TII INDUSTRIES INC
PRE 14A, 1998-10-15
SWITCHGEAR & SWITCHBOARD APPARATUS
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                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

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

Filed by the Registrant [X]

Filed by a party other than the Registrant [   ]

Check the appropriate box:

[X]  Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ]  Confidential,  for  Use  of the  Commission  Only  (as  permitted  by  Rule
     14a-6(e)(2))
[ ] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive  Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss.240.14a-11(c) or ss.240.14a-12

                              TII Industries, Inc.                
                              ---------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

              ----------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]      No fee required

[   ]    Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11

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

         2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

         3) Per  unit  price  or other  underlying  value  of  transaction
            computed  pursuant  to  Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the
            amount on which the filing fee is calculated  and state how it
            was determined):

         4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

         5) Total fee paid:

[  ]     Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

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

         1)       Amount Previously Paid:

         2)       Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

         3)       Filing Party:

         4)       Date Filed:

<PAGE>


                              TII INDUSTRIES, INC.

                                1385 Akron Street
                            Copiague, New York 11726
                               ------------------

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD DECEMBER 8, 1998
                               ------------------

To the Stockholders of
TII Industries, Inc.:

         NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the 1998 Annual Meeting of  Stockholders of
TII Industries,  Inc., a Delaware  corporation (the "Company"),  will be held at
the Huntington Hilton, 598 Broad Hollow Road, Melville,  New York, on Wednesday,
December 8, 1998 at 4:00 p.m., New York time, at which the following matters are
to be presented for consideration:

         1.    The election of three Class I directors to serve until the Annual
               Meeting  of  Stockholders  to be held in the year  2001 and until
               their respective successors are elected and qualified;

         2.    A proposal to approve the Company's 1998 Stock Option Plan.

         3.    A proposal  to approve  the  issuance,  in  addition to the up to
               1,520,000  shares of Common Stock which the Company has agreed to
               issue,  of all shares of Common Stock which the Company  would be
               entitled  to issue  upon  conversion  of the  Company's  Series C
               Convertible Preferred Stock;

         4.    A proposal to ratify the  selection  by the Board of Directors of
               Arthur   Andersen  LLP  as  the  Company's   independent   public
               accountants for the fiscal year ending June 25, 1999; and

         5.    The  transaction  of such other  business  as may  properly  come
               before the meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof.

         The close of  business on October 16, 1998 has been fixed as the record
date for the  determination  of stockholders  entitled to notice of, and to vote
at, the meeting and any  adjournments or postponements  thereof.  A list of such
stockholders  will be open for  examination by any  stockholder  for any purpose
germane to the meeting, during ordinary business hours, for a period of at least
10 days prior to the meeting at the offices of the Company,  1385 Akron  Street,
Copiague, New York.

                                            By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                                         /s/ Dorothy Roach,
                                                            Secretary
October 26, 1998

         WHETHER OR NOT YOU EXPECT TO ATTEND THE MEETING,  PLEASE COMPLETE, DATE
AND SIGN THE  ENCLOSED  PROXY AND MAIL IT PROMPTLY IN THE  ENCLOSED  ENVELOPE IN
ORDER TO ASSURE  REPRESENTATION  OF YOUR  SHARES.  NO POSTAGE NEED BE AFFIXED IF
MAILED IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE IN THE UNITED STATES.
<PAGE>



                              TII INDUSTRIES, INC.
                                1385 Akron Street
                            Copiague, New York 11726
                              --------------------

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       For Annual Meeting of Stockholders
                         To be Held on December 8, 1998
                            ------------------------

         This Proxy  Statement,  to be mailed to stockholders of TII Industries,
Inc., a Delaware  corporation (the "Company"),  on or about October 26, 1998, is
furnished in connection  with the  solicitation by the Board of Directors of the
Company of proxies in the accompanying form ("Proxy" or "Proxies") to be used at
the  Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  of the  Company to be held on  Wednesday,
December  8,  1998 at 4:00  p.m.,  New York  time,  and at any  adjournments  or
postponements  thereof  (the  "Meeting").  The  Meeting  will  be  held  at  the
Huntington Hilton, 598 Broad Hollow Road, Melville, New York.

         The close of  business on October 16, 1998 has been fixed as the record
date (the  "Record  Date") for the  determination  of  stockholders  entitled to
notice  of,  and to vote  at,  the  Meeting.  On the  Record  Date,  there  were
outstanding 7,667,269 shares of the Company's Common Stock ("Common Stock"). The
presence of a majority of all such shares at the Meeting, in person or by proxy,
will  constitute a quorum for the  transaction of business at the Meeting.  Each
outstanding  share of Common Stock on the Record Date is entitled to one vote on
all matters to be voted on at the  Meeting.  A plurality  of the votes of shares
present in person or  represented  by proxy at the Meeting and  entitled to vote
thereon  will be  required  for the  election  of  directors  (Proposal  1). The
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in person or represented by
proxy and entitled to vote will be required to approve the Company's  1998 Stock
Option Plan  (Proposal  2), to approve the  issuance,  in addition to the shares
which the Company has agreed to issue,  of all shares of Common  Stock which the
Company would be entitled to issue upon  conversion  of the  Company's  Series C
Convertible  Preferred  Stock (Proposal 3) and to ratify the selection of Arthur
Andersen LLP as the Company's independent public accountants for the fiscal year
ending June 25, 1999 (Proposal 4).

         Proxies properly  executed and received in time for the Meeting will be
voted in accordance with the  specifications  made thereon or, in the absence of
specification,  for all nominees named herein to serve as directors and in favor
of each of the other  matters  proposed in this Proxy  Statement by the Board of
Directors.  The Board of  Directors  does not intend to bring before the Meeting
any matter other than those described  above, and has not received notice of and
is not aware of any other matters that are to be presented by  stockholders  for
formal  action at the Meeting.  If,  however,  any other matters or motions come
before the Meeting, it is the intention of the persons named in the accompanying
Proxy to vote such Proxy in  accordance  with their  judgment on such matters or
motions,  including any matters dealing with the conduct of the Meeting. Proxies
submitted which contain  abstentions or broker  non-votes will be deemed present
at the  Meeting  for  determining  the  presence  of a quorum.  Abstentions  are
considered  shares  entitled to vote at the  Meeting,  while  shares  subject to
broker  non-votes with respect to any matter are not considered  shares entitled
to vote with respect to that matter.  Abstentions and broker non-votes will have
no  effect on the  election  of  directors  or the  outcome  of any of the other
proposals  set forth in this  Proxy  Statement.  Any Proxy may be revoked by the
person  giving it at any time  prior to the  exercise  of the  powers  conferred
thereby by a written  notice of  revocation to Dorothy  Roach,  Secretary of the
Company,  1385 Akron  Street,  Copiague,  New York 11726,  by  submitting a duly
executed proxy bearing a later date at the foregoing  address or at the Meeting,
or by voting in person at the Meeting.


<PAGE>

                          SECURITY HOLDINGS OF CERTAIN
                      STOCKHOLDERS, MANAGEMENT AND NOMINEES

         The following table sets forth information, as of the Record Date, with
respect  to  the  beneficial  ownership  of  Common  Stock  by (i)  each  person
(including  any  "group",  as  that  term is used  in  Section  13(d)(3)  of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934) known by the Company to own more than 5% of the
outstanding shares of Common Stock, (ii) each director and nominee to serve as a
director  of the  Company,  (iii) each  executive  officer  named in the Summary
Compensation Table under the caption "Executive  Compensation",  below, and (iv)
all  executive  officers and  directors  of the Company as a group.  The Company
understands  that,  except as noted below, each beneficial owner has sole voting
and investment power with respect to all shares attributable to such owner.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                      Percent
                                                                  Shares                 of
Beneficial Owner                                                  Owned              Class (1)
- ----------------                                                  -----              ---------

<S>                                                           <C>                <C>  
Alfred J. Roach                                                 891,600 (2)            11.4%
Route 2-Kennedy
Avenue, Guaynabo,
Puerto Rico 00657
Dorothy Roach                                                    60,704 (3)             *
Route 2-Kennedy
Avenue, Guaynabo,
Puerto Rico 00657
Timothy J. Roach                                                681,013 (4)             8.7%
1385 Akron Street
Copiague, NY 11726
C. Bruce Barksdale                                               31,998 (5)             *
James R. Grover, Jr.                                             38,600 (6)             *
Joseph C. Hogan                                                  44,330 (7)             *
William G. Sharwell                                              45,000 (8)             *
Dare P. Johnston                                                 40,000 (9)             *
James A. Roach                                                   50,488 (10)            *
George S. Katsarakes                                                  0                 *
All executive officers and                                    1,931,733 (11)           23.3 %
directors as a group
(12 persons)
- ----------------
</TABLE>

(1)      Asterisk  indicates  that the  percentage  is less  than  one  percent.
         Percent of Class assumes the issuance of the Common Stock issuable upon
         the exercise of options (to the extent exercisable on or within 60 days
         after  the  Record  Date)  held by such  persons  but  (except  for the
         calculation  of  beneficial  ownership  by all  executive  officers and
         directors as a group) by no other person or entity.

                                       -2-

<PAGE>



(2)      Includes  180,360  shares  subject to options held under the  Company's
         Stock Option  Plans.  Excludes the shares  owned by Mr.  Roach's  wife,
         Dorothy Roach, reflected below in this table, as to which shares Mr.
         Roach disclaims beneficial ownership.

(3)      Includes 8,960 shares subject to options held under the Company's Stock
         Option Plans. Excludes the shares owned by Mrs. Roach's husband, Alfred
         J. Roach,  reflected above in this table, as to which shares Mrs. Roach
         disclaims beneficial ownership.

(4)      Includes 968 shares owned by Mr.  Roach's wife (who has sole voting and
         dispositive  power with  respect  to the shares  owned by her and as to
         which Mr. Roach  disclaims  beneficial  ownership)  and 170,000  shares
         subject to options held under the Company's Stock Option Plans.

