registration  Statement  of  which  this
Prospectus forms a part.
 
     There  are ten sources of registration  rights applicable to the Company as
of the  date of  this Prospectus:  (1) the  registration rights  granted to  the
holders of Alliance common stock (the 'Reg D
 
                                       72
 

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<PAGE>
Investors')  pursuant  to the  Placement  Memorandum dated  February,  1995 (the
'Placement Memorandum');  (2)  the  registration rights  granted  to  Mr.  Glenn
Golenberg,  Mr.  Marshall  Geller,  Whale  Securities  Co.,  L.P.  ('Whale') and
Millennium Capital Corp. ('Millennium') pursuant to an aggrement dated  February
7,  1995 among the Company,  Whale and Golenberg and  Geller, Inc., and a letter
dated March 21, 1995 from Whale  to the Company (the 'Finder's Fee  Agreements')
in connection with certain finder's fees related to the Company's acquisition of
Alliance;  (3) the registration  rights granted to Mr.  Golenberg and Mr. Geller
pursuant to two  agreements (the  'Golenberg/Geller Agreements')  dated May  19,
1995  between the  Company and  Mr. Golenberg  and the  Company and  Mr. Geller,
respectively; (4) the registration rights  attached to the 62,500 shares  issued
to  Mighty Net, Inc. (previously named  Membership Development, Inc.) ('MNI') by
the Company pursuant to a Settlement  and Release Agreement dated June 17,  1994
between  the Company, Sheldon Kasower ('Kasower')  and MNI; (5) the registration
rights granted  to  the  holders  of  the Series  B  Preferred  Stock;  (6)  the
registration  rights granted to the holders of Series C Preferred Stock; (7) the
registration rights attached to the warrants  issued by the Company pursuant  to
various warrant certificates; (8) the registration rights granted to Mr. Stephen
Dunn  pursuant to the Stock Purchase  Agreement (the 'Stock Purchase Agreement')
dated January  31, 1995  between Mr.  Dunn and  Alliance; (9)  the  registration
rights  granted to  Mr. Barbera,  Mr. Budlow and  Ms. Sautkulis  pursuant to the
Registration Rights Agreement (the 'Registration Agreement') dated as of October
9, 1996 between the Company, Mr. Barbera, Mr. Budlow and Ms. Sautkulis; and (10)
the registration rights attached to the Representative's Warrants.
 
     Reg  D  Investors.  Subject  to  certain  conditions  and  limitations,  in
connection  with the issuance of 563,750 shares  of Common Stock pursuant to the
Placement Memorandum (the  'Reg D  Registrable Securities'), the  holders of  an
aggregate  of at least two-thirds  of the Reg D  Registrable Securities have the
right to require  one time that  the Company use  its best efforts  to effect  a
registration  of all the Reg D  Registrable Securities. This demand registration
right may not  be exercised before  the date which  is the earlier  of (i)  nine
months  from  the date  of  the closing  of the  'Offering'  (as defined  in the
Placement Memorandum) and (ii)  six months after  a 'Qualified Public  Offering'
(as defined in the Placement Memorandum).
 
     Subject  to certain  conditions and limitations,  the Reg  D Investors also
have piggyback registration rights pursuant to which the Company must notify the
Reg D Investors of the Company's intention to register any Common Stock for  its
own  account and include  in such registration all  Reg D Registrable Securities
requested by the Reg D Investors to be so included.
 
     Certain of the Reg D Registrable Securities of the Reg D Investors who  are
also  Delayed  Selling Stockholders  (an aggregate  of  78,556 shares  of Common
Stock) are  being  registered  under  the Securities  Act  by  the  registration
statement  of which this Prospectus  forms a part for  resale on a delayed basis
pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act. See 'Delayed Selling Stockholders
and Plan of Distribution.'
 
   
     Certain of the Reg D Registrable Securities of the Reg D Investors who  are
also  Selling Stockholders (an aggregate of  183,881 shares of Common Stock) are
being registered under the Securities Act by the registration statement of which
this Prospectus forms a  part for resale as  part of the Underwritten  Offering.
See 'Principal and Selling Stockholders.'
    
 
   
     Reg  D Investors who  are also Selling Stockholders  have agreed, except as
set forth  in the  next sentence,  to irrevocably  waive any  and all  of  their
piggyback  and demand registration rights  and not to sell  any shares of Common
Stock or certain  related securities  except: (i) pursuant  to the  Underwritten
Offering  or the exercise  of the Underwriters'  over-allotment options; (ii) in
accordance with  all  of  the  applicable  provisions  of  Rule  144  under  the
Securities   Act;  or  (iii)  in   transactions  exempt  from  the  registration
requirements of  the Securities  Act.  Such agreements  terminate if  the  final
Prospectus  relating  to  the  Underwritten  Offering  is  not  filed  with  the
Commission by March 31, 1997 pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     All of the Reg D Investors (other than the Reg D Investors who are  Delayed
Selling  Stockholders  or the  Selling Stockholders  described in  the preceding
paragraph), including the Reg  D Investors who  are also Over-Allotment  Selling
Stockholders, have agreed not to exercise their demand or piggyback registration
rights  and not  to make  sales of  Common Stock  or certain  related securities
during the Lock-Up Period with respect to any Reg D Registrable Securities  held
by  them that are not sold pursuant to the Underwritten Offering or the exercise
of the Underwriters' over-allotment options. As considera-
    

 
                                       73
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
tion for these  lock-ups, upon  consummation of the  Underwritten Offering,  the
Company  will issue to the Reg D  Investors agreeing thereto (other than to such
Reg D  Investors who  are Selling  Stockholders), warrants  exercisable for  one
share  of Common Stock for  each two shares of Common  Stock that are subject to
such lock-ups (such new  warrants to be  exercisable for an  aggregate of up  to
77,142,  shares of Common Stock). Such warrants will be exercisable for a period
of two years  from the date  of the Closing  at an exercise  price equal to  the
initial price to public of the Common Stock in the Underwritten Offering (except
that, in the case of warrants exercisable for up to 9,386 shares of Common Stock
issued  to two  stockholders, the exercise  price with respect  to such warrants
will be $1.00  above such  initial price  to public).  Reg D  Investors who  are
Selling Stockholders are not entitled to any such warrants.
    
 
     Recipients  of Finder's Fee. Subject  to certain conditions and limitations
and pursuant to the  Finder's Fee Agreements,  Whale, Millennium, Mr.  Golenberg
and  Mr. Geller have piggyback registration  rights with respect to an aggregate
of 37,500  shares of  Common Stock  owned outright  and an  aggregate of  25,000
shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of warrants (the 'Finder's Fee
Warrants').
 
   
     Whale and Millennium have agreed, except as set forth in the next sentence,
to  irrevocably waive any and all of their piggyback registration rights and not
to sell any  shares of Common  Stock or certain  related securities except:  (i)
pursuant  to  the Underwritten  Offering or  the  exercise of  the Underwriters'
over-allotment options; (ii) in accordance with all of the applicable provisions
of Rule 144 under the Securities Act;  or (iii) in transactions exempt from  the
registration  requirements of the  Securities Act. Such  agreements terminate if
the final Prospectus relating to the Underwritten Offering is not filed with the
Commission by March 31, 1997 pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     Mr. Golenberg and Mr.  Geller have agreed not  to exercise their  piggyback
registration  rights and not  to make sales  of Common Stock  or certain related
securities during the Lock-Up Period. As consideration for these lock-ups,  upon
consummation of the Underwritten Offering, the Company will issue to each of Mr.
Golenberg  and Mr. Geller warrants exercisable for one share of Common Stock for
each two shares  of Common Stock  that are  subject to such  lock-ups (such  new
warrants  to be exercisable for an aggregate  of 15,626 shares of Common Stock).
Such warrants will be exercisable for a  period of three years from the date  of
the  Closing at an  exercise price equal to  the initial price  to public of the
Common Stock in the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
     Golenberg and Geller.  Subject to  certain conditions  and limitations  and
pursuant  to the Golenberg/Geller  Agreements, the Company  agreed to include an
aggregate of 56,250 shares of Common Stock held by Mr. Golenberg and Mr.  Geller
outright  or  issuable  upon  the exercise  of  warrants  (the 'Golenberg/Geller
Warrants') in a  registration statement  to be filed  on or  before December  1,
1995.
 
   
     Mr. Golenberg and Mr. Geller have agreed not to exercise their registration
rights  and not  to make  sales of  Common Stock  or certain  related securities
during  the  Lock-Up   Period.  As  consideration   for  these  lock-ups,   upon
consummation of the Underwritten Offering, the Company will issue to each of Mr.
Golenberg  and Mr. Geller warrants exercisable for one share of Common Stock for
each two shares  of Common Stock  that are  subject to such  lock-ups (such  new
warrants  to be exercisable for an aggregate  of 28,125 shares of Common Stock).
Such warrants will be exercisable for a  period of three years from the date  of
the  Closing at an  exercise price equal to  the initial price  to public of the
Common Stock in the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
   
     Kasower and MNI. Pursuant to a Settlement and Release Agreement dated  June
17,  1994 between  the Company, Kasower  and MNI,  the Company agreed  to file a
registration statement with respect to  62,500 shares of Common Stock  delivered
to  MNI in connection with such settlement and release not later than sixty (60)
days after the filing of the Company's Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended  June
30, 1994.
    
 
   
     Pursuant to such obligations, the Company filed a registration statement on
Form  S-3 on  June 17, 1995  and Amendment  No. 1 thereto  on July  25, 1996 (as
amended, the 'S-3') with respect to which the Company has submitted a letter  to
the Commission requesting withdrawal. See ' -- S-3.' Kasower and MNI have agreed
to the Company's withdrawal of the S-3 and MNI has included all remaining 52,500
shares  of Common  Stock issued  to it  in connection  with such  Settlement and
Release Agreement in the Delayed Offering. See 'Delayed Selling Stockholders and
Plan of Distribution' in the Delayed Prospectus.
    
 
                                       74
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
     Holders of Series B Preferred Stock. Pursuant to an agreement dated June 7,
1996 with the holders  of the Series  B Preferred Stock,  the Company agreed  to
file  on or before October 5, 1996 (120 days after the date of such agreement) a
registration statement on Form S-3 or Form  S-1 for the public resale of all  of
the  shares of  Common Stock  issuable on conversion  of the  Series B Preferred
Stock and all of the shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the Series
B Warrants.  Subject  to certain  conditions  and limitations,  the  Company  is
required  to use its best efforts to cause such registration statement to become
effective not later  than 90 days  after the date  of filing, and  to keep  such
registration  statement effective  for two  years, in  the case  of Common Stock
issued upon conversion of the Series B Preferred Stock, and for three years,  in
the case of Common Stock issued upon exercise of the Series B Warrants.
    
 
   
     In  connection with the Recapitalization,  (i) all 6,200 outstanding shares
of the Series B Preferred Stock were converted without the payment of additional
consideration into  2,480,000  shares  of  Common Stock  and  (ii)  all  accrued
interest  on  the  Series B  Preferred  Stock  ($101,918 in  the  aggregate) was
converted into 81,534 shares  of Common Stock. Holders  of the shares of  Common
Stock  into which the  Series B Preferred  Stock was converted  and the Series B
Warrants have agreed not to exercise their registration rights and agreed not to
make sales  of Common  Stock or  Series B  Warrants during  the Lock-Up  Period,
except  as  part  of  the  Underwritten  Offering.  See  'Principal  and Selling
Stockholders' and 'Certain Transactions.'
    
 
   
     Holders of  Series  C  Preferred  Stock. Pursuant  to  an  agreement  dated
September  10, 1996, but effective  as of June 7, 1996,  with the holders of the
Series C Preferred Stock, the Company agreed to file a registration statement on
Form S-3 or Form S-1 for the public resale of all of the shares of Common  Stock
issuable  on conversion of the Series C Preferred Stock and all of the shares of
Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the Series C Warrants. Subject to certain
conditions and limitations, the Company is  required to use its best efforts  to
cause  such registration  statement to become  effective not later  than 90 days
after the date of filing, and to keep such registration statement effective  for
two  years, in the case  of Common Stock issued upon  conversion of the Series C
Preferred Stock, and for three  years, in the case  of Common Stock issued  upon
exercise of the Series C Warrants.
    
 
   
     In  connection with the Recapitalization,  (i) all 2,000 outstanding shares
of the Series C Preferred Stock were repurchased by the Company for $1.0 million
aggregate principal amount of promissory notes; (ii) warrants issued to  holders
of  Series C Preferred Stock, exercisable  for 3,000,000 shares of Common Stock,
were exchanged for an aggregate of 600,000 shares of Common Stock; and (iii) all
accrued interest on the Series C Preferred Stock ($43,836 in the aggregate)  was
converted  into 7,306 shares  of Common Stock.  Holders of the  shares of Common
Stock for which the Series C Warrants were exchanged have agreed to waive  their
registration  right and  not to  make sales of  Common Stock  during the Lock-Up
Period.
    
 
     Warrants. In addition  to the Finder's  Fee Warrants, the  Golenberg/Geller
Warrants,  the Series  B Warrants  and the  Series C  Warrants, the  Company has
issued warrants containing registration rights  (the 'Other Warrants'), as  more
fully  described below, exercisable for an  aggregate of 40,577 shares of Common
Stock to various persons  (the 'Warrant Holders'). The  Other Warrants (and  the
related  registration rights)  expire on various  dates ranging  from January 8,
1999 to July 15, 2000. Pursuant to such Other Warrants, the Company must provide
each Warrant Holder with at least  forty-five (45) days prior written notice  of
any registration of any securities of the Company. Subject to certain conditions
and  limitations, all such Warrant Holders have the right to require the Company
to include such number of shares  of Common Stock underlying the Other  Warrants
held by them in any registered offering of Common Stock by the Company.
 
   
     Such   Warrant  Holders  have  agreed   not  to  exercise  their  piggyback
registration rights and  agreed not  to make sales  of Common  Stock or  certain
related securities during the Lock-Up Period. As consideration for the foregoing
lock-ups, upon consummation of the Underwritten Offering, the Company will issue
to  such Warrant Holders, new warrants exercisable for one share of Common Stock
for each two shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the Other Warrants
held by  such  Warrant Holders  that  are subject  to  such lock-ups  (such  new
warrants  to be exercisable for an aggregate  of 16,068 shares of Common Stock).
These new warrants will be exercisable for  a period of two years from the  date
of  the Closing at an exercise price equal to the initial price to public of the
Common Stock in the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
                                       75
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
     In addition, pursuant to an option agreement dated October 1, 1995  between
the  Company and the three individuals named therein, the Company agreed to file
with the  Commission,  on or  before  December  1, 1995,  a  shelf  registration
statement  with regard to 30,000 shares of Common Stock issuable to such persons
upon exercise of warrants granted to  them in such option agreement. Subject  to
certain  conditions and limitations, the Company  agreed to use its best efforts
to have such registration statement declared effective as soon as possible after
the filing thereof  and to  keep the shelf  registration statement  continuously
effective  thorough  December  31, 1996.  In  addition, in  connection  with the
extension of such  option agreement in  April 1996, the  Company issued to  such
three  individuals warrants exercisable for 22,500 shares of Common Stock in the
aggregate,  together  with  piggyback  registration  rights  having  terms   and
conditions similar to those given to the Warrant Holders.
 
   
     Each of such persons has agreed not to exercise his registration rights and
not  to make  sales of  Common Stock  or certain  related securities  during the
Lock-Up Period. As consideration for each of the foregoing lock-ups, the Company
will issue, upon  consummation of  the Underwritten  Offering, to  each of  such
persons,  new warrants exercisable  for one share  of Common Stock  for each two
shares of Common Stock  issuable upon exercise of  the warrants granted to  such
person  under the option agreement  that are subject to  such lock-ups (such new
warrants to be exercisable for an  aggregate of 26,250 shares of Common  Stock).
These  warrants will be exercisable  for a period of two  years from the date of
the Closing at an  exercise price equal  to the initial price  to public of  the
Common Stock in the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
     Stephen  Dunn. Pursuant  to a  Stock Purchase  Agreement dated  January 31,
1995, the Company may satisfy any part of any contingent payment due in  respect
of the purchase price for SD&A with restricted Common Stock. With respect to any
such  Common Stock  issued to  Mr. Dunn in  satisfaction of  any such contingent
payment, Mr. Dunn  has the right  to make two  demands, commencing in  September
1997,   that  the  Company  prepare,  file  and  cause  to  become  effective  a
registration statement as to such number of shares of Common Stock so issued  to
Mr. Dunn as he may request to be included therein in a notice to the Company.
 
     Mr. Dunn has agreed not to exercise such registration rights and agreed not
to  make sales of Common Stock or  certain related securities during the Lock-Up
Period.
 
     Metro. In connection with the  Company's acquisition of Metro, the  Company
issued  1,814,000 shares  of Common Stock  to the former  shareholders of Metro.
Pursuant to a Registration Rights Agreement dated as of October 9, 1996, subject
to certain conditions and limitations contained therein, commencing nine  months
after  the consummation of an underwritten public offering by the Company of its
securities,  (or,  if  such  an  underwritten  public  offering  has  not   been
consummated  by  March  31, 1997,  commencing  December 31,  1997),  such former
shareholders or  any permitted  transferee or  assignee thereof  have  piggyback
registration  rights with respect to  the Common Stock so  issued to them in the
event the Company files a registration  statement on any form that would  permit
the  registration of  their Common Stock  (other than on  Form S-4 or  S-8 or in
connection with an  exchange offer or  an offering of  securities solely to  the
Company's   existing  stockholders).  The  Company  is  required  to  give  such
stockholders or any permitted transferee or  assignee thereof at least 40  days'
prior  written  notice of  the  filing of  any  such registration  statement. In
addition, in the event  that such a registration  statement is not filed  within
nine  months  of the  consummation  of an  underwritten  public offering  by the
Company of its securities (or, if  such an underwritten public offering has  not
been  consummated by March  31, 1997, prior  to December 31,  1997), such former
shareholders or any permitted transferee or  assignee thereof have the right  to
demand  one time that the Company file  a registration statement with respect to
the Common  Stock so  issued to  them  and use  its best  efforts to  have  such
registration statement declared effective.
 
     The  former shareholders of Metro have  agreed not to exercise their demand
registration rights and their  piggyback registration rights  and agreed not  to
make  sales of  Common Stock  or certain  related securities  during the Lock-Up
Period.
 
   
     Representatives'  Warrants.  Upon  the   completion  of  the   Underwritten
Offering, the Company will sell to  the Representatives, individually and not as
representatives  of  the   Underwriters,  the   Representatives'  Warrants   for
consideration  of one mil ($.001)  per Representatives' Warrant, exercisable for
210,000 shares of Common Stock  in the aggregate. Each Representatives'  Warrant
shall (i) entitle the holder thereof to purchase one share of Common Stock at an
exercise price equal to
    
 
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<PAGE>
120%  of the initial public offering price per share of the Common Stock offered
by the Company hereby; (ii) be exercisable for a period of four years commencing
one year  after the  date  of this  Prospectus;  and (iii)  contain  appropriate
anti-dilution  provisions.  Such  anti-dilution  provisions  include  protection
against dilution in  both price  and percentage of  the Company  (to the  extent
permitted  by the rules  and regulations of  the NASD) upon  (a) any issuance of
Common Stock, warrants or  other securities convertible into  Common Stock at  a
price  below the then market  value of the Common Stock  during a period of five
years from  the date  of this  Prospectus;  (b) any  issuance of  Common  Stock,
warrants or other securities convertible into Common Stock as a dividend; or (c)
a  subdivision or combination of the outstanding Common Stock, warrants or other
securities  convertible  into  Common   Stock  as  the   result  of  a   merger,
consolidation, spin-off or otherwise.
 
   
     During  the  four-year period  commencing one  year from  the date  of this
Prospectus, the  Company is  required to  use  its best  efforts to  assist  the
holders  of  the  Representatives'  Warrants and  the  underlying  securities in
publicly selling such Representatives'  Warrants and the underlying  securities,
when  and if requested by the holders  of a majority thereof. These best efforts
include the preparation and filing of one or more registration statements during
such four-year period at the demand of  the holders of not less than a  majority
of  the  Representatives'  Warrants  or underlying  securities  (treated  as one
class), and  the maintenance  of  the effectiveness  thereof  for at  least  six
months,  the  first of  which such  filings is  at the  Company's sole  cost and
expense, including, without limitation, blue sky fees and expenses and the  fees
and  expenses  (not to  exceed $15,000)  of one  counsel to  the holders  of the
Representatives' Warrants  or  underlying  securities,  but  not  including  any
underwriting   or  selling  commissions,  discounts  or  other  charges  of  any
broker-dealer acting on behalf of such holders. In addition, for the period from
the first through the  seventh anniversary of the  date of this Prospectus,  the
Company  is required to notify all  holders of the Representatives' Warrants and
underlying securities of  the Company's  intention to  undertake another  public
offering  of the Company's securities (whether by the Company or by any security
holder of the Company). If requested by any holder of Representatives' Warrants,
the Company is required to include in such public offering any  Representatives'
Warrants  and underlying securities  of such requesting  holder at the Company's
sole cost and expense (other than (i) fees and disbursements of counsel for  any
holder  of  Representatives'  Warrants  and  (ii)  any  applicable  underwriting
discounts or commissions, but including,  without limitation, blue sky fees  and
expenses)  and maintain the effectiveness of any registration statement relating
to such public offering for at least six months after the date such registration
statement is  declared  effective. The  Representatives'  Warrants will  not  be
transferable,  saleable, assignable  or hypothecatable  except that  they may be
assigned in  whole or  in part  to any  officer, director  or principal  of,  or
successor to, either of the Representatives.
    
 
     S-3.  In addition to Kasower and MNI,  all of the other persons referred to
in the S-3 as 'Selling Stockholders' have agreed to the Company's withdrawal  of
the S-3.
 
     Other  Lock-Up Arrangements.  The Company  and its  Directors and executive
officers have  agreed not  to make  sales  of Common  Stock or  certain  related
securities during the Lock-Up Period.
 
   
     New  Warrants.  All  of the  warrants  to  be issued  by  the  Company upon
consummation of the Underwritten  Offering as consideration  for certain of  the
lock-up  arrangements described above,  exercisable for an  aggregate of 160,414
shares of Common Stock, will grant to the holders thereof the same  registration
rights  as  the  underlying securities  subject  to the  lock-up  arrangement in
respect of which such new warrants are being issued.
    
 
                                       77
 

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<PAGE>
                                  UNDERWRITING
 
     Subject to  the terms  and conditions  of the  Underwriting Agreement,  the
Underwriters  named below, for whom Cruttenden Roth Incorporated and LT Lawrence
& Co., Inc. are acting as the Representatives, have severally agreed to purchase
from the Company and the Selling  Stockholders, and the Company and the  Selling
Stockholders  have severally agreed  to sell to  the Underwriters, the aggregate
respective  number  of  shares   of  Common  Stock   set  forth  opposite   each
Underwriter's name below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     NUMBER
                                  UNDERWRITERS                                      OF SHARES
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------   ---------
 
<S>                                                                                 <C>
Cruttenden Roth Incorporated ....................................................
LT Lawrence & Co., Inc. .........................................................
 
                                                                                    ---------
          Total..................................................................   2,100,000
                                                                                    ---------
                                                                                    ---------
</TABLE>
 
     The  Underwriting Agreement  provides that  the obligations  of the several
Underwriters thereunder are subject  to certain conditions precedent,  including
the  absence of any  material adverse change  in the Company's  business and the
receipt of  certain certificates,  opinions and  letters from  the Company.  The
nature  of  the Underwriters'  obligations is  such that  they are  committed to
purchase and pay for all the shares of Common Stock if any are purchased.
 
   
     The Company has been advised by the Representatives that, the  Underwriters
propose initially to offer the shares of Common Stock to the public at the price
to  public  set  forth on  the  cover page  of  this Prospectus  and  to certain
securities dealers at such price less a concession not in excess of $.       per
share.  The Underwriters  may allow,  and such  selected dealers  may reallow, a
concession not in excess of $.       per  share to certain brokers and  dealers.
After  the Underwritten Offering, the price to public, concession, allowance and
reallowance may be changed by the Lead Representative.
    
 
     The Company,  the  Selling  Stockholders  and  the  Over-Allotment  Selling
Stockholders  have granted to the Underwriters options to purchase up to 315,000
additional shares of Common Stock solely  to cover over-allotments, if any.  The
options  are exercisable within 45 days from  the date of this Prospectus at the
initial price to public, less the  underwriting discount set forth on the  cover
page  of this Prospectus.  To the extent the  Underwriters exercise the options,
the Underwriters will be committed,  subject to certain conditions, to  purchase
the  additional shares. The Company has agreed with the Selling Stockholders and
the Over-Allotment  Selling Stockholders  that the  first 124,173  shares as  to
which  the Underwriters'  over-allotment options are  exercised will  be sold by
such Selling Stockholders and Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders on a pro  rata
basis based on the relative amounts subject to sale by such persons as set forth
under  'Principal and  Selling Stockholders,' and  any of  the remaining 190,827
shares as to which the  Underwriters' over-allotment options are exercised  will
be sold by the Company.
 
     See  'Shares Eligible for Future Sale' for a description of certain lock-up
agreements.
 
     The  Underwriting  Agreement  provides   that  the  Company,  the   Selling
Stockholders  and  the Over-Allotment  Selling  Stockholders will  indemnify the
Underwriters and their controlling persons against certain liabilities under the
Securities Act, or contribute to payments the Underwriters and their controlling
persons may be required to make in respect thereof.
 
   
     The Company has  paid the Other  Representative $50,000 on  account of  the
Underwriters'  expenses  in  connection  with the  Underwritten  Offering  to be
applied to a  non-accountable expense  allowance equal  to 3%  of the  aggregate
offering  price of  the shares of  Common Stock  to be sold  in the Underwritten
Offering.
    
 
                                       78
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
     The  Company  has  agreed  to  issue  to  the  Representatives,  for  total
consideration   of  one   mill  ($.001),  the   Representatives'  Warrants.  The
Representatives' Warrants have an  exercise price equal to  120% of the  initial
price  to public in the  Underwritten Offering, are exercisable  for a period of
four years commencing one  year from the  date of this  Prospectus, and are  not
transferable  except  to  officers,  directors  or principals, or successors to,
either  of  the  Representatives.  The  Representatives'  Warrants  include  net
exercise  provisions   permitting  the  holders  to  pay  the  exercise price by
cancellation of a number of shares  with  a  fair  market  value  equal  to  the
exercise   price   of   the  Representatives'   Warrants.  The  holders  of  the
Representatives'  Warrants  will  have no voting, dividend or other stockholders
rights until the Representatives'  Warrants  are  exercised.  In  addition,  the
Company   has   granted  certain  rights  to  holders  of  the  Representatives'
Warrants  to  register  the  Representatives'  Warrants  and  the  Common  Stock
underlying  the Representatives'  Warrants.  The Representatives  may  allow  to
certain dealers, and such dealers may reallow, a portion of the Representatives'
Warrants.
    
 
     In the  ordinary course  of  its investment  banking activities,  the  Lead
Representative was paid by the Company (i) $25,000 (in two equal installments of
$12,500  each  in  November 1995  and  January  1996) for  services  rendered in
connection with a proposed private placement of debt securities of the  Company,
which  was never consummated, and  (ii) $33,750 in July  1996 in connection with
rendering a fairness opinion relating to the sale by the Company of the Series B
Preferred Stock  and Series  C  Preferred Stock  and related  transactions  (see
'Description of Capital Stock -- Preferred Stock').
 
     LT  Lawrence & Co., Inc. was organized  in February 1992 and was registered
as a broker-dealer in 1994. Prior to this Offering, LT Lawrence & Co., Inc.  has
participated  as  a  sole or  co-manager  in  four public  offerings.  See 'Risk
Factors -- Lack of Underwriting History.'
 
     The Representatives have informed the Company that the Underwriters do  not
intend  to confirm sales to any  accounts over which they exercise discretionary
authority.
 
                               VALIDITY OF SHARES
 
   
     The validity of the securities offered hereby is being passed upon for  the
Company  by Lionel, Sawyer & Collins, Las Vegas, Nevada and for the underwriters
by Gordon  & Silver  Ltd., Las  Vegas, Nevada.  Certain other  legal matters  in
connection with the Underwritten Offering will be passed upon for the Company by
Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, New York, New York and for the Underwriters by Rubin
Baum Levin Constant & Friedman, New York, New York.
    
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
     The  Company's  consolidated balance  sheet  as of  June  30, 1996  and the
consolidated statements of operations, stockholders'  equity and cash flows  for
each  of  the two  years in  the period  ended  June 30,  1996 included  in this
Prospectus have been  included herein  in reliance on  the report  of Coopers  &
Lybrand  L.L.P., independent accountants, given on the authority of that firm as
experts in accounting and auditing. The balance sheet of SD&A as of December 31,
1994 and the statements of income,  shareholder's equity and cash flows for  the
year  ended December  31, 1994  included in  this Prospectus  have been included
herein in  reliance on  the  report of  Coopers  & Lybrand  L.L.P.,  independent
accountants,  given on the authority  of that firm as  experts in accounting and
auditing. Metro's balance sheet  as of December 31,  1995 and the statements  of
operations, shareholders' equity and cash flows for each of the two years in the
period  ended December 31,  1995 included in this  Prospectus have been included
herein in  reliance on  the  report of  Coopers  & Lybrand  L.L.P.,  independent
accountants,  given on the authority  of that firm as  experts in accounting and
auditing.
 
                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION
 
     The Company  has  filed  with  the Commission,  Washington,  D.C.  20549  a
Registration Statement on Form SB-2 under the Securities Act with respect to the
shares  of Common Stock offered hereby. This  Prospectus does not contain all of
the information set  forth in the  Registration Statement and  the exhibits  and
schedules  thereto. For further information pertaining to the securities offered
hereby and to the Company, reference  is made to the Registration Statement  and
the exhibits and schedules filed
 
                                       79
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
therewith.  Statements contained in the  Prospectus concerning the provisions of
any document to  which reference is  made are not  necessarily complete and,  in
each  instance,  reference is  made to  the copy  of such  document filed  as an
exhibit to the Registration Statement. Each  such statement is qualified in  its
entirety  by  such  reference.  A  copy of  the  Registration  Statement  may be
inspected without charge at  the offices of the  Commission in Washington,  D.C.
20549,  and  copies of  all or  any part  of the  Registration Statement  may be
obtained from  the Public  Reference  Section of  the  Commission at  450  Fifth
Street,  N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549 upon the payment of the fees prescribed by
the Commission.
 
     The Company is subject to  the informational reporting requirements of  the
Securities  Exchange Act, and accordingly,  files, reports, proxy statements and
other information are filed with the Commission. Such reports, proxy  statements
and other information filed with the Commission are available for inspection and
copying  at the public reference facilities maintained by the Commission at Room
1025, 450 Fifth  Street, N.W., Judiciary  Plaza, Washington, D.C.  20549 and  at
certain  regional offices of the Commission, located at Suite 1400, Northwestern
Atrium Center, 500  West Madison  Street, Chicago, IL  60621 and  7 World  Trade
Center,  New York, NY  10048. Copies of  such material can  be obtained from the
Public Reference Section of  the Commission, 450  Fifth Street, N.W.,  Judiciary
Plaza,  Washington, D.C. 20549  upon the payment  of the fees  prescribed by the
Commission. In  addition,  the  Commission maintains  a  website  that  contains
reports,  proxy statements and other information  filed with the Commission. The
address of such site is http://www.sec.gov.
 
                                       80


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                           <C>
INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
     Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
       June 30, 1996 (unaudited) and September 30, 1996 (unaudited)........................................    F-2
     Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations
       Three Months Ended September 30, 1995 (unaudited) and 1996 (unaudited)..............................    F-3
     Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
       Three Months Ended September 30, 1995 (unaudited) and 1996 (unaudited)..............................    F-4
     Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (unaudited)..............................    F-6
ANNUAL FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
     Report of Independent Accountants.....................................................................    F-9
     Consolidated Balance Sheet
       June 30, 1996.......................................................................................   F-10
     Consolidated Statements of Operations
       Years Ended June 30, 1995 and 1996..................................................................   F-11
     Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity
       Years Ended June 30, 1995 and 1996..................................................................   F-12
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
       Years Ended June 30, 1995 and 1996..................................................................   F-13
     Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements............................................................   F-15
 
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
     Report of Independent Accountants.....................................................................   F-28
     Balance Sheets
       December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996 (unaudited)................................................   F-29
     Statements of Operations
       Years Ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and Nine Months Ended September 30, 1995 (unaudited) and 1996
      (unaudited)..........................................................................................   F-30
     Statements of Shareholders' Equity (Deficit)
       Years Ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and Nine Months Ended September 30, 1996 (unaudited).........   F-31
     Statements of Cash Flows
       Years Ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and Nine Months Ended September 30, 1995 (unaudited) and 1996
      (unaudited)..........................................................................................   F-32
     Notes to Financial Statements.........................................................................   F-33
 
SELECTED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
  Audited
     Report of Independent Accountants.....................................................................   F-37
     Balance Sheet
       December 31, 1994...................................................................................   F-38
     Statement of Income
       Year Ended December 31, 1994........................................................................   F-39
     Statement of Shareholder's Equity
       Year Ended December 31, 1994........................................................................   F-40
     Statement of Cash Flows
       Year Ended December 31, 1994........................................................................   F-41
     Notes to Financial Statements.........................................................................   F-42
  Unaudited
     Balance Sheet
       March 31, 1995......................................................................................   F-46
     Statement of Operations
       Three Months Ended March 31, 1995...................................................................   F-47
     Statement of Shareholder's Equity
       Three Months Ended March 31, 1995...................................................................   F-48
     Statement of Cash Flows
       Three Months Ended March 31, 1995...................................................................   F-49
     Notes to Interim Financial Statements.................................................................   F-50
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-1
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                   AS OF JUNE 30, 1996 AND SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       JUNE 30,      SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                                         1996            1996
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
<S>                                                                                   <C>            <C>
                                      ASSETS
Current assets:
     Cash and cash equivalents.....................................................   $ 1,393,044     $ 1,180,129
     Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful accounts of $34,906 at June
      30 and $6,000 at September 30................................................     2,681,748       1,864,425
     Land held for sale at cost....................................................       921,465
     Other current assets..........................................................       107,658         560,968
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
          Total current assets.....................................................     5,103,915       3,605,522
Property and equipment at cost, net................................................       299,045         494,031
Intangible assets at cost, net.....................................................     7,851,060       7,755,414
Other assets.......................................................................        47,046          35,846
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
          Total assets.............................................................   $13,301,066     $11,890,813
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
 
                       LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
     Short-term borrowings.........................................................   $   500,000     $   102,224
     Trade accounts payable........................................................       470,706         317,228
     Accrued salaries and wages....................................................       706,039         420,773
     Other accrued expenses........................................................       758,112         485,404
     Income taxes payable..........................................................        10,000
     Long-term obligations to related party, current portion.......................       583,333         700,000
     Related party payable.........................................................       425,000
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
          Total current liabilities................................................     3,453,190       2,025,629
Long-term obligations to related party less current portion........................     1,516,667       1,341,667
Other liabilities..................................................................        80,315         111,105
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
          Total liabilities........................................................     5,050,172       3,478,401
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
Commitments and contingencies
Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock, $.01 par value, consisting of: 6,200 shares
  of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock issued and outstanding; 2,000 shares of
  Series C Convertible Preferred Stock issued and outstanding......................     1,306,358       1,667,434
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
Stockholders' equity:
     Convertible Preferred Stock, $.01 par value; 50,000 Shares authorized; 8,200
      redeemable shares issued and outstanding.....................................            --              --
     Common stock -- authorized 6,250,000 shares of $.01 par value at June 30,
      1996, increased in August 1996 to 36,250,000; 3,198,534 and 3,303,207 shares
      issued, respectively.........................................................        31,985          33,032
     Additional paid-in capital....................................................    13,173,520      13,317,396
     Accumulated deficit...........................................................    (6,125,500)     (6,469,981)
     Less 11,800 shares of common stock in treasury, at cost.......................      (135,469)       (135,469)
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
          Total stockholders' equity...............................................     6,944,536       6,744,978
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
               Total liabilities and stockholders' equity..........................   $13,301,066     $11,890,813
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
                                                                                      -----------    -------------
</TABLE>
    
 
       See Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
             FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            1995          1996
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
<S>                                                                                      <C>           <C>
Revenues..............................................................................   $3,926,438    $3,932,030
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
Operating costs and expenses:
     Salaries and benefits............................................................    3,161,669     3,303,499
     Direct costs.....................................................................      129,713       145,230
     Selling, general and administrative..............................................      386,575       544,636
     Professional fees................................................................      145,428       168,187
     Amortization of intangible assets................................................       90,226        95,646
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
          Total operating costs and expenses..........................................    3,913,611     4,257,198
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
          Income (loss) from operations...............................................       12,827      (325,168)
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
Other income (expense):
     Gain from sale of land...........................................................                     90,021
     Interest income..................................................................        3,244         9,561
     Interest expense.................................................................      (98,802)     (114,917)
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
          Total.......................................................................      (95,558)      (15,335)
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
Loss before income taxes..............................................................      (82,731)     (340,503)
Provision for income taxes............................................................      (53,295)       (3,978)
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
          Net loss....................................................................   $ (136,026)   $ (344,481)
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
Net loss per common share.............................................................   $     (.05)   $     (.11)
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
 
Weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding......................    3,016,028     3,214,884
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
                                                                                         ----------    ----------
</TABLE>
    
 
       See Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-3
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
             FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                        1995          1996
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
<S>                                                                                                  <C>           <C>
Operating activities:
     Net loss.....................................................................................   $ (136,026)   $ (344,481)
     Adjustments to reconcile loss to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:
          Gain from sale of land..................................................................                    (90,021)
          Depreciation............................................................................       44,863        38,086
          Amortization............................................................................       90,226        95,646
          Warrant issuances to consultants........................................................                     76,000
          Accrued interest on redeemable convertible preferred stock..............................           --        66,500
     Changes in assets and liabilities:
          Accounts receivable.....................................................................      208,627       817,323
          Other current assets....................................................................       (9,326)     (128,310)
          Other assets............................................................................       (4,087)       (6,500)
          Trade accounts payable..................................................................      (28,106)     (153,478)
          Accrued expenses and other current liabilities..........................................      (64,249)     (749,942)
          Income taxes payable....................................................................      (19,838)      (10,000)
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
          Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities.....................................       82,084      (389,177)
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
Investing activities:
     Net proceeds from sale of land...............................................................                    860,443
     Proceeds from issuances of warrants..........................................................                      5,000
     Purchase of property and equipment...........................................................      (13,696)     (233,072)
     Payments relating to acquisition of Alliance and SD&A........................................      (40,806)
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
          Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities.....................................      (54,502)      632,371
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
Financing activities:
     Repayments of bank loans.....................................................................      (19,588)     (397,776)
     Repayments of notes payable other............................................................      (18,000)
     Repayment of acquisition debt................................................................     (375,000)      (58,333)
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
          Net cash used in financing activities...................................................     (412,588)     (456,109)
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents.........................................................     (385,006)     (212,915)
     Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period.............................................    1,217,772     1,393,044
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period........................................................   $  832,766    $1,180,129
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
                                                                                                     ----------    ----------
</TABLE>
    
 
       See Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-4
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Supplemental Schedule of Non-Cash Investing and Financing Activities:
 
          In  October 1995, in accordance with the acquisition agreement between
     Alliance Media Corporation and the former owner of SD&A the purchase  price
     was increased by $92,702.
 
          In  September 1996, the Company issued  96,748 shares of common stock,
     valued at $425,000, as an earn out payment to the former owner of SD&A  for
     achieving  certain targeted  earnings for  the fiscal  year ended  June 30,
     1996.
 
          In September  1996, the  Company  incurred approximately  $325,000  in
     accrued   professional  fees  related   to  acquisitions  and  registration
     statement preparation which were deferred as of September 30, 1996.
 
   
          Accrued and  unpaid  interest  on  shares  of  Redeemable  Convertible
     Preferred  Stock during the  three months ended  September 30, 1996 totaled
     $66,500 which is payable in common stock.
    
 
          During the three months ended  September 30, 1996, the Company  issued
     warrants to consultants valued at $81,000 for $5,000 in cash.
 
       See Notes to Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-5


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
          NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
1. BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
     The   accompanying  unaudited  Interim   Condensed  Consolidated  Financial
Statements include the accounts of  All-Comm Media Corporation and  Subsidiaries
(the  'Company'). They have been prepared  in accordance with generally accepted
accounting  principles   for  interim   financial  information   and  with   the
instructions to Form 10-QSB and Item 310(b) of Regulation S-B. Accordingly, they
do  not  include all  of  the information  and  footnotes required  by generally
accepted accounting principles for complete financial statements. In the opinion
of  management,  all  adjustments  (consisting  of  normal  recurring  accruals)
considered  necessary  for a  fair  presentation have  been  included. Operating
results for the three month period ended September 30, 1996 are not  necessarily
indicative  of the results that may be  expected for the fiscal year ending June
30,  1997.  For  further  information,  refer  to  the  consolidated   financial
statements and footnotes thereto included in the Company's annual report on Form
10-K  for the  fiscal year ended  June 30, 1996.  Certain reclassifications have
been made in the  fiscal 1996 interim financial  statements to conform with  the
fiscal 1997 presentation. Certain amounts have been reclassified to conform with
industry standards.
 
2. NET LOSS PER COMMON SHARE
 
     Net  loss  per common  share is  computed based  upon the  weighted average
number of  shares outstanding  during  the periods  presented and  common  stock
equivalents  unless antidilutive. Primary  and fully diluted  loss per share are
the same in the periods presented.
 
3. ACQUISITION OF ALLIANCE MEDIA CORPORATION AND STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
 
     On April  25, 1995,  the Company  acquired all  of the  outstanding  common
shares  of Alliance Media Corporation ('Alliance') which simultaneously acquired
Stephen Dunn & Associates, Inc. ('SD&A').
 
     These acquisitions  were  accounted  for using  the  purchase  method.  The
operating  results  of  these  acquisitions  are  included  in  the  results  of
operations from the date of acquisition.
 
4. LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS TO RELATED PARTY
 
     In connection with  the acquisition  of SD&A  on April  25, 1995,  Alliance
issued  promissory  notes totaling  $4,500,000 to  SD&A's current  president and
former sole  shareholder. The  notes bore  interest at  the prime  rate, not  to
exceed  10%  or drop  below  8%, payable  monthly.  Principal payments  were due
quarterly, and originally  $1,500,000 was due  in quarterly installments  during
fiscal  1996. During  1996, principal payments  of $2,400,000 were  made and the
long-term obligations were restructured such  that the remaining obligations  of
$2,100,000  are now payable at $58,333 per  month, plus interest at 8%, starting
September 19, 1996.
 
5. INCOME TAXES
 
     In the three month  periods ended September 30,  1995 and 1996, the  income
tax  provision totaled $53,000  and $4,000 on losses  from operations of $83,000
and $274,000, respectively. The provisions resulted from state and local  income
taxes  incurred on taxable income at  the operating subsidiary level which could
not be offset by losses incurred at the corporate level.
 
6. GAIN FROM SALE OF LAND
 
     The Company, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, All-Comm Holdings,  Inc.,
owned  approximately seven acres of undeveloped  land in Laughlin, Nevada, which
had a carrying value of $921,465 as of June 30, 1996. During fiscal 1996, a bond
measure was passed by Clark County,  Nevada authorities, resulting in a  special
assessment  to fund  improvements which  would benefit  the land.  The principal
balance assessed to the Company totaled  $154,814 plus interest at 6.4% and  was
payable in semi-annual
 
                                      F-6
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
  NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
installments  over twenty years. The principal was capitalized by the Company in
fiscal 1996. On August 16, 1996, the land was sold to, and liability assumed by,
an unaffiliated third party,  by auction, for $952,000  in cash, resulting in  a
net gain after commissions and other selling costs of approximately $90,000.
 
7. STOCK OPTIONS
 
     On  September 26, 1996, the Board of Directors approved the increase in the
number of shares available under the  1991 Stock Option Plan by 600,000  shares,
to  1,450,000,  and granted  options exercisable  for  300,000 shares  of common
stock, par value $.01 per  share (the 'Common Stock')  to each of the  Company's
Chief Executive Officer and Chief Operating Officer. Options exercisable for the
first  150,000 shares were granted to each  such officer at an exercise price of
$2.50 per share (the fair market value of the stock as of the effective date  of
the  grant), and the remaining 150,000 each were granted at an exercise price of
$3.00 per share. The options vest and are exercisable immediately and expire  on
July 1, 2001.
 
8. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
     Effective as of October 1, 1996, the Company acquired Metro Services Group,
Inc.  ('Metro') pursuant to a merger agreement.  In exchange for all of the then
outstanding shares of Metro, the Company  issued 1,814,000 shares of its  Common
Stock   valued  at  $7,256,000  and  promissory  notes  (the  'Notes')  totaling
$1,000,000. The Notes shall be due  and payable, together with interest  thereon
at  the rate of 6% per annum, on June 30, 1998, subject to earlier repayment, at
the option of the holder, upon completion by the Company of a public offering of
its equity securities. The Notes are  convertible on or before maturity, at  the
option  of the holder, into shares of Common  Stock at an exchange rate of $5.38
per share. Metro develops and markets information-based services, used primarily
in direct marketing by a variety of commercial and not-for-profit organizations,
principally in the United States.
 
   
     On October 17, 1996, the Company  filed a Form SB-2 registration  statement
(the  'Registration Statement') with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The
Registration  Statement  relates  to   an  underwritten  public  offering   (the
'Underwritten Offering') of 2,100,000 shares of Common Stock, of which 1,750,000
shares are being offered by the Company and 350,000 are being offered by certain
stockholders  of the Company.  It also relates  to the sale  of 1,381,056 shares
(the 'Delayed Shares')  of Common  Stock by  certain selling  stockholders on  a
delayed  basis pursuant to Rule  415 of the Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,
none of whom are  members of, or  affiliated with, the  Board or management.  Of
such  Delayed Shares, 1,291,588  shares will be subject  to 'lock up' provisions
that prohibit resale of such shares for a period of nine months from the date of
consummation of the Company's offering.
    
 
   
     In connection  with the  Company's  filing on  Form SB-2,  the  Convertible
Preferred  Stock in the accompanying  financial statements has been reclassified
in accordance  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission's  requirements.
Accordingly, the Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock is no  longer  presented
as part of  stockholders'  equity  and  its  initial  carrying  value  is  being
increased  to  its  redemption  value  by  periodic  accretions  against paid in
capital.
    

   
     The Company and certain of its securityholders have agreed, on December 23,
1996, to effect a recapitalization of the Company's capital stock, whereby:  (i)
the  Company's Series  B Convertible Preferred  Stock, par value  $.01 per share
(the 'Series B  Preferred Stock'),  will be  converted, in  accordance with  its
terms  without the payment of additional consideration, into 2,480,000 shares of
Common Stock; (ii) the Company's Series C Convertible Preferred Stock, par value
$.01 per  share  (the 'Series  C  Preferred  Stock'), will  be  repurchased  for
promissory  notes  in  an  aggregate principal  amount  of  $1.0  million, which
promissory notes  will bear  interest at  a rate  of 8%  per annum  and will  be
repayable  on demand at any time from and  after the date of the consummation of
an underwritten public offering by the Company of Common Stock, but in any event
such notes will mature June 7,
    
 
                                      F-7
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
  NOTES TO INTERIM CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
   
1998; (iii) all accrued interest on the Series B Preferred Stock and the  Series
C Preferred Stock will be converted into 88,840 shares of Common Stock (assuming
conversion  on  December  23,  1996);  (iv) warrants  related  to  the  Series C
Preferred Stock, currently  exercisable for  3,000,000 shares  of Common  Stock,
will  be  exchanged for  600,000  shares of  Common  Stock; (v)  agreements with
certain of  the Company's  securityholders to  issue, upon  consummation of  the
Underwritten Offering, warrants exercisable for 1,038,503 shares of Common Stock
in   consideration  for  such  securityholders'  agreement  to  certain  lock-up
arrangements will be rescinded at no cost to the Company; and (vi) options  held
by  two of the Company's principal executive officers to purchase 300,000 shares
of   common   stock  will  be   cancelled  at  no  cost  to  the  Company.  Upon
conversion  of the  Series  B  Preferred  Stock and accumulated interest thereon
into  Common  Stock  on December  23,  1996,  the Company  incurred  a non-cash,
non-recurring dividend for the difference  between the conversion price and  the
market  price of the  Common Stock estimated  to be $8.5  million. This dividend
will  not  impact  net  income  (loss),  but  will  impact  net  income   (loss)
attributable to common stockholders in the calculation of earnings per share.

    
 
   
     In connection  with the  Underwritten Offering,  the Company  will incur  a
non-recurring  non-cash charge estimated to be  $75,000 in the fiscal quarter in
which the Underwritten Offering is consummated,  as a result of the issuance  by
the  Company of warrants exercisable for an aggregate of up to 160,414 shares of
Common Stock to  certain stockholders of  the Company as  consideration for  the
agreement of such stockholders to certain lock-up arrangements.
    
 
                                      F-8


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
The Stockholders of
ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
 
     We   have  audited  the  consolidated   balance  sheet  of  All-Comm  Media
Corporation and Subsidiaries as  of June 30, 1996  and the related  consolidated
statements  of operations, stockholders'  equity and cash flows  for each of the
two years in the period ended June 30, 1996. These financial statements are  the
responsibility of All-Comm Media Corporation'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 consolidated financial position of All-Comm  Media
Corporation  and Subsidiaries as of June  30, 1996, and the consolidated results
of their operations and their cash flows for each of the two years in the period
ended  June  30,  1996,  in   conformity  with  generally  accepted   accounting
principles.
 
                                          /s/ COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
   
Los Angeles, California
September 19, 1996, except
for Note 19 as to which
the date is December 17, 1996
    
 
                                      F-9
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                                 JUNE 30, 1996
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              ASSETS
<S>                                                                                                   <C>
Current assets:
     Cash and cash equivalents.....................................................................   $ 1,393,044
     Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful accounts of $34,906........................     2,681,748
     Land held for sale at cost....................................................................       921,465
     Other current assets..........................................................................       107,658
                                                                                                      -----------
          Total current assets.....................................................................     5,103,915
Property and equipment at cost, net................................................................       299,045
Intangible assets at cost, net.....................................................................     7,851,060
Other assets.......................................................................................        47,046
                                                                                                      -----------
          Total assets.............................................................................   $13,301,066
                                                                                                      -----------
                                                                                                      -----------
 
                               LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
     Short-term borrowings.........................................................................   $   500,000
     Trade accounts payable........................................................................       470,706
     Accrued salaries and wages....................................................................       706,039
     Other accrued expenses........................................................................       758,112
     Income taxes payable..........................................................................        10,000
     Long-term obligations to related party, current portion.......................................       583,333
     Related party payable.........................................................................       425,000
                                                                                                      -----------
          Total current liabilities................................................................     3,453,190
Long-term obligations to related party less current portion........................................     1,516,667
Other liabilities..................................................................................        80,315
                                                                                                      -----------
          Total liabilities........................................................................     5,050,172
                                                                                                      -----------
Commitments and contingencies
Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock, $.01 par value, consisting of: 6,200 shares of Series B
  Convertible Preferred Stock issued and outstanding, involuntary liquidation preference of
  $3,112,130; 2,000 shares of Series C Convertible
  Preferred Stock issued and outstanding, involuntary liquidation preference of $1,005,360 ........     1,306,358
                                                                                                      -----------
Stockholders' equity:
     Convertible Preferred Stock, $.01 par value; 50,000 shares authorized, 8,200 redeemable shares
      issued and outstanding.......................................................................            --
     Common stock -- authorized 6,250,000 shares of $.01 par value at June 30, 1996, increased in
      August 1996 to 36,250,000; 3,198,534 shares issued...........................................        31,985
     Additional paid-in capital....................................................................    13,173,520
     Accumulated deficit...........................................................................    (6,125,500)
     Less 11,800 shares of common stock in treasury, at cost.......................................      (135,469)
                                                                                                      -----------
          Total stockholders' equity...............................................................     6,944,536
                                                                                                      -----------
               Total liabilities and stockholders' equity..........................................   $13,301,066
                                                                                                      -----------
                                                                                                      -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
                See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-10
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                       YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1995 AND 1996
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         1995           1996
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
 
<S>                                                                                   <C>            <C>
Revenues...........................................................................   $ 3,630,828    $15,889,210
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
Operating costs and expenses:
     Salaries and benefits.........................................................     3,139,232     12,712,150
     Direct costs..................................................................       102,052        807,057
     Selling, general and administrative...........................................     1,121,023      1,843,236
     Professional fees.............................................................       459,344        625,667
     Amortization of intangible assets.............................................        65,101        361,537
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
          Total operating costs and expenses.......................................     4,886,752     16,349,647
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
          Loss from operations.....................................................    (1,255,924)      (460,437)
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
Other income (expense):
     Gain from sales of securities.................................................     1,579,539             --
     Loan commitment fee...........................................................      (300,000)            --
     Interest income...............................................................        13,679         12,276
     Interest expense..............................................................       (94,200)      (505,128)
     Other, net....................................................................         1,047             --
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
          Total....................................................................     1,200,065       (492,852)
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
     Loss from continuing operations before income taxes...........................       (55,859)      (953,289)
     Provision for income taxes....................................................       (75,000)      (141,084)
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
Loss from continuing operations before discontinued operations.....................      (130,859)    (1,094,373)
Gain on sale of discontinued operations............................................       322,387             --
Loss from discontinued operations..................................................       (81,131)            --
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
          Net income (loss)........................................................   $   110,397    $(1,094,373)
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
Income (loss) per common share:
     From continuing operations....................................................   $      (.07)   $      (.36)
     From discontinued operations..................................................   $       .13             --
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
Net income (loss) per common share.................................................   $       .06    $      (.36)
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
 
Weighted average common and common equivalent shares outstanding...................     1,807,540      3,068,278
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
                                                                                      -----------    -----------
 
Primary and fully diluted income (loss) per common share are the same in fiscal years 1995 and 1996.
</TABLE>
    
 
                See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-11
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                       YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1995 AND 1996
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            CONVERTIBLE
                                          PREFERRED STOCK     COMMON STOCK     ADDITIONAL
                                          ---------------  ------------------    PAID-IN
                                          SHARES   AMOUNT   SHARES    AMOUNT     CAPITAL
                                          -------  ------  ---------  -------  -----------
<S>                                       <C>      <C>     <C>        <C>      <C>
Balance June 30, 1994                                      1,436,833  $14,368  $ 5,928,542
Effect of change in accounting
  principle..............................
Change in net unrealized gain on
  available-for-sale investments.........
Issuance of restricted shares for
  litigation settlement..................                     37,500      375      149,625
Issuance of restricted shares for merger
  with Alliance Media Corporation........                  1,025,000   10,250    2,734,750
Issuance of restricted shares as finder's
  fees...................................                     42,500      425      138,325
Private placement of shares -- cash......                    413,759    4,138    1,014,537
Shares issued upon exercise of stock
  options and warrants...................                     72,500      725      207,193
Discounts granted on exercise of
  options................................                                          127,875
Net income...............................
                                                           ---------  -------  -----------
 
Balance June 30, 1995....................                  3,028,092   30,281   10,300,847
Issuance of common shares as compensation
  to employees, directors and
  consultants............................                     95,442      954      218,974
Sale of shares (including 12,500 to
  related parties).......................                     75,000      750      119,250
Sale of Series A Convertible Preferred
  Stock..................................  10,000  $ 100                           686,669
Repurchase of Series A Convertible
  Preferred Stock........................ (10,000)  (100)                         (812,400)
Warrants issued with Series B and Series
  C Convertible Preferred Stock..........                                        2,672,522
Warrants issued to consultants...........                                           82,626
Accretion of Redeemable Convertible
  Preferred Stock........................                                          (94,968)
Net loss.................................
                                          -------  ------  ---------  -------  -----------
Balance June 30, 1996....................   --     $--     3,198,534  $31,985  $13,173,520
                                          -------  ------  ---------  -------  -----------
                                          -------  ------  ---------  -------  -----------
 
<CAPTION>
                                              NET
                                           UNREALIZED
                                            GAIN ON
                                           AVAILABLE-                  TREASURY STOCK
                                            FOR-SALE    ACCUMULATED  ------------------
                                          INVESTMENTS     DEFICIT    SHARES    AMOUNT      TOTALS
                                          ------------  -----------  -------  ---------  -----------
<S>                                       <C>           <C>          <C>      <C>        <C>
Balance June 30, 1994                                   $(5,141,524) (11,800) $(135,469) $   665,917
Effect of change in accounting
  principle.............................. $  1,579,539                                     1,579,539
Change in net unrealized gain on
  available-for-sale investments.........   (1,579,539)                                   (1,579,539)
Issuance of restricted shares for
  litigation settlement..................                                                    150,000
Issuance of restricted shares for merger
  with Alliance Media Corporation........                                                  2,745,000
Issuance of restricted shares as finder's
  fees...................................                                                    138,750
Private placement of shares -- cash......                                                  1,018,675
Shares issued upon exercise of stock
  options and warrants...................                                                    207,918
Discounts granted on exercise of
  options................................                                                    127,875
Net income...............................                   110,397                          110,397
                                          ------------   ----------- -------  ---------  -----------
Balance June 30, 1995....................      --        (5,031,127) (11,800)  (135,469)   5,164,532
Issuance of common shares as compensation
  to employees, directors and
  consultants............................                                                    219,928
Sale of shares (including 12,500 to
  related parties).......................                                                    120,000
Sale of Series A Convertible Preferred
  Stock..................................                                                    686,769
Repurchase of Series A Convertible
  Preferred Stock........................                                                   (812,500)
Warrants issued with Series B and Series
  C Convertible Preferred Stock..........                                                  2,672,522
Warrants issued to consultants...........                                                     82,626
Accretion of Redeemable Convertible
  Preferred Stock........................                                                    (94,968)
Net loss.................................                (1,094,373)                      (1,094,373)
                                          ------------  -----------  -------  ---------  -----------
Balance June 30, 1996.................... $    --       $(6,125,500) (11,800) $(135,469) $ 6,944,536
                                          ------------  -----------  -------  ---------  -----------
                                          ------------  -----------  -------  ---------  -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
                See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-12
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                       YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1995 AND 1996
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                        1995          1996
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
<S>                                                                                                  <C>           <C>
Operating activities:
     Net income (loss).............................................................................  $   110,397   $(1,094,373)
     Adjustments to reconcile loss to net cash used in operating activities:
          Gains from sales of securities...........................................................   (1,579,539)      --
          Gain on sale of discontinued operations..................................................     (322,387)      --
          Depreciation.............................................................................       52,348       139,881
          Amortization.............................................................................       65,101       361,537
          Loss on disposal of assets...............................................................       30,319       --
          Discount on exercise of options..........................................................      127,875       --
          Stock issuances to employees, directors and consultants..................................      --            193,677
          Warrant issuances to consultants.........................................................      --             82,626
          Accrued interest on redeemable convertible preferred stock...............................      --             17,490
     Changes in assets and liabilities net of effects from acquisition:
          Accounts receivable......................................................................     (377,631)     (613,771)
          Other current assets.....................................................................      (16,844)       38,710
          Other assets.............................................................................       20,519        (8,346)
          Trade accounts payable...................................................................     (147,360)      105,068
          Accrued expenses and other current liabilities...........................................        6,757       (21,674)
          Income taxes payable.....................................................................       55,000       (84,565)
          Discontinued operations, net.............................................................     (152,662)      --
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
          Net cash used in operating activities....................................................   (2,128,107)     (883,740)
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
Investing activities:
     Proceeds from sales of investments in securities..............................................    2,682,811       --
     Purchase of investment in securities..........................................................   (1,063,272)      --
     Proceeds from sale of discontinued operations.................................................      800,000       --
     Proceeds from sales of fixed assets...........................................................       11,000       --
     Acquisition of Alliance Media Corporation, net of cash acquired of $567,269...................      259,088       --
     Payments relating to acquisition of Alliance and SD&A.........................................      --           (477,704)
     Purchase of property and equipment............................................................      (43,905)      (94,772)
     Land development costs........................................................................      (10,526)      --
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
          Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities......................................    2,635,196      (572,476)
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
Financing activities:
     Repurchase of Series A Convertible Preferred Stock............................................      --           (812,500)
     Proceeds from issuances of common stock.......................................................    1,226,593       120,000
     Proceeds from issuances of Series B and Series C Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock
      and warrants.................................................................................      --          4,570,682
     Proceeds from land option.....................................................................      --            150,000
     Proceeds from bank loans......................................................................      --            500,000
     Repayments of bank loans......................................................................     (513,059)      (49,694)
     Proceeds from note payable other..............................................................    1,000,000       --
     Repayments of note payable other..............................................................   (1,072,000)      (72,000)
     Related party repayment.......................................................................     (350,000)   (2,775,000)
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
     Net cash provided by financing activities.....................................................      291,534     1,631,488
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents..........................................................      798,623       175,272
     Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year................................................      419,149     1,217,772
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year...........................................................  $ 1,217,772   $ 1,393,044
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
                                                                                                     -----------   -----------
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow data:
     Cash paid during the year for:
          Interest.................................................................................  $    60,422   $   455,276
          Financing charge.........................................................................  $   300,000       --
          Income taxes.............................................................................  $    15,000   $   155,025
</TABLE>
    
 
                See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-13
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
Supplemental Schedule of Non-cash Investing and Financing Activities:
 
          In  fiscal 1995,  the Company  purchased all  of the  capital stock of
     Alliance Media Corporation for 1,025,000  shares of common stock valued  at
     $2,745,000.  Additionally, 37,500 shares of common stock valued at $100,000
     were issued  as a  finder's  fee. Other  direct  costs of  the  acquisition
     totaled  approximately $500,000.  In conjunction with  the acquisition, net
     assets acquired and liabilities assumed,  less payments prior to year  end,
     were:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                               <C>
Working capital, other than cash...............................................   $   601,729
Property and equipment.........................................................      (326,320)
Costs in excess of net assets of companies acquired............................    (7,337,870)
Other assets...................................................................       (23,451)
Long-term debt.................................................................     4,500,000
Common stock issued............................................................     2,845,000
                                                                                  -----------
                                                                                  $   259,088
                                                                                  -----------
                                                                                  -----------
</TABLE>
 
          Five  thousand shares of common stock valued at $38,750 were issued as
     a commission on the sale of Sports-Tech International, Inc. during 1995.
 