(5)      Includes 78  shares owned by Mr. Barksdale's children and 24,000 shares
         subject to options held under the Company's Stock Option Plans.

(6)      Includes  35,000  shares  subject to options  held under the  Company's
         Stock Option Plans.

(7)      Includes  44,250  shares  subject to options  held under the  Company's
         Stock Option Plans.

(8)      Represents  44,400  shares  subject to options held under the Company's
         Stock Option Plans.

(9)      Represents  40,000  shares  subject to options held under the Company's
         Stock Option Plans.

(10)     Includes  1,000 shares  owned by Mr.  Roach's wife (who has sole voting
         and dispositive power with respect to the shares owned by her and as to
         which Mr.  Roach  disclaims  beneficial  ownership)  and 32,000  shares
         subject to options held under the Company's Stock Option Plans.

(11)     Includes 621,970 shares subject to options.


                                       -3-

<PAGE>

                                   PROPOSAL 1.

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         The Company's Restated Certificate of Incorporation and By-Laws provide
that the Board of  Directors  shall be divided  into three  classes,  designated
Class I,  Class II and Class III.  These  classes  are to be as nearly  equal in
number as the then total  number of directors  constituting  the entire Board of
Directors permits, with each class to include not less than two directors.

         The Company's Board of Directors  presently consists of seven directors
divided into three  classes.  The term of office of Class I directors  continues
until the Meeting,  the term of office of Class II directors continues until the
next succeeding  annual meeting of stockholders  and the term of office of Class
III  directors   continues  until  the  second   succeeding  annual  meeting  of
stockholders,  and, in each case, until their respective  successors are elected
and qualified.  At each annual meeting  directors are chosen to succeed those in
the class whose term expires at that meeting.

         The terms of C. Bruce  Barksdale,  Dr.  Joseph C. Hogan and  William G.
Sharwell, the present Class I directors,  each of whom was previously elected by
stockholders,  will expire at the  Meeting.  At the  Meeting,  holders of Common
Stock will elect three Class I  directors  to serve until the Annual  Meeting of
Stockholders to be held in the year 2001 and until their  respective  successors
are elected and qualified.  Unless otherwise directed,  the persons named in the
enclosed  Proxy  intend to cast all votes  pursuant to Proxies  received for the
election of C. Bruce Barksdale, Dr. Joseph C. Hogan and William G. Sharwell (the
"nominees") to serve as Class I directors.

         In the event that either of the nominees  should become  unavailable or
unable to serve for any  reason,  the  holders  of  Proxies  have  discretionary
authority to vote for one or more  alternate  nominees who will be designated by
the Board of  Directors.  The Company  believes  that each of the  nominees  are
available to serve as directors.

Background of Nominees

         Class I Directors

         C. Bruce Barksdale,  67, has been a Vice President of the Company since
August  1971,  serving as Senior Vice  President  (responsible  for customer and
product  development)  since October  1993,  and a director of the Company since
1974. Mr. Barksdale holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering
from the University of South Carolina.

         Dr.  Joseph C.  Hogan,  76, has been a director  of the  Company  since
January  1974.  Dr.  Hogan served as Dean of the College of  Engineering  of the
University of Notre Dame from 1967 to 1981, following which he performed various
services  for the  University  of Notre Dame until 1985,  where he remains  Dean
Emeritus.  From 1985 until his  retirement in 1987,  Dr. Hogan was a Director of
Engineering   Research  and  Resource   Development  at  Georgia   Institute  of
Technology.  He is  past  President  of  the  American  Society  of  Engineering
Education.  Dr.  Hogan is a  director  of  American  Biogenetic  Sciences,  Inc.
("ABS").

         William G.  Sharwell,  76, has been as a director of the Company  since
October 1995.  Mr.  Sharwell was  President of Pace  University in New York from
1984 until his  retirement  in 1990.  He was Senior Vice  President  of American
Telephone & Telegraph Company (now AT&T Corporation)  between 1976 and 1984, and
previously  served  as  Executive  Vice  President  of  Operations  of New  York
Telephone Company (now Bell

                                       -4-

<PAGE>



Atlantic Corporation).  Mr. Sharwell serves as an independent general partner of
Equitable  Capital  Partners,  L.P. and Equitable  Capital Partners  (Retirement
Fund), L.P., registered investment companies under the Investment Company Act of
1940. He is also a director of ABS.

         Class II Directors

         James R.  Grover,  Jr.,  79, has been a director of the  Company  since
1978. Mr. Grover has been engaged in the private practice of law in the State of
New York since 1974 and has been General Counsel to the Company since 1977.

         Dorothy Roach, 75, has been Secretary of the Company since 1971, served
as Treasurer of the Company from 1979 to December  1993 and,  except for a brief
period, has been a director of the Company since 1964.

         Class III Directors

         Alfred J. Roach,  83, has served as Chairman of the Board of  Directors
and a director of the Company and its predecessor since its founding in 1964 and
was Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company from the Company's  founding  until
January 1995. Since September 1983, Mr. Roach has also served as Chairman of the
Board of Directors of ABS, a biotechnology research company. Mr. Roach devotes a
majority of his time to the affairs of ABS.

         Timothy J.  Roach,  51, has  served the  Company in various  capacities
since December 1973. He has been President of the Company since July 1980,  Vice
Chairman of the Board since October 1993, Chief Executive  Officer since January
1995 and a director since January 1978. Mr. Roach also served as Chief Operating
Officer of the Company from May 1987 until January 1998. Mr. Roach was a Captain
in the United  States Air Force for four years  prior to joining the Company and
is a graduate of Harvard  University's  Business  School  Program for Management
Development. Mr. Roach has also served as Treasurer, Secretary and a director of
ABS since September 1983. Mr. Roach devotes substantially all of his time to the
affairs of the Company.

         Alfred J.  Roach and  Dorothy  Roach are  married  and the  parents  of
Timothy J. Roach.  There are no other family  relationships  among the Company's
directors.

The Board of Directors and Committees of the Board

         During the  Company's  fiscal year ended June 26, 1998,  the  Company's
Board of Directors held thirteen meetings. In addition, during that fiscal year,
the Board  acted by  unanimous  consent on eight  occasions  following  informal
discussions.

         The Board of Directors has Audit and Compensation Committees. The Board
does not have a standing nominating  committee or committee performing a similar
function.

         The  principal  functions  of  the  Audit  Committee  are  to  nominate
independent  auditors for  appointment by the Board;  meet with the  independent
auditors to review and approve the scope of their audit  engagement and the fees
related  to  such  work;  meet  with  the  Company's  financial  management  and
independent auditors to review matters relating to internal accounting controls,
the Company's  accounting practices and procedures and other matters relating to
the  financial  condition of the Company;  and report to the Board  periodically
with respect to

                                       -5-

<PAGE>



such  matters.  The members of the Audit  Committee  are James R.  Grover,  Jr.,
Joseph C. Hogan and William G. Sharwell. The Audit Committee met on one occasion
during the Company's fiscal year ended June 26, 1998.

         The  Compensation  Committee is authorized to consider and recommend to
the Board of Directors  salaries,  bonuses and other  compensation  arrangements
with respect to the executive officers of the Company;  grant options under, and
administer,  the  Company's  present and future  employee  stock  option  plans;
examine, administer and make recommendations to the full Board of Directors with
respect to other employee  benefit plans and arrangements of the Company and its
subsidiaries; and report to the Board periodically with respect to such matters.
The  present  members  of the  Compensation  Committee  are  Joseph C. Hogan and
William G. Sharwell. While the Compensation Committee held no formal meeting, it
acted by unanimous  consent on four  occasions  following  informal  discussions
during the Company's fiscal year ended June 26, 1998.

         During the  Company's  fiscal year ended June 26, 1998,  each  director
attended at least 75% of the aggregate number of Board of Directors meetings and
meetings of all  committees on which such director  served that were held during
the year.

Required Vote

         A  plurality  of the  votes  cast by the  shares  present  in person or
represented  by proxy at the  Meeting and  entitled to vote for the  election of
directors will elect directors.

         The Board of Directors recommends that stockholders vote FOR each of C.
Bruce Barksdale, Dr. Joseph C. Hogan and William G. Sharwell to serve as Class I
directors.

                                       -6-

<PAGE>
                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         In addition to Alfred J. Roach,  Timothy J. Roach,  C. Bruce  Barksdale
and Dorothy Roach, the following are also executive officers of the Company:

         Virginia  M. Hall,  45, has  served the  Company in various  capacities
since February  1976,  serving as Vice  President-Administration  since December
1993  and Vice  President-Contract  Administration  from  September  1990  until
December 1993.

         Dare P. Johnston,  57, has been Vice President - Fiber Optic Operations
since December 1993. Ms.  Johnston joined the Company in September 1993 with the
Company's  acquisition  of  Ditel,  Inc.  (now  TII-Ditel,  Inc.),  a  designer,
manufacturer and supplier of fiber optic products. Prior to joining the Company,
Ms. Johnston served in various  capacities with Ditel,  Inc. since January 1989,
serving as President  since September  1990.  Prior to joining Ditel,  Inc., Ms.
Johnston was employed by NCNB National Bank of North Carolina since 1973,  where
she served as Senior Vice  President  since October 1983.  Ms.  Johnston holds a
Bachelor of Arts degree in English from Duke University.

         George S.  Katsarakes,  60, has been Executive Vice President and Chief
Operating Officer of the Company since January 1998. From January, 1994 until he
joined the Company, Mr. Katsarakes held senior- level positions,  most recently,
Executive Vice President of Eagle Manufacturing Company, Inc., a manufacturer of
high-tech electrical wiring devices.  From December 1978 until January 1994, Mr.
Katsarakes held several general  management and plant management  positions with
Pratt & Whitney and Otis Elevator Company,  subsidiaries of United  Technologies
Corporation,  a provider  of a broad range of  products  to the  commercial  and
defense industries.  Mr. Katsarakes holds an  industrial/mechanical  engineering
degree from  Northeastern  University  and a Masters of Business  Administration
degree from Harvard Business School.