          The Company issued 37,500 shares of common stock valued at $150,000 in
     fiscal 1995 in settlement  of a 1994 liability  for early termination of  a
     consulting agreement.
 
          In October, 1995, in accordance with the acquisition agreement between
     Alliance Media Corporation and the former owner of SD&A, the purchase price
     was increased by $85,699.
 
          In  October, 1995, the Company issued  6,250 shares of common stock in
     settlement of a liability of $26,250.
 
          In November,  1995,  a special  county  bond measure,  with  principal
     totaling $154,814, was assessed on the Company's land and was recorded as a
     land improvement, offset by a liability in accrued other expenses.
 
          In  April, 1996, the  Company issued 89,192 shares  of common stock in
     settlement of  liabilities  to  employees,  directors  and  consultants  of
     $193,678.
 
          During  the year ended  June 30, 1996, the  Company issued warrants to
     consultants valued at $82,626.
 
   
          Accrued and  unpaid  interest  on  shares  of  Redeemable  Convertible
     Preferred Stock during fiscal 1996 totaled $17,490.
    
 
          On  June 30,  1996, intangible assets  were increased  by $425,000 for
     accrued restricted common stock payable to  the former owner of SD&A as  an
     additional  payment  resulting  from  achievement  of  defined  results  of
     operations. See Note 3.
 
                See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
                                      F-14


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1. GENERAL
 
     All-Comm   Media  Corporation   (the  'Company')  was   formerly  known  as
Sports-Tech, Inc.  The  name  change  was  approved  at  a  Special  Meeting  of
Stockholders  held on August 22, 1995. On April 25, 1995, the Company, through a
wholly-owned subsidiary, was merged with Alliance Media Corporation ('Alliance')
and its wholly-owned subsidiary, Stephen  Dunn & Associates, Inc. ('SD&A').  The
shareholders  of  Alliance received  1,025,000  shares of  the  Company's common
stock, par  value $.01  per share  ('Common Stock').  Upon consummation  of  the
merger,  the  members of  the board  of directors  of the  Company ('Directors')
resigned and a  new board  was appointed.  Through SD&A,  the Company  currently
operates in one industry segment, providing telemarketing and telefundraising to
not-for-profit  arts and other  organizations principally in  the United States.
The Company's mission is to create a growth-oriented direct marketing and  media
services  company  through acquisitions  and internal  growth. The  Company also
owned approximately seven acres of  undeveloped land in Laughlin, Nevada,  which
was sold on August 16, 1996.
 
     Prior  to the merger with Alliance, the Company's principal activities were
the investigation  of  non-gaming  acquisitions. In  fiscal  1992,  the  Company
acquired  a 100%  interest in  Sports-Tech International,  Inc. ('STI'),  and in
fiscal 1993 acquired 100% of the  assets and certain liabilities of High  School
Gridiron  Report  ('HSGR'). STI  was  engaged in  the  development, acquisition,
integration and  sale  of advanced  computer  software, computer  equipment  and
computer  aided  video  systems used  by  sports programs  at  the professional,
collegiate and high school levels. HSGR provided academic and video data to  aid
in  pre-qualifying high school athletes to  colleges and universities. In fiscal
1995, the Company discontinued the operations of STI and HSGR.
 
     The Company  believes that  funds available  from operations  and from  the
August,  1996 sale of the Laughlin, Nevada  land will be adequate to finance its
current operations and  meet interest and  debt obligations in  its fiscal  year
ending  June  30,  1997.  Thereafter,  and  in  conjunction  with  the Company's
acquisition and growth strategy,  additional financing may  be required to  meet
potential acquisition payment requirements. The Company believes that it has the
ability  to raise funds  through private placements or  public offerings of debt
and/or equity securities to meet these requirements. There can be no  assurance,
however,  that such capital will be required or available at terms acceptable to
the Company, if at all.
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
Principles of Consolidation
 
     The consolidated financial statements include  the accounts of the  Company
and  its wholly-owned  subsidiaries, All-Comm Holdings,  Inc. (formerly Bullhead
Casino Corporation), All-Comm Acquisition Corporation (formerly BH Acquisitions,
Inc.), STI (sold during  fiscal year 1995), HSGR  (dissolved during fiscal  year
1996),  Alliance, SD&A  and BRST  Mining Company  (dissolved during  fiscal year
1996). STI and HSGR are presented as discontinued operations in the consolidated
financial statements. All  material intercompany accounts  and transactions  are
eliminated in consolidation.
 
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  reported amounts of assets  and liabilities at the
date of  the financial  statements  and the  reported  amounts of  revenues  and
expenses  during the reporting period. The estimates and assumptions made in the
preparation of the consolidated financial statements relate to the assessment of
the carrying value of assets and  liabilities. Actual results could differ  from
those estimates.
 
Cash and Cash Equivalents/Statement of Cash Flows
 
     Highly liquid investments with an original maturity of three months or less
are considered to be cash equivalents.
 
                                      F-15
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
Available-for-sale Investments
 
     Pursuant  to SFAS No. 115, 'Accounting  for Certain Investments in Debt and
Equity Securities,' the Company's marketable equity securities are accounted for
at market  value  (Note 15).  The  fair market  value  of short-  and  long-term
investments is determined based on quoted market prices for those investments.
 
Land Held for Sale
 
     The  cost of acquiring, improving and  planning the development of land was
capitalized. Costs related to development were written off when such plans  were
abandoned.  Interest  cost  was  capitalized  in  periods  in  which  activities
specifically related to  the development of  the land took  place. The land  was
valued  at lower of  cost or market. The  land was sold on  August 16, 1996. See
Note 6.
 
Property and Equipment
 
     Property and equipment is recorded  at cost less accumulated  depreciation.
Maintenance  and  repairs  are  expensed  as  incurred.  The  cost  and  related
accumulated depreciation  and amortization  of property  and equipment  sold  or
retired are removed from the accounts and resulting gains or losses are included
in   current  operations.  Depreciation  and  amortization  are  provided  on  a
straight-line basis over the useful lives of the assets involved, limited as  to
leasehold improvements by the term of the lease, as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                             <C>
Equipment.....................................  5 years
Furniture and fixtures........................  2 to 7 years
Computer equipment and software...............  3 to 5 years
Leasehold improvements........................  over the useful life of the assets or term of
                                                  the lease, whichever is shorter
</TABLE>
 
Intangible Assets
 
     Excess of cost over net assets acquired in connection with the Alliance and
SD&A  acquisitions are being amortized over the period of expected benefit of 40
years. Covenants not to compete  are stated at cost  and are amortized over  the
period  of expected  benefit of  five years.  For each  of its  investments, the
Company assesses the recoverability of  its goodwill by determining whether  the
amortization  of the goodwill  balance over its remaining  life can be recovered
through projected undiscounted future cash flows over the remaining amortization
period. If projected future cash  flows indicate that unamortized goodwill  will
not  be recovered, an adjustment  will be made to reduce  the net goodwill to an
amount consistent with projected future  cash flows discounted at the  Company's
incremental  borrowing  rate.  Cash  flow projections  are  based  on  trends of
historical performance and management's  estimate of future performance,  giving
consideration to existing and anticipated competitive and economic conditions.
 
Revenue Recognition
 
     Revenues represent fees earned by SD&A which are recorded when pledged cash
is  received  by SD&A's  clients  for on-site  campaigns  and when  services are
provided for off-site campaigns.
 
Income taxes
 
     Deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined based on the  difference
between  the financial statement  and tax basis of  assets and liabilities using
enacted tax rates and laws applicable to the years in which the differences  are
expected  to  reverse.  Valuation  allowances,  if  any,  are  established  when
necessary to reduce deferred tax assets to  the amount that is more likely  than
not to be realized. Income tax expense is the tax payable for the period and the
change during the period in deferred tax assets and liabilities.
 
                                      F-16
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
Concentration of Credit Risk
 
     Financial instruments that potentially subject the Company to concentration
of  credit  risk  consist  primarily of  temporary  cash  investments  and trade
receivables. The Company restricts investment  of temporary cash investments  to
financial   institutions  with  high  credit  standing.  Credit  risk  on  trade
receivables is minimized  as a result  of the  large and diverse  nature of  the
Company's customer base.
 
Earnings (Loss) Per Share
 
   
     Primary earnings (loss) per common and common equivalent share and earnings
per common and common equivalent share assuming full dilution are computed based
on  the weighted  average number of  common shares outstanding  and common share
equivalents attributable to the effects, if dilutive, of the assumed exercise of
outstanding stock options  and warrants,  and the conversion  of all  Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock.
    
 
Reclassifications
 
     Certain  prior year  items have been  reclassified to  conform with current
year presentation.  Certain  amounts  have been  reclassified  to  conform  with
industry standards.
 
3. ACQUISITION OF ALLIANCE AND SD&A
 
     On April 25, 1995, the Company, through a statutory merger, acquired all of
the  outstanding common shares of Alliance. The purchase price was approximately
$2,745,000, consisting  of issuance  of 1,025,000  shares of  restricted  Common
Stock to former stockholders of Alliance valued at $2.68 per share. These shares
have registration rights as of December 1, 1995. Direct costs of the acquisition
approximated  $500,000.  Pursuant to  the terms  of  the merger  agreement, upon
consummation of the merger the then current Directors resigned, and a new  board
consisting of six persons designated by Alliance was appointed.
 
     The  assets of Alliance acquired by the Company consisted primarily of: (i)
all the  issued and  outstanding  stock of  SD&A,  which Alliance  had  acquired
simultaneously  with the merger; (ii)  a five year covenant  not to compete with
the former owner  of SD&A; and  (iii) the  cash proceeds of  $1,509,750 (net  of
certain  payments, including  the payment of  $1.5 million made  pursuant to the
acquisition of SD&A) of  a private placement of  equity securities of  Alliance,
which  securities, upon consummation  of the merger,  were converted into Common
Stock. The purchase price  of SD&A paid  by Alliance was  $1.5 million in  cash,
plus  $4.5 million  in long-term obligations  yielding prime  rate, payable over
four years. Additional contingent payments of  up to $850,000 per year over  the
period  ending June 30, 1998 may be required based on the achievement of defined
results of operations of SD&A after its acquisition. At the Company's option, up
to one half of  the additional contingent payments  may be made with  restricted
Common Stock. These additional shares have demand registration rights commencing
in  September  1997.  Alliance  and  SD&A  entered  into  an  operating covenant
agreement relating to  the operations of  SD&A and Alliance  pledged all of  the
common  shares  of SD&A  acquired to  collateralize  its obligations  under that
agreement.
 
     These acquisition  terms  were  revised pursuant  to  the  Company  private
placement   financing  which  occurred  on  June  7,  1996  (see  'Stockholders'
Equity -- Preferred Stock') whereby  the long-term obligations were revised  and
approximately  $2.0 million was paid in June,  1996. The balance of $2.1 million
is payable in  36 monthly principal  payments of $58,333,  plus interest at  8%,
starting September 19, 1996.
 
     The  assets of SD&A acquired by Alliance (and therefore by the Company upon
consummation of the merger)  consisted primarily of  cash and cash  equivalents,
accounts receivable and furniture, fixtures and equipment.
 
     These  acquisitions  were  accounted  for using  the  purchase  method. The
purchase price was allocated  to assets acquired based  on their estimated  fair
value. This treatment initially resulted in
 
                                      F-17
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
approximately  $6.3 million  of costs  in excess  of net  assets required, after
recording a covenant not  to compete of approximately  $1.0 million. The  excess
was  increased by $850,000 on June 30, 1996,  $425,000 of which was paid in cash
in June 1996 and $425,000 of which is payable in 96,748 shares of Common  Stock,
due  to achievement of defined results of  operations of SD&A for the year ended
June 30,  1996. Such  excess,  which may  increase  for any  further  contingent
payments,  is  being amortized  over  the remainder  of  the expected  period of
benefit of 40 years.
 
     The  operating  results   of  these  acquisitions   are  included  in   the
consolidated  results of operations from the  date of acquisition. The following
summary, prepared on  a pro forma  basis, combines the  consolidated results  of
operations  as if Alliance and SD&A had been acquired as of the beginning of the
period presented, after including  the impact of  certain adjustments, such  as:
amortization  of intangibles,  increased interest  on the  acquisition debt, and
adjustment of officer salary for new contract.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           1995
                                                                        -----------
                                                                        (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                                     <C>
Revenues.............................................................   $15,013,000
Income (loss) from continuing operations.............................      (113,911)
Income (loss) from continuing operations per common share............        $(.04)
</TABLE>
 
     The unaudited pro forma information is provided for informational  purposes
only. It is based on historical information and is not necessarily indicative of
the  actual results that would have occurred nor is it necessarily indicative of
future results of operations of the combined entities.
 
4. DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS
 
     On December 7, 1994,  the Company entered into  a definitive agreement  for
the sale of the Company's subsidiary, STI. The proposed purchase price for STI's
operations was $1,100,000 of which $300,000 was paid as of the agreement date.
 
     By mutual agreement, the closing date was accelerated to March 8, 1995, and
the  purchase price reduced to $800,000, a reduction of $300,000 on the original
sales price, out  of which  $80,000 was  paid as  a commission  to STI's  former
president. The former president of STI also received $38,750 in Common Stock and
warrants  to  purchase  2,500 shares  of  Common  Stock at  $8.00  per  share in
connection with such  transaction. The Company  realized a gain  on the sale  of
$322,387.  No  tax  is  allocable  to  this  gain  due  to  net  operating  loss
carryforwards.
 
     Concurrent with the  closing of  the sale of  STI, all  operations of  HSGR
ceased  and  all  unrecoverable  assets  were  written  off,  which  amounted to
approximately $22,000. Accordingly,  STI and HSGR  are reported as  discontinued
operations at June 30, 1995, and the consolidated financial statements have been
reclassified  to report  separately the net  assets, operating  results, gain on
disposition and cash flows of these operations.
 
     Revenues of these discontinued operations for fiscal 1995 were $1,147,829.
 
5. PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment of continuing operations at June 30, 1996  consisted
of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                        <C>
Office furnishings and equipment........................................   $302,607
Leasehold improvements..................................................    169,771
                                                                           --------
                                                                            472,378
Less accumulated depreciation and amortization..........................   (173,333)
                                                                           --------
                                                                           $299,045
                                                                           --------
                                                                           --------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-18
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
6. LAND HELD FOR SALE
 
     The  Company, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, All-Comm Holdings, Inc.,
owned approximately seven acres of  undeveloped land in Laughlin, Nevada,  which
had a carrying value of $921,465 as of June 30, 1996. During fiscal 1996, a bond
measure  was passed by Clark County,  Nevada authorities, resulting in a special
assessment to  fund improvements  which would  benefit the  land. The  principal
balance  assessed to the Company totaled $154,814  plus interest at 6.4% and was
payable in  semi-annual  installments  over  twenty  years.  The  principal  was
capitalized by the Company in fiscal 1996. On August 16, 1996, the land was sold
to,  and  liability assumed  by, an  unaffiliated third  party, by  auction, for
$952,000 in cash, resulting in a net gain of approximately $90,000.
 
7. INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
     Intangible assets at June 30, 1996, consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                      <C>
Covenant not to compete...............................................   $1,000,000
Goodwill..............................................................    7,277,698
                                                                         ----------
                                                                          8,277,698
Less accumulated amortization.........................................     (426,638)
                                                                         ----------
                                                                         $7,851,060
                                                                         ----------
                                                                         ----------
</TABLE>
 
     Intangible assets increased during fiscal 1996 principally due to recording
of a contingent payment of $850,000 due  to the former owner of SD&A  subsequent
to  the achievement  of defined  results of operations  of SD&A  during the year
ended June 30, 1996.
 
8. SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS AND NOTE PAYABLE TO BANK
 
     During fiscal  1996,  SD&A's  $350,000  line of  credit  from  a  bank  was
increased  to  $500,000 and  was fully  used at  June 30,  1996. The  line bears
interest at  prime plus  1/2% (8.75%  at June  30, 1996),  is collateralized  by
substantially  all  of  SD&A's assets  and  is personally  guaranteed  by SD&A's
president. The  line  of  credit  also  contains  certain  financial  covenants,
including   current  ratio,  working  capital,   debt  and  net  worth,  capital
expenditure, and cash flow requirements.
 
     At June 30,  1995, SD&A had  a note payable  outstanding totaling  $49,694,
which  bore  interest at  the bank's  prime  rate plus  1.75%. The  note payable
required monthly principal repayments  of $6,529 plus interest  and was paid  in
full during 1996.
 
9. OTHER ACCRUED EXPENSES
 
     Accrued expenses at June 30, 1996 consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                        <C>
Accrued professional fees...............................................   $290,897
Other...................................................................    467,215
                                                                           --------
     Total..............................................................   $758,112
                                                                           --------
                                                                           --------
</TABLE>
 
10. LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS TO RELATED PARTY
 
     In  connection with  the acquisition  of SD&A  on April  25, 1995, Alliance
issued promissory  notes totaling  $4,500,000 to  SD&A's current  president  and
former  sole shareholder. The notes  bore interest at prime  rate, not to exceed
10% or drop  below 8%,  and were payable  monthly. Principal  payments were  due
quarterly,  and originally $1,500,000  was due in  quarterly installments during
fiscal 1996. All the outstanding common shares of SD&A were initially pledged to
collateralize these notes  but were released  in June 1996.  In connection  with
these  notes,  an operating  covenant  agreement included,  among  other things,
provisions requiring that SD&A have a minimum level of working capital and  cash
levels,  subject to periodic increases based  on sales, before dividend payments
could be  made  to the  parent  company. In  June  1996 the  operating  covenant
agreement was terminated.
 
                                      F-19
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     During 1996 the July 1, 1996 principal payment of $375,000 was made and the
long-term  obligations were restructured to defer principal payments due October
1, 1995, January  1, 1996 and  April 1, 1996,  until June 1996.  In June,  1996,
principal  payments of  $2,025,000 were  made and  the remaining  obligations of
$2,100,000 are now payable at $58,333  per month, plus interest at 8%,  starting
September 19, 1996.
 
11. EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS
 
     Subject to execution of definitive agreements, the Company has entered into
three-year  employment arrangements  with current  officers of  the Company. The
arrangements provide for annual base  salaries, base increases, cash and  option
bonuses  which  are  payable if  specified  management goals  are  achieved, and
certain  termination  benefits.  The  aggregate   liability  in  the  event   of
termination  by the Company without cause or  by the executives for 'good cause'
as defined in  such employment  agreements of these  employees is  approximately
$1,000,000 based on current salary levels.
 
     The Company also had employment contracts with certain members of the prior
management   of  the  Company.  In   fiscal  1995  severance  payments  totaling
approximately $60,000 were  fully paid under  the contracts. A  contract with  a
prior  key member of management  also required the issuance  of 25,000 shares of
Common Stock in exchange for a $200,000 non-recourse promissory note receivable.
The note receivable was due on November 1, 1994, along with accrued interest  at
10.5%  per annum. In  fiscal 1994, the  Company's Directors approved discounting
the interest receivable and  note receivable by one  third. The discount of  the
interest  receivable of $29,166  was charged against  operations and the $66,667
discount of the note receivable was charged to additional paid in capital.
 
12. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
 
Leases
 
     SD&A leases its corporate business premises from its former owner, who is a
current stockholder  and officer  of  the Company.  The lease  requires  monthly
rental  payments of $11,805  through January 1,  1999, with an  option to renew.
SD&A incurs all costs of insurance, maintenance and utilities. Also, the Company
leases  its  corporate  office  space,  copier,  phones  and  automobiles  under
long-term leases.
 
     Future  minimum rental commitments  under all non-cancelable  leases, as of
fiscal years ending June 30, are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                            <C>
1997........................................................   $  324,978
1998........................................................      310,968
1999........................................................      199,609
2000........................................................      130,858
2001........................................................      130,858
                                                               ----------
                                                               $1,097,271
                                                               ----------
                                                               ----------
</TABLE>
 
     Rent expense  for  continuing  operations  was  approximately  $89,000  and
$297,000  for fiscal years 1995 and 1996,  respectively. Total rent paid by SD&A
to its former owner  from the date  of acquisition to June  30, 1995 and  during
1996 was approximately $26,000 and $138,000, respectively.
 
Litigation
 
     Pursuant  to a  Settlement and Release  Agreement dated June  17, 1994 with
Membership Development, Inc. ('MDI'), a non-affiliated direct marketing  company
that  was providing marketing services to STI, in fiscal 1994 the Company issued
25,000  shares  of  STI  stock   valued  at  $250,000,  executed  an   unsecured
non-interest  bearing promissory note for $144,000  and in fiscal 1995 issued an
additional 37,500 shares of stock valued at $150,000. In May 1995, MDI exercised
its right to require  the Company to file  a registration statement  registering
these  securities for sale. A  registration statement was filed  but has not yet
been declared effective. The  entire $544,000 of  consideration was expensed  in
fiscal 1994 in discontinued operations.
 
                                      F-20
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     The Company is party to various routine legal proceedings incidental to its
business.  The outcomes of  these legal proceedings  are not expected  to have a
material adverse effect on the financial  condition or operation of the  Company
based on the Company's current understanding of the relevant facts and law.
 
   
13. REDEEMABLE CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK
    
   
    
 
   
     On  June  7,  1996,  the  Company  completed  the  private  placements with
accredited  investors  of  6,200  shares  of  Series  B  Redeemable  Convertible
Preferred  Stock, par value $.01 per share  (the 'Series B Preferred Stock') for
$3,100,000. In  addition, the  Company issued  warrants in  connection with  the
issuance  of the Series B  Preferred Stock for 3,100,000  shares of Common Stock
exercisable for three years at $2.50 per share. The Series B Preferred Stock  is
preferred  as to  the Company's  assets over  the Common  Stock in  the event of
liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Company, prior to distribution  of
assets  to  the  Company's common  stockholders.  The  holders of  the  Series B
Preferred Stock are entitled to their original investment, plus accrued,  unpaid
dividends  or, if  unavailable, a ratable  distribution of  existing assets. The
holders of Series B Preferred Stock  are entitled to receive a dividend  payable
only  on redemption  or credited against  conversion, which shall  accrue at the
rate of 6%  per annum.  The holders  of the Series  B Preferred  Stock have  the
right,  at any time prior to the second  anniversary of the date of issuance, to
convert, first,  the  outstanding  accrued  dividends, and  then  the  Series  B
Preferred  Stock, in whole or in  part.The outstanding accrued dividends on each
share of Series B Preferred Stock are convertible into that number of shares  of
Common  Stock equal to  the quotient of  the amount of  such outstanding accrued
dividends divided by the lesser of (i) $1.25 and (ii) 80% of the average of  the
closing bid price of the Common Stock during the five trading days prior to such
conversion.  Each share  of Series  B Preferred  Stock is  convertible into that
number of shares of  Common Stock equal  to the quotient of  $500, which is  the
redemption value per share of Series B Preferred Stock, divided by the lesser of
(i)  $1.25 and (ii)  80% of the average  of the closing bid  price of the Common
Stock during the five trading days prior to such conversion. If not  theretofore
converted,  the Series  B Preferred Stock  is automatically  deemed converted at
such price on the  second anniversary of  the date of  issuance, unless (i)  the
Common  Stock is not then trading on  NASDAQ or another U.S. securities exchange
or (ii) the Company  has not theretofore had  declared effective a  registration
statement  with  respect to  the Common  Stock issuable  upon conversion  of the
Series B Preferred Stock or the exercise of such warrants. See 'Shares  Eligible
for Future Sale -- Registration Rights -- Holders of Series Preferred Stock.' In
such  event, the Company is required to redeem the Series B Preferred Stock at a
redemption price payable in cash  equal to $500 per  share plus all accrued  and
unpaid dividends thereon.
    
 
   
     On  June  7,  1996,  the  Company  completed  the  private  placements with
accredited investors  of  $1,000,000  of  convertible  notes  and  warrants  for
3,000,000 shares of Common Stock. Subsequent to year end, the notes and warrants
were  rescinded retroactive to  June 7, 1996  and replaced with  2,000 shares of
Series C Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock,  par value $.01 per share  (the
'Series  C Preferred  Stock') for  $1,000,000. In  addition, the  Company issued
warrants in connection  with the issuance  of the Series  C Preferred Stock  for
3,000,000 shares of Common Stock exercisable at $3.00 per share for three years.
The  Series C Preferred Stock  is preferred as to  the Company's assets over the
Common Stock  in the  event of  liquidation, dissolution  or winding-up  of  the
Company,  prior to distribution of assets  to the Company's common stockholders.
The holders  of the  Series C  Preferred Stock  are entitled  to their  original
investment,  plus  accrued  unpaid  dividends  or,  if  unavailable,  a  ratable
distribution of existing assets. The holders of the Series C Preferred Stock are
entitled to receive a  dividend payable only on  redemption or credited  against
conversion,  which shall accrue at the rate of  8% per annum. The holders of the
Series C Preferred Stock have the right, at  any time prior to June 7, 1998,  to
convert,  first,  the  outstanding  accrued dividends,  and  then  the  Series C
Preferred Stock, in whole or in part. The outstanding accrued dividends on  each
share  of Series C Preferred Stock are convertible into that number of shares of
Common Stock equal  to the quotient  of the amount  of such outstanding  accrued
    
 
                                      F-21
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
dividends  divided  by  $6.00.  Each  share  of  Series  C  Preferred  Stock  is
convertible into that number of shares of Common Stock equal to the quotient  of
$500,  which is  the redemption  value per  share of  Series C  Preferred Stock,
divided by $6.00. If not theretofore converted, the Series C Preferred Stock  is
automatically  deemed converted at  such price on  June 7, 1998,  unless (i) the
Common Stock is not then listed on NASDAQ (or another U.S. securities  exchange)
or  (ii) the Company  has not theretofore had  declared effective a registration
statement with  respect to  the Common  Stock issuable  upon conversion  of  the
Series  C Preferred Stock or the exercise of such warrants. See 'Shares Eligible
for Future Sale -- Registration Rights -- Holders of Series C Preferred  Stock.'
In such event, the Company is required to redeem the Series C Preferred Stock at
a  redemption price payable in cash equal to $500 per share plus all accrued and
unpaid dividends  thereon. In  addition, if  the Company  has not  had  declared
effective  by October 7, 1996 such  registration statement, the dividend rate is
increased to  24% per  annum and  at the  option of  the holders  of the  Series
Preferred  Stock, the Series  C Preferred Stock  shall not be  redeemable by the
Company, and shall remain convertible and accrue dividends, until the earlier of
(x) the date designated  by such holders  and (y) the date  180 days after  such
registration statement is declared effective.
 
     The Company allocated the net proceeds received on the sales of each series
of  preferred  shares and  warrants based  on  the relative  fair values  of the
securities at the time of issuance.
 
   
14. STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
    
 
   
Preferred Stock
    
 
   
     On May  9,  1996, the  Company  completed  the private  placement  with  an
institutional investor of 10,000 shares of Series A Convertible Preferred Stock,
par value $.01 per share (the 'Series A Preferred Stock') for $750,000, $687,000
net  after offering  costs. The  Series A  Preferred Stock  was convertible into
shares of Common Stock at the lesser of the price paid divided by $2.50, or  80%
of  the average closing bid price of the  Common Stock for the five trading days
immediately  prior  to  the  conversion   date,  and  was  subject  to   certain
restrictions.
    