         James A. Roach, 45, has served the Company in various  capacities since
January 1982, serving as Vice President-Marketing and Sales since July 1987.

         Paul  G.  Sebetic,  34,  has  been  Vice  President-Finance  and  Chief
Financial  Officer of the Company  since October 1996.  Mr.  Sebetic  joined the
Company in April 1996 as Corporate Controller.  From November 1992 until joining
the Company, Mr. Sebetic held various financial management positions with V Band
Corporation, a telecommunications equipment manufacturer,  serving as Controller
since August 1995.  From February 1991 through  August 1992, Mr. Sebetic was the
Financial  Controller of the European  operations of MacDermid Inc., a specialty
chemical manufacturer.  Mr. Sebetic is a Certified Public Accountant and holds a
Masters of Business Administration degree in Finance from New York University.

         Alfred J.  Roach and  Dorothy  Roach are  married.  Timothy J. Roach is
their  son and  James A.  Roach  is  their  nephew.  There  are no other  family
relationships among the Company's directors and executive officers.

         Officers hold office until their  successors  are chosen and qualified.
Any officer elected or appointed by the Board of Directors may be removed at any
time by the Board.  See  "Executive  Compensation - Employment  Agreements"  for
information  concerning  the  Company's  Employment  Agreements  with Timothy J.
Roach, Dare P. Johnston, George S. Katsarakes and James A. Roach.


                                       -7-

<PAGE>

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Summary Compensation Table

         The following  table sets forth,  for the Company's  three fiscal years
ended June 26, 1998, information concerning the compensation paid by the Company
to Timothy J. Roach, who served as the Company's Chief Executive  Officer during
all of fiscal 1998, and each of the four other most highly  compensated  persons
who were serving as executive  officers of the Company at the end of fiscal 1998
(the "Named Executive Officers"):
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                           Long-Term
                                                                                          Compensation
                                                             Annual Compensation             Award
Name and                                                                                     Stock                 All Other
Principal Position                  Year              Salary               Bonus          Options (#)            Compensation
- ------------------                  ----              ------               -----          ------------           ------------

<S>                              <C>             <C>                  <C>                  <C>                   <C>      
Timothy J. Roach                    1998            $243,654             $    --              100,000               $7,877(1)
    Chief Executive                 1997             193,985               6,976               50,000                7,521
    Officer                         1996             171,618                  --                   --                7,586

Alfred J. Roach                     1998             150,000                 200 (2)           60,000                   --
   Chairman of the Board            1997             150,000                 200 (2)           50,000                   --
                                    1996             150,000                 200 (2)               --                   --


Dare P. Johnston                    1998             139,000                  --               25,000                   --
   Vice President -                 1997             129,825               4,017                   --                   --
   Fiber Optics                     1996             120,779                  --               10,000                   --
   Operations

James A. Roach                      1998             130,738                  --               25,000                   --
   Vice President -                 1997             111,564              44,209 (3)               --                   --
    Marketing and Sales             1996             106,440              24,347 (3)           10,000                   --


George S. Katsarakes                1998              95,192 (4)          24,000              100,000                   --
   Executive Vice
   President


</TABLE>

(1)      Includes (i) $1,264  representing  the dollar value to Mr. Roach of the
         portion  of the  premium  paid by the  Company  on  split  dollar  life
         insurance  policy during such year with respect to the deemed term life
         insurance  portion of the premiums and (ii)  $6,613,  representing  the
         annual  premium paid by the Company on long-term  disability  insurance
         maintained by the Company for the benefit of Mr. Roach.

(2)      Required to be paid under Puerto Rico law.

(3)      Commissions based on sales.

(4)      Mr. Katsarakes joined the Company in January 1998.


                                       -8-

<PAGE>

Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year

         The following  table contains  information  concerning  options granted
during the  Company's  fiscal  year ended June 26,  1998 to the Named  Executive
Officers:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                             Potential Realizable
                             Number of       Percent of                                      Value at Assumed
                             Securities    Total Options                                    Annual Rates of Stock
                             Underlying      Granted to       Exercise                      Price Appreciation For
                              Options       Employees in     Price Per     Expiration           Option Term (2)
Name                          Granted     Fiscal Year (1)      Share       Date            ------------------------
- ----                         ---------    ---------------    ---------     -----------                               
                                                                                                 5%            10%
                                            
<S>                      <C>                <C>            <C>            <C>             <C>            <C>
Alfred J. Roach                60,000              7.3%        $4.38          12/29/2007       $165,085      $418,357
Timothy J. Roach              100,000             12.1%        $4.38          12/29/2007       $275,141      $697,262
Dare P. Johnston               25,000              3.0%        $4.38          12/29/2007      $0068,785      $174,316
James A. Roach                 25,000              3.0%        $4.38          12/29/2007      $0068,785      $174,316
George S. Katsarakes          100,000             12.1%        $5.88           1/20/2007       $369,476      $936,324
</TABLE>

         (1) Each option was  granted at an  exercise  price equal to the market
value of the  Company's  Common  Stock on the date of grant  and is  exercisable
during a ten year term (subject to early termination in certain instances).  The
options vest in five equal  annual  installments  commencing  one year after the
date of grant.

         (2) These are  hypothetical  values using assumed compound growth rates
prescribed by the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  and are not intended to
forecast  possible  future  appreciation,  if any,  in the  market  price of the
Company's Common Stock.

Aggregate Option Exercises and Fiscal Year-End Option Value Table

         The following  table contains  information  with respect to (i) options
exercised by the Named Executive Officers during the Company's fiscal year ended
June 26, 1998 and (ii) the fiscal year-end value of unexercised  options held by
such officers:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                         Number of           Value of Unexercised
                                                                    Unexercised Options      In-the-Money Options
                                                                     Held Fiscal Year-          Held at Fiscal
                                                                    nd (#) (Exercisable/         Year-End ($)
                              Shares Acquired         Value            Unexercisable)            (Exercisable/
Name                          on Exercise (#)     Realized($)(1)   E                          Unexercisable) (2)
- ----                                                                                                            
                            -------------------  ----------------  ----------------------   -----------------------
<S>                          <C>                <C>                  <C>                  <C>    
Alfred J. Roach                     --              $   --         170,360/180,000           $93,968/$28,820
Timothy J. Roach                   7,725            18,675         162,275/220,000           $56,106/ 41,340
Dare P. Johnston                    --                  --          36,000/ 39,000               756/  8,329
James A. Roach                     5,000            14,695          26,000/ 39,000               756/  8,329
George S. Katsarakes                --                  --              --/100,000              --  /   --
</TABLE>

(1)      Represents the number of underlying  shares of Common Stock  multiplied
         by the closing  price per share of Common Stock on the date of exercise
         of the option less the exercise price of the option.

(2)      Represents the number of underlying  shares of Common Stock  multiplied
         by the  difference  between  the closing  price of the Common  Stock at
         fiscal year-end and the option exercise price.

                                       -9-

<PAGE>


Remuneration of Directors

         Non-employee  directors receive a fee of $1,000 for each meeting of the
Board attended in person and members of Committees of the Board receive a fee of
$500 for meetings  attended of the Committee of the Board on which such director
serves.  Non-employee  directors  are also  granted  options to purchase  10,000
shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock under the  Company's  1994  Non-Employee
Director  Stock  Option  Plan at the time such  person  becomes  a  non-employee
director and immediately  following each annual meeting of stockholders at which
directors  are elected.  Each option  granted is  exercisable  for period of ten
years  (subject  to  earlier   termination  at  specified   times   following  a
non-employee director's cessation of service) at an exercise price equal to 100%
of the fair market value on the date of grant of the shares subject thereto.

Employment Agreements

         The Company and Timothy J. Roach are parties to an Amended and Restated
Employment  Agreement,  effective  as of August 1, 1997,  pursuant  to which Mr.
Roach is serving as the Company's  President and Chief  Executive  Officer.  The
Agreement  replaced Mr. Roach's former  Employment  Agreement,  which expired on
July 31, 1997.  The Amended and  Restated  Employment  Agreement  provides for a
five-year  term  presently  ending  July  31,  2003,  with  automatic   one-year
extensions  on each July 31 during the term unless  either party gives notice of
termination  at least 90 days prior to such July 31.  Under the  Agreement,  Mr.
Roach is presently entitled to an annual salary of $250,000 per year, subject to
increases and bonuses at the discretion of the Board of Directors.  In addition,
the Agreement  requires the Company to provide Mr. Roach with an allowance,  not
to exceed 20% of his then salary, to reimburse him for the cost of maintaining a
secondary  residence in Puerto Rico,  where the Company  maintains its principal
manufacturing facilities.  The Company also is to continue to maintain insurance
benefits  provided  Mr.  Roach at levels  and terms no less  favorable  than are
currently in effect.  Mr. Roach has agreed,  among other things, not to disclose
confidential  information  of the  Company  and not to  directly  or  indirectly
engage,  during the term of the agreement and for two years  thereafter,  in any
activity which is competitive with the Company's business.  In consideration for
such covenant, Mr. Roach is to receive, for each year during the two-year period
following  termination of his employment,  an amount equal to his highest salary
rate in effect at any time during the one-year period preceding the date of such
termination  unless Mr. Roach's employment is terminated by reason of his death,
voluntary termination other than for "good reason" (in general,  adverse changes
in his  powers,  duties,  position  or  compensation  or certain  changes in the
location where his duties are to be  performed),  disability or for cause and he
is not capable of providing day-to-day services to a competitor. In the event of
termination  of  employment by reason of death or  disability,  Mr. Roach or his
beneficiary  is entitled to receive a  continuation  of his  compensation  for a
period  of one  year  and  two  years,  respectively.  In the  event  Mr.  Roach
terminates  his  employment for "good reason," the Company will also be required
to pay him a sum equal to three  times the amount of his highest  annual  salary
and highest  bonus for the current or two  preceding  fiscal  years,  subject to
reduction as to any amount that would constitute a "parachute payment" under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended,  to the maximum amount that would not
constitute  such a "parachute  payment." In the event of the  termination of Mr.
Roach's employment other than for cause, all outstanding stock options then held
by Mr. Roach shall fully vest.

         Dare P. Johnston is a party to an Employment Agreement, dated September
23,  1993,  with the  Company's  subsidiary,  TII-Ditel  Inc.,  under  which Ms.
Johnston  is to serve as  President/General  Manager  of the Ditel  Fiber  Optic
Division of the Company. The Agreement, as amended, provides for a term expiring
April 30, 2000.  Under the Agreement,  Ms.  Johnston's  current annual salary is
$145,000 per annum, subject to review at

                                      -10-

<PAGE>



the end of each  year of  employment,  with Ms.  Johnston  to  receive  a salary
increase  of up to 10% per year but not less than the  percentage  increase of a
consumer  price  index.  In the  event  of  the  termination  of Ms.  Johnston's
employment  by the Company  other than for cause,  death,  disability  or by Ms.
Johnston  following a  reduction  in rank or  authority,  Ms.  Johnston  will be
entitled  to  receive  all  compensation  that she would have  received  for the
remaining term of her Agreement, but not less than six months' compensation,  in
a lump sum, and all  outstanding  options then held by Ms.  Johnston shall fully
vest. Ms.  Johnston has agreed not to disclose  confidential  information of the
Company  during  or  after  her  employment  and  that,  during  the term of her
employment  and,  for a period  of two  years  thereafter,  not to  directly  or
indirectly engage in certain activities which are competitive to the Company.

         James A. Roach is a party to an Employment Agreement, dated January 21,
1998, with the Company under which Mr. Roach is serving as Vice President-Sales.
The  Agreement  provides  for a  term  expiring  January  20,  2001.  Under  the
Agreement,  Mr. Roach's salary is presently $131,700 and is subject to review at
the end of each year of  employment.  In addition,  the  Agreement  requires the
Company to provide Mr.  Roach with an  allowance,  not to exceed 20% of his then
salary to reimburse  him for the cost of  maintaining  a secondary  residence in
Puerto Rico, where the Company maintains its principal manufacturing facilities.
In the event of the termination of Mr. Roach 's employment by the Company, other
than for cause, death,  disability or by Mr. Roach following a reduction in rank
or  authority,  Mr. Roach will be entitled to receive all  compensation  that he
would have received for the remaining term of his  Agreement,  but not less than
six months' compensation, in a lump sum, and all outstanding options held by Mr.
Roach  shall  fully  vest.  Mr.  Roach has agreed not to  disclose  confidential
information of the Company  during or after his employment and that,  during the
term of his  employment  and,  for a  period  of two  years  thereafter,  not to
directly or indirectly engage in certain activities which are competitive to the
Company.

         George S. Katsarakes is a party to an Employment Agreement, dated March
9, 1998,  with the Company  under which Mr.  Katsarakes  is serving as Executive
Vice President.  The Agreement provides for a term expiring March 8, 2001. Under
the Agreement,  Mr.  Katsarakes's salary is presently $225,000 and is subject to
review at the end of each year of employment,  with Mr.  Katsarakes to receive a
salary  increase  of up to 10% per  year but not less  that  the  increase  in a
consumer  price  index.  In the  event of the  termination  of Mr.  Katsarakes's
employment  by the Company,  other than for cause,  death,  disability or by Mr.
Katsarakes  following a reduction in rank or authority,  Mr.  Katsarakes will be
entitled  to  receive  all  compensation  that he would  have  received  for the
remaining term of his Agreement, but not less than six months' compensation,  in
a lump sum, and all outstanding options held by Mr. Katsarakes shall fully vest.
Mr.  Katsarakes  has  agreed not to  disclose  confidential  information  of the
Company  during  or  after  his  employment  and  that,  during  the term of his
employment  and,  for a period  of two  years  thereafter,  not to  directly  or
indirectly engage in certain activities which are competitive to the Company.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation


Report of Board of Directors and Compensation Committee
Concerning Executive Compensation

         The following report is submitted by the Compensation  Committee of the
Board of Directors  which,  among other things,  considers and recommends to the
Board of Directors  salaries,  bonuses and other compensation  arrangements with
respect  to the  Company's  executive  officers.  While  both the full  Board of
Directors and the Compensation Committee have authority with respect to granting
stock options under the Company's  1995 Stock Option Plan,  all options  granted
under  that plan  during the  Company's  fiscal  year  ended June 26,  1998 were
granted by the Compensation Committee.


                                      -11-

<PAGE>



         The  Compensation  Committee  has  viewed  salaries  for the  Company's
executive  officers  as a  means  of  providing  basic  compensation  at  levels
sufficient  to attract and retain  qualified  executives.  Levels of base salary
have been determined,  on a subjective  basis, in light of the executive's level
of  responsibility,  performance and expertise,  as well as prevailing  economic
conditions,  the  Company's  performance,  competitive  factors and  contractual
obligations.

         Bonuses, if awarded,  have been to provide short-term  incentive and to
reward the executive's  personal  performance and  contribution to the Company's
recent overall performance or as an inducement to join the Company.  Performance
bonuses  have  been   determined   by  reference  to  specific   pre-established
performance  targets,  on  a  subjective  basis  by  examining  the  executive's
achievements, or, at times, pursuant to agreements entered into as an inducement
for an executive to join the Company. During fiscal 1998, no performance bonuses
were granted.  A bonus was paid to George S.  Katsarakes as an inducement to him
to join the Company as Chief Operating Officer.

         The  Compensation  Committee has  considered  options a useful means of
enabling the Company to provide  long-term  incentive to  executives in a manner
that enables the Company to conserve cash for  operations and growth while tying
the  executive's  interest  to  the  interests  of  stockholders  through  stock
ownership and potential  stock  ownership.  Option grants have been made,  based
upon the  executive's  performance  and expected  contribution  to the long-term
goals of the Company.  See "Approval of the  Company's  1998 Stock Option Plan,"
below,  for  information  concerning  offers made and proposed to be made to the
holders of all employee options (including those held by executive  officers) to
substitute new options, with an exercise price based on the current market price
of the Company's Common Stock, a new term and an increased vesting schedule, for
existing options.

         In negotiating the terms of a new Employment  Agreement with Timothy J.
Roach, the Company's Chief Executive  Officer (which agreement  replaced a prior
agreement  that  expired  on July 31,  1997),  the  Committee  requested  that a
provision  contained in Mr. Roach's former Employment  Agreement that guaranteed
Mr.  Roach a minimum 10% annual  salary  increase be deleted and that any salary
increases during the term of his Amended and Restated Employment  Agreement,  as
well as any  bonuses,  be at the  discretion  of the  Committee.  In  connection
therewith, and in light of Mr. Roach's leadership, efforts and commitment to the
Company,  the  Committee  determined  to increase  Mr.  Roach's base salary from
$195,000  to $250,000  in August  1997.  In December  1997,  the  Committee,  in
reviewing  employee  stock  options in general,  granted Mr.  Roach an option to
purchase  100,000  shares  of the  Company's  Common  Stock.  See  "--Employment
Agreements,"  above,  for a  description  of Mr.  Roach's  Amended and  Restated
Employment Agreement.

         Section  162(m)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of  1986,  as  amended
("Section 162(m)"),  precludes a public company from taking a Federal income tax
deduction for annual  compensation paid to its chief executive officer or any of
its  four  other  most  highly  compensated  executive  officers  in  excess  of
$1,000,000 for any such person.  Certain  "performance  based  compensation"  is
excluded  from the deduction  limitation.  Cash  compensation  being paid by the
Company  does not,  and is not  expected  to,  reach the  threshold at which the
deduction  limitation  would be imposed.  The Company's  stock option plans have
been  structured in a manner  designed to enable any amounts which may be deemed
compensation  as a result of the exercise of stock  options to be excluded  from
the deduction limitation.  Accordingly, Section 162(m) is not expected to affect
the Company's ability to deduct items treated as compensation for Federal income
tax purposes.

Respectfully submitted,

Joseph C. Hogan
William G. Sharwell

                                      -12-

<PAGE>



Performance Graph

         The following  graph compares the  cumulative  return to holders of the
Company's  Common  Stock for the five  years  ended  June 26,  1998 with (i) the
Nasdaq Stock Market-US Index (the Company's  Common Stock has been quoted on the
Nasdaq  National Market System since August 3, 1994 prior to which it was traded
on the American Stock  Exchange) and (ii) the Nasdaq  Telecommunications  Index.
The  comparison  assumes  $100 was  invested on June 30,  1993 in the  Company's
Common Stock and in each of the comparison  groups and assumes  reinvestment  of
dividends (the Company paid no dividends during the periods):

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>



                                         6/93           6/94           6/95          6/96           6/97          6/98
<S>                                   <C>            <C>            <C>           <C>            <C>           <C> 
TII Industries Inc.                      $100           $149           $144          $147           $125          $101
Nasdaq Stock Market-US Index             $100           $101           $135          $173           $210          $278
Nasdaq Telecommunications Index          $100           $100           $115          $143           $158          $270

</TABLE>

                                    CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

         Since fiscal 1982,  the Company has leased  equipment from PRC Leasing,
Inc.  ("PRC"),  a corporation  wholly-owned by Alfred J. Roach,  Chairman of the
Board of  Directors  and a director  of the  Company.  On July 18,  1991,  as an
inducement  to the  Company's  then bank lenders to  restructure  the  Company's
long-term bank loan, among other things,  the Company acquired certain equipment
and  replaced its leases for other  equipment  with a new lease.  The  equipment
lease (as subsequently  amended, the "Equipment Lease") has a term expiring July
17,  1999  (subject  to an  automatic  extension  until  July 17,  2001,  unless
terminated by either party upon at least ninety days written notice prior to the
scheduled  renewal  period) and provides for rentals at the rate of $200,000 per
year. The Company believes that the rentals charged by PRC are comparable to the
rentals which would have been charged by unrelated leasing companies for similar
equipment.