 
   
     In  connection with the  June 7, 1996 transactions  as described above, the
Company reacquired the 10,000  shares of Series A  Preferred Stock for  $800,000
plus fees of $12,500.
    
 
Common Stock
 
     The  Directors approved a one-for-four reverse stock split of the Company's
authorized and issued  Common Stock,  effective August 22,  1995. The  Directors
also  approved  reducing the  number  of authorized  shares  of Common  Stock to
6,250,000 with a  par value of  $.01 per  share, from the  25,000,000 shares  of
Common  Stock previously authorized. Accordingly, all  share and per share data,
as appropriate, reflect the effect of the reverse split.
 
     Effective August 1996, the number of authorized shares of Common Stock  was
increased from 6,250,000 to 36,250,000.
 
     During 1996, the Company issued 95,442 shares of restricted Common Stock as
compensation to various employees, Directors and consultants.
 
     In  March 1996, the  Company sold 75,000 shares  of restricted Common Stock
for $120,000 to four individuals, including 12,500 shares to related parties.
 
     In May 1995, the Company completed a private placement of 413,759 shares of
restricted Common  Stock, at  $2.68 per  share. These  shares have  registration
rights  as  of  December  1,  1995.  Net  proceeds  from  this  offering totaled
$1,018,675.
 
     As discussed in Note 3, in connection with the acquisition of Alliance  and
SD&A,  the Company  issued 1,025,000  restricted shares  of Common  Stock to the
former shareholders of Alliance. These shares have registration rights. Also  in
connection  with the acquisition, the Company issued 37,500 restricted shares of
Common Stock  valued at  $100,000  and warrants  to  purchase 43,077  shares  of
 
                                      F-22
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
Common  Stock  at exercise  prices  ranging from  $6.00  to $8.00  per  share to
investment banking  firms,  a shareholder,  a  director  and a  law  firm  which
represented  the Company. These warrants expire between April 25, 1998 and April
25, 2000.
 
     In connection with the  sale of STI, the  Company approved the issuance  to
its  former  president of  5,000  restricted shares  of  Common Stock  valued at
$38,750 and warrants  to purchase 2,500  shares of Common  Stock at an  exercise
price of $8.00 per share through April 25, 1995.
 
     On July 26, 1991, the Company sold warrants to purchase up to 62,500 shares
of Common Stock to a private investor for $250 in cash, exercisable at $6.00 per
share  through  July 31,  1996. This  investor was  subsequently elected  to the
Company's board  of directors.  On  January 31,  1994, this  Director  exercised
warrants to purchase 25,000 shares of Common Stock at $4.00 per share (which had
previously been reduced by the Directors from $6.00 to $4.00) by paying $100,000
to  the Company. On June 9, 1994,  this Director sold, in a private transaction,
18,750 of these warrants  to another stockholder of  the Company. In May,  1995,
the  Directors approved the  temporary reduction of the  exercise price of these
warrants from $6.00 to $2.68  and, on May 31,  1995, these 37,500 warrants  were
exercised for $100,500 in cash payments.
 
     As  of June 30, 1996, the Company has the following outstanding warrants to
purchase 6,370,577 shares of Common Stock:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            DATE          SHARES OF COMMON       EXERCISE PRICE PER
DATE ISSUED                              EXERCISABLE     STOCK UPON EXERCISE    SHARE OF COMMON STOCK
- ------------------------------------   ---------------   -------------------    ---------------------
<S>                                    <C>               <C>                    <C>
April 1995..........................   April 1995                33,750              $6.00 - $8.00
May 1995............................   May 1995                  11,827                  $6.00
October 1995........................   October 1995              30,000                  $2.50
January 1996........................   January 1996              32,500              $3.375 - 8.00
February 1996.......................   February 1996             15,000              $3.00 - 4.00
April 1996..........................   April 1996                22,500                  $1.60
May 1996............................   May 1996                 100,000                  $4.50
June 1996...........................   June 1996                 25,000                  $4.50
June 1996...........................   August 1996            6,100,000              $2.50 - $3.00
                                                         -------------------
     Total as of June 30, 1996........................        6,370,577
                                                         -------------------
                                                         -------------------
</TABLE>
 
     In addition, warrants for  150,000 shares at  exercise prices ranging  from
$2.50  to $3.50  per share, and  exercisable at  dates through May  2000, may be
purchased for a total of $7,500.
 
Stock Options
 
     In 1991, the Company adopted a non-qualified stock option plan (the  'Stock
Option Plan') for key employees, officers, directors and consultants to purchase
up to 250,000 shares of Common Stock. In November, 1995, the Directors increased
the number of available shares by 600,000. The Stock Option Plan is administered
by  the Directors, who  have the authority  to determine which  officers and key
employees of  the  Company will  be  granted  options to  acquire  Common  Stock
('Options'),  the exercise price of the Options  and the term of the Options. In
no event shall an Option expire more than 10 years after grant.
 
                                      F-23
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
     The following summarizes  the Option  transactions under  the Stock  Option
Plan for the two fiscal years ended June 30, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             NUMBER       OPTION PRICE
                                                                            OF SHARES       PER SHARE
                                                                            ---------    ---------------
<S>                                                                         <C>          <C>
Outstanding at June 30, 1994.............................................    107,892     $6.00 to $22.00
     Granted.............................................................      8,750     $5.24 to $7.00
     Exercised...........................................................    (22,500)    $2.68 to $5.24
     Canceled............................................................     (3,334)         $6.00
                                                                            ---------
Outstanding at June 30, 1995.............................................     90,808
     Granted.............................................................    525,003     $2.00 to $3.00
     Canceled............................................................    (91,004)    $6.00 to $22.00
                                                                            ---------
Outstanding at June 30, 1996.............................................    524,807
                                                                            ---------
                                                                            ---------
</TABLE>
 
     All the outstanding Options under the Stock Option Plan are exercisable and
expire  as  follows: fiscal  1998  -- 2,084,  fiscal  2000 --  5,000  and fiscal
2003 -- 517,723. All Options granted in  fiscal years 1995 and 1996 were  issued
at  fair market value. In  May, 1995, a $128,000 discount  was given to a former
Director of  the  Company to  exercise  18,750  Options and  was  recognized  as
compensation  expense.  At June  30, 1996,  179,504  Options were  available for
grant.
 
     In addition  to  the  Stock  Option Plan,  the  Company  has  other  option
agreements  with former officers, directors, employees and owners of an acquired
company.
 
     The following summarizes transactions outside the Stock Option Plan for the
two fiscal years ended June 30, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             NUMBER       OPTION PRICE
                                                                            OF SHARES       PER SHARE
                                                                            ---------    ---------------
<S>                                                                         <C>          <C>
Outstanding at June 30, 1994.............................................     73,791     $3.00 to $16.00
     Exercised...........................................................    (12,500)         $3.00
     Canceled............................................................    (28,875)    $6.00 to $16.00
                                                                            ---------
Outstanding at June 30, 1995.............................................     32,416
     Canceled............................................................    (30,166)    $4.50 to $6.00
                                                                            ---------
Outstanding at June 30, 1996.............................................      2,250
                                                                            ---------
                                                                            ---------
</TABLE>
 
     All the  outstanding Options  under these  agreements are  exercisable  and
expire  in  fiscal 1999.  A one-third  discount, totaling  $86,334 was  given to
non-affiliates when  36,083  Options were  exercised  in January  1994  and  was
recognized as compensation expense.
 
Common Stock in Treasury
 
     The  Company has purchased  26,800 shares of  its Common Stock  for a total
cost of $214,579  (or an average  of $8.00  per share). In  connection with  the
acquisition  of HSGR assets, 15,000 shares  were issued from the treasury stock.
The remaining treasury shares have  a total cost of  $135,469 (or an average  of
$11.48 per share).
 
                                      F-24
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
   
15. INCOME TAXES
    
 
     Income tax expense from continuing operations is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 YEARS ENDED JUNE 30,
                                                                                 ---------------------
                                                                                  1995          1996
                                                                                 -------      --------
<S>                                                                              <C>          <C>
Current:
     Federal..................................................................     --            --
     State and local..........................................................   $75,000      $141,084
Deferred......................................................................     --            --
                                                                                 -------      --------
          Total...............................................................   $75,000      $141,084
                                                                                 -------      --------
                                                                                 -------      --------
</TABLE>
 
     A  reconciliation of the federal statutory income tax rate to the effective
income tax rate based on pre-tax loss from continuing operations follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  1995          1996
                                                                                 -------       -------
<S>                                                                              <C>           <C>
Statutory rate................................................................     (34)%         (34)%
Increase (decrease) in tax rate resulting from:
     Loss limitations and valuation allowance.................................      34            34
     State income taxes.......................................................     134            15
                                                                                 -------       -------
     Effective rate...........................................................     134%           15%
                                                                                 -------       -------
                                                                                 -------       -------
</TABLE>
 
     Deferred tax assets and liabilities at June 30, are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 1995           1996
<S>                                                                              <C>          <C>
Deferred tax assets:
     Net operating loss carryforwards.........................................   $ 374,000    $ 691,100
     Amortization of intangibles..............................................     133,000      142,300
     Other....................................................................     158,800       95,900
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
Total deferred tax assets.....................................................     665,800      929,300
     Valuation allowance......................................................    (364,400)    (789,800)
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
Net deferred tax assets.......................................................     301,400      139,500
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
Deferred tax liabilities:
     Cash to accrual adjustment...............................................    (262,500)    (139,500)
     Other....................................................................     (38,900)      --
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
          Total deferred tax liabilities......................................    (301,400)    (139,500)
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
          Total deferred taxes, net...........................................   $  --        $  --
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
                                                                                 ---------    ---------
</TABLE>
 
     The Company has a net operating loss of approximately $2,032,000  available
which  expires  from 2008  through  2011. These  losses  can only  offset future
income.
 
     No income  taxes  are  allocable  to  the  gain  on  sale  of  discontinued
operations during 1995 due to utilization of net operating loss carryforwards.
 
   
16. GAINS FROM SALES OF SECURITIES
    
 
     In  July, 1994, the Company borrowed $1,000,000 to fund the exercise by the
Company of a  common stock purchase  warrant. The loan  was collateralized by  a
pledge  of such common  stock pursuant to  the terms of  a pledge agreement. The
parties to  the $1,000,000  loan included,  among others,  the Company's  former
chairman,  former  president,  a former  director  and a  stockholder,  who each
provided $200,000. The other lenders  were non-affiliates. The lenders  received
the  repayment of the $1,000,000  loan, interest at 7.75%  totaling $9,493 and a
$300,000 commitment fee from the proceeds of the subsequent sales of such common
stock. Effective July 1, 1994, the Company adopted SFAS No. 115, 'Accounting for
Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities.' In accordance with SFAS  No.
115,    the   Company's    marketable   equity    securities   were   considered
'available-for-sale' investments and were
 
                                      F-25
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
carried at  market value  with  the difference  between  cost and  market  value
recorded  as a component of stockholders' equity. The cost of available-for-sale
investments that were  sold was  based on specific  identification. The  Company
subsequently  sold all these  securities and recognized a  gain of $1,580,000 in
fiscal 1995.
 
   
17. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
    
 
     A former  Director of  the Company  is the  senior managing  director of  a
private   merchant  banking  firm,  which  was  paid  approximately  $5,700  for
investment advisory services in fiscal 1995. In connection with the  acquisition
of  Alliance, a finder's  fee totaling $100,000  was paid in  fiscal 1995 to the
merchant banking firm. In addition, the former director and the other  principal
owner  of the  merchant banking  firm each  received 9,375  restricted shares of
Common Stock valued at $2.67 per share and warrants to purchase 6,250 shares  of
Common Stock exercisable at $8.00 per share.
 
     On  June 9, 1994,  the Company borrowed $350,000  from the Company's former
chief executive officer and its former president and pledged its equity interest
in the Laughlin land  as security for  repayment of the loan.  The note was  due
July  31, 1995 with  interest at the rate  of 7.25% (the  Bank of America Nevada
prime rate at the time of execution). The promissory note and interest of $8,695
were repaid in advance on October 4, 1994.
 
     A former Director of the Company,  and another person serving as  assistant
secretary in 1993, were each partners in different law firms that provided legal
services  for which  the Company  recognized expenses  aggregating approximately
$31,000 in 1995.
 
     In April 1995, the  former chairman of the  Company purchased property  and
equipment  owned by the  Company with a cost  of $160,109 and  net book value of
$5,870 for a discounted appraised value of $11,000 in cash.
 
     See  Notes  3,  10,  11,  12,  13  and  15  for  additional  related  party
transactions.
 
   
18. NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
    
 
     Adoption of the Financial and Accounting Standards Board ('FASB') Statement
of  Financial Accounting No.  121, 'Accounting for  the Impairment of Long-Lived
Assets for  Long-Lived  Assets  to  be Disposed  of,'  which  is  effective  for
financial  statements for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1995, is not
anticipated to have a  material effect on  the Company's consolidated  financial
statements.
 
     The  FASB  recently  issued  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting  No. 123,
'Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation' ('SFAS  123'), which is effective  for
financial  statements for fiscal  years beginning after  December 15, 1995. SFAS
123 establishes new financial accounting and reporting standards for stock-based
compensation plans. Entities will  be allowed to  measure compensation cost  for
stock-based  compensation under SFAS 123 or  APB Opinion No. 25, 'Accounting for
Stock Issued to Employees.' The Company  has elected to continue the  accounting
treatment of such compensation pursuant to APB Opinion No. 25. However, starting
in  the first quarter of  fiscal 1997, the Company will  be required to make pro
forma disclosure of net income  and earnings per share  as if the provisions  of
SFAS 123 had been applied.
   
    
 
   
19. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
    
 
   
     Effective as of October 1, 1996, the Company acquired Metro Services Group,
Inc.  ('Metro') pursuant to a merger agreement.  In exchange for all of the then
outstanding shares of Metro, the Company  issued 1,814,000 shares of its  Common
Stock   valued  at  $7,256,000  and  promissory  notes  (the  'Notes')  totaling
$1,000,000. The Notes shall be due  and payable, together with interest  thereon
at  the rate of 6% per annum, on June 30, 1998, subject to earlier repayment, at
the option of the holder, upon completion by the Company of a public offering of
its equity securities. The Notes are  convertible on or before maturity, at  the
option  of the holder, into shares of Common Stock at a conversion rate of $5.38
per share. Metro develops and markets information-based services, used primarily
in direct marketing by a variety of commercial and not-for-profit organizations,
principally in the United States.
    
 
                                      F-26
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                  ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
 
   
     On October 17, 1996, the Company  filed a Form SB-2 registration  statement
(the  'Registration Statement') with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The
Registration  Statement  relates  to   an  underwritten  public  offering   (the
'Underwritten Offering') of 2,100,000 shares of Common Stock, of which 1,750,000
shares are being offered by the Company and 350,000 are being offered by certain
stockholders  of the Company.  It also relates  to the sale  of 1,381,056 shares
(the 'Delayed Shares')  of Common  Stock by  certain selling  stockholders on  a
delayed basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
none  of whom are  members of, or  affiliated with, the  Board or management. Of
such Delayed Shares, 1,291,588  shares will be subject  to 'lock up'  provisions
that prohibit resale of such shares for a period of nine months from the date of
consummation of the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
   
     In  connection  with the  Company's filing  on  Form SB-2,  the Convertible
Preferred Stock in the accompanying  financial statements has been  reclassified
in  accordance  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission's requirements.
Accordingly, the Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock is no longer presented a
part of stockholders' equity and its  initial carrying value is being  increased
to its redemption value by periodic accretions against paid in capital.
    
 
   
     The Company and certain of its securityholders have agreed, on December 23,
1996,  to effect a recapitalization of the Company's capital stock, whereby: (i)
the Company's Series B  Preferred Stock, will be  converted, in accordance  with
its terms without the payment of additional consideration, into 2,480,000 shares
of  the Company's common stock,  par value $.01 per  share (the 'Common Stock');
(ii) the Company's Series C Preferred Stock, will be repurchased for  promissory
notes  in an aggregate principal amount  of $1.0 million, which promissory notes
will bear interest at a rate of 8% per annum and will be repayable on demand  at
any  time from and after the date  of the consummation of an underwritten public
offering by the Company of Common Stock, but in any event such notes will mature
June 7, 1998; (iii) all accrued interest on the Series B Preferred Stock and the
Series C Preferred Stock  will be converted into  88,840 shares of Common  Stock
(assuming  conversion on December 23, 1996); (iv) warrants related to the Series
C Preferred Stock, currently exercisable  for 3,000,000 shares of Common  Stock,
will  be  exchanged for  600,000  shares of  Common  Stock; (v)  agreements with
certain of  the Company's  securityholders to  issue, upon  consummation of  the
Underwritten Offering, warrants exercisable for 1,038,503 shares of Common Stock
in   consideration  for  such  securityholders'  agreement  to  certain  lock-up
arrangements will be rescinded at no cost to the Company; and (vi) options  held
by  two of the Company's principal executive officers to purchase 300,000 shares
of  common   stock   will   be  cancelled  at  no  cost  to  the  Company.  Upon
conversion of the  Series B  Preferred  Stock and accumulated  interest  thereon
into  Common  Stock  on December  23,  1996,  the Company  incurred  a non-cash,
non-recurring dividend for the difference  between the conversion price and  the
market  price of the  Common Stock estimated  to be $8.5  million. This dividend
will  not  impact  net  income  (loss),  but  will  impact  net  income   (loss)
attributable to common stockholders in the calculation of earnings per share.
    
 
   
     In connection  with the  Underwritten Offering,  the Company  will incur  a
non-recurring  non-cash charge estimated to be  $75,000 in the fiscal quarter in
which the Underwritten Offering is consummated,  as a result of the issuance  by
the  Company of warrants exercisable for an aggregate of up to 160,414 shares of
Common Stock to  certain stockholders of  the Company as  consideration for  the
agreement of such stockholders to certain lock-up arrangements.
    
 
                                      F-27


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
To the Shareholders of
METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.:
 
     We  have audited  the accompanying balance  sheet of  Metro Services Group,
Inc. as  of  December  31,  1995, and  the  related  statements  of  operations,
shareholders'  equity (deficit), and cash flows for each of the two years in the
period  ended   December  31,   1995.  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 Metro Services Group, Inc.
at December 31, 1995, and the results of its operations, and its cash flows  for
each  of the two years in the period ended December 31, 1995, in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles.
 
                                          /s/ COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
New York, New York
August 29, 1996.
 
                                      F-28
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                                 BALANCE SHEETS
           AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                                          1995            1996
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                                       (UNAUDITED)
                                      ASSETS
<S>                                                                                   <C>             <C>
Current assets:
     Cash..........................................................................    $    7,918      $   349,446
     Accounts receivable billed, net of allowance of $82,118 and $39,700
      (unaudited), respectively....................................................     1,168,602        1,009,584
     Accounts receivable, unbilled.................................................     1,233,596          829,547
     Other.........................................................................         7,663           54,537
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total current assets.....................................................     2,417,779        2,243,114
     Due from shareholder..........................................................            --           50,000
     Fixed assets, net.............................................................        87,522          242,726
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total assets.............................................................    $2,505,301      $ 2,535,840
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
 
                  LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
Current liabilities:
     Accounts payable..............................................................    $2,142,688      $ 2,189,188
     Due to shareholders and other related parties, net............................        31,797           25,000
     Capital lease obligation, current.............................................                         59,258
     Sales and income taxes payable................................................        65,273            9,532
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total current liabilities................................................     2,239,758        2,282,978
Capital lease obligation, non-current..............................................                        112,837
Deferred rent......................................................................        30,583           34,146
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total liabilities........................................................     2,270,341        2,429,961
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
Commitments
Shareholders' equity (deficit):
     Common stock, no par value; 200 shares authorized, 100 shares issued and
      outstanding..................................................................         1,000            1,000
     Retained earnings.............................................................       233,960          104,879
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
          Total shareholders' equity...............................................       234,960          105,879
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
               Total liabilities and shareholders' equity (deficit)................    $2,505,301      $ 2,535,840
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
                                                                                      ------------    -------------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying Notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
 
                                      F-29
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
               FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 AND 1995 AND
         THE (UNAUDITED) NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                  DECEMBER 31,                SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                            ------------------------    --------------------------
                                                               1994          1995          1995           1996
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
                                                                                               (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                         <C>           <C>           <C>            <C>
Revenues.................................................   $5,914,079    $8,096,307    $ 5,713,514    $ 5,768,664
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
Operating expenses:
     Direct costs........................................    3,290,265     4,652,820      3,330,490      3,174,946
     Salaries and benefits...............................    1,672,496     1,792,203      1,314,522      1,567,365
     Selling, general and administrative.................      867,845       899,323        651,502        746,071
     Professional fees...................................      133,073       175,855        151,499        173,660
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
          Total operating expenses.......................    5,963,679     7,520,201      5,448,013      5,662,042
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
          Income (loss) before provision for income
            taxes........................................      (49,600)      576,106        265,501        106,622
Provision for income taxes...............................        7,072        35,490         15,930          5,280
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
          Net income (loss)..............................   $  (56,672)   $  540,616    $   249,571    $   101,342
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
Pro forma data (unaudited) (Note 10):
     Historical income (loss) before provision for income
       taxes.............................................   $  (49,600)   $  576,106    $   265,501        106,622
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
     Pro forma provision for income taxes................        7,072       224,681        103,545         33,314
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
     Pro forma net income (loss).........................   $  (56,672)   $  351,425    $   161,956    $    73,308
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
                                                            ----------    ----------    -----------    -----------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying Notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
 
                                      F-30
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                  STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
               FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 AND 1995 AND
              THE (UNAUDITED) NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           RETAINED
                                                                       COMMON STOCK        EARNINGS
                                                                     ----------------    (ACCUMULATED
                                                                     SHARES    AMOUNT      DEFICIT)         TOTAL
                                                                     ------    ------    -------------    ---------
<S>                                                                  <C>       <C>       <C>              <C>
Balance at January 1, 1994........................................     100     $1,000      $(249,984)     $(248,984)
     Net loss.....................................................      --        --         (56,672)       (56,672)
                                                                     ------    ------    -------------    ---------
Balance at December 31, 1994......................................     100     1,000        (306,656)      (305,656)
     Net income...................................................      --        --         540,616        540,616
                                                                     ------    ------    -------------    ---------
Balance at December 31, 1995......................................     100     1,000         233,960        234,960
     Dividends paid...............................................      --        --        (230,423)      (230,423)
     Net income...................................................      --        --         101,342        101,342
                                                                     ------    ------    -------------    ---------
Balance at September 30, 1996 (unaudited).........................     100     $1,000      $ 104,879      $ 105,879
                                                                     ------    ------    -------------    ---------
                                                                     ------    ------    -------------    ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The accompanying Notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
 
                                      F-31
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
               FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 AND 1995 AND
         THE (UNAUDITED) NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                    DECEMBER 31,               SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                               ----------------------    --------------------------
                                                                 1994         1995          1995           1996
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
                                                                                                (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                            <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net income (loss)......................................   $ (56,672)   $ 540,616     $ 249,571      $ 101,342
     Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash
       provided by operating activities:
          Provision for allowances..........................      32,414       56,342        53,063         65,551
          Depreciation......................................      63,263       59,436        44,578         49,015
          Deferred rent.....................................      10,833       19,750        14,813          3,563
          Changes in assets and liabilities:
               (Increase) decrease in accounts receivable...    (331,821)    (483,614)     (478,821)       497,516
               Increase in other assets.....................      (1,176)        (848)         (848)       (46,874)
               Increase in accounts payable.................     266,272       18,917       327,990         46,498
               Increase (decrease) in accrued expenses......      87,915     (219,952)     (219,952)             0
               (Decrease) increase in sales and income taxes
                 payable....................................     (17,425)      48,086        19,380        (55,741)
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
                    Net cash provided by operating
                      activities............................      53,603       38,733         9,774        660,870
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Purchase of fixed assets...............................     (78,344)     (42,704)      (17,475)       (22,938)
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
                    Net cash used in investing activities...     (78,344)     (42,704)      (17,475)       (22,938)
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Principal payments on capital lease obligation.........          --           --            --         (9,184)
     Repayment of related party loan........................          --           --            --         (6,797)
     Advance to shareholder.................................          --           --            --        (50,000)
     Dividends paid.........................................          --           --            --       (230,423)
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
                    Net cash used in financing activities...          --           --            --       (296,404)
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
                    Net (decrease) increase in cash.........     (24,741)      (3,971)       (7,701)       341,528
Cash, beginning of period...................................      36,630       11,889        11,889          7,918
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
Cash, end of period.........................................   $  11,889    $   7,918     $   4,188      $ 349,446
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
                                                               ---------    ---------    -----------    -----------
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
     Cash paid during the period for:
          Interest..........................................   $  14,070    $  24,405
          Income taxes......................................   $     665    $  13,054
</TABLE>
 
Supplemental Schedule of Non-cash Financing and Investment Activities:
 
          In July 1996, the Company acquired computer equipment, financed by the
     vendor, for $181,281.
 
    The accompanying Notes are an integral part of the financial statements.
 
                                      F-32


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    (INFORMATION PERTAINING TO SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 AND THE NINE MONTHS ENDED
                   SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996 IS UNAUDITED)
 
1. DESCRIPTION OF THE BUSINESS
 
     Metro  Services Group, Inc. ('Metro' or the 'Company') develops and markets
information-based services used primarily  in direct marketing  by a variety  of
commercial and not-for-profit organizations principally in the United States.
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
Revenue Recognition
 
   
     Metro  recognizes revenue when  its services have  been fully performed and
completed but  does not  bill for  such services,  in accordance  with  industry
practices,  until  all  services  relating  to  a  client's  campaign, including
services unrelated to  those provided  by Metro, have  been completed.  Unbilled
receivables  represent the  portion of revenue  recognized in  excess of revenue
billed in accordance with this practice.
    
 
Fixed Assets
 
     Fixed assets  are stated  at  cost. Computer  equipment and  furniture  and
fixtures  are depreciated  using the  straight-line method  over their estimated
useful lives of three to seven years.
 
     Expenditures for maintenance  and repairs, which  do not materially  extend
the useful lives of the assets, are charged to expense as incurred. The cost and
related  accumulated depreciation of assets retired or sold are removed from the
respective accounts, and any gain or loss is recognized in income.
 
Income Taxes
 
     The Company has elected to  be treated as an  S corporation for income  tax
reporting  purposes, which requires the Company's income or loss for federal and
certain  state  tax  jurisdictions  to   be  recognized  by  its   shareholders.
Consequently,  the Company provides for income taxes only in those jurisdictions
which do not recognize its S corporation status, mainly New York City. See  Note
11.
 
     The  Company recognizes deferred taxes by the asset and liability method of
accounting for  those jurisdictions  which do  not recognize  its S  corporation
status.  Under  the  asset  and  liability  method  deferred  income  taxes  are
recognized for  differences between  the financial  statement and  tax bases  of
assets and liabilities at enacted tax rates applicable to the years in which the
differences  are  expected to  reverse.  In addition,  valuation  allowances are
established when necessary to reduce deferred tax assets to the amounts expected
to be realized.
 
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  reported  amounts of  assets and  liabilities  and
disclosure  of contingent assets  and liabilities at the  dates of the financial
statements and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during  the
reporting periods. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
Recently Issued Pronouncements
 
     In  March 1995,  the Financial  Accounting Standards  Board ('FASB') issued
Statement of  Financial  Accounting  Standards  No.  121,  'Accounting  for  the
Impairment  of Long-Lived  Assets and for  Long-Lived Assets to  be Disposed of'
('SFAS 121').  SFAS 121  requires  that an  impairment  loss be  recognized  for
long-lived  assets and certain identifiable intangibles when the carrying amount
of these
 
                                      F-33
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
    (INFORMATION PERTAINING TO SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 AND THE NINE MONTHS ENDED
                   SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996 IS UNAUDITED)
 
assets may not be  recoverable. The Company believes  that the adoption of  SFAS
121  in fiscal 1996 will not have a  material impact on the Company's results of
operations or financial position.
 
3. FIXED ASSETS
 
     Fixed assets comprise
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        DECEMBER 31, 1995    SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                        -----------------       (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                     <C>                  <C>
Furniture and fixtures...............................       $  37,327             $ 49,180
Computer equipment...................................         273,463              465,829
                                                        -----------------    ------------------
     Total...........................................         310,790              515,009
Less: Accumulated depreciation.......................        (223,268)            (272,283)
                                                        -----------------    ------------------
                                                            $  87,522             $242,726
                                                        -----------------    ------------------
                                                        -----------------    ------------------
</TABLE>
 
     Depreciation expense for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and the
nine months ended  September 30,  1995 and  1996 was  $63,263, $59,436,  $44,578
(unaudited) and $49,015 (unaudited), respectively.
 
4. COMMITMENTS
 
Operating Lease
 
     Metro is obligated under a 10-year lease for office space. Rent expense for
the  years ended December 31, 1994 and  1995 and the nine months ended September
30, 1995  and 1996  amounted to  $108,365, $162,262,  $124,505 (unaudited),  and
$133,379 (unaudited), respectively.
 
     Modified  in June 1994, this  lease includes rent escalation  at the end of
the third, fourth  and eighth  years of  this lease.  At December  31, 1995  and
September  30, 1996,  Metro has  recorded deferred  rent expense  of $19,750 and
$3,563 (unaudited), respectively.
 
     Minimum annual  lease commitments  under the  terms of  the  noncancellable
operating leases are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
              YEAR ENDING
             DECEMBER 31,                 COMMITMENTS
- ---------------------------------------   -----------
<S>                                       <C>
   1996................................   $  155,250
   1997................................      164,000
   1998................................      164,000
   1999................................      164,000
   2000................................      167,708
   Thereafter..........................      269,958
                                          -----------
                                          $1,084,916
                                          -----------
                                          -----------
</TABLE>
 
Employment Contracts
 
     In 1993, Metro had entered into a contractual arrangement with a consultant
to  provide services  to the  Company. The  contract provides  for approximately
$11,000 per year in future minimum consulting compensation through 1997.
 