Compliance with Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

         Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as  amended,
requires  the  Company's  executive  officers  and  directors,  and  persons who
beneficially  own more than 10% of the Company's  Common  Stock,  to timely file
initial  statements of stock  ownership and  statements of changes of beneficial
ownership  with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  and furnish copies of
those statements to the Company. Based solely on

                                      -13-

<PAGE>



a review of the copies of the  statements  furnished to the Company to date,  or
written  representations that no statements were required,  the Company believes
that all  statements  required to be filed by such  persons  with respect to the
Company's fiscal year ended June 27, 1997 were timely filed.


                                   PROPOSAL 2

                APPROVAL OF THE COMPANY'S 1998 STOCK OPTION PLAN

         The  Compensation  Committee  and the full  Board of  Directors  of the
Company  consider  options a useful  means of  enabling  the  Company to provide
long-term  incentive  to  optionees  in a manner  that  enables  the  Company to
conserve cash for operations  and growth while tying the optionee's  interest to
the  interests of  stockholders  through stock  ownership  and  potential  stock
ownership.

         Presently,  there are outstanding  options to purchase 23,440 shares of
Common Stock under the  Company's  1983 Stock Option  Incentive  Plan (the "1983
Plan"),  916,261  shares under the  Company's  1986 Stock Option Plan (the "1986
Plan") and  1,196,300  shares  under the  Company's  1995 Stock Option Plan (the
"1995 Plan").  No further options may be granted under the 1983 Plan or the 1986
Plan and options to purchase 46,500 shares  (together with any shares subject to
options which become  available for future grant in the event of any expiration,
cancellation or termination of unexercised  options) remain available for future
grant  under  the  1995  Plan.  See  "Executive   Compensation--Remuneration  of
Directors" for  information  concerning the Company's  1994  Non-Employee  Stock
Option Plan under which options to purchase  105,000  shares of Common Stock are
presently outstanding.

         While all outstanding (and exercised) options under each of those plans
were  granted at exercise  prices at least equal to 100% of the market  value of
the Company's  Common Stock on the date of grant, the exercise prices of many of
the options are  presently  well in excess of the  current  market  value of the
Company's Common Stock. As a result, the Compensation Committee and the Board of
Directors  believe that  presently  outstanding  options are not  providing  the
intended incentive.

         Accordingly,  the Board has determined that it is in the best interests
of the Company to offer all  optionees  (other than  holders of options  granted
under the Company's 1994 Non-Employee Director Stock Option Plan) the ability to
modify their existing  options to reduce the exercise price thereof to an amount
equal to at least 100% of the market value of the Company's  Common Stock on the
date of the  Board's  extension  of the offer and begin a new  ten-year  term in
exchange for a new vesting schedule  pursuant to which the options would vest in
five equal annual installments commencing one year after the date of the Board's
extension of the offer.

         To  implement  its  determination,  (a) on October  8, 1998,  the Board
extended an offer, in accordance with the terms of the 1995 Plan, to each person
holding options under that plan to amend the optionee's  existing  options under
the 1995 Plan to  provide  for an  exercise  price  equal to $1.563 per share of
Common  Stock,  the average of the high and low sales prices per share of Common
Stock on such date,  and a ten-year term  beginning  October 8, 1998, but with a
vesting  schedule such that the option could be exercised at the rate of 20% per
annum of the number of shares subject to the option  beginning  October 8, 1999;
and (b) adopted,  subject to  stockholder  approval,  the  Company's  1998 Stock
Option Plan (the "1998 Plan"),  described below,  under which holders of options
outstanding  under the 1983 Plan and 1986 Plan  (which  plans do not  permit the
grant of options or a similar option  modifications)  would be extended an offer
to exchange their existing  options for new options with an exercise price to be
equal to the average of the high and low sales  prices per share of Common Stock
on the

                                      -14-

<PAGE>



date of the new grant by the Board,  which is  expected  to occur on the date of
the  Meeting  if  stockholders  approve  the 1998  Plan,  with a  ten-year  term
commencing on such date and the vesting schedule  described above. The 1998 Plan
also includes additional shares of Common Stock available for future grant.

         Except  therefor,  no options  granted to executive  officers have ever
been amended or  substituted by the Company in a manner which reduced the option
exercise price. The following table sets forth  information  concerning  options
granted to the Named Executive Officers under the 1995 Plan which have been, and
options proposed to be granted to them under the 1983 Plan and 1986 Plan, in the
manner described above:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                                     Length of
                                                                                                                  Original Option
                                                                                                                       Term
                                                        Number of        Fair Market      Exercise       New       Remaining at
                                         Year of       Underlying     Value at Time of    Price of    Exercise        Date of
Name                         Date      Option Plan       Shares           Amendment      Old Option     Price      Amendment (1)
- ----                         ----      -----------       ------           ---------      ----------     -----      -------------

<S>                     <C>          <C>            <C>               <C>             <C>            <C>               <C>
Timothy J. Roach           1//9/92           1986           30,000            $ (2)           $3.13      $ (2)             3.1
Timothy J. Roach           9/14/94           1986          100,000              (2)            4.63        (2)             5.8
Timothy J. Roach           5/15/95           1986          100,000              (2)            5.13        (2)             6.4
Timothy J. Roach           7/25/96           1995           50,000             1.56            4.50       1.56             7.8
Timothy J. Roach          12/30/97           1995          100,000             1.56            4.38       1.56             9.2
Alfred J. Roach           11/14/89           1986           40,360              (2)            2.50        (2)              .9
Alfred J. Roach            9/14/95           1986          100,000              (2)            4.63        (2)             5.8
Alfred J. Roach            5/15/96           1986          100,000              (2)            5.13        (2)             6.4
Alfred J. Roach            7/25/96           1995           50,000             1.56            4.50       1.56             7.8
Alfred J. Roach           12/30/97           1995           60,000             1.56            4.38       1.56             9.2
Dare P. Johnston           9/23/93           1986           20,000              (2)            6.25        (2)             4.8
Dare P. Johnston           9/14/94           1986           20,000              (2)            4.63        (2)             5.8
Dare P. Johnston          12/18/95           1986           10,000              (2)            7.50        (2)             7.0
Dare P. Johnston          12/30/97           1995           25,000             1.56            4.38       1.56             9.2
James A. Roach             9/21/93           1986           10,000              (2)            6.09        (2)             4.8
James A. Roach             9/14/94           1986           20,000              (2)            4.63        (2)             5.8
James A. Roach              7/3/85           1986           10,000              (2)            6.75        (2)             6.6
James A. Roach            12/30/97           1995           25,000             1.56            4.38       1.56             9.2
George S. Katsarakes       1/21/98           1995          100,000             1.56            5.88       1.56             9.3
- ------------------
</TABLE>

(1)      In years and tenths of a year.

(2)      To be the  average  of the high and low sales  prices of the  Company's
         Common  Stock on the date of grant,  which is  expected to occur on the
         date of the Meeting.

                  Approval of adoption of the 1998 Plan is required in order for
the Board to implement its  determination  with respect to options granted under
the  1983  and 1986  Plans,  but is not a  condition  to  implementation  of its
determination with respect to options granted under the 1995 Plan.

         The  following  is a summary of certain  material  features of the 1998
Plan.

                                      -15-

<PAGE>



Shares Subject to the Option Plan and Eligibility

         The 1998 Plan  authorizes the grant of options to purchase a maximum of
1,500,000  shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock  (subject  to  adjustment  as
described  below) to employees and directors of, and consultants to, the Company
or any of its  subsidiaries.  Upon  expiration,  cancellation  or termination of
unexercised  options,  the shares of the Company's  Common Stock subject to such
options will again be available for the grant of options under the 1998 Plan.

Type of Options

         Options  granted  under the 1998 Plan may  either  be  incentive  stock
options ("ISOs"), within the meaning of Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended (the  "Code"),  or  nonqualified  stock options which do not
qualify as ISOs ("NQSOs"). ISOs, however, may only be granted to employees.

Administration

         The 1998  Plan is to be  administered  by the Board of  Directors  or a
committee of the  Company's  Board of Directors  consisting of not less than two
members of the Board, each of whom is to be a "non-employee director" within the
meaning of Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended (the "Exchange Act"). Those  administering the 1998 Plan are referred to
as the "Administrators."

         Among other  things,  the  Administrators  are  empowered to determine,
within the express limits contained in the 1998 Plan, the employees, consultants
and directors to be granted options, whether an option granted to an employee is
to be an ISO or a NQSO,  the  number of shares of Common  Stock to be subject to
each option,  the exercise  price of each option,  the term of each option,  the
date each option shall become  exercisable  as well as any terms,  conditions or
installments  relating  to  the  exercisability  of  each  option,   whether  to
accelerate  the date of  exercise of any option or  installment  and the form of
payment of the exercise price,  to construe each stock option  contract  between
the Company and an optionee and, with the consent of the optionee,  to cancel or
modify an option. The Administrators are also authorized to prescribe, amend and
rescind  rules  and  regulations  relating  to the 1998  Plan and make all other
determinations necessary or advisable for administering the 1998 Plan.

Terms and Conditions of Options

         Options granted under the 1998 Plan are subject to, among other things,
the following terms and conditions:

         (a)  The  exercise   price  of  each  option  is   determined   by  the
Administrators;  provided, however, that the exercise price of an ISO may not be
less than the fair market  value of the  Company's  Common  Stock on the date of
grant (110% of such fair market value if the optionee owns, or is deemed to own,
more than 10% of the voting power of the Company).

         (b) Options may be granted for terms established by the Administrators;
provided,  however, that the term of an ISO may not exceed ten years (five years
if the optionee  owns, or is deemed to own, more than 10% of the voting power of
the Company).

         (c) The  maximum  number of shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock for
which options may be granted to an employee in any calendar year is 250,000.  In
addition, the aggregate fair market value of shares

                                      -16-

<PAGE>



with respect to which ISOs may be granted to an employee  which are  exercisable
for the first time during any calendar year may not exceed $100,000.

         (d) The exercise  price of each option is payable in full upon exercise
or, if the Administrators permit, in installments. Payment of the exercise price
of an option may be made in cash, or, if the Administrators permit, in shares of
the Company's Common Stock or any combination thereof.

         (e) Options may not be transferred other than by will or by the laws of
descent and  distribution,  and may be exercised during the optionee's  lifetime
only by the optionee.

         (f) Except as may otherwise be determined by the Administrators, if the
optionee's relationship with the Company as an employee,  director or consultant
is terminated for any reason other than death or  disability,  the option may be
exercised,  to the  extent  exercisable  at the  time  of  termination  of  such
relationship at any time, within three months thereafter,  but in no event after
the  expiration  of the  term  of the  option;  provided,  however,  that if the
relationship  is  terminated  either  for cause or  without  the  consent of the
Company, the option will terminate immediately. Except as may be provided in the
option contract related to the option,  an option is not affected by a change in
the status of an optionee so long as the optionee continues to be an employee or
director  of, or a consultant  to, the  Company.  In the case of the death of an
optionee while an employee,  director or consultant (or, generally, within three
months  after  termination  of such  relationship,  or  within  one  year  after
termination of such  relationship by reason of disability),  except as otherwise
provided in the optionee's option contract,  the optionee's legal representative
or beneficiary may exercise the option, to the extent exercisable on the date of
death,  at any time  within one year after such date,  but in no event after the
expiration of the term of the option.  An optionee whose  relationship  with the
Company is terminated by reason of disability may (except as otherwise  provided
in  the  optionee's  option  contract)   exercise  the  option,  to  the  extent
exercisable  at the effective date of such  termination,  at any time within one
year thereafter, but not after the expiration of the term of the option.

         (g) The  Company  may  withhold  cash  and/or,  with the consent of the
Administrators,  shares of the Company's  Common Stock having an aggregate value
equal to the  amount  which the  Company  determines  is  necessary  to meet its
obligations  to withhold any federal,  state and/or local taxes or other amounts
incurred  by reason  of the grant or  exercise  or  vesting  of an option or the
disposition of shares  acquired upon the exercise of the option.  Alternatively,
the  Company may  require  the  optionee to pay the Company  such amount in cash
promptly upon demand.

Adjustment in Event of Capital Changes

         Appropriate adjustments are to be made in the number and kind of shares
available  under the 1998 Plan, in the number and kind of shares  subject to the
1998 Plan and each outstanding  option and in the exercise prices of outstanding
options,  as well as the  limitation on the number of shares that may be granted
to any  employee  in any  calendar  year,  in the  event  of any  change  in the
Company's Common Stock by reason of any stock dividend,  split-up,  combination,
reclassification, recapitalization, merger in which the Company is the surviving
corporation,  spin-off,  exchange of shares or the like. In the event of (a) the
liquidation  or  dissolution  of the Company or (b) a transaction  (or series of
related  transactions)  that is approved by a majority of the Company's Board of
Directors  as elected by  stockholders  prior to the first of such  transactions
(including,  without limitation, a merger,  consolidation,  sale of stock by the
Company or its stockholders, tender offer or sale of assets) in which the voting
power  (in  the  election  of  directors  generally)  of  the  Company's  voting
securities outstanding immediately prior to such transaction ceases to represent
(which representation may be by voting securities of

                                      -17-

<PAGE>



the Company  remaining  outstanding or by being converted into voting securities
of the  surviving  entity)  at least 50% of the  combined  voting  power (in the
election  of  directors  generally)  of the  Company  or such  surviving  entity
outstanding  immediately after such transaction,  any outstanding  options shall
terminate  upon the earliest of any such event,  unless other  provision is made
therefor in the transaction.

Duration and Amendment of the 1998 Plan

         No option may be granted under the 1998 Plan after October 7, 2008. The
Board of Directors may at any time  terminate or amend the 1998 Plan;  provided,
however, that, without the approval of the Company's stockholders,  no amendment
may be made which would (a) except as a result of the anti-dilution  adjustments
described above,  increase the maximum number of shares for which options may be
granted under the 1998 Plan or increase the maximum  number of shares covered by
options that may be granted to an employee in any calendar  year, (b) change the
eligibility requirements for persons who may receive options under the 1998 Plan
or (c) make any change for which applicable law requires  stockholder  approval.
No termination or amendment may adversely  affect the rights of an optionee with
respect to an outstanding option without the optionee's consent.

Federal Income Tax Treatment

         The  following  is  a  general   summary  of  the  federal  income  tax
consequences  under  current  tax law of NQSOs and ISOs.  It does not purport to
cover all of the  special  rules,  including  the  exercise  of an  option  with
previously-acquired   shares,  or  the  state  or  local  income  or  other  tax
consequences  inherent in the  ownership  and exercise of stock  options and the
ownership and disposition of the underlying shares.

         An optionee does not recognize  taxable  income for federal  income tax
purposes upon the grant of a NQSO or an ISO.

         Upon the exercise of a NQSO, the optionee recognizes ordinary income in
an amount  equal to the excess,  if any, of the fair market  value of the shares
acquired  on the date of  exercise  over the  exercise  price  thereof,  and the
Company  generally is entitled to a deduction  for such amount at that time.  If
the optionee later sells shares acquired  pursuant to the exercise of a NQSO, he
or she recognizes long-term or short-term capital gain or loss, depending on the
period  for which the shares  were held.  Long-term  capital  gain is  generally
subject to more  favorable  tax  treatment  than  ordinary  income or short-term
capital gain.

         Upon the exercise of an ISO, the optionee  does not  recognize  taxable
income. If the optionee disposes of the shares acquired pursuant to the exercise
of an ISO more  than two  years  after  the date of grant and more than one year
after  the  transfer  of the  shares  to him or  her,  the  optionee  recognizes
long-term  capital  gain  or  loss  and  the  Company  is not be  entitled  to a
deduction.  However, if the optionee disposes of such shares within the required
holding  period,  all or a portion of the gain is treated as ordinary income and
the Company generally is entitled to deduct such amount.

         In addition to the federal income tax consequences  described above, an
optionee may be subject to the alternative  minimum tax, which is payable to the
extent it  exceeds  the  optionee's  regular  tax.  For this  purpose,  upon the
exercise of an ISO,  the excess of the fair market  value of the shares over the
exercise price therefor is an adjustment  which  increases  alternative  minimum
taxable income. In addition, the optionee's basis in such shares is increased by
such excess for purposes of computing the gain or loss on the disposition of the
shares for alternative  minimum tax purposes.  If an optionee is required to pay
an alternative minimum tax, the amount of

                                      -18-

<PAGE>



such tax  which is  attributable  to  deferral  preferences  (including  the ISO
adjustment) is allowed as a credit against the optionee's  regular tax liability
in  subsequent  years.  To the  extent  the  credit is not used,  it is  carried
forward.

Options Proposed to be Granted Under the 1998 Plan

         The following table sets forth the number of shares underlying  options
that are proposed to be granted  under the 1998 Plan in  replacement  of options
which  are  presently  outstanding  under the 1983 Plan and 1986 Plan to (i) the
Named Executive  Officers,  (ii) all current  executive  officers as a group and
(iii) all other  employees,  including  current  officers who are not  executive
officers, and consultants.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                                  Number of Shares
Category of Optionee                                                         Underlying Options Granted
- --------------------                                                         --------------------------
<S>                                                                                      <C>    
Timothy J. Roach..........................................................               230,000
Alfred J. Roach...........................................................               240,360
Dare P. Johnston..........................................................                50,000
James A. Roach............................................................                40,000
George S. Katsarakes......................................................                  --
Executive officers as a group (7 persons, including the                                                     
   Named Executive Officers) .............................................               611,360
Other employees and consultants as a group (48 persons)...................               328,341
</TABLE>

         It is not  intended  that  new  options  will  be  substituted  for the
existing  options  to  purchase  105,000  shares  of  Common  Stock  held by the
Company's five  non-employee  directors  under the Company's  1994  Non-Employee
Director  Stock  Option Plan (see  "Executive  Compensation  -  Remuneration  of
Directors").

         On October 14, 1998, the closing price of the Company's Common Stock on
The Nasdaq Stock Market's National Market was $1.6875 per share.

Required Vote

         Approval  of the  proposed  amendment  to the 1998  Plan  requires  the
affirmative  vote of a majority of the shares of Common Stock  present in person
or  represented  by proxy at the Meeting and entitled to vote on this  proposal.
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR approval of Proposal 2.


                                   PROPOSAL 3.

            APPROVAL OF ISSUANCE OF ADDITIONAL SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
             UPON CONVERSION OF SERIES C CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK

General

         On January 26, 1998, the Company completed a private placement of 5,000
shares of its newly-created Series C Convertible  Preferred Stock (the "Series C
Preferred  Shares") and  Warrants to purchase an aggregate of 200,000  shares of
the Company's Common Stock (the "Warrants") to five investors (the  "Investors")
who are  unaffiliated  with  the  Company  for an  aggregate  purchase  price of
$5,000,000.   The  net  proceeds  from  the  private  placement,   estimated  at
$4,550,000, are being used to purchase additional equipment and leasehold

                                      -19-

<PAGE>



improvements  to  increase  the  Company's  manufacturing  capacity  to  support
recently awarded contracts and for working capital.