                                      F-34
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
    (INFORMATION PERTAINING TO SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 AND THE NINE MONTHS ENDED
                   SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996 IS UNAUDITED)
 
5. RELATED PARTIES
 
     In January 1990, a related party loaned $50,000 to the Company in the  form
of  a promissory note (the '1990 Note'). The loan is collateralized by a portion
of the Company's receivables. The  Note bears interest at  12% per annum and  is
due  in equal monthly installments on the  last day of each month. The principal
balance is payable at any time upon 30 days' written notice by either party.  In
1993,  the Company made a $25,000 advance to a party related to the owner of the
1990 Note, and in 1994,  recorded the advance as a  reduction of the 1990  Note.
Additionally,  in 1993, approximately $18,000 of Metro's expenses were paid by a
shareholder related to the owner of the 1990 Note, and, in 1994, this receivable
was applied against the 1990 Note to reduce its outstanding principal balance to
approximately $7,000 at December 31, 1995.  In 1996, the $7,000 (unaudited)  was
paid  in full. Interest expense  incurred and paid in  connection with this loan
for the years  ended December 31,  1994 and 1995,  was approximately $6,000  and
$4,000, respectively.
 
     In  December 1992, a minority shareholder  loaned $50,000 to the Company in
the form of a  promissory note. The loan  is collateralized by certain  accounts
receivable.  The note bears interest at 12% per year and is due in equal monthly
installments on the last day of each month. The principal balance is payable  at
any  time upon 30 day's written notice by either party. As of December 31, 1995,
the outstanding principal  balance relating  to the loan  was $25,000.  Interest
expense  incurred and paid relating to this note was $3,000 per year in 1994 and
1995.
 
6. MAJOR CUSTOMERS
 
     For the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995, sales to a single  customer
amounted to 12% and 10% of revenues, respectively. Accounts receivable from this
customer  at  December 31,  1995 and  September  30, 1996  totaled approximately
$470,000 and less  than $1,000,  respectively. Subsequent to  1995, the  Company
ceased  providing services to  this customer. However,  management believes that
there will not be an adverse effect  on the Company's financial position due  to
the loss of this customer.
 
7. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
 
     On  January 1, 1994, the Company  established a 401(k) retirement plan (the
'Metro Retirement  Plan')  for  certain  of  its  employees  to  make  qualified
contributions,   in  1%   increments,  limited   to  20%   of  the  contributing
participant's annual  compensation.  The  Company did  not  match  any  employee
contributions  in 1994 and 1995. Effective May  1, 1996, Metro amended the Metro
Retirement Plan to provide for  employer contributions to match  up to 2% of  an
employee's  contribution.  Employer  contributions  for  the  nine  months ended
September 30, 1996 was approximatey $12,000 (unaudited).
 
8. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
     In February  1996,  the  Company  declared  and  paid  a  dividend  to  its
shareholders  in the  aggregate amount of  $230,423. In May  1996, Metro entered
into  a  non-binding  letter  of  intent  to  be  acquired  by  All-Comm   Media
Corporation.
 
9. INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
 
     (a) Basis  of presentation  -- The  interim unaudited  financial statements
         reflect adjustments,  consisting  only of  normal  recurring  accruals,
         which  are, in the opinion of the Company's management, necessary for a
         fair presentation of the financial  position and results of  operations
         for  the  periods presented.  Revenues and  net  income (loss)  for any
         interim period are not necessarily indicative of the results for a full
         year.
 
     (b) In February 1996, a  shareholder of the  Company borrowed $50,000  from
         the Company.
 
                                      F-35
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                           METRO SERVICES GROUP, INC.
                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
    (INFORMATION PERTAINING TO SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 AND THE NINE MONTHS ENDED
                   SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1996 IS UNAUDITED)
 
     (c) The  Company is  contingently liable  for guarantees  of lease payments
         owed by a related party of approximately $28,000. The Company is of the
         opinion that such  related party will  be able to  perform its  payment
         obligations  in connection with such guaranteed lease payments and that
         no payments will  be required  and no losses  will be  incurred by  the
         Company under such guarantees.
 
     (d) In  July, 1996, the  Company purchased computer  equipment for $181,281
         under a capitalized lease obligation.
 
10. PRO FORMA DATA (UNAUDITED)
 
     The pro forma  financial information  is provided to  show the  significant
effects  on the historical financial information had the Company operated as a C
corporation. Historically,  the  Company  has  elected to  be  taxed  under  the
provisions of subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and
comparable provisions of state income tax laws.
 
                                      F-36


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
To the Shareholder of
STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
 
     We  have audited the balance sheet of Stephen Dunn & Associates, Inc. as of
December 31, 1994 and the related statements of income, shareholder's equity and
cash flows  for  the  year  then  ended.  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 audit.
 
     We conducted  our  audit 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 audit provides 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 Stephen Dunn & Associates,
Inc. as of  December 31, 1994  and the results  of its operations  and its  cash
flows  for the year then ended  in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
 
                                          /s/ COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
Los Angeles, California
June 2, 1995
 
                                      F-37
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                                 BALANCE SHEET
                            AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                    <C>
                                               ASSETS
Current assets:
     Cash...........................................................................................   $  164,910
     Accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts of $8,000............................    1,473,712
     Prepaid expenses and other current assets......................................................       58,818
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total current assets......................................................................    1,697,440
Property and equipment -- at cost, less accumulated depreciation of $702,842 -- Note 2..............      352,309
Deposits............................................................................................       23,452
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total assets..............................................................................   $2,073,201
                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                       ----------
 
                                LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
Current liabilities:
     Accounts payable...............................................................................   $  195,203
     Accrued wages and payroll taxes................................................................      262,586
     Accrued expenses and other current liabilities.................................................       70,956
     Current portion of long-term debt -- Note 5....................................................       78,353
     Income taxes payable...........................................................................       55,270
     Deferred income taxes -- Note 8................................................................       30,600
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total current liabilities.................................................................      692,968
                                                                                                       ----------
Long-term liabilities:
     Long-term debt, less current portion -- Note 5.................................................       10,517
     Other taxes and licenses -- Note 6.............................................................       72,000
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total long-term liabilities...............................................................       82,517
                                                                                                       ----------
Commitments and contingencies -- Notes 6 and 7
Shareholder's equity:
Common stock:
     Authorized -- 1,000 shares of no par common stock, issued and
       outstanding -- 400 shares....................................................................          400
     Retained earnings..............................................................................    1,464,839
     Loan receivable, shareholder...................................................................     (167,523)
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total shareholder's equity................................................................    1,297,716
                                                                                                       ----------
               Total liabilities and shareholder's equity...........................................   $2,073,201
                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                       ----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-38
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                              STATEMENT OF INCOME
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                   <C>
Revenues...........................................................................................   $13,595,763
                                                                                                      -----------
Salaries and benefits..............................................................................    10,344,131
Direct costs.......................................................................................       497,383
Selling, general and administrative................................................................     1,928,980
Professional fees..................................................................................        99,012
                                                                                                      -----------
          Total operating expenses.................................................................    12,869,506
                                                                                                      -----------
          Income from operations...................................................................       726,257
     Interest income...............................................................................         7,485
     Interest expense..............................................................................       (36,855)
                                                                                                      -----------
          Income before income taxes...............................................................       696,887
Provision for income taxes.........................................................................       (48,405)
                                                                                                      -----------
          Net income...............................................................................   $   648,482
                                                                                                      -----------
                                                                                                      -----------
     Pro forma data (unaudited) (Note 10):
     Historical income before income taxes.........................................................   $   696,887
     Pro forma provision for income taxes..........................................................      (271,786)
                                                                                                      -----------
          Pro forma net income.....................................................................   $   425,101
                                                                                                      -----------
                                                                                                      -----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-39
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                       STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               COMMON     RETAINED      LOANS TO
                                                               STOCK      EARNINGS     SHAREHOLDER       TOTAL
                                                               ------    ----------    -----------    -----------
<S>                                                            <C>       <C>           <C>            <C>
Balance, December 31, 1993..................................    $400     $  816,357     $  --         $   816,757
     Net income.............................................    --          648,482        --             648,482
     Loans to shareholder...................................    --           --         $(167,523)       (167,523)
                                                               ------    ----------    -----------    -----------
Balance, December 31, 1994..................................    $400     $1,464,839     $(167,523)    $ 1,297,716
                                                               ------    ----------    -----------    -----------
                                                               ------    ----------    -----------    -----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-40
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                      <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net income.......................................................................................   $648,482
     Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:
          Depreciation................................................................................    166,671
          Provision for doubtful accounts.............................................................      2,000
          Increase in:
               Accounts receivable....................................................................   (380,219)
               Prepaid expense and other current assets...............................................    (31,739)
          Increase (decrease) in:
               Accounts payable.......................................................................    114,740
               Accrued wages and payroll taxes........................................................     73,483
               Accrued expenses and other current liabilities.........................................      6,029
               Income taxes payable...................................................................     54,205
               Deferred income taxes..................................................................      2,300
               Other taxes and licenses...............................................................     (4,300)
                                                                                                         --------
                    Net cash provided by operating activities.........................................    651,652
                                                                                                         --------
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Purchase of equipment............................................................................    (84,444)
                                                                                                         --------
                    Net cash used in investing activities.............................................    (84,444)
                                                                                                         --------
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Payments to shareholder..........................................................................   (293,626)
     Loans to shareholder.............................................................................   (167,523)
     Repayment of notes payable.......................................................................    (78,353)
                                                                                                         --------
                    Net cash used in financing activities.............................................   (539,502)
                                                                                                         --------
                    Net increase in cash..............................................................     27,706
Cash at beginning of year.............................................................................    137,204
                                                                                                         --------
Cash at end of year...................................................................................   $164,910
                                                                                                         --------
                                                                                                         --------
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
     Cash paid during the year for:
          Interest....................................................................................   $ 37,050
          Income taxes................................................................................      4,065
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-41


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
     Stephen  Dunn & Associates, Inc. (the 'Company') provides telemarketing and
other services related to fund-raising campaigns for non-profit entities located
throughout the United States.
 
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  reported amounts of assets  and liabilities at  the
date  of  the financial  statements  and the  reported  amounts of  revenues and
expenses during the reporting period. The estimates and assumptions made in  the
preparation of the consolidated financial statements relate to the assessment of
the  carrying value of assets and  liabilities. Actual results could differ from
those estimates.
 
Recognition of Revenue
 
     Revenues from on-site campaigns are  earned when pledged cash is  received.
Revenues  from off-site  campaigns are earned  when the  Company's services have
been provided.
 
Property and Depreciation
 
     Property and equipment are reported at cost. Expenditures which improve  or
extend  the life  of the  asset are  capitalized, while  maintenance and repairs
which do  not appreciably  extend the  useful lives  of the  related assets  are
charged to expenses as incurred.
 
     Depreciation  is provided using the straight-line method over the estimated
useful lives of the assets.
 
Income Taxes
 
     The Company has elected to be taxed under the provision of Subchapter S  of
the  Internal Revenue Code  of 1986, as  amended, and as  a result the Company's
federal taxable  income  or loss  and  tax credits  are  passed through  to  the
individual  shareholder  --  see  Note  10. However,  the  Company  does  have a
liability for income taxes on its net income in prior years to the extent of the
built-in gain which existed  at the time  of the S  corporation election --  see
Note 6.
 
     Some  states either do not recognize  the Company's S corporation status or
require income taxes  at a  reduced rate. The  income tax  provision relates  to
income  taxes due on taxable income for those states plus deferred taxes related
primarily to the differences that exist between the financial statement and  the
tax  bases  of the  assets and  liabilities. These  differences are  primarily a
result of differences in depreciation methods and  the use of the cash basis  of
accounting for tax reporting.
 
Cash and Cash Equivalents
 
     For  purposes of  the Statement  of Cash  Flows, the  Company considers all
highly liquid investments purchased with a  maturity of three months or less  to
be cash equivalents.
 
                                      F-42
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
2. PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment consist of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                            <C>
Office furniture and equipment..............................   $  805,383
Automobile..................................................       26,581
Leasehold improvements......................................      223,187
                                                               ----------
                                                                1,055,151
Less accumulated depreciation...............................     (702,842)
                                                               ----------
                                                               $  352,309
                                                               ----------
                                                               ----------
</TABLE>
 
     Depreciation expense for the year ended December 31, 1994 was $166,671.
 
3. RELATED PARTY
 
     The  Company was indebted to its sole shareholder in the amount of $293,626
as of December 31, 1993. Interest was payable at 10%. This amount was repaid  in
1994.  The debt at December 31, 1993  included unpaid interest of $331. Interest
expense for the year ended December 31, 1994 was $9,799.
 
     The Company  advanced  funds to  its  sole  shareholder in  the  amount  of
$166,179 as of December 31, 1994. The advance accrues interest at 10% per annum,
does  not have  a specified maturity  date, and  is reflected as  a reduction in
Shareholder's Equity. At December 31, 1994 the advance included unpaid  interest
of $1,344. Interest income for the year ended December 31, 1994 was $1,344.
 
     The  Company leases its  corporate business premises  in Venice, California
from its sole shareholder  requiring monthly rental  payments of $9,905  through
January  1994 and $11,805 until the lease  term expires on January 1, 1999, with
an option for renewal at such time.  The Company incurs all costs of  insurance,
maintenance  and  utilities.  Total  rent  paid  by  the  Company  to  its  sole
shareholder for the year  ended December 31, 1994  was $139,754. Future  minimum
rental payments for this lease are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                              <C>
1995..........................................................   $141,654
1996..........................................................    141,654
1997..........................................................    141,654
1998..........................................................    141,654
                                                                 --------
                                                                 $566,616
                                                                 --------
                                                                 --------
</TABLE>
 
4. CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT RISK
 
     The   Company  maintains   cash  deposits  with   primarily  one  financial
institution amounting  to $254,051  at  December 31,  1994. These  deposits  are
insured for up to $100,000 by the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
 
     Concentrations of credit risk with respect to trade receivables are limited
due to the large number of customers comprising the Company's customer base, and
their  dispersion across many  different geographical regions  within the United
States. At December 31, 1994, the  Company had no significant concentrations  of
credit risk.
 
5. LONG-TERM DEBT
 
     During  the year ended December 31,  1993, the Company refinanced two loans
into a  single bank  loan.  The bank  note  payable requires  monthly  principal
payments  of $6,529  plus interest  based on the  bank's prime  rate of interest
(8.5% at December 31, 1994)  plus 1.75%. The note  matures on January 15,  1996.
The  note is collateralized by substantially all  of the Company's assets and is
guaranteed by the shareholder. The debt to the shareholder is subordinate to the
bank debt. The bank loan contains
 
                                      F-43
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
financial covenants including current ratio and working capital, debt/net worth,
capital expenditure limits and cash flows.
 
     Maturity of the bank note payable is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          YEAR ENDED
                         DECEMBER 31,
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                               <C>
   1995........................................................   $78,353
   1996........................................................    10,517
                                                                  -------
                                                                   88,870
   Less current maturities.....................................    78,353
                                                                  -------
                                                                  $10,517
                                                                  -------
                                                                  -------
</TABLE>
 
     The Company also  has available  an unsecured  $350,000 line  of credit  at
December 31, 1994. There were no borrowings from the line at December 31, 1994.
 
     Total  interest incurred  during the year  ended December 31,  1994 on bank
borrowings was $17,089.
 
6. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
 
     Effective October  1,  1990,  the Company  elected  to  be taxed  as  an  S
corporation.  As a result, the Company is  required to pay taxes on the built-in
gain which existed  when the  Company converted  from a  C corporation  to an  S
corporation. The Company estimates that the minimum tax on the built-in gain was
$25,500.  The actual  liability may  be higher if  goodwill for  tax purposes is
determined to  have existed  at October  1, 1990.  A provision  for the  minimum
expected  liability has been  made. Interest and penalties  of $15,045 have been
estimated and recorded at  December 31, 1994. Subsequent  to December 31,  1994,
the Company will be taxed as a C corporation -- see Note 9.
 
7. LEASE COMMITMENTS
 
     In  addition to leasing corporate office space (Note 3), the Company leases
office space  in  Berkeley, California,  requiring  monthly rental  payments  of
$9,135.  The lease term expired on October  22, 1994 and was extended to January
31, 1996 at $9,610 per month. There are no further options to renew this  lease.
Total rent paid by the Company for this location for the year ended December 31,
1994 was $110,570. Future minimum rental payments for this lease are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                              <C>
1995..........................................................   $115,320
1996..........................................................      9,610
                                                                 --------
                                                                 $124,930
                                                                 --------
                                                                 --------
</TABLE>
 
     The  Company also leases office space in New York, requiring monthly rental
payments of $550. Total rent paid by the Company for this location for the  year
ended December 31, 1994 was $6,600.
 
8. INCOME TAXES
 
     As  of December  31, 1994,  deferred state  tax liabilities  recognized for
taxable temporary differences totalled $30,600. There were no deferred state tax
assets or valuation allowances recognized as of December 31, 1994.
 
     The provision for state income taxes consists of the following components:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                               <C>
Current taxes..................................................   $46,105
Deferred taxes.................................................     2,300
                                                                  -------
                                                                  $48,405
                                                                  -------
                                                                  -------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-44
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                  NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- (CONTINUED)
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
     The Company has a capital loss carryforward of $10,000 available for offset
against future capital gains.
 
9. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
     On April 25, 1995, all of the  outstanding common stock of the Company  was
acquired   by  Alliance  Media  Corporation  ('Alliance')  and  subsequently  by
Sports-Tech, Inc. ('Sports-Tech')  upon consummation of  the merger between  STI
Merger  Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary  of Sports-Tech and Alliance. The
Company has consequently changed  its fiscal year-end from  December 31 to  June
30,  and  as a  result of  the acquisition,  the Company  will be  taxed as  a C
corporation.
 
10. PRO FORMA DATA (UNAUDITED)
 
     The pro forma  financial information  is provided to  show the  significant
effects  on the historical financial information had the Company operated as a C
corporation. Historically,  the  Company  has  elected to  be  taxed  under  the
provisions of Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and
comparable provisions of state income tax laws.
 
                                      F-45


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                                 BALANCE SHEET
                                 MARCH 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                    <C>
                                               ASSETS
Current assets:
     Cash...........................................................................................   $  445,897
     Accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts of $6,000............................    1,578,099
     Prepaid expenses and other current assets......................................................       70,636
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total current assets......................................................................    2,094,632
Property and equipment -- at cost, less accumulated depreciation of $744,504........................      317,958
Deposits............................................................................................       23,452
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total assets..............................................................................   $2,436,042
                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                       ----------
                                LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
Current liabilities:
     Accounts payable...............................................................................   $   30,745
     Accrued wages and payroll taxes................................................................      628,413
     Accrued expenses and other current liabilities.................................................      165,508
     Current portion of long-term debt..............................................................       78,353
     Income taxes payable...........................................................................       55,270
     Deferred income taxes..........................................................................       30,600
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total current liabilities.................................................................      988,889
Long-term liabilities:
     Long-term debt, less current portion...........................................................       90,929
     Other taxes and licenses.......................................................................       72,000
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total liabilities.........................................................................    1,151,818
                                                                                                       ----------
Commitments and contingencies
Shareholder's equity:
Common stock:
     Authorized -- 1,000 shares of no par common stock; issued and outstanding  -- 400 shares.......          400
     Retained earnings..............................................................................    1,450,003
     Loan receivable, shareholder...................................................................     (166,179)
                                                                                                       ----------
          Total shareholder's equity................................................................    1,284,224
                                                                                                       ----------
               Total liabilities and shareholder's equity...........................................   $2,436,042
                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                       ----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-46
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                   FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                    <C>
Revenues............................................................................................   $3,551,095
                                                                                                       ----------
Salaries and benefits...............................................................................    2,620,585
Direct costs........................................................................................      187,442
Selling, general and administrative.................................................................      666,322
Professional fees...................................................................................       89,418
                                                                                                       ----------
     Total operating expenses.......................................................................    3,563,767
                                                                                                       ----------
Loss from operations................................................................................      (12,672)
Interest expense....................................................................................       (2,164)
                                                                                                       ----------
Loss before income taxes............................................................................      (14,836)
Provision for income taxes..........................................................................            0
                                                                                                       ----------
Net loss............................................................................................   $  (14,836)
                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                       ----------
Pro forma data (Note 10):
Historical loss before income taxes.................................................................   $  (14,836)
Pro forma benefit for income taxes..................................................................        5,786
                                                                                                       ----------
Pro forma net loss..................................................................................   $   (9,050)
                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                       ----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-47
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                       STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDER'S EQUITY
                   FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               COMMON     RETAINED       LOANS TO
                                                               STOCK      EARNINGS      SHAREHOLDER      TOTAL
                                                               ------    -----------    -----------    ----------
<S>                                                            <C>       <C>            <C>            <C>
Balance, December 31, 1994..................................    $400     $ 1,464,839     $(167,523)    $1,297,716
Net loss....................................................    --           (14,836)       --            (14,836)
Payments by shareholder.....................................    --           --              1,344          1,344
                                                               ------    -----------    -----------    ----------
Balance, March 31, 1995.....................................    $400     $ 1,450,003     $(166,179)    $1,284,224
                                                               ------    -----------    -----------    ----------
                                                               ------    -----------    -----------    ----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-48
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                   FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                      <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
     Net loss.........................................................................................   $(14,836)
     Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:
          Depreciation................................................................................     41,952
     Increase in:
          Accounts receivable.........................................................................   (104,387)
          Prepaid expenses and other current assets...................................................    (11,818)
     Increase (decrease) in:
          Accounts payable............................................................................   (164,458)
          Accrued wages and payroll taxes.............................................................    365,827
          Accrued expenses and other current liabilities..............................................     94,552
                                                                                                         --------
               Net cash provided by operating activities..............................................    206,832
                                                                                                         --------
Cash flows from investing activities:
     Purchase of equipment............................................................................     (7,601)
     Payments by shareholder..........................................................................      1,344
                                                                                                         --------
               Net cash used in investing activities..................................................     (6,257)
                                                                                                         --------
Cash flows from financing activities:
     Borrowings on bank line of credit................................................................    100,000
     Payments on bank line of credit..................................................................    (19,588)
                                                                                                         --------
               Net cash provided by financing activities..............................................     80,412
                                                                                                         --------
Net increase in cash..................................................................................    280,987
Cash at beginning of period...........................................................................    164,910
                                                                                                         --------
Cash at end of period.................................................................................   $445,897
                                                                                                         --------
                                                                                                         --------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying Notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-49
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                        STEPHEN DUNN & ASSOCIATES, INC.
                     NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                   FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 1995
                                  (UNAUDITED)
 
1. GENERAL
 
     The  interim financial statements included  herein were prepared by Stephen
Dunn & Associates, Inc. (the  'Company') without audit. Certain information  and
footnote  disclosures  normally  included in  financial  statements  prepared in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles have been condensed  or
omitted.  The Company  believes that  the disclosures  are adequate  to make the
information presented not misleading.  The interim financial statements  reflect
all  adjustments that are, in the opinion  of management, necessary for the fair
presentation of the results  for the interim  period presented. All  adjustments
are  of a recurring nature. These interim financial statements should be read in
conjunction with the financial statements of the Company as of December 31, 1994
and the Notes thereto.
 
2. SUBSEQUENT EVENT
 
     On April 25, 1995, all of the  outstanding common stock of the Company  was
acquired   by  Alliance  Media  Corporation  ('Alliance')  and  subsequently  by
Sports-Tech, Inc. ('Sports-Tech')  upon consummation of  the merger between  STI
Merger  Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary  of Sports-Tech and Alliance. The
Company has consequently changed its fiscal year-end from December 31 to June 30
and, as  a  result  of the  acquisition,  the  Company  will be  taxed  as  a  C
corporation.
 
3. PRO FORMA DATA
 
     The  pro forma  financial information is  provided to  show the significant
effects on the historical financial information had the Company operated as a  C
corporation.  Historically,  the  Company  has elected  to  be  taxed  under the
provisions of Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and
comparable provisions of state income tax laws.
 
                                      F-50


<PAGE>

<PAGE>


                           [Artwork for Inside Back Cover]


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
_______________________________                  _______________________________
 
   
     NO  UNDERWRITER, DEALER,  SALESMAN OR OTHER  PERSON HAS  BEEN AUTHORIZED TO
GIVE ANY INFORMATION  OR TO  MAKE ANY  REPRESENTATIONS IN  CONNECTION WITH  THIS
UNDERWRITTEN  OFFERING, OTHER THAN  THOSE CONTAINED IN  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 UNDERWRITERS. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES
NOT CONSTITUTE AN  OFFER TO  SELL, OR  A SOLICITATION OF  AN OFFER  TO BUY,  ANY
SECURITIES  OFFERED HEREBY 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. NEITHER THE DELIVERY OF THIS PROSPECTUS NOR ANY
SALE MADE HEREUNDER SHALL, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, CREATE ANY IMPLICATION  THAT
THE  INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN  IS CORRECT AS  OF ANY TIME  SUBSEQUENT TO THE
DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS.
    
 
                            ------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  PAGE
                                                  ----
<S>                                               <C>
Prospectus Summary.............................     4
Risk Factors...................................    10
Use of Proceeds................................    19
Price Range of Common Stock....................    20
Dividend Policy................................    20
Capitalization.................................    21
Dilution.......................................    22
Pro Forma Condensed Combined Financial
  Information..................................    23
Selected Financial Data........................    28
Management's Discussion and Analysis of
  Financial Condition and Results of
  Operations...................................    30
Business.......................................    39
Management.....................................    49
Principal and Selling Stockholders.............    60
The Recapitalization...........................    63
Certain Transactions...........................    64
Description of Capital Stock...................    67
Shares Eligible for Future Sale................    71
Underwriting...................................    78
Validity of Shares.............................    79
Experts........................................    79
Available Information..........................    79
Index to Financial Statements..................   F-1
</TABLE>
    
 
 
   
                                2,100,000 SHARES
    
                                     [LOGO]
 
                                 ALL-COMM MEDIA
                                  CORPORATION
                                  COMMON STOCK
 
   
                           -------------------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                           -------------------------
    
 
                                     [LOGO]
 
                                     [LOGO]
 
   
                                JANUARY   , 1997
    
 
_______________________________                  _______________________________






<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
PROSPECTUS
 
   
                                                                          [LOGO]

                                1,381,056 SHARES
                           ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
    
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
 
   
     This  Prospectus  relates  to  an  offering  (the  'Delayed  Offering')  of
1,381,056 shares  (the 'Delayed  Stock') of  common stock,  par value  $.01  per
shares  ('Common  Stock'), of  All-Comm  Media Corporation  (the  'Company'), by
certain stockholders of  the Company (the  'Delayed Selling Stockholders').  The
shares  of Common Stock offered by this Prospectus may be sold from time to time
by the Delayed Selling Stockholders,  provided a current registration  statement
with  respect to  such securities is  then in effect  commencing on January    ,
1997. See 'Delayed Selling Stockholders and Plan of Distribution.' Of the shares
offered hereby, 1,291,588  shares are subject  to certain lock-up  arrangements.
See  'Shares Eligible for Future Sale -- Registration Rights and Certain Lock-Up
Arrangements.' Concurrently, 2,100,000 shares of Common Stock are being  offered
(the 'Underwritten Offering') by the Company and certain selling stockholders of
the Company (the 'Selling Stockholders') in an underwritten public offering, and
up  to an  additional 315,000 shares  of Common  Stock are being  offered by the
Company and certain  selling stockholders  of the  Company (the  'Over-Allotment
Selling  Stockholders') to cover over-allotments,  if any. See 'The Underwritten
Offering.'
    
 
   
     The distribution  of the  shares  of Common  Stock  offered hereby  by  the
Delayed  Selling Stockholders may  be effected in one  or more transactions that
may take  place  on the  over-the-counter  market, including  ordinary  broker's
transactions,  privately negotiated transactions or through sales to one or more
dealers for resale of such securities as principals, at market prices prevailing
at the time of sale,  at prices related to such  prevailing market prices or  at
negotiated prices. Usual and customary or specifically negotiated brokerage fees
or  commissions may  be paid  by the  Delayed Selling  Stockholders. The Selling
Stockholders and intermediaries  through whom  such securities are  sold may  be
deemed  'underwriters'  within the  meaning of  the Securities  Act of  1933, as
amended, with respect  to the securities  offered, and any  profits realized  or
commissions received may be deemed underwriting compensation.
    
 
     The  Company will  not receive  any of  the proceeds  from the  sale of the
Common Stock  by the  Delayed  Selling Stockholders.  Substantially all  of  the
expenses  in connection with the registration of  the Common Stock will be borne
by  the  Company,  except  for  any  underwriters',  brokers'  and/or   dealers'
commissions  and/or  discounts. See  'Delayed Selling  Stockholders and  Plan of
Distribution.'
 
     The Common Stock is traded on The Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM under the symbol
'ALCM.' On  December 20,  1996, the  last sale  price of  the Common  Stock,  as
reported by The Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM, was $      per share. See 'Price Range
of Common Stock.'
 
   
     SEE  'RISK  FACTORS'  BEGINNING ON  PAGE  10  FOR A  DISCUSSION  OF CERTAIN
MATERIAL FACTORS  THAT SHOULD  BE CONSIDERED  BY PROSPECTIVE  PURCHASERS OF  THE
COMMON STOCK OFFERED HEREBY.
    
                            ------------------------
 
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.
 