         The Series C  Preferred  Shares are  convertible,  at the option of the
holders thereof, into shares of the Company's Common Stock at a conversion price
equal to the lower of (i) $7.08 per share of Common Stock (the "Fixed Conversion
Price") or (ii) 95% of the average of the  closing  bid prices of the  Company's
Common Stock during the ten consecutive  trading days immediately  preceding the
conversion date of the Series C Preferred  Shares.  Unless converted or redeemed
prior thereto,  the Series C Preferred Shares are to be automatically  converted
into  Common  Stock on January 26,  2003  (subject to possible  delay in certain
instances).  The Company may also require  conversion  of the Series C Preferred
Shares at any time on or after January 26, 2001,  subject to the  fulfillment of
certain  conditions.  The Fixed  Conversion Price and percentage set forth above
are subject to reduction,  subject to certain exceptions,  based upon periods of
time that sales of shares of Common  Stock  underlying  the  Series C  Preferred
Shares cannot be made under a registration statement which the Company has filed
under the Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and which is presently effective (the "Registration Statement").  The
conversion price is also subject to anti-dilution adjustments under a formula in
certain circumstances,  including, with certain exceptions, (a) the issuances of
Common  Stock,  or the  issuance  of  securities  which  are  exercisable  into,
exchangeable   for  or  convertible  into  Common  Stock,  for  a  consideration
(including  amounts  receivable  upon such exercise,  exchange or conversion) at
below the then Fixed Conversion Price and (b) subdivisions or combination of the
Company's  Common  Stock.  The Company is subject to potential  penalties in the
event it fails to timely  permit  conversion of Series C Preferred  Shares.  The
Company is not  obligated  to issue more than  1,520,000  shares of Common Stock
upon  conversion  of  Series C  Preferred  Shares  (the  "Exchange  Cap") if the
issuance of a larger number would breach the Company's  obligations  under rules
and  regulations of The Nasdaq Stock Market.  If the Company cannot issue Common
Stock for any reason,  including by reason of the Exchange Cap, or fails to have
sufficient shares registered under the Securities Act for resale, the Company is
to issue as many shares of Common Stock as it is able to issue without violating
any  restriction  and the holder of unconverted  Series C Preferred  Shares may,
among  other  things,  require the  Company to redeem  those  Series C Preferred
Shares which the Company is unable to convert at a redemption price per Series C
Preferred  Share  equal to the greater of $1,150 or the closing bid price on the
proposed  conversion  date of the Common Stock which would have  otherwise  been
issued.

         The Series C Preferred  Shares bear no  dividends,  have a  liquidation
preference  of $1,150 per Series C  Preferred  Share and have no voting  rights,
except as required by the Delaware  General  Corporation Law and with respect to
(a) any changes  which would amend,  alter,  change or repeal any of the powers,
designations,  preferences  and rights of the Series C Preferred  Shares and (b)
any issuance of any additional Series C Preferred Shares. The Series C Preferred
Shares are redeemable, prior to conversion, at the option of the holders thereof
at a price  equal to the higher of $1,150 or the then  closing  bid price of the
underlying shares of the Company's Common Stock in the event of certain business
combinations  of the Company,  the sale of  substantially  all of the  Company's
assets, a purchase,  tender or exchange offer for more than 50% of the Company's
Common Stock and, in certain  other cases,  including the failure of the Company
to convert Series C Preferred  Shares,  to maintain the  Registration  Statement
effective  (except for specified  periods of time) or to maintain the listing of
the Common Stock on Nasdaq/NMS.

         The Warrants are exercisable until January 25, 2001 at a fixed exercise
price equal to approximately $7.03 per share, subject to adjustment in the event
of stock splits, dividends, combinations,  reclassifications,  recapitalizations
or like capital adjustments.

                                      -20-

<PAGE>





Purpose of the Proposal

         The rules of Nasdaq require  companies,  the stocks of which are quoted
thereon, to obtain stockholder approval prior to issuing, in a transaction other
than in a public  offering,  a number of shares of common  stock equal to 20% or
more of its common  stock or voting power  outstanding  before the issuance at a
price less than the greater of the book or market value of the stock.

         The  Company  is  seeking  stockholder  approval  at the  Meeting  of a
proposal to authorize the Company to issue,  at its option,  in addition to such
1,520,000 shares, all shares of Common Stock which the Company would be entitled
to issue upon conversion of the Series C Preferred Shares (limited by the number
of shares,  in excess of  outstanding  shares and shares  reserved for issuance,
which the Company is authorized to issue under its Certificate of Incorporation)
should the  Exchange  Cap be reached,  thus  enabling the Company to utilize its
available cash for the intended purposes discussed above.

         Assuming  conversion  prices  based upon the average of the closing bid
prices of the  Company's  Common Stock during the ten  consecutive  trading days
immediately  preceding  September 30, 1998, if the proposal is not adopted,  the
Company would be required to issue 1,497,970 shares of Common Stock (in addition
to the 22,030 shares  issued prior to September 30, 1998) and pay  $2,080,452 to
the Investors.  Based upon the same assumption,  if the proposal is adopted, the
Company could (to the extent it elects to issue in excess of 1,520,000 shares of
Common Stock) issue approximately  2,374,721 shares of Common Stock (in addition
to the  22,030  shares  issued  prior  to  September  30,1998)  and make no cash
payments.  The  foregoing  numbers will vary  depending  upon  variations in the
market price of the Company's  Common  Stock.  While  conversion,  as opposed to
redemption,  of the  Series  C  Preferred  Shares  will  serve to  preserve  the
Company's  cash and net worth,  the  issuance of  significant  amounts of Common
Stock could adversely affect the market price of the Company's Common Stock.

         A vote against the proposal by stockholders  will not effect the rights
of the Investors, who would, if the Company would otherwise be required to issue
in excess of 1,520,000 shares, be able to require the Company to redeem Series C
Preferred  Shares  otherwise  convertible  at a  redemption  price per  Series C
Preferred  Shares equal to the greater of $1,150 or the closing bid price on the
proposed  conversion  date of the Common Stock which would have  otherwise  been
issued.

Required Vote

         The  affirmative  vote of a  majority  of the  shares of  Common  Stock
present in person or represented by proxy at the Meeting and entitled to vote on
this  proposal is  required to approve  this  proposal.  The Board of  Directors
recommends a vote FOR approval of Proposal 3.

                                   PROPOSAL 4.

                          RATIFICATION OF SELECTION OF
                         INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

         The Board of Directors has selected the firm of Arthur  Andersen LLP as
the independent  public  accountants of the Company for the year ending June 25,
1999. Arthur Andersen LLP and its predecessor, Arthur

                                      -21-

<PAGE>



Andersen  & Co.,  have  acted  for the  Company  in such  capacity  for the last
twenty-five  years.  The  Board  proposes  that  the  stockholders  ratify  such
selection at the Meeting.

         Representatives  of Arthur  Andersen  LLP are expected to be present at
the Meeting and will be afforded the  opportunity to make a statement if they so
desire and to respond to appropriate questions.

Required Vote

         The  affirmative  vote of a  majority  of the  shares of  Common  Stock
present in person or represented by proxy at the Meeting and entitled to vote on
this  proposal is  required to approve  this  proposal.  The Board of  Directors
recommends a vote FOR Proposal 4.

                                  MISCELLANEOUS

Stockholder Proposals

         From  time to time  stockholders  may  present  proposals  which may be
proper  subjects for inclusion in the proxy  statement and form of proxy related
to that meeting. In order to be considered,  such proposals must be submitted in
writing on a timely basis.  Stockholder proposals intended to be included in the
Company's  proxy  statement  and form of proxy  relating to the  Company's  1999
Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  must be  received by June 30,  1999.  Any such
proposals,  as well as any questions relating thereto, should be directed to the
Secretary of the Company, 1385 Akron Street, Copiague, New York 11726. As to any
proposals  intended to be presented by a  stockholder  without  inclusion in the
Management's  proxy  statement and form of proxy for the  Company's  next Annual
Meeting,  the proxies named in the  Management's  form of proxy for that meeting
will be entitled to exercise discretionary authority on that proposal unless the
Company receives notice of the matter on or before September 11, 1999.  However,
even if such  notice  is timely  received,  such  proxies  may  nevertheless  be
entitled  to  exercise  discretionary  authority  on that  matter to the  extent
permitted by Securities and Exchange Commission regulations.

Annual Report on Form 10-K

         A copy of the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
June 26, 1998, which has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
is also available,  without charge,  to stockholders  who are interested in more
detailed  information  about the  Company.  Requests  for a copy of that  report
should be addressed to Ms. Virginia M. Hall, Vice President-Administration, 1385
Akron Street, Copiague, New York 11726, telephone number (516) 789-5000.

Solicitation of Proxies

         The cost of solicitation of Proxies,  including the cost of reimbursing
banks, brokers and other nominees for forwarding proxy solicitation  material to
the beneficial owners of shares held of record by them and seeking  instructions
from  such  beneficial  owners,  will be borne by the  Company.  Proxies  may be
solicited without extra compensation by certain officers,  directors and regular
employees  of the  Company  by mail  and,  if  determined  to be  necessary,  by
telephone,  telecopy,  telegraph or personal interview. The Company has retained
W.F. Doring & Co., Inc., 150 Bay Street, Jersey City, New Jersey 07302 to aid in
the  solicitation  of Proxies.  For its services,  W.F.  Doring & Co., Inc. will
receive a fee of $2,500 plus reimbursement for certain out-of-pocket expenses.

                                      -22-

<PAGE>



Other Matters

         The Board of Directors  does not intend to bring before the Meeting any
matter  other than those  specifically  described  above and knows of no matters
other than the  foregoing  to come before the Meeting.  If any other  matters or
motions  properly  come before the Meeting,  it is the  intention of the persons
named in the  accompanying  Proxy to vote the  Proxy in  accordance  with  their
judgment on such  matter or motions,  including  any  matters  dealing  with the
conduct of the Meeting.

                                      By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                           /s/   Dorothy Roach,
                                              Secretary
October 26, 1998

                                      -23-

<PAGE>



                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                             1998 STOCK OPTION PLAN

                                       of

                              TII INDUSTRIES, INC.