   
          THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS                       , 1997
    


                                      Alt-1

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
   
                                  THE OFFERING
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                               <C>
Common Stock Offered Hereby.....................  1,381,056 shares(1)(3)
Common Stock to be Outstanding Following the
  Underwritten Offering.........................  10,008,108 shares(1)(2)(3)(4)
Use of Proceeds.................................  The Company will not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of the
                                                  Common  Stock offered hereby. The  net proceeds from the Underwritten
                                                  Offering will  be  used  by the  Company  for  capital  expenditures,
                                                  repayment  of certain outstanding  indebtedness and general corporate
                                                  purposes,  including  possible  future  acquisitions.  See  'Use   of
                                                  Proceeds.'
Dividend Policy.................................  The Company intends to retain future earnings, if any, to finance the
                                                  growth  and  development  of  its  business  and  therefore  does not
                                                  anticipate  paying  cash  dividends  on  the  Common  Stock  in   the
                                                  foreseeable future. See 'Dividend Policy.'
The Nasdaq SmallCap Market'SM' Symbol...........  ALCM
Risk Factors....................................  See  'Risk Factors' beginning on page  10 for a discussion of certain
                                                  material factors that should be considered by prospective  purchasers
                                                  of the Common Stock.
</TABLE>
    
 
   
- ------------
    
 
   
(1) The Company previously entered into contractual arrangements with certain of
    its  stockholders, including  the Delayed  Selling Stockholders,  whereby it
    agreed to register certain securities owned by such stockholders for  resale
    under   the  Securities  Act.  As  a   result  of  negotiations  with  these
    stockholders, the Company has agreed  to satisfy certain of its  obligations
    by registering these shares of Common Stock on behalf of the Delayed Selling
    Stockholders.
    
 
   
(2) Does  not include 5,080,927 shares of  Common Stock issuable upon conversion
    or exercise of certain securities  or other contractual rights, as  follows:
    (i)  warrants issued  to the  holders of  the Company's  Series B Redeemable
    Convertible Preferred  Stock,  par  value  $.01 per  share  (the  'Series  B
    Preferred  Stock')  currently  exercisable for  3,100,000  shares  of Common
    Stock; (ii)  warrants to  be isssued  to Cruttenden  Roth Incorporated  (the
    'Lead  Representative') and LT Lawrence &  Co., Inc. (together with the Lead
    Representative, the 'Representatives'),  each in  their individual  capacity
    and  not as representative of  the several underwriters (the 'Underwriters')
    in the  Underwritten  Offering, exercisable  for  210,000 shares  of  Common
    Stock;  (iii) warrants  to be issued  upon consummation  of the Underwritten
    Offering to certain stockholders of  the Company as consideration for  their
    agreement  to certain lock-up arrangements,  exercisable for an aggregate of
    up to 160,414 shares of Common Stock,  depending on the extent to which  the
    Underwriters' over-allotment options are exercised, if at all -- see 'Shares
    Eligible  for Future Sale;' (vi) all other outstanding options, warrants and
    other contractual rights, which are  currently exercisable for an  aggregate
    of  1,245,135 shares of Common Stock; (v) the promissory notes issued to the
    former shareholders  of  Metro,  which are  currently  convertible  into  an
    aggregate  of 185,874 shares of Common  Stock -- see 'Certain Transactions;'
    and (vi) 179,504 shares  of Common Stock reserved  for issuance but not  yet
    issued  under the Company's 1991 Stock Option Plan. See 'Management -- Stock
    Option Plan' and 'Description of  Capital Stock.' Although no assurance  can
    be  given that any  of the foregoing options,  warrants or other contractual
    rights will  be  exercised, if  all  of  such options,  warrants  and  other
    contractual  rights having exercise prices at  or below the assumed price to
    public of $5  per shares in  the Underwritten Offering  were exercised,  the
    aggregate proceeds to the Company resulting therefrom would be approximately
    $ 11.5 million. The Company expects that it would use such proceeds, if any,
    for general corporate purposes, including possible future acquisitions.
    
 
   
(3) An  additional 2,100,000  shares of  Common Stock  are being  offered by the
    Company and the  Selling Stockholders  and up  to 315,000  shares of  Common
    Stock  are  being  offered by  the  Company and  the  Over-Allotment Selling
    Stockholders to cover over-allotments, if any, in the Underwritten Offering,
    none of  which  315,000  shares are  included  in  the Common  Stock  to  be
    outstanding following the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
   
(4) Includes  3,168,840 shares  of Common  Stock issued  in connection  with the
    Recapitalization. See 'The Recapitalization.'
    


                                      Alt-2


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
   
                           THE UNDERWRITTEN OFFERING
    
 
   
     On  the date of  this Prospectus, a registration  statement filed under the
Securities Act with respect to 2,100,000 shares of Common Stock being offered by
the Company and the Selling Stockholders in the Underwritten Offering, and up to
an additional 315,000 shares  of Common Stock being  offered by the Company  and
the  Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders  to cover over-allotments,  if any, was
declared effective by the Securities  and Exchange Commission. The Company  will
receive  net proceeds of  $                   from the  sale of 1,750,000 shares
included in the Underwritten Offering and the Selling Stockholders will  receive
net  proceeds of $               from the sale of 350,000 shares included in the
Underwritten Offering.  The  Company will  receive  additional net  proceeds  of
approximately  $                and the Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders will
receive net proceeds of  approximately $                   if the  Underwriters'
over-allotment options are exercised in full. All of such net proceeds are after
the  payment of underwriting discounts and commissions and estimated expenses of
the Underwritten Offering and the Delayed  Offering. Sales of securities by  the
Company,  the Selling Stockholders and  the Over-Allotment Selling Stockholders,
or even the potential of such sales, would likely have an adverse effect on  the
market  price of  the Common  Stock. See  'Risk Factors  Shares --  Eligible for
Future Sale.'
    
 
                                     Alt-3


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
   
     The net proceeds to the Company from the sale of 1,750,000 shares of Common
Stock offered by the  Company in the Underwritten  Offering are estimated to  be
$7.3  million based  on an assumed  initial price to  public of $5  per share of
Common  Stock,  after  deducting  underwriting  discounts  and  commissions  and
estimated  offering expenses. The  Company will not receive  any of the proceeds
from the sale of Common Stock by the Delayed Selling Stockholders hereby, or  by
the  Selling  Stockholders or  the  Over-Allotment Selling  Stockholders  in the
Underwritten Offering.
    
 
   
     Of such net  proceeds to the  Company, approximately $4.0  million will  be
applied to expand the Company's business by investing approximately $2.3 million
for   technology  (including   computer  systems,   software  and  telemarketing
equipment),  approximately  $1.2  million  for  technical  support,  sales   and
marketing personnel and approximately $0.5 million for advertising and promotion
of  the  Company's services.  In addition,  approximately  $1.0 million  of such
proceeds will  be used  to repay  the promissory  notes (the  'Series C  Notes')
issued  to  the  former  holders  of the  Series  C  Preferred  Stock  issued in
connection with  the repurchase  thereof  as part  of the  Recapitalization  and
approximately  $1.0  million will  be used  to repay  the promissory  notes (the
'Metro Notes') issued to the former shareholders of Metro in connection with the
Company's acquisition of Metro. The  Metro Notes bear interest  at a rate of  6%
per annum, mature June 30, 1998 and are convertible at the option of the holders
thereof  into 185,174  shares of  Common Stock, based  on a  conversion price of
$5.38 per share. The Series C Notes bear interest at a rate of 8% per annum  and
are  payable  on  demand  from  and  after  the  date  of  consummation  of  the
Underwritten Offering  (or  any other  underwritten  public offering  of  Common
Stock), and in any event mature June 7, 1998. To the extent the Company does not
use  all or any portion of the $2.0  million to repay the Metro Notes and/or the
Series C Notes, such proceeds will  be used to augment general working  capital,
including,  without limitation, for marketing of  the Company's services and new
business development on behalf of SD&A and  Metro. The balance will be used  for
general  corporate  purposes,  including possible  future  acquisitions. Pending
their application,  the net  proceeds to  be received  by the  Company from  the
Underwritten Offering will be invested in short-term, investment-grade, interest
bearing  securities. The foregoing represents the Company's best estimate of the
allocation of the  net proceeds  from the Underwritten  Offering. Future  events
such  as changes in economic or competitive conditions may result in the Company
re-allocating such proceeds.  In addition, there  can be no  assurance that  the
Company's  estimates will prove to be  accurate or that unforeseen expenses will
occur.
    
 
   
     In addition,  up to  5,080,927 shares  of Common  Stock are  issuable  upon
conversion  or exercise  of certain  securities or  other contractual  rights as
described in footnote (2) to 'Prospectus  Summary -- The Offering.' Although  no
assurance  can be  given that  any of the  foregoing options,  warrants or other
contractual rights will be exercised, if all of such options, warrants and other
contractual rights  having exercise  prices at  or below  the assumed  price  to
public  of $5 per shares  were exercised, the aggregate  proceeds to the Company
resulting therefrom would  be approximately $11.5  million. The Company  expects
that  it  would  use such  proceeds,  if  any, for  general  corporate purposes,
including possible future acquisitions. The exercise of these options,  warrants
and  contractual rights is not required as a condition to the sale of any of the
shares of Common Stock being offered hereby or in the Underwritten Offering  and
none  of such securities is being offered either as part of the Delayed Offering
or as part of the Underwritten Offering.
    
 
                                     Alt-4


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
 
   
             DELAYED SELLING STOCKHOLDERS AND PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
    
 
   
DELAYED SELLING STOCKHOLDERS
    
   
     The Company has agreed to include the Delayed Stock, for the benefit of the
holders  thereof, in  the Registration Statement  of which this  Prospectus is a
part.
    
   
     The following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial
ownership of Common Stock by the Delayed Selling Stockholders as of December 23,
1996.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  COMMON STOCK
                                                               BENEFICIALLY OWNED               COMMON STOCK
                                                               AS OF DECEMBER 23,                TO BE SOLD
                                                                     1996(1)                  ON DELAYED BASIS
                     NAME OF DELAYED                        -------------------------      -----------------------
                   SELLING STOCKHOLDER                       NUMBER         PERCENT        NUMBER        PERCENT
- ---------------------------------------------------------   ---------      ----------      -------      ----------
<S>                                                         <C>            <C>             <C>          <C>
Seth Antine(2)...........................................     365,260          4.3%         91,000         *
Birdsall Corp., N.V.(2)..................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Ezra Birnbaum(2).........................................       4,566         *                640         *
Naomi Bodner(2)(3).......................................   2,040,891         21.8         500,000          6.1
Marguerite E. Cascio(4)..................................      10,492         *              4,621         *
Stephen A. Cooper and Randy E. Cooper, as joint
  tenants................................................       9,242         *              4,621         *
Israel A. Englander(2)...................................     182,630          2.2          26,000         *
Bryan I. Finkel(2).......................................      18,263         *              2,500         *
Seth Fireman(2)..........................................      91,315          1.1          20,220         *
Rita Folger(2)...........................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Friends of Kiryat Meor Chaim, Inc.(2)....................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Juliet Gal...............................................       9,242         *              4,621         *
Irwin L. Gross(2)........................................     273,945          3.3          38,000         *
Barbara M. Henagan.......................................       9,242         *              4,621         *
Laura Huberfeld(2)(3)....................................   2,040,891         21.8         500,000          6.1
Keren M.Y.C.B. Elias Foundation(2).......................      45,658         *              6,400         *
The Lederer Family Trust(4)..............................      10,492         *              4,621         *
Chanie Lerner(2).........................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Thierry Liverman.........................................       4,621         *              2,310         *
Mighty Net, Inc..........................................      52,500         *             52,500         *
Gloria Lee Morgan........................................       9,242         *              9,242         *
Moshe Mueller(2).........................................      54,789         *              6,000         *
The Nais Corp.(2)........................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Namax Corp.(2)...........................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Charles Nebenzahl(2).....................................      45,658         *              1,000         *
Lee M. Polster(4)........................................      10,492         *              4,621         *
Ronald M. Resch(4).......................................      10,492         *              4,621         *
Fred Rudy(2).............................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Malca Sand(2)............................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
Joshua Schwartz(2).......................................       4,566         *                640         *
Richard Stadtmauer.......................................      45,658         *              6,400         *
G. Van Mourik & J. Van Mourik Revocable Trust............       4,621         *              2,310         *
Gregory Welter...........................................      10,634         *              9,242         *
Brian Welter.............................................       9,242         *              9,242         *
Neil and Betty Joan Welter, as joint tenants.............       9,242         *              9,242         *
Zapco Holdings, Inc......................................       9,242         *              4,621         *
</TABLE>
    
 
   
- ------------
    
 
   
*  Less than 1%
    
 
   
(1) Gives effect  to the  Recapitalization,  but does  not  give effect  to  the
    Underwritten Offering.
    
 
   
(2) This Delayed Selling Stockholder's beneficially owned shares of Common Stock
    as  of  December 23,  1996  include the  number  of shares  of  Common Stock
    issuable upon exercise  of currently  exercisable warrants as  is set  forth
    below next to such Delayed Selling Stockholder's name:
    
                                              (footnotes continued on next page)
 
                                      Alt-5
<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
   
(footnotes continued from previous page)
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
                                                                                      ISSUABLE UPON EXERCISE
                                       NAME                                                OF WARRANTS
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------   ----------------------
 
<S>                                                                                   <C>
   Seth Antine.....................................................................            200,000
   Birdsall Corp., N.V.............................................................             25,000
   Ezra Birnbaum...................................................................              2,500
   Naomi Bodner(A).................................................................          1,117,500
   Israel A. Englander.............................................................            100,000
   Bryan I. Finkel.................................................................             10,000
   Seth Fireman....................................................................             50,000
   Rita Folger.....................................................................             25,000
   Friends of Kiryat Meor Chaim, Inc...............................................             25,000
   Irwin L. Gross..................................................................            150,000
   Laura Huberfeld(A)..............................................................          1,117,500
   Keren M.Y.C.B. Elias Foundation.................................................             25,000
   Chanie Lerner...................................................................             25,000
   Moshe Mueller...................................................................             30,000
   The Nais Corp...................................................................             25,000
   Namax Corp......................................................................             25,000
   Charles Nebenzahl...............................................................             25,000
   Fred Rudy.......................................................................             25,000
   Malca Sand......................................................................             25,000
   Joshua Schwartz.................................................................              2,500
   Richard Stadtmauer..............................................................             25,000
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     -----------------
    
 
   
     (A) 117,500   of  this  Delayed  Selling   Stockholder's  total  number  of
         beneficially owned shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of
         warrants  currently  exercisable  are  owned  by  the  Bodner/Huberfeld
         Partnership and are subject to a shared investment power. Each of Naomi
         Bodner and Laura Huberfeld disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares
         of  Common  Stock beneficially  owned by  the other  and the  shares of
         Common Stock beneficially owned by the Bodner/Huberfeld Partnership.
    
 
   
    
 
   
(3) 1,000,000 of this Delayed Selling Stockholder's total number of beneficially
    owned shares  of  Common  Stock  are  issuable  upon  exercise  of  warrants
    currently  exercisable, subject  to this Delayed  Selling Stockholder's sole
    investment power. The remaining 211,500 beneficially owned shares of  Common
    Stock  are owned by  the Bodner/Huberfeld Partnership,  investment power and
    include 117,500 shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of  currently
    exercisable  warrants. Each  of Naomi  Bodner and  Laura Huberfeld disclaims
    beneficial ownership of the shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by the
    other  and  the   shares  of   Common  Stock  beneficially   owned  by   the
    Bodner/Huberfeld Partnership.
    
 
   
    
 
   
(4) 1,250  of this  Delayed Selling  Stockholder's total  number of beneficially
    owned shares  of  Common  Stock  are issuable  upon  exercise  of  currently
    exercisable warrants.
    
 
   
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
    
 
   
     The shares of Delayed Stock covered by this Prospectus are being registered
by  the Company for the account of the Delayed Selling Stockholders. The Company
has been  informed by  the  Delayed Selling  Stockholders  that they  intend  to
distribute  the Delayed Stock in the  following manner, subject to the agreement
of certain of  the Delayed Selling  Stockholders, who are  selling an  aggregate
1,291,588  shares of Common Stock, to refrain  from effecting any sales for nine
months after the date the final Prospectus relating to the Underwritten Offering
has  been  filed  with   the  Commission.  See   'Shares  Eligible  For   Future
Sale -- Registration Rights and Certain Lock-Up Arrangements.'
    
 
     The  shares  may  be  sold  from  time  to  time  by  the  Delayed  Selling
Stockholders, either directly  in privately negotiated  transactions or  through
one or more brokers or dealers (which may include either 

                                      Alt-6
<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
   
of the Representatives) on the over-the-counter market, at such prices and  upon
such terms as may be obtainable. In connection therewith,  the  Delayed  Selling
Stockholders  and  participating  brokers  or  dealers  may  be  deemed   to  be
'underwriters' as that term is  defined in the  Securities Act, and  commissions
or  discounts  or  any  profit  realized  on  the sale of shares received by the
Delayed Selling Stockholders  and such  brokers  or  dealers  may  be deemed  to
be underwriting commissions or discounts within  the  meaning of  the Securities
Act. The Company has been informed  that the Delayed Selling Stockholders do not
have,  as  of  the  date  of  this  Prospectus,  any  agreement,  arrangement or
understanding  with  any  broker  or  dealer  concerning the distribution of the
shares of Delayed Stock covered by this Prospectus.
    
 
   
     Notwithstanding the  foregoing, the  Lead Representative  has informed  the
Company and certain representatives of the Delayed Selling Stockholders who have
agreed  to  the  lock-up arrangements,  that  it  would be  willing  to release,
following consummation of the Underwritten Offering,  some or all of the  shares
of  Common  Stock  owned  by such  Delayed  Selling  Stockholders  under certain
circumstances. Although no agreement (oral  or written) exists between the  Lead
Representative  and any of the  Delayed Selling Stockholders for  the sale by or
through the Lead Representative  of any shares of  Common Stock upon release  of
such shares from the provisions of the lock-up agreement(s) to which such shares
are  subject, such services would be  provided on customary terms and conditions
with a standard commission. See 'Shares Eligible for Future Sale.'
    
 
                                      Alt-7

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]
 
   
                        SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
    
 
   
     The following discussion of shares eligible for future sale excludes up  to
5,080,927 shares of Common Stock (subject to lock-up provisions described below)
which  may be  issued pursuant  to currently  outstanding options,  warrants and
contractual rights.
    
 
   
     Upon completion of the Underwritten Offering, the Company will have a total
of  10,008,108  shares   of  Common   Stock  outstanding   (10,189,935  if   the
Underwriters'  over-allotment option  is exercised in  full). As of  the date of
this Prospectus, 5,321,228 shares of the outstanding Common Stock, including the
2,100,000 shares of Common  Stock being offered by  the Company and the  Selling
Stockholders  in the Underwritten Offering (plus an additional 315,000 shares if
the Underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full) and the  1,381,056
shares  of  Common  Stock  offered  hereby,  will  be  freely  tradeable without
restriction or registration  under the Securities  Act or will  be eligible  for
sale  in the public market without regard  to the availability of current public
information,  volume  limitations,  manner   of  sale  restrictions  or   notice
requirements  under Rule 144(k), in each case by persons other than 'affiliates'
(as defined under the Securities Act) of the Company.
    
 
   
     All the remaining 4,686,880 Restricted Shares  were issued and sold by  the
Company in private transactions in reliance upon the exemption from registration
contained  in Section 4(2)  of the Securities Act  and are restricted securities
under Rule 144 of the Securities Act.  Restricted Shares may not be sold  unless
they  are  registered  under the  Securities  Act  or are  sold  pursuant  to an
applicable exemption  from  registration, including  pursuant  to Rule  144.  In
general,  under Rule  144 as  currently in effect,  beginning 90  days after the
completion of the Underwritten  Offering a person (or  persons whose shares  are
aggregated) who has beneficially owned Restricted Shares for at least two years,
including  affiliates  of the  Company, would  be entitled  to sell  in brokers'
transactions or  to market  makers within  any three-month  period a  number  of
Restricted  shares  that does  not  exceed the  greater of  (i)  1% of  the then
outstanding shares of the Common  Stock (approximately 100,081 shares, based  on
the  number of shares to be outstanding after the Offering, assuming no exercise
of the Underwriters' over-allotment options) or (ii) the average weekly  trading
volume  of the  Common Stock  on The  Nasdaq SmallCap  MarketSM during  the four
calendar weeks preceding the date on which notice of the sale is filed with  the
Commission.  Sales under  Rule 144  are also subject  to certain  manner of sale
provisions,  notice  requirements  and   the  availability  of  current   public
information  about the Company. A person who  is not an affiliate of the Company
at any time during the 90 days preceding a sale, and who has beneficially  owned
Restricted  Shares for at least three years,  is currently entitled to sell such
Restricted Shares  under  Rule 144(k)  without  regard to  the  availability  of
current  public information, volume limitations,  manner of sale restrictions or
notice  requirements.  However,  under  Rule  144,  Restricted  Shares  held  by
affiliates  must continue,  after the three-year  holding period, to  be sold in
brokers' transactions  or to  market makers  subject to  the volume  limitations
described  above. The above is a summary of Rule 144 and is not intended to be a
complete description  thereof.  As  of April  25,  1997,  approximately  837,415
Restricted Shares may become eligible for sale pursuant to Rule 144, or continue
to  be eligible  for sale  under other  exemptions from  registration, under the
Securities Act.
    
 
   
     Holders of  an  aggregate  of  up to  7,832,897  shares  of  Common  Stock,
consisting  of 4,058,532  Restricted Shares outstanding  as of the  date of this
Prospectus and up  to 3,774,365  Restricted Shares issuable  upon conversion  or
exercise  of other securities  or other contractual  rights then outstanding and
then convertible or exercisable, in each  case depending on the extent to  which
the  Underwriters' over-allotment  options are exercised,  if at  all, will have
demand and/or piggyback rights to  have such Restricted Shares registered  under
the  Securities Act pursuant to various  registration rights agreements with the
Company. See '  -- Registration  Rights and Certain  Lock-Up Arrangements.'  The
Company,  its Directors and officers and certain of its stockholders and holders
of options, warrants, conversion or contractual rights to acquire Common  Stock,
who  will hold in the  aggregate up to 10,229,855  Restricted Shares outright or
issuable upon exercise  of such  rights, depending on  the extent  to which  the
Underwriters'  over-allotment  options  are  exercised,  if  at  all (10,227,545
Restricted Shares if the Underwriters'  over-allotment options are exercised  in
full),  have agreed  that they  will not,  directly or  indirectly, offer, sell,
offer to  sell,  contract to  sell,  pledge, grant  any  option to  purchase  or
otherwise  dispose of or transfer  (or announce any offer,  sale, offer of sale,
pledge, contract of sale, grant of any
    

                                      Alt-8

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                    [ALTERNATE PAGE FOR DELAYED PROSPECTUS]

_______________________________                  _______________________________
 
   
     NO  UNDERWRITER, DEALER,  SALESMAN OR OTHER  PERSON HAS  BEEN AUTHORIZED TO
GIVE ANY INFORMATION  OR TO  MAKE ANY  REPRESENTATIONS IN  CONNECTION WITH  THIS
OFFERING,  OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN 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  UNDERWRITERS.  THIS  PROSPECTUS  DOES NOT
CONSTITUTE AN  OFFER  TO  SELL, OR  A  SOLICITATION  OF AN  OFFER  TO  BUY,  ANY
SECURITIES  OFFERED HEREBY 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. NEITHER THE DELIVERY OF THIS PROSPECTUS NOR ANY
SALE MADE HEREUNDER SHALL, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, CREATE ANY IMPLICATION  THAT
THE  INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN  IS CORRECT AS  OF ANY TIME  SUBSEQUENT TO THE
DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS.
    
 
   
                            ------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  PAGE
                                                  ----
<S>                                               <C>
Prospectus Summary.............................
Risk Factors...................................
Use of Proceeds................................
Price Range of Common Stock....................
Dividend Policy................................
Capitalization.................................
Dilution.......................................
Pro Forma Condensed Combined Financial
  Information..................................
Selected Financial Data........................
Management's Discussion and Analysis of
  Financial Condition and Results of
  Operations...................................
Business.......................................
Management.....................................
Principal and Selling Stockholders.............
Delayed Selling Stockholders and Plan of
  Distribution.................................
The Recapitalization...........................
Certain Transactions...........................
Description of Capital Stock...................
Shares Eligible for Future Sale................
Underwriting...................................
Validity of Shares.............................
Experts........................................
Available Information..........................
Index to Financial Statements..................   F-1
</TABLE>
    
 
 
 
_______________________________                  _______________________________
 
   
                                1,381,056 SHARES
    
 
   
                                     [LOGO]

                                 ALL-COMM MEDIA
                                  CORPORATION
                                  COMMON STOCK
    
 
   
                           -------------------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                           -------------------------
    
 
   
                               JANUARY    , 1997
    
 
                              Alt-9



<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                    PART II
                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
 
ITEM 24. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.
 
     Section 78.751 of the Nevada General Corporation Law (the 'NGCL') provides,
in effect, that any person made a party to any action by reason of the fact that
such  person is or was a director, officer, employee or agent of the Company may
and, in certain cases, must be indemnified  by the Company against, in the  case
of  a non-derivative  action, judgments, fines,  amounts paid  in settlement and
reasonable expenses (including  attorney's fees)  incurred by such  person as  a
result  of such action, and in the case of a derivative action, against expenses
(including attorney's fees), if  in either type of  action such person acted  in
good  faith and  in a  manner such person  reasonably believed  to be  in or not
opposed to the  best interests  of the  Company. This  indemnification does  not
apply,  in a derivative action,  to matters as to which  it is adjudged that the
director, officer, employee or agent is liable to the Company, unless upon court
order it is determined that, despite such adjudication of liability, but in view
of all  the circumstances  of the  case, such  person is  fairly and  reasonably
entitled  to indemnity  for expenses,  and, in  a non-derivative  action, to any
criminal proceeding in which  such person had reasonable  cause to believe  such
person's conduct was unlawful.
 
     Article  Seventh, Section 6 of the by-laws  of the Company, as amended (the
'By-Laws') provides that the Company shall  indemnify each person who is or  was
an officer or director of the Company to the fullest extent permitted by Chapter
78 of the NGCL.
 
     In  addition,  the  Company  maintains  customary  directors,  officers and
corporate liability insurance policies.
 
     Reference is  made to  Section    of  the Underwriting  Agreement filed  as
Exhibit  1.1 hereto, pursuant to which the Underwriters have agreed to indemnify
officers and directors of the Company against certain liabilities.
 
ITEM 25. OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION.
 
     The following  table  sets  forth the  expenses,  other  than  underwriting
discounts  and commissions, paid or payable  in connection with the issuance and
distribution of the Common Stock being  registered hereby (as such expenses  are
estimated except as noted):
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                          <C>
Securities and Exchange Commission Registration Fee.......................................   $  5,015*(1)
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. Filing Fee...............................      2,155*(2)
Nasdaq SmallCap MarketSM Listing Fee......................................................      **
Printing and Engraving Expenses...........................................................      **
Legal Fees and Expenses...................................................................      **
Accounting Fees and Expenses..............................................................      **
Blue Sky Fees and Expenses................................................................      **
Transfer Agent and Registrar Fees.........................................................      **
Miscellaneous Fees and Expenses...........................................................      **
                                                                                             --------
     Total................................................................................   $  **
                                                                                             --------
                                                                                             --------
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------
 
*  Actual
 
** To be provided by Amendment.
 
   
(1) Of this amount, $5,462 was previously paid.
    
 
   
(2) Of this amount, $2,302 was previously paid.
    
 
                                      II-1
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
ITEM 26. RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES.
 
COMMON STOCK
 
     In October 1996, the Company issued an aggregate of 1,814,000 shares of its
common  stock,  par  value  $.01  per  share  (the  'Common  Stock'),  valued at
$7,256,000 in the aggregate, to the three former shareholders of Metro  Services
Group,  Inc. ('Metro')  in connection with  the Company's  acquisition of Metro.
There were no fees, commissions or discounts payable to any person in connection
with this issuance.  Each of  the three  investors gave  representations to  the
Company  customary for  a transaction  of this  type. All  of these  shares were
issued without registration under  the Securities Act of  1933, as amended  (the
'Securities  Act'), in connection with the  Company's acquisition of Metro in an
offering not involving a public offering  pursuant to the exemption afforded  by
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
 
   
     In  April 1996, the Company issued to (i) to an individual, 1,459 shares of
Common Stock as payment  for consulting fees of  $1,750 and having an  aggregate
value  equal to the amount  of such consulting fees,  (ii) to a public relations
firm, 10,000 shares  of Common  Stock as payment  for services  rendered over  a
two-month  period and having a value equal  to $2.00 per share, the market price
of the Common Stock on November 21, 1995 (the date such issuance was approved by
the Company's board of directors), (iii)  to two former directors who were  then
serving  in  such capacity,  an aggregate  of  6,270 shares  of Common  Stock as
payment for certain directors fees due them  in lieu of cash and having a  value
equal  to $2.00 per share, the market price  of the Common Stock on November 21,
1995 (the date such issuance was approved by the Company's board of  directors),
discounted  40% for the restrictions on transferability to which such shares are
subject, and (iv)  to nine employees,  an aggregate of  61,462 shares of  Common
Stock,  valued  at $2.00  per share,  the market  price of  the Common  Stock on
November 21, 1995 (the date such issuance was approved by the Company's board of
directors), discounted 40% for the restrictions on transferability to which such
shares are subject, as compensation in lieu of cash salary. All of the foregoing
shares were issued at a time when, at the parent company level, the Company  was
experiencing  a liquidity crisis and was unable to satisfy its payroll and other
compensation obligations as a  result of the prohibition  on the upstreaming  of
cash  from SD&A contained in the  operating covenants agreement, now terminated,
with Mr. Dunn, the seller of SD&A. There were no fees or commissions payable  to
any person in connection with these issuances.
    
 
   
     Each  of  the  investors  referred  to  in  clauses  (ii)  and  (iii) above
represented to the Company  that such investor was  an 'accredited investor'  as
such  term is defined in Rule 501 of Regulation D of the Securities Act and gave
other representations customary  for a transaction  of this type.  Three of  the
employees  referred to  in clause  (iv) above, who  were issued  an aggregate of
41,147 shares of Common Stock, were  directors and/or executive officers of  the
Company  at the time of issuance and were 'accredited investors' as such term is
defined in Rule  501(a)(4) of Regulation  D of  the Securities Act.  All of  the
shares issued to the two former directors, the public relations firm referred to
in  clause (ii) above and these three employees were issued without registration
under the Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded by Section 4(2)  and
Regulation  D  of  the  Securities  Act. The  remaining  six  employees  and the
individual consultant  referred to  in clause  (i) above  were all  unaccredited
investors  and the shares issued to  them were issued without registration under
the Securities Act in  an offering not involving  a public offering pursuant  to
the exemption afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
     In  April  1996, the  Company  issued 62,500  shares  of Common  Stock, for
$100,000, to an individual accredited investor and an aggregate of 12,500 shares
of Common Stock  to four other  unaccredited investors (two  as joint  tenants),
each  with a 'purchaser representative,' for aggregate consideration of $20,000.
There were no fees, commissions or discounts payable to any person in connection
with this issuance, nor was there  a placement agent. The individual  accredited
investor represented to the Company that he was an 'accredited investor' as such
term is defined in Rule 501 of Regulation D of the Securities Act and gave other
representations  customary  for  a  transaction of  this  type.  The  other four
unaccredited investors,  all of  whom  were related  parties, had  a  'purchaser
representative'  as such  term is  defined in  Rule 501  of Regulation  D of the
Securities Act. All of these shares  were issued without registration under  the
Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded by Section 4(2) and Regulation
D of the Securities Act.
 
   
     In  May 1995, the Company  issued an aggregate of  413,759 shares of Common
Stock  to  six  European   institutional  accredited  investors  for   aggregate
consideration of $1,108,375 (or $2.68 per
    
 
                                      II-2
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
share),  less  fees,  commissions and/or  discounts  aggregating  $89,745. Value
Investing Partners Inc. acted as placement agent. Each such investor represented
to the  Company that  such investor  was a  'non-U.S. investor'  and gave  other
representations  customary  for a  transaction of  this  type.   Value Investing
Partners, Inc., as placement agent, represented to the Company that (i) no offer
of such shares was made to any 'U.S. person' as such term is defined in Rule 902
of Regulation S of  the Securities Act, (ii)  no 'directed selling efforts',  as
such term is defined in Rule 902 of Regulation S of the Securities Act, occurred
in  the United  States and  (iii) the  offering of  such shares  qualified as an
'offshore transaction' as such term  is defined in Rule  902 of Regulation S  of
the Securities Act and gave other representations customary for a transaction of
this  type. The 413,759 shares of  Common Stock were issued without registration
under the Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded by Section 4(2)  and
Regulation S of the Securities Act. In addition, as payment for certain finders'
fees  related  to  the issuance  of  such  shares, the  Company  issued warrants
exercisable  for  an  aggregate  of  11,827  shares  of  Common  Stock  to   six
individuals.   These  warrants  were  issued   without  registration  under  the
Securities Act in an  offering not involving a  public offering pursuant to  the
exemption afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     In  April 1995,  in connection with  the Company's  acquisition of Alliance
Media  Corporation  ('Alliance')  and  immediately  prior  to  the  merger  (the
'Merger')  of a subsidiary of  the Company into Alliance,  Alliance issued to 36
accredited investors and  6 unaccredited investors  an aggregate of  22,000.0505
shares  of its common  stock, for consideration of  $1,509,750 in the aggregate,
less fees,  commissions  and/or  discounts aggregating  $78,250.  Each  of  W.J.
Gallagher  & Company,  Inc. and Whale  Securities Co., L.P.,  acted as placement
agent. Each  such  accredited investor  represented  to the  Company  that  such
investor  was an 'accredited  investor' as such  term is defined  in Rule 501 of
Regulation D of the Securities Act and gave other representations customary  for
a  transaction of  this type.  Each of  the other  investors represented  to the
Company that  such investor  either  alone or  with such  investor's  'purchaser
representative,'  as such  term is defined  in Rule  501 of Regulation  D of the
Securities Act,  had  such  knowledge  and experience  in  financial  and  other
business  matters that  such investor was  capable of evaluating  the merits and
risks of the investment  in the Common  Stock. All of  these shares were  issued
without registration under the Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded
by Section 4(2) and Regulation D of the Securities Act.
    
 
     In  April  1995,  immediately  after  the  private  placement  effected  by
Alliance, in  connection  with  the  Merger  and  pursuant  to  the  Acquisition
Agreement  dated  as of  February  7, 1995,  as  amended, relating  thereto, the
Company issued 1,025,000  shares of Common  Stock, valued at  $2,745,000 in  the
aggregate  (or  $2.68 per  share),  to the  former  stockholders of  Alliance in
exchange for such stockholders' shares of Alliance. Each such former stockholder
of Alliance  represented to  the Company  that such  former stockholder  was  an
'accredited investor' as such term is defined in Rule 501 of Regulation D of the
Securities  Act  or that  such  investor either  alone  or with  such investor's
'purchaser representative,' as such term is defined in Rule 501 of Regulation  D
of  the Securities Act, had such knowledge and experience in financial and other
business matters that  such investor was  capable of evaluating  the merits  and
risks  of  the investment  in the  Common Stock  and gave  other representations
customary for  a transaction  of this  type. All  1,025,000 shares  were  issued
without registration under the Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded
by  Section 4(2) and Regulation D of the Securities Act. In addition, as payment
for certain finders' fees related to  the Merger, the Company paid an  aggregate
of $200,000 in cash and issued an aggregate of 37,500 shares of Common Stock and
warrants exercisable for 25,000 shares of Common Stock, such shares and warrants
being valued at $100,000 in the aggregate, to an investment banking firm and its
three  designees, which  investment banking firm  and one of  its designees were
institutional accredited investors and which other two designees were individual
accredited investors. Each  of such  investors represented to  the Company  that
such  investor was an 'accredited investor' as  such term is defined in Rule 501
of Regulation D of the Securities  Act and gave other representations  customary
for  a  transaction  of this  type.  All  of these  shares  were  issued without
registration under  the Securities  Act pursuant  to the  exemption afforded  by
Section 4(2) and Regulation D of the Securities Act.
 
     In  April 1995, in  connection with the  sale of Sports-Tech International,
Inc. ('STI'),  the Company  issued 5,000  shares of  Common Stock  and  warrants
exercisable  for an aggregate 2,500 shares of Common Stock, valued at $38,750 in
the  aggregate,  to  the   former  president  of  STI   in  settlement  of   the
 
                                      II-3
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
termination  of his employment  agreement with the Company.  There were no fees,
commissions and/or  discounts payable  to  any person  in connection  with  this
issuance.  These shares and warrants were  issued without registration under the
Securities Act in an  offering not involving a  public offering pursuant to  the
exemption afforded by Section 4(2) and Regulation D of the Securities Act.
 
   
     Pursuant to a Settlement and Release Agreement dated June 17, 1994, in June
1994, the Company issued 25,000 shares of Common Stock, valued at $250,000,  and
in  September 1994, the Company issued 37,500  shares of Common Stock, valued at
$150,000, in each case to a former consulting firm to Sports Tech International,
Inc., a former subsidiary of the  Company, as settlement for the termination  of
its  consulting  contract.  There  were no  fees,  commissions  and/or discounts
payable to any person in connection with this issuance. These shares were issued
without registration under  the Securities Act  in an offering  not involving  a
public  offering  pursuant to  the  exemption afforded  by  Section 4(2)  of the
Securities Act.
    
 
Convertible Preferred Stock
 
   
     On May  9,  1996,  the  Company  issued  10,000  shares  of  its  Series  A
Convertible  Preferred Stock (the 'Series  A Preferred Stock'), convertible into
300,000 shares of Common Stock, and  warrants exercisable for 100,000 shares  of
Common  Stock,  valued  at $16,000,  to  a non-U.S.  institutional  investor for
aggregate consideration  of $750,000,  less fees,  commissions and/or  discounts
aggregating $63,000. Such investor represented to the Company that such investor
was  a  'non-U.S.  investor'  and gave  other  representations  customary  for a
transaction of this type.  These shares were  issued without registration  under
the  Securities  Act pursuant  to  the exemption  afforded  by Section  4(2) and
Regulation S of  the Securities Act.  On June  7, 1996, in  connection with  the
issuance  of  the  Series  B  Redeemable  Convertible  Preferred  Stock  and the
convertible notes  referred  to  below,  the  Company  repurchased  all  of  the
outstanding  shares of its  Series A Preferred  Stock for $800,000  plus fees of
$12,500. In addition, in July 1996, the Company issued (i) Warrants  exercisable
for  25,000 shares of Common  Stock, valued at $15,000,  to the former holder of
the Series A  Preferred Stock as  part of the  consideration for the  repurchase
thereof  and (ii) warrants exercisable for 12,500 shares of Common Stock, valued
at $7,500,  to  an  investment  firm  for  its  assistance  in  structuring  the
repurchase. These warrants were issued without registration under the Securities
Act  in an offering  not involving a  public offering pursuant  to the exemption
afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     On June 7, 1996, the Company issued 6,200 shares of its Series B Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock (the 'Series  B Preferred Stock'), convertible  into
2,480,000  shares of  Common Stock,  and warrants  exercisable for  an aggregate
3,100,000 shares of its Common Stock  to 29 accredited investors, for  aggregate
consideration  of $3,100,000, less fees, commission and/or discounts aggregating
$218,914, of which $80,000 was paid Jason Lyons as a finder's fee. Each of  such
investors  represented  to the  Company that  such  investor was  an 'accredited
investor' as such term is defined in Rule 501 of Regulation D of the  Securities
Act  and gave  other representations customary  for a transaction  of this type.
These shares of Series  B Preferred Stock and  the related warrants were  issued
without registration under the Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded
by  Section 4(2) and Regulation  D of the Securities  Act. On December 23, 1996,
all of the shares of the Series B Preferred Stock were converted, in  accordance
with  the terms thereof, into  2,480,000 shares of Common  Stock and all accrued
interest thereon was converted into 81,534 shares of Common Stock. In connection
with such  conversions, each  of the  holders of  the Series  B Preferred  Stock
represented  to the Company that it was an 'accredited investor' as such term is
defined in  Rule 501  of  Regulation D  of the  Securities  Act and  gave  other
representations  customary for a transaction of  this type. The shares of Common
Stock were issued without registration under the Securities Act pursuant to  the
exemption  afforded by  Section 4(2),  Regulation D  and Section  3(a)(9) of the
Securities Act.
    
 
     Also on June 7,  1996, the Company issued  $1,000,000 of convertible  notes
due  June 1, 1998 and warrants exercisable  for an aggregate 3,000,000 shares of
its common stock to two accredited investors. There were no fees, commissions or
discounts payable  to  any person  in  connection  therewith and  there  was  no
placement  agent. Each  of such investors  represented to the  Company that such
investor was an 'accredited  investor' as such  term is defined  in Rule 501  of
Regulation  D of the Securities Act and gave other representations customary for
a  transaction   of  this   type.   These  notes   and  warrants   were   issued
 
                                      II-4
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
without registration under the Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded
by Section 4(2) and Regulation D of the Securities Act.
 
   
     On September 10, 1996, the convertible notes and the warrants issued to the
holders of the convertible notes referred to above were rescinded retroactive to
June  7,  1996 and  replaced with  (i) 2,000  shares of  the Company's  Series C
Redeemable  Convertible  Preferred  Stock  (the  'Series  C  Preferred  Stock'),
convertible  into 166,666 shares of Common Stock, for aggregate consideration of
$1,000,000, and  (ii) warrants  relating to  3,000,000 shares  of Common  Stock.
There were no fees, commissions or discounts. Each of such investors represented
to  the Company that such investor was  an 'accredited investor' as such term is
defined in  Rule 501  of  Regulation D  of the  Securities  Act and  gave  other
representations  customary  for a  transaction of  this  type. These  shares and
warrants were issued without registration  under the Securities Act pursuant  to
the  exemption afforded by Section 4(2), Regulation D and Section 3(a)(9) of the
Securities Act. On  December 23, 1996,  (i) all of  the shares of  the Series  C
Preferred  Stock were repurchased for promissory notes in an aggregate principal
amount of $1.0 million, (ii) all of  the warrants issued in connection with  the
Series  C Preferred Stock were exchanged for  600,000 shares of Common Stock and
(iii) all accrued interest  on the Series C  Preferred Stock was converted  into
7,306  shares of Common Stock. In  connection with such exchange and conversion,
each of the holders of the Series  C Preferred Stock represented to the  Company
that  it was  an 'accredited investor'  as such term  is defined in  Rule 501 of
Regulation D of the Securities Act and gave other representations customary  for
a  transaction of  this type.  The shares  of Common  Stock were  issued without
registration under  the Securities  Act pursuant  to the  exemption afforded  by
Section 4(2), Regulation D and Section 3(a)(9) of the Securities Act.
    

   
Warrants
    

   
     Upon  successful  consummation  of  the Offering,  the  Company  will issue
warrants exercisable  for an  aggregate of  160,414 shares  of Common  Stock  to
certain  stockholders  as  consideration  for  such  stockholders'  agreement to
certain of the lock-up arrangements described under 'Shares Eligible for  Future
Sale.'  Each of  the stockholders  receiving such  warrants will  be required to
represent to the Company that such person is an 'accredited investor' as defined
in Rule 501 of Regulation D of  the Securities Act or that such investor  either
alone  or  with  such investor's  'purchaser  representative,' as  such  term is
defined in Rule 501 of  Regulation D of the  Securities Act, had such  knowledge
and  experience in financial  and other business matters  that such investor was
capable of evaluating the merits and risks of the investment in the warrants and
Common Stock and other customary representations customary for a transaction  of
this  type.  These  securities will  be  issued without  registration  under the
Securities Act pursuant to the exemption afforded by Section 4(2) and Regulation
D of the Securities Act.
    

   
     In September  1996,  the Company  issued  warrants exercisable  for  50,000
shares  of Common Stock for aggregate consideration of $2,500 to Mr. Coppersmith
pursuant to the consulting  agreement between Mr.  Coppersmith and the  Company.
These  warrants were issued without registration  under the Securities Act in an
offering not involving a public offering  pursuant to the exemption afforded  by
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     In  August 1996, the Company issued  warrants exercisable for 50,000 shares
of Common Stock for aggregate consideration  of $2,500 to Mr. Jones pursuant  to
the  consulting agreement between Mr. Jones and the Company. These warrants were
issued without  registration  under  the  Securities  Act  in  an  offering  not
involving  a public offering pursuant to  the exemption afforded by Section 4(2)
of the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     In February 1996, the Company issued warrants exercisable for 5,000  shares
of  Common Stock,  valued at  $4,000, to an  individual as  payment for advisory
services rendered. There were no  fees, commissions and/or discounts payable  to
any  person in connection with this issuance. These warrants were issued without
registration under the  Securities Act  in an  offering not  involving a  public
offering  pursuant to the  exemption afforded by Section  4(2) of the Securities
Act.
    
 
   
     In February 1996, the Company issued warrants exercisable for 10,000 shares
of Common Stock, valued at $7,000, to  a law firm, three individuals related  to
such  law firm and a trust of one  other individual related to such law firm for
legal services provided  in connection  with the private  placement of  Alliance
common  stock pursuant to  Regulation D referred  to above. There  were no fees,
    
 
                                      II-5
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
   
commissions and/or  discounts payable  to  any person  in connection  with  this
issuance.  These warrants were issued  without registration under the Securities
Act in an  offering not involving  a public offering  pursuant to the  exemption
afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     In  January 1996, the Company issued warrants exercisable for 12,500 shares
of Common  Stock, valued  at $4,000,  to a  public relations  firm for  services
rendered. There were no fees, commissions and/or discounts payable to any person
in   connection  with  this   issuance.  These  warrants   were  issued  without
registration under the  Securities Act  in an  offering not  involving a  public
offering  pursuant to the  exemption afforded by Section  4(2) of the Securities
Act.
    
 
   
     In January 1996, the Company issued warrants exercisable for 15,000  shares
of  Common Stock, valued at $7,000, to  an investment advisory firm for services
rendered. There were no fees, commissions and/or discounts payable to any person
in  connection  with   this  issuance.  These   warrants  were  issued   without
registration  under the  Securities Act  in an  offering not  involving a public
offering pursuant to the  exemption afforded by Section  4(2) of the  Securities
Act.
    
 
   
     In  January 1996, the Company issued  warrants exercisable for 5,000 shares
of Common Stock, valued at $3,000, to Mr. Dunn, the former owner of Stephen Dunn
& Associates,  Inc. ('SD&A'),  in  consideration for  the restructuring  of  the
indebtedness  of the Company to Mr.  Dunn incurred in connection with Alliance's
acquisition of SD&A. There were no fees, commissions and/or discounts payable to
any person in connection with this issuance. These warrants were issued  without
registration  under the  Securities Act  in an  offering not  involving a public
offering pursuant to the  exemption afforded by Section  4(2) of the  Securities
Act.
    
 
   
     In October 1995 and April 1996, the Company issued warrants exercisable for
52,500  shares of  Common Stock  in the aggregate,  valued at  $43,000, to three
individuals as an inducement to enter  into an option agreement relating to  the
sale  of the  Company's land  in Laughlin, Nevada  and as  consideration for the
extension of the  put right  held by the  holders of  the option,  respectively.
There  were  no fees,  commissions  and/or discounts  payable  to any  person in
connection with this issuance. These  warrants were issued without  registration
under the Securities Act in an offering not involving a public offering pursuant
to the exemption afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
   
     In  May 1995, the  Company issued warrants exercisable  for 6,250 shares of
Common Stock, which warrants were not valued,  to a law firm for legal  services
rendered  in connection  with the  private placement  by Alliance  of its common
stock  pursuant  to  Regulation  D  referred  to  above.  There  were  no  fees,
commissions  and/or  discounts payable  to any  person  in connection  with this
issuance. These warrants were issued  without registration under the  Securities
Act  in an offering  not involving a  public offering pursuant  to the exemption
afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act.
    
 
ITEM 27. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS SCHEDULES.
 
(a) Exhibits
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
 NUMBER                                         ITEM                                                 EXHIBIT
- ---------  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------     --------------------
                                                                                                  (SEE NOTES)(*)
   
<S>        <C>                                                                                 <C>
 1.1       Form of Underwriting Agreement                                                      M
 1.2       Form of Underwriters' Warrant Agreement                                             M
 2.1       Acquisition Agreement dated as of  February 7, 1995 between Sports-Tech,  Inc.,
           STI Merger Corporation and Alliance Media Corporation                               G(1)
 2.2       Amendment No. 1 to the Acquisition Agreement dated April 21, 1995                   H(2)
 2.3       Merger  Agreement dated as of April 21, 1995 between STI Merger Corporation and
           Alliance Media Corporation                                                          H(3)
 2.4       Stock Purchase Agreement dated  as of January 31,  1995 between Alliance  Media
           Corporation and Mr. Stephen Dunn                                                    H(4)
 2.5       Agreement and Plan of Merger dated as of October 1, 1996 between All-Comm Media
           Corporation,   Metro  Services  Group,   Inc.,  Metro  Merger   Corp.  and  the
           Shareholders named therein                                                          K(2.1)
 3.1       Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation                                      C(3(a)(1))
 3.2       Certificate of Amendment to the Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation      A
 3.3       Certificate of Amendment to the Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation      D(3(iii))
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-6
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
 NUMBER                                         ITEM                                             EXHIBIT
- ---------  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------------------
                                                                                              (SEE NOTES)(*)
                                                                                                  
<C>        <S>                                                                                 <C>
 3.4       Certificate of Amendment to the Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation      E(3(v))
 3.5       By-Laws                                                                             C(3(c)(2))
 3.6       Certificate of Designation for Series B Convertible Preferred Stock, as amended     A
 3.7       Certificate of Designation for Series C Convertible Preferred Stock                 A
 5.1       Opinion of Lionel Sawyer & Collins                                                  B
10.1       1991 Stock Option Plan                                                              F(28.1)
10.2       Operating Covenants  Agreement  dated April  25,  1995 between  Alliance  Media
           Corporation and Mr. Stephen Dunn                                                    H(5)
10.3       Pledge  Agreement dated as of April 25, 1995 between Alliance Media Corporation
           and Mr. Stephen Dunn                                                                H(6)
10.4       Lease Agreement dated January 1, 1989  between Stephen Dunn & Associates,  Inc.
           and Mr. Stephen Dunn relating to 1728 Abbott Kinney Boulevard                       A
10.5       Form  of promissory note  of Alliance Media Corporation  payable to Mr. Stephen
           Dunn with respect to sale of SD&A (included in Exhibit 2.4)                         H(4)
10.6       Memorandums of  Understanding relating  to deferral  of payments  on  long-term
           obligations payable to seller of SD&A                                               J(10.6)
10.7       Letter  from  Mr. Stephen  Dunn agreeing  to  long-term obligation  payment and
           restructuring                                                                       I(10.9)
10.8       Form of Private Placement Purchase Agreement for Convertible Notes                  I(10.8)
10.9       Form of Warrant Certificate (without registration rights)                           A
10.10      Form of  promissory  note  of  All-Comm  Media  Corporation  issued  to  former
           shareholders of Metro Services Group, Inc. (included in Exhibit 2.5)                K(2.1)
10.11(a)   Form  of  Registration Rights  Agreement  dated as  of  October ,  1996 between
           All-Comm Media  Corporation and  the Shareholders  named therein  (included  in
           Exhibit 2.5)                                                                        K
10.11(b)   Amendment  No. 1 to  the Registration Rights  Agreement dated as  of October 9,
           1996                                                                                L(10.3)
10.12      Form of Employment Agreement between  All-Comm Media Corporation and Mr.  Barry
           Peters                                                                              A
10.13      Form  of Employment  Agreement between  All-Comm Media  Corporation and  Mr. E.
           William Savage                                                                      A
10.14      Form of Employment Agreement  between Stephen Dunn &  Associates, Inc. and  Mr.
           Stephen Dunn (included in Exhibit 2.4)                                              H(4)
10.15      Form  of Employment Agreement  between Stephen Dunn &  Associates, Inc. and Mr.
           Thomas Scheir (included in Exhibit 2.4)                                             H(4)
10.16      Form of Employment  Agreement between  Metro Services  Group, Inc.  and Mr.  J.
           Jeremy Barbera (included in Exhibit 2.5)                                            K(2.1)
10.17      Form  of Employment Agreement between Metro Services Group, Inc. and Mr. Robert
           M. Budlow (included in Exhibit 2.5)                                                 K(2.1)
10.18      Form of Employment Agreement between Metro  Services Group, Inc. and Ms.  Janet
           Sautkulis (included in Exhibit 2.5)                                                 K(2.1)
10.19      Form of Consulting Agreement between All-Comm Media Corporation and Mr. Seymour
           Jones                                                                               A
10.20      Form  of Consulting  Agreement between  All-Comm Media  Corporation and  Mr. S.
           James Coppersmith                                                                   A
10.21      Form of  Consulting Agreement  between All-Comm  Media Corporation  and Mr.  C.
           Anthony Wainwright                                                                  A
10.22      Excerpt  from Confidential Private Placement  dated February 1995 Memorandum of
           Alliance Media Corporation relating to Common Stock registration rights             A
10.23(a)   Letter agreement dated  February 7,  1995 between  Alliance Media  Corporation,
           Sports-Tech,  Inc., Whale  Securities Co.,  L.P. and  Golenberg &  Geller, Inc.
           relating in part to Common Stock registration rights                                A
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-7
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 EXHIBIT
 NUMBER                                         ITEM                                              EXHIBIT
- ---------  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------------------
                                                                                               (SEE NOTES)(*)
                                                                                                  
<C>        <S>                                                                                 <C>
10.23(b)   Letter agreement  dated May  19, 1995  between All-Comm  Media Corporation  and
           Marshall Geller relating in part to Common Stock registration rights                A
10.23(c)   Letter  agreement dated  May 19,  1995 between  All-Comm Media  Corporation and
           Glenn Golenberg relating in part to Common Stock registration rights                A
10.24(a)   Settlement and Release  Agreement dated  as of  June 17,  1994 between  Sheldon
           Kasower, Membership Development, Inc. and Sports-Tech, Inc. relating in part to
           Common Stock registration rights                                                    A
10.24(b)   Letter  agreement dated January  13, 1995 between  Membership Development, Inc.
           and Sports-Tech, Inc. relating to Common Stock registration rights                  A
10.25      Form of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock Subscription Agreement relating in
           part to Common Stock registration rights                                            A
10.26      Form of  Series  C  Convertible  Preferred  Stock  Private  Placement  Purchase
           Agreement                                                                           A
10.27      Form of Warrant Certificate (with registration rights)                              A
10.28(a)   Option Agreement dated as of October 1, 1995 between All-Comm Media Corporation
           and certain individuals named therein                                               D(10.4)
10.28(b)   Amendment to Option Agreement dated April 19, 1996                                  J(10.5)
10.29      Form of Transfer and Registration Rights Agreement between Mr. Stephen Dunn and
           Sports-Tech, Inc. (included in Exhibit 2.4)                                         H(4)
10.30      Form of Series B Conversion Agreement                                               A
10.31      Form of Warrant Cancellation Agreement                                              A
10.32      Form of Series C Repurchase and Exchange Agreement                                  A
10.33      Form of Option Cancellation Agreement                                               A
10.34      Form of Amended and Restated Series B Conversion Agreement                          B
10.35      Form of Amended and Restated Series C Repurchase and Exchange Agreement             B
10.36      Form of Amended and Restated Option Cancellation Agreement                          B
11.1       Statement Regarding Computation of Net Income Per Share                             E(11)
21.1       List of Subsidiaries of the Company                                                 E(22.1)
23.1       Consent of Lionel Sawyer & Collins (included in Exhibit 5.1)                        B
23.2       Consent of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P. (Sherman Oaks)                                  B
23.3       Consent of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P. (New York)                                      B
23.4       Consent of Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue                                               A
24.1       Power  of Attorney executed by Barry Peters, E. William Savage, Scott Anderson,
           S. James Coppersmith, Seymour Jones, C. Anthony Wainwright and Jeremy Barbera       A
27.1       Financial Data Schedule                                                             A
</TABLE>
    
 
(b) Financial Statement Schedules
 
     None.
 
Notes relating to Exhibits
 
      A  Previously filed.
 
      B  Filed herewith.
 
      C  Incorporated by reference  to the Company's  Registration Statement  on
         Form S-4 No. 33-45192, declared effective on February 12, 1992.
 
      D  Incorporated  by reference to the Company's Report on Form 10-K for the
         fiscal year ended June 30, 1995.
 
      E  Incorporated by reference to the Company's Report on Form 10-K for  the
         fiscal year ended June 30, 1996.
 
      F  Incorporated  by reference  to the Company's  Registration Statement on
         Form S-8 No. 33-43520.
 
      G  Incorporated by reference  to the  Company's Report on  Form 8-K  dated
         February 7, 1995.
 
      H  Incorporated  by reference  to the Company's  Report on  Form 8-K dated
         April 25, 1995.
 
      I  Incorporated by reference  to the  Company's Report on  Form 8-K  dated
         June 7, 1996.
 
                                      II-8
 

<PAGE>

<PAGE>
      J  Incorporated  by reference to the Company's Report on Form 10-Q for the
         quarter ended March 31, 1996.
 
      K  Incorporated by reference  to the  Company's Report on  Form 8-K  dated
         October 11, 1996.
 
      L  Incorporated  by reference to the Company's Report on Form 10-Q for the
         quarter ended September 30, 1996.
 
   
     M  To be filed by amendment.
    
 
*  Numbers in parentheses next to any of the above letters C through L refer  to
   the   exhibit  numbers  within  each  document  from  which  the  Exhibit  is
   incorporated by reference herein.
 
ITEM 28. UNDERTAKINGS.
 
     The Company hereby undertakes to provide to the Underwriters at the closing
specified in the Underwriting Agreement, certificates in such denominations  and
registered  in  such names  as  required by  the  Underwriters to  permit prompt
delivery to each purchaser.
 
     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities 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  Commission such indemnification  is against public
policy as expressed in the Securities  Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In
the  event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than
the payment by the Company of expenses  incurred or paid by a director,  officer
or  controlling person of the  Company in the successful  defense of any action,
suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling  person
in  connection with the  securities registered, the Company  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  Securities
Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
 
     The Company hereby undertakes that:
 
          (1)  To file,  during any  period in which  offers or  sales are being
     made, a post-effective amendment to this registration statement:
 
             (i) To include any prospectus  required by Section 10(a)(3) of  the
        Securities Act of 1933;
 
             (ii) To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after
        the  effective date  of the registration  statement (or  the most recent
        post-effective  amendment  thereof)  which,   individually  or  in   the
        aggregate,  represent a fundamental change  in the information set forth
        in  the  registration  statement.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  any
        increase  or  decrease in  volume of  securities  offered (if  the total
        dollar value  of securities  offered  would not  exceed that  which  was
        registered)  and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated
        maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus  filed
        with  the Commission pursuant  to Rule 424(b) if,  in the aggregate, the
        changes in volume and price represent no  more than a 20% change in  the
        maximum  aggregate  offering  price  set forth  in  the  'Calculation of
        Registration Fee' table in the effective registration statement; and
 
             (iii) To include  any additional  or changed  material inform  with
        respect  to  the  plan  of  distribution  previously  disclosed  in  the
        registration statement.
 
          (2) That,  for the  purpose  of determining  any liability  under  the
     Securities  Act of 1933,  it will treat each  post-effective amendment as a
     new registration statement of the  securities offered, and the offering  of
     the securities at that time be the initial bona fide offering.
 
          (3) To file a post-effective amendment to remove from registration any
     of the securities that remain unsold at the end of the offering.
 
          (4)  For purposes  of determining  any liability  under the Securities
     Act, 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  Company pursuant to Rule 424(b)(1) or  (4)
     or  497(h) under  the Securities  Act shall  be deemed  to be  part of this
     registration statement as of the time it was declared effective.
 
          (5) For the purpose of determining any liability under the  Securities
     Act, each post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus shall
     be  deemed to  be a new  registration statement relating  to the securities
     offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall  be
     deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.
 
                                      II-9


<PAGE>

<PAGE>
                                   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 authorized this Amendment No.  3
to  the registrant's  registration Statement  on Form SB-2  to be  signed on its
behalf by  the  undersigned,  in the  City  of  Culver City,  in  the  State  of
California, on December 24, 1996.
    
 
                                          ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION
 
   
                                          By: /s/ BARRY PETERS
    
                                                             ...
                                                        BARRY PETERS
                                                 CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD AND
                                                  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
 
   
     In  accordance with  the requirements of  the Securities Act  of 1933, this
Amendment No. 3 to the registrant's registration statement on Form SB-2 has been
signed by the  following persons  in the  capacities indicated  on December  24,
1996.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                SIGNATURE                                                   TITLE
- ------------------------------------------  ---------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>                                         <S>
                                            Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer (Principal
 .........................................    Executive Officer)
               BARRY PETERS
 
                    *                       Director, President, Chief Operating Officer, Secretary and Treasurer
 .........................................    (Chief Operating Officer)
            E. WILLIAM SAVAGE
 
                    *                       Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
 .........................................
              SCOTT ANDERSON
 
                    *                       Director
 .........................................
           S. JAMES COPPERSMITH
 
                    *                       Director
 .........................................
              SEYMOUR JONES
 
                    *                       Director
 .........................................
          C. ANTHONY WAINWRIGHT
 
                    *                       Director
 .........................................
              JEREMY BARBERA
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                                          *By:        /s/ BARRY PETERS
                                              ...............................
                                                        BARRY PETERS
                                               PURSUANT TO POWERS OF ATTORNEY
                                                  FILED PREVIOUSLY WITH THE
                                                          SECURITIES
                                                   AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
 
                                     II-10


                            STATEMENT OF DIFFERENCES
             The service mark symbol shall be expressed as..... 'SM'

<PAGE>


<PAGE>



                                December 24, 1996

                                                                  (702) 383-8888

Board of Directors
All-Comm Media Corporation
400 Corporate Pointe, Suite 780
Culver City, CA 90230

        Re:    All-Comm Media Corporation
               Registration Statement on Form SB-2

Dear Sirs:

        We have acted as special Nevada counsel for All-Comm Media Corporation,
a Nevada corporation (the "Company"), in connection with the preparation and
filing of a Registration Statement on Form SB-2 ("Registration Statement"), with
the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended (the "Act"), with respect to the registration by the
Company of four million six thousand fifty six (4,006,056) shares of common
stock, par value $.01 per share, of the Company (the "Shares"), consisting of:
(i) two million one hundred thousand (2,100,000) shares to be sold in an
underwritten public offering (the "Offering"), of which one million seven
hundred fifty thousand (1,750,000) shares will be newly issued shares ("New
Shares") and three hundred fifty thousand (350,000) shares outstanding
("Outstanding Underwritten Shares"), (ii) up to three hundred fifteen thousand
(315,000) shares subject to the over-allotment options granted to the several
underwriters (the "Underwriters") in connection with the Offering, of which one
hundred ninety thousand eight hundred twenty seven (190,827) shares will be
newly-issued shares (the "New Over-Allotment Shares") and one hundred twenty
four thousand one hundred seventy three (124,173) shares outstanding
("Outstanding Over-Allotment Shares"), (iii) two hundred ten thousand (210,000)
shares ("Warrant Shares") to be issued upon conversion of certain warrants
issued to the Representatives ("Warrants"), and (iv) one million three hundred
eighty one thousand fifty six (1,381,056) shares to be sold on a delayed basis
by certain stockholders of the Company pursuant to Rule 415 under the Act (the
"Delayed Shares"), of which one hundred thirty one thousand


Page 1

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


All-Comm Media Corporation
December 24, 1996

Page 2

fifty six (131,056) shares are outstanding shares (the "Outstanding Delayed
Shares"), and one million two hundred fifty thousand (1,250,000) shares (the
"Conversion Shares") issued upon conversion of the Company's Class B Convertible
Preferred Stock, par value $.01 per share, pursuant to the terms and conditions
of such securities (the "Conversion Provisions"), in connection with the
Recapitalization. Capitalized terms used in this Opinion Letter and not defined
herein shall have the meaning given to them in the Registration Statement. For
the purposes of this Opinion Letter, unless otherwise provided, we have assumed
that the Recapitalization has occurred.

        This Opinion Letter is governed by, and shall be interpreted in
accordance with, the Legal Opinion Accord (the "Accord") of the ABA Section of
Business Law (1991). As a consequence, it is subject to a number of
qualifications, exceptions, definitions, limitations on coverage and other
limitations, all as more particularly described in the Accord, and this Opinion
Letter should be read in conjunction therewith. The Law covered by the Opinions
expressed herein is limited to the State of Nevada.

        We have relied upon the certificates of all public officials and
corporate officers with respect to the accuracy of all factual matters contained
therein, including, but not limited to, the officer's certificate attached
hereto as exhibit A. In addition we have examined all corporate records of the
Company since April 1, 1992.

        We understand that Continental Stock Transfer & Trust Company was
engaged as of April 1, 1992 to be the transfer agent ("Transfer Agent") for the
common stock, par value $.01 per share, of the Company ("Common Stock"), and not
the preferred stock, par value of $.01, per share, of the Company ("Preferred
Stock"). We assume the records of the Transfer Agent are true, accurate and
complete, and contain all transactions with respect to the Common Stock of the
Company since April 1, 1992. With respect to the Preferred Stock, we assume that
the records of the Company with respect thereto are true, accurate and complete,
and that all the 10,000 shares of the Series A Convertible Preferred Stock were
redeemed and canceled by the Company, and that all of the 6,200 shares of Series
B Convertible Preferred Stock and the 2,000 shares of Series C Convertible
Preferred Stock that were authorized for issuance were in fact issued for the
consideration provided for in the resolutions authorizing the same. Nothing has
come to our attention during the course of our examination of the above
referenced records to indicate such records are other than true and accurate.

        As used herein, the phrase, "the best of our knowledge" means to our
Actual Knowledge (as defined in the Accord).

        Based upon and subject to the foregoing, and subject to the
qualifications, limitations,


Page 2

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


All-Comm Media Corporation
December 24, 1996

Page 3

restrictions and assumptions set forth below, we are of the opinion that upon
receipt of the consideration called for in the Underwriting Agreement, the
Warrants and the Conversion Provisions, and issuance and delivery of the New
Shares and the Over-Allotment Shares, the Warrant Shares and the Conversion
Shares pursuant to the Underwriting Agreement, the Warrants and the Conversion
Provisions, respectively, the Shares will be duly authorized, validly issued and
outstanding, fully paid and nonassessable and the holders of such Shares, as
such holders, will not be personally liable for the obligations of the Company.

        We hereby consent to the filing of this Opinion Letter as an exhibit to
the Registration Statement. We also consent to the reference to this firm under
the caption "Validity of Shares" in the Registration Statement. In giving this
consent, we do not hereby admit that we are in a category of persons whose
consent is required pursuant to Section 7 of the Act or the rules and
regulations of the Commission promulgated thereunder, and we disclaim liability
as an expert under the securities laws of the United States or any other
jurisdiction.

                                            Very truly yours,

                                            /s/  LIONEL SAWYER & COLLINS

                                            LIONEL SAWYER & COLLINS


Page 3

<PAGE>


                                

               AMENDED AND RESTATED SERIES B CONVERSION AGREEMENT

                  Amended and Restated Series B Conversion Agreement dated as of
December 23, 1996 among All-Comm Media Corporation (the "Company") and each of
the Company's securityholders party hereto.

                  WHEREAS, the Company has issued and outstanding 6,200 shares
of its Series B Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $.01 per share (the
"Series B Preferred Stock");

                  WHEREAS, the shares of Series B Preferred Stock are currently
convertible into shares of the Company's common stock, par value $.01 per share
(the "Common Stock"), in accordance with the certificate of designations for of
the Series B Preferred Stock;

                  WHEREAS, the Company has filed a registration statement with
the Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed underwritten public
offering (the "Offering") of shares of Common Stock and for the delayed offering
of shares of Common Stock by certain delayed selling securityholders;

                  WHEREAS, the lead underwriter for the Offering has advised the
Company that the existence of the current number of outstanding options,
warrants or other rights convertible or exercisable for shares of the Common
Stock could be detrimental to the Offering and to secondary trading in the
Common Stock following consummation of the Offering;

                  WHEREAS, in support of the Offering, the holders of the Series
B Preferred Stock would like to convert their shares of Series B Preferred Stock
into shares of Common Stock;

                  WHEREAS, the undersigned holders of Series B Preferred Stock
also hold Common Stock purchase warrants (the "Series B Warrants") originally
issued with the Series B Preferred Stock and expect to derive significant
benefit from the Offering;

                  WHEREAS, the parties hereto are parties to a Series B
Conversion Agreement dated as of November 20, 1996 (the "Old Agreement"); and

                  WHEREAS, the parties wish to amend and restate the Old
Agreement to change the date of the consummation of the transactions
contemplated thereby from immediately prior to the Offering to December 23,
1996;

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Amended and Restated
Series B Conversion
Agreement, Page 2

                  NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and for other
good and valuable consideration, and receipt and sufficiency which are hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:

                  1. Conversion of Series B Preferred Stock. On and as of the
date hereof, each of the undersigned holders of Series B Preferred Stock will
convert (i) all outstanding accrued dividends on the Series B Preferred Stock
held by such person and (ii) all of the shares of Series B Preferred Stock held
by such person, into shares of Common Stock in accordance with the certificate
of designations for the Series B Preferred Stock. Notwithstanding such
conversions, the Series B Warrants shall remain in full force and effect. The
holders of the shares of Common Stock into which the Series B Preferred Stock
was converted and of the Series B Warrants shall have the same registration
rights as such holders had under the agreement dated June 7, 1996 between the
Company and such holders with respect to the shares of Common Stock into which
the Series B Preferred Stock was converted and the shares of Common Stock for
which the Series B Warrants are exercisable.

                  2. Securities Law Matters. Each of the undersigned holders of
Series B Preferred Stock severally acknowledges and agrees that: (a) the shares
of Common Stock to be issued to it upon conversion of shares of Series B
Preferred Stock have not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended (the "Securities Act"); (b) such shares may not be freely resold or
transferred absent registration under the Securities Act or an exemption
therefrom; (c) it is acquiring such shares for its own account for investment
purposes only and not with a view towards the resale or distribution thereof;
(d) it may be required to hold such shares for an indefinite period; (e)
certificates representing such shares may bear restrictive legends and the
Company may instruct its transfer agent to place stop transfer orders with
respect thereto; (f) it is an "accredited investor" within the meaning of Rule
501(a) of Regulation D under the Securities Act; and (g) it is aware that the
Company is issuing such Common Stock in transactions exempt from the
registration requirements of the Securities Act pursuant to Regulation D or
other exemptions from registration.

                  3. Miscellaneous. This Agreement may not be modified except in
a writing signed by or on behalf of all of the parties hereto. This Agreement
constitutes the entire agreement of the parties with respect to the conversion
of the outstanding shares of Series B Preferred Stock, and supersedes the Old
Agreement. This Agreement may be signed in one or more counterparts, all of
which shall constitute a single original.

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Amended and Restated
Series B Conversion
Agreement, Page 3

                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the undersigned has duly signed or
caused this Amended and Restated Series B Conversion Agreement to be signed on
its or their behalf as of this 23rd day of December, 1996.

                                                  All-Comm Media Corporation


                                                  By:
                                                      --------------------------
                                                      Name:
                                                      Title:

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Bryan I. Finkel

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Seth Antine

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Naomi Bodner

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Israel A. Englander - IRA
                                                  F/B/O

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Laura Huberfeld

                                                  -----------------------------
                                                  Chanie Lerner

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Seth Fireman

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Rita Folger

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Fred Rudy

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Amended and Restated
Series B Conversion
Agreement, Page 4

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Seymour Huberfeld

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Keren M.Y.C.B. Elias
                                                  Foundation

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Malca Sand

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Erza Birnbaum

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Joshua Schwartz

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Jonathan Mayer

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Cong. Ahavas Tzd Okah V. Ches

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Yeshiva of Telshe Alumni

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Birdsall Corp N.V.

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Laura Huberfeld/Naomi Bodner

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Shekel Hakodesh

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Bais Kaila Torah Prep. HS
                                                    for Girls

<PAGE>
<PAGE>



Amended and Restated
Series B Conversion
Agreement, Page 5

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Namax Corp.

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Ohr Somayach Tanenbaum Educ.

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Moshe Muller

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Friends of Kiryat Meor Chaim

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  The Nais Corp.

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Richard Stadtmauer

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Irwin Gross

                                                  ------------------------------
                                                  Charles Nebenzahl

<PAGE>




         AMENDED AND RESTATED SERIES C REPURCHASE AND EXCHANGE AGREEMENT

                  Amended and Restated Series C Repurchase and Exchange
Agreement dated as of December 23, 1996 among All-Comm Media
Corporation (the "Company"), Newark Sales Corp. ("Newark") and
Saleslink Ltd. ("Saleslink").

                  WHEREAS, the Company has issued and outstanding 2,000 shares
of its Series C Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $.01 per share (the
"Series C Preferred Stock");

                  WHEREAS, Newark and Saleslink are the holders of all of
the issued and outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock;

                  WHEREAS, the shares of Series C Preferred Stock are currently
convertible into 166,666 shares of the Company's common stock, par value $.01
per share (the "Common Stock"), in accordance with the certificate of
designations of the Series C Preferred Stock;

                  WHEREAS the holders of the Series C Preferred Stock also hold
warrants exercisable for 3,000,000 shares of Common Stock (the "Series C
Warrants");

                  WHEREAS, the Company has filed a registration statement with
the Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed underwritten public
offering (the "Offering") of shares of Common Stock, and for the delayed
offering of shares of Common Stock by certain delayed selling securityholders;

                  WHEREAS, the lead underwriter for the Offering has advised the
Company that the existence of the current number of outstanding options,
warrants or other rights convertible or exercisable for shares of the Common
Stock could be detrimental to the Offering and to secondary trading in the
Common Stock following consummation of the Offering;

                  WHEREAS, the holders of Series C Preferred Stock are willing
to enter into this Agreement in order to induce the Company to proceed with the
Offering and in order to obtain the benefits of this Agreement;

                  WHEREAS, the parties hereto are parties to a Series C
Repurchase and Exchange Agreement dated as of November 20, 1996 (the "Old
Agreement"); and

                  WHEREAS, the parties wish to amend and restate the Old
Agreement to change the date of the consummation of the

<PAGE>
<PAGE>



Amended and Restated
Series C Repurchase and
Exchange Agreement, Page 2

transactions contemplated thereby from immediately prior to the Offering to
December 23, 1996;

                  NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and for other
good and valuable consideration, and receipt and sufficiency which are hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:

                  1. Repurchase of Series C Preferred Stock. On and as of the
date hereof, each of the undersigned holders of Series C Preferred Stock agrees
to sell, and the Company agrees to repurchase, all 2,000 of the outstanding
shares of Series C Preferred Stock for an aggregate of $1,000,000 (the
"Repurchase Price"), to be paid pro rata to such holders based on the number of
shares of Series C Preferred Stock held. Payment of the Repurchase Price shall
be made in the form of a promissory note of the Company, substantially in the
form of Exhibit A hereto.

                  2. Conversion of Warrants. Simultaneously with the repurchase
of the Series C Preferred Stock as set forth in paragraph 1, the Series C
Warrants shall be cancelled and shall cease to be outstanding and will be
exchanged for an aggregate of 600,000 shares of Common Stock, to be issued pro
rata based on the number of Series C Warrants held. The holders of the shares of
Common Stock for which the Series C Warrants are exchanged shall have the same
registration rights as such holders had under the agreement dated as of
September 10, 1996 between such holders and the Company, with respect to shares
of Common Stock for which the Series C Warrants were exercisable.

                  3. Securities Law Matters. Each of the undersigned holders of
Series C Preferred Stock severally acknowledges and agrees that: (a) the shares
of Common Stock to be issued to it upon exchange of the Series C Warrants have
not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the
"Securities Act"); (b) such shares may not be freely resold or transferred
absent registration under the Securities Act or an exemption therefrom; (c) it
is acquiring such shares for its own account for investment purposes only and
not with a view towards the resale or distribution thereof; (d) it may be
required to hold such shares for an indefinite period; (e) certificates
representing such shares may bear restrictive legends and the Company may
instruct its transfer agent to place stop transfer orders with respect thereto;
(f) it is an "accredited investor" within the meaning of Rule 501(a) of
Regulation D under the Securities Act; (g) it is aware that the Company is
issuing such Common Stock in transactions exempt from the registration
requirements of the Securities Act pursuant to Regulation D or

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Amended and Restated
Series C Repurchase and
Exchange Agreement, Page 3

other exemptions from registration; and (h) it is not an "affiliate" of Broad
Capital Associates, Inc. within the meaning of the Securities Act.

                  4. Miscellaneous. This Agreement may not be modified except in
a writing signed by or on behalf of all of the parties hereto. This Agreement
constitutes the entire agreement of the parties with respect to the repurchase
of the outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock and the exchange of the
Series C Warrants, and supersedes the Old Agreement. This Agreement may be
signed in one or more counterparts, all of which shall constitute a single
original.

                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the undersigned has duly caused
this Agreement to be signed on its behalf as of this 23rd day of December, 1996.

                                           All-Comm Media Corporation

                                           By:---------------------------------
                                              Name:
                                              Title:

                                           Newark Sales Corp.

                                           By:----------------------------------
                                              Name:
                                              Title:

                                           Saleslink Ltd.

                                           By:----------------------------------
                                              Name:
                                              Title:

<PAGE>
<PAGE>



                                                                       Exhibit A

                            [Form of Promissory Note]

                                 PROMISSORY NOTE

$_______________                                            December 23, 1996
                                                            New York, New York

                  FOR VALUE RECEIVED, All-Comm Media Corporation, a Nevada
corporation (the "Company"), hereby promises to pay to __________________ (the
"Payee"), the principal sum of FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND ($500,000.00) Dollars (or
such lesser amount as shall equal the aggregate unpaid amount of the Repurchase
Price owed to Payee under the Amended and Restated Series C Repurchase and
Exchange Agreement (the "Repurchase Agreement") dated as of the date hereof), in
lawful money of the United States of America and in immediately available funds,
on demand at any time from and after the date the Offering is consummated, but
in no event later than June 7, 1998 (the "Maturity Date").

                                    ARTICLE I

                                   DEFINITIONS

                  Capitalized terms used but not defined herein have the
meanings given to such terms in the Repurchase Agreement. In addition, when used
herein, the following terms have the following meanings:

                   "Business Day" means any day on which commercial banks are
not authorized or required to close in New York City, New York or in Los
Angeles, California.

                  "Dollars" and "$" shall mean lawful money of the United
States of America.

                                   ARTICLE II

                             PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST

                  2.01 Repayment of Principal. The Company hereby promises to
pay to the Payee the entire unpaid principal amount of this Note, together with
accrued interest thereon, on demand at any time from and after the date of
consummation of the Offering (or any other underwritten public offering of
Common Stock by the Company), but in no event later than the Maturity Date;
provided that, in the case of payment on demand, Payee has given the Company at
least ten (10) Business Days' prior written notice of its intention to make such
demand, which notice shall specify the date designated for payment (which shall
be a

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Exhibit A to Repurchase
Agreement, Page 2

Business Day).  Simultaneously with the payment in full of this Note, Payee
shall surrender this Note to the Company for cancellation.

                  2.02 Interest. The Company hereby promises to pay to Payee
interest on the unpaid principal amount of the Note for the period from and
including the date hereof to but excluding the date the principal amount of this
Note shall be paid in full, at a rate per annum equal to eight percent (8%);
provided that in no event shall the amount paid or agreed to be paid to Payee
for the use, forbearance, or detention of the indebtedness evidenced by this
Note exceed the maximum amount permitted by law. Interest on this Note shall be
computed on the basis of a year of 365 or 366 days (as the case may be) and
actual days elapsed (including the first day but excluding the last day)
occurring in the period for which interest is payable. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Company hereby promises to pay to Payee interest ("Default
Interest") at a rate per annum equal to ten percent (10%) on any principal and
any other amount payable by the Company hereunder that shall not be paid in full
when due (whether on demand or otherwise), for the period from and including the
due date thereof to but excluding the date the same is paid in full. Accrued
interest (including Default Interest, if any) shall be payable at the time of
payment or prepayment of any principal of this Note (but only on the principal
amount so paid or prepaid).

                                   ARTICLE III
                            PAYMENTS AND PREPAYMENTS

                  3.01 Payments. Except to the extent otherwise provided herein,
all payments of principal, interest and other amounts to be made by the Company
under this Note, shall be made in Dollars, in immediately available funds,
without deduction, set-off or counterclaim, by wire transfer to an account
designated by Payee in the notice required by Section 2.01 not later than 1:00
p.m. (New York time) on the date on which such payment shall become due (each
such payment made after such time on such due date to be deemed to have been
made on the next succeeding Business Day).

                  3.02 Optional Prepayments. The Company shall have the right to
prepay, without premium or penalty, the unpaid principal amount of this Note, in
whole or in part, at any time or from time to time; provided that (a) the
Company shall give Payee at least ten (10) Business Days' prior written notice
thereof, which notice shall specify the amount to be prepaid and the date of
prepayment (which shall be a Business Day and upon which date the amount to be
prepaid shall become due and payable hereunder) and (b) any such prepayment
shall be in a minimum amount of $100,000 or a larger multiple of $50,000.

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Exhibit A to Repurchase
Agreement, Page 3

                                   ARTICLE IV
                                  MISCELLANEOUS

                  4.01 Subordination. This Note shall be a general obligation of
the Company and is subordinated to any and all obligations of the Company to any
bank or other financial institution, regardless of whether such obligations
presently exist or are subsequently incurred.

                  4.02 Waiver. (a) No failure on the part of Payee to exercise
and no delay in exercising, and no course of dealing with respect to, any right,
power or privilege under this Note or the Repurchase Agreement shall operate as
a waiver thereof, nor shall any single or partial exercise of any right, power
or privilege under this Note or the Repurchase Agreement preclude any other or
further exercise thereof or the exercise of any other right, power or privilege.
The remedies provided herein are cumulative and not exclusive of any remedies
provided by law.

                  (b) The Company hereby waives demand, presentment, protest,
notice of protest, notice of dishonor, and all other notices or demand of any
kind or nature with respect to this Note (other than as otherwise expressly
provided herein).

                  4.03 Notices. All notices, requests and other communications
provided for herein (including, without limitation, any modifications of, or
waivers, requests or consents under, this Note) shall be given or made in
writing (including, without limitation, by telecopy) by the close of business on
the day the notice is given, delivered to the intended recipient at the address
specified below or at such other address as shall be designated by such
recipient in a notice to the Company or Payee, as the case may be. Except as
otherwise provided herein, all such communications shall be deemed to have been
duly given when transmitted by telecopier or personally delivered or, in the
case of a mailed notice, upon receipt, in each case given or addressed as
aforesaid.

                  If to Payee:

                  __________________________________
                  
                  __________________________________

                  __________________________________

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Exhibit A to Repurchase
Agreement, Page 4

                  If to the Company:
                  
                  All-Comm Media Corporation
                  400 Corporate Pointe, Suite 780
                  Culver City, California  90230

                  Attention:  Barry Peters
                  Telecopy:   (310) 342-2801

                  4.04 Costs of Collection. The Company agrees to pay or
reimburse the Payee for all reasonable out-of-pocket costs and expenses of Payee
(including, without limitation, the reasonable fees and expenses of legal
counsel) in connection with (i) any default under this Note and any enforcement
or collection proceedings resulting therefrom, including, without limitation,
all manner of participation in or other involvement with (x) any bankruptcy,
insolvency, receivership, foreclosure, winding up or liquidation proceedings,
(y) judicial or regulatory proceedings and (z) workout, restructuring or other
negotiations or proceedings (whether or not the workout, restructuring or
transaction contemplated thereby is consummated) and (ii) the enforcement of
this Section 4.04.

                  4.05 Successors and Assigns. This Note and the Repurchase
Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the Company and
Payee and their respective successors and permitted assigns.

                  4.06 Assignments. The Company may not assign or transfer this
Note or any of its obligations hereunder without the prior written consent of
Payee. Payee may assign or transfer this Note or any of its rights hereunder at
any time.

                  4.07 Amendment, Modification, Waiver. The terms of this Note
may not be waived, altered or amended except by an instrument in writing duly
executed by the Company and Payee. Any such amendment or waiver shall be binding
upon the Company and Payee, and their respective successors and permitted
assigns.

                  4.08 Governing Law; Submission to Jurisdiction. This Note and
the Repurchase Agreement shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with,
the laws of the State of New York (without giving effect to its principles of
conflicts of law). Each of the Company and Payee hereby submits to the
nonexclusive jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York and of the Supreme Court of the State of New York sitting
in New York County (including its Appellate Division), and of any other
appellate court in the State of New York, for the purposes of all legal
proceedings arising out of or relating to this Note or the transactions
contemplated hereby. Each of the Company and the Payee hereby irrevocably
waives, to

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Exhibit A to Repurchase
Agreement, Page 5

the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, any objection that it may now or
hereafter have to the laying of the venue of any such proceeding brought in such
a court and any claim that any such proceeding brought in such a court has been
brought in an inconvenient forum.

                  4.09 Waiver of Jury Trial. EACH OF THE COMPANY AND THE PAYEE
HEREBY IRREVOCABLY WAIVES, TO THE FULLEST EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW,
ANY AND ALL RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY LEGAL PROCEEDING ARISING OUT OF OR
RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT, THE NOTES OR THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED HEREBY.

                                                      ALL-COMM MEDIA CORPORATION

                                                      By 
                                                         -----------------------
                                                         Name:
                                                         Title:

<PAGE>


               AMENDED AND RESTATED OPTION CANCELLATION AGREEMENT

                  Amended and Restated Option Cancellation Agreement dated as of
December 23, 1996 among All-Comm Media Corporation (the "Company"), Barry Peters
and E. William Savage.

                  WHEREAS, the Company has filed a registration statement with
the Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed underwritten registered
public offering (the "Offering") of shares of its common stock, par value $.01
per share (the "Common Stock"), and for the delayed offering of shares of Common
Stock by certain delayed selling securityholders;

                  WHEREAS, the lead underwriter for the Offering has advised the
Company that the existence of the current number of options, warrants or other
rights convertible or exercisable for shares of the Common Stock could be
detrimental to the Offering and to secondary trading in the Common Stock
following consummation of the Offering;

                  WHEREAS, in September 1996, the Company awarded to each of
Messrs. Peters and Savage options to purchase 300,000 shares of Common Stock,
and each of them holds securities of the Company other than such options;

                  WHEREAS, each of Messrs. Peters and Savage is willing to enter
into this Agreement in order to induce the Company to proceed with the Offering
and in order to derive or have the potential to derive economic benefit
therefrom;

                  WHEREAS, the parties hereto are parties to an Option
Cancellation Agreement dated as of November 20, 1996 (the "Old Agreement"); and

                  WHEREAS, the parties wish to amend and restate the Old
Agreement to change the date of the consummation of the transactions
contemplated thereby from immediately prior to the Offering to December 23,
1996;

                  NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and for other
good and valuable consideration, and receipt and sufficiency which are hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:

                  1. Cancellation of Options. On and as of the date hereof, each
of Messrs. Peters and Savage severally irrevocably waives and agrees to the
cancellation of any and all rights he has or may have had to 150,000 of the
options awarded to him by the Company in September 1996, and agrees that such
options shall be treated for all purposes as null and void ab initio.

<PAGE>
<PAGE>


Amended and Restated
Option Cancellation
Agreement, Page 2

                  2. Remaining Options. The Company confirms and agrees that all
other options granted to Messrs. Peters and Savage, including the balance of the
options awarded to each of them in September 1996 which are not being cancelled
under paragraph 1, shall remain in full force and effect in accordance with
their respective terms and shall not be affected by this Agreement.

                  3. Miscellaneous. This Agreement may not be modified except in
a writing signed by or on behalf of all of the parties hereto. This Agreement
constitutes the entire agreement of the parties with respect to the cancellation
of the options specified as being cancelled hereby. This Agreement may be signed
in one or more counterparts, all of which shall constitute a single original.

                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the undersigned has duly signed or
caused this Agreement to be signed on its behalf as of this 23rd day of
December, 1996.

                                           All-Comm Media Corporation

                                           By:
                                              ----------------------------------
                                              Name:  Scott A. Anderson
                                                     Title: Chief Financial
                                                            Officer

                                                      --------------------------
                                                      Barry Peters

                                                      --------------------------
                                                      E. William Savage

<PAGE>




<PAGE>
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.2
                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

We consent to the inclusion in this registration statement on Amendment No. 3 to
Form SB-2 (File No.  333-14339)  of our report dated  September 19, 1996, on our
audits of the consolidated financial statements of All-Comm Media Corporation as
of June 30,  1996 and for each of the two years  ended  June 30,  1996.  We also
consent to the  inclusion in this  registration  statement on Amendment No. 3 to
Form SB-2 (File No. 333-14339) of our report dated June 2, 1995, on our audit of
the financial  statements of Stephen Dunn & Associates,  Inc. as of December 31,
1994 and for the year then ended.  We also consent to the  reference to our firm
under the caption "Experts."

                                                    /s/ Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.
                                                    Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.

Sherman Oaks, California
December 24, 1996


<PAGE>





<PAGE>

                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.3

                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

We consent to the inclusion in this registration statement on Amendment No. 3 to
Form SB-2 (File No.  333-14339)  of our report  dated  August 29,  1996,  on our
audits of the financial  statements of Metro Services Group, Inc. as of December
31, 1995 and for each of the two years ended  December 31, 1995. We also consent
to the reference to our firm under the caption "Experts."

                                                    /s/ Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.

New York, New York
December 23, 1996.

<PAGE>



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