1.  PURPOSES OF THE PLAN.  This stock  option  plan (the  "Plan") is designed to
provide an  incentive  to employees  (including  directors  and officers who are
employees)  and  directors  of, and  consultants  to, TII  INDUSTRIES,  INC.,  a
Delaware corporation (the "Company"), or any Parent or Subsidiary (as such terms
are defined in Paragraph 19 hereof) of the Company,  and to offer an  additional
inducement in obtaining the services of such persons.  The Plan provides for the
grant of "incentive stock options" ("ISOs") within the meaning of Section 422 of
the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended (the "Code"),  and  nonqualified
stock  options  which do not qualify as ISOs  ("NQSOs").  The  Company  makes no
representation or warranty,  express or implied,  as to the qualification of any
option as an "incentive stock option" under the Code.

               2.  STOCK  SUBJECT  TO THE PLAN.  Subject  to the  provisions  of
Paragraph 12 hereof,  the aggregate  number of shares of Common Stock,  $.01 par
value per share,  of the  Company  ("Common  Stock")  for which  options  may be
granted under the Plan shall not exceed  1,500,000.  Such shares of Common Stock
may consist  either in whole or in part of  authorized  but  unissued  shares of
Common  Stock or shares of Common  Stock held in the  treasury  of the  Company.
Subject to the  provisions  of Paragraph  13 hereof,  any shares of Common Stock
subject to an option which for any reason expires,  is canceled or is terminated
unexercised or which ceases for any reason to be exercisable, shall again become
available for the granting of options  under the Plan.  The Company shall at all
times  during the term of the Plan  reserve  and keep  available  such number of
shares of Common Stock as will be sufficient to satisfy the  requirements of the
Plan.

               3.  ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN. The Plan shall be administered by
the  Board  of  Directors  or a  committee  (the  "Committee")  of the  Board of
Directors  of the Company  (the "Board of  Directors"),  which  Committee  shall
consist of not less than two (2) directors, each of whom shall be a non-employee
director  within  the  meaning of Rule 16b-3  promulgated  under the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934,  as amended (as the same may be in effect and  interpreted
from time to time, "Rule 16b-3").  Unless  otherwise  provided in the By-laws of
the  Company or by  resolution  of the Board of  Directors,  a  majority  of the
members of the Committee shall  constitute a quorum,  and the acts of a majority
of the members present at any meeting at which a quorum is present, and any acts
approved  in writing by all of the members of the  Committee  without a meeting,
shall be the acts of the Committee. Those administering the Plan are referred to
herein as the "Administrators".

               Subject to the express provisions of the Plan, the Administrators
shall have the authority, in their sole discretion, to determine: the employees,
consultants and directors who shall be granted

                                      -24-

<PAGE>



options;  whether an option to be  granted  to a employee  is to be in ISO or an
NQSO (options to be granted to  consultants  and directors who are not employees
shall be NQSOs); the times when an option shall be granted; the number of shares
of Common Stock to be subject to each option;  the term of each option; the date
each option shall become exercisable;  whether an option shall be exercisable in
whole, in part or in installments and, if in installments,  the number of shares
of Common  Stock to be subject to each  installment,  whether  the  installments
shall be cumulative,  the date each installment shall become exercisable and the
term of each  installment;  whether to  accelerate  the date of  exercise of any
option or  installment;  whether  shares of Common  Stock may be issued upon the
exercise  of an  option  as  partly  paid and,  if so,  the  dates  when  future
installments  of the  exercise  price  shall  become due and the amounts of such
installments;  the  exercise  price of each  option;  the form of payment of the
exercise price;  whether to restrict the sale or other disposition of the shares
of Common Stock  acquired upon the exercise of an option and, if so, whether and
under what  conditions  to waive any such  restriction;  whether  and under what
conditions to subject all or a portion of the grant, the vesting or the exercise
of an option or the shares acquired pursuant to the exercise of an option to the
fulfillment  of  certain  restrictions  or  contingencies  as  specified  in the
contract referred to in Paragraph 11 hereof (the "Contract"), including, without
limitation,  restrictions or contingencies  relating to entering into a covenant
not to compete with the Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries  or a Parent (as such
term is defined  in  Paragraph  19  hereof),  to  financial  objectives  for the
Company,  any  of  its  Subsidiaries  or a  Parent,  a  division  of  any of the
foregoing,  a product line or other category,  and/or to the period of continued
employment  of the  optionee  with the  Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries  or a
Parent,  and to determine whether such  restrictions or contingencies  have been
met;  whether an optionee is Disabled  (as such term is defined in  Paragraph 19
hereof); the amount, if any, necessary to satisfy the obligation of the Company,
a Subsidiary or Parent to withhold taxes or other amounts; the fair market value
of a share of Common Stock;  to construe the respective  Contracts and the Plan;
with the consent of the optionee,  to cancel or modify an option,  provided that
the modified  provision is permitted to be included in an option  granted  under
the Plan on the date of the  modification,  and provided,  further,  that in the
case of a modification  (within the meaning of Section 424(h) of the Code) of an
ISO,  such option as modified  would be  permitted  to be granted on the date of
such modification  under the terms of the Plan; to prescribe,  amend and rescind
rules and regulations relating to the Plan; to approve any provision of the Plan
or any option  granted under the Plan,  or any amendment to either,  which under
Rule 16b-3  requires  the  approval of the Board of  Directors,  a committee  of
non-employee  directors  or the  stockholders  to be  exempt  (unless  otherwise
specifically provided herein); and to make all other determinations necessary or
advisable for administering the Plan. Any controversy or claim arising out of or
relating to the Plan, any option granted under the Plan or any Contract shall be
determined  unilaterally by the  Administrators  in their sole  discretion.  The
determinations  of  the  Administrators  on  the  matters  referred  to in  this
Paragraph  3  shall  be  conclusive  and  binding  on the  parties  thereto.  No
Administrator or former Administrator shall be liable for any action, failure to
act or  determination  made in good faith with respect to the Plan or any option
hereunder.

               4.  ELIGIBILITY.  The  Administrators  may from time to time,  in
their sole  discretion,  consistent with the purposes of the Plan, grant options
to (a) employees  (including  officers and directors who are  employees) of, (b)
directors (who are not employees) of, and (c) consultants

                                      -25-

<PAGE>



to, the Company or any Parent or Subsidiary of the Company. Such options granted
shall  cover such  number of shares of Common  Stock as the  Administrators  may
determine,  in their sole discretion,  as set forth in the applicable  Contract;
provided, however, that the maximum number of shares subject to options that may
be granted to any employee  during any calendar year under the Plan (the "162(m)
Maximum") shall be 100,000  shares;  and provided,  further,  that the aggregate
market value  (determined  at the time the option is granted in accordance  with
Paragraph  5  hereof)  of the  shares of  Common  Stock  for which any  eligible
employee may be granted ISOs under the Plan or any other plan of the Company, or
of a Parent or a Subsidiary of the Company,  which are exercisable for the first
time by such optionee during any calendar year shall not exceed  $100,000.  Such
ISO  limitation  shall be  applied by taking  ISOs into  account in the order in
which they were  granted.  Any option  granted in excess of such ISO  limitation
amount shall be treated as a NQSO to the extent of such excess.

               5.  EXERCISE  PRICE.  The exercise  price of the shares of Common
Stock under each option shall be determined by the Administrators, in their sole
discretion, as set forth in the applicable Contract; provided, however, that the
exercise  price of an ISO shall not be less  than the fair  market  value of the
Common Stock subject to such option on the date of grant; and provided, further,
that if, at the time an ISO is granted,  the optionee  owns (or is deemed to own
under Section  424(d) of the Code) stock  possessing  more than 10% of the total
combined  voting  power of all  classes of stock of the  Company,  of any of its
Subsidiaries  or of a Parent,  the exercise  price of such ISO shall not be less
than 110% of the fair market  value of the Common  Stock  subject to such ISO on
the date of grant.

               The fair market value of a share of Common Stock on any day shall
be (a) if actual sales price information is available with respect to the Common
Stock,  the average of the highest and lowest  sales  prices per share of Common
Stock on such day, or (b) if such  information is not available,  the average of
the highest bid and lowest asked prices per share of Common Stock on such day as
reported  by the market upon which the Common  Stock is quoted,  The Wall Street
Journal,  the National Quotation Bureau Incorporated or an independent dealer in
the Common  Stock,  as  determined by the Company;  provided,  however,  that if
clauses (a) and (b) of this Paragraph are all inapplicable, or if no trades have
been made or no quotes are  available for such day, the fair market value of the
Common  Stock  shall be  determined  by the  Board of  Directors  by any  method
consistent  with  applicable  regulations  adopted  by the  Treasury  Department
relating to stock options.

               6. TERM.  The term of each  option  granted  pursuant to the Plan
shall be such  term as is  established  by the  Administrators,  in  their  sole
discretion, as set forth in the applicable Contract; provided, however, that the
term of each  ISO  granted  pursuant  to the  Plan  shall  be for a  period  not
exceeding ten (10) years from the date of grant thereof; and provided,  further,
that if, at the time an ISO is granted,  the optionee  owns (or is deemed to own
under Section  424(d) of the Code) stock  possessing  more than 10% of the total
combined  voting  power  of all  classes  of stock  of the  Company,  any of its
Subsidiaries  or a  Parent,  the  term  of the ISO  shall  be for a  period  not
exceeding  five (5) years  from the date of grant.  Options  shall be subject to
earlier termination as hereinafter provided.

                                      -26-

<PAGE>



               7. EXERCISE.  An option (or any part or installment  thereof), to
the extent then exercisable,  shall be exercised by giving written notice to the
Company  at its  principal  office  stating  which  option  is being  exercised,
specifying the number of shares of Common Stock as to which such option is being
exercised and  accompanied  by payment in full of the aggregate  exercise  price
therefor  (or the amount due on  exercise  if the  applicable  Contract  permits
installment payments) (a) in cash or by certified check or (b) if the applicable
Contract  permits,  with  previously  acquired  shares of Common Stock having an
aggregate  fair market value on the date of exercise  (determined  in accordance
with  Paragraph 5 hereof) equal to the aggregate  exercise  price of all options
being  exercised or a combination of cash,  certified  check or shares of Common
Stock having such value.  The Company  shall not be required to issue any shares
of  Common  Stock  pursuant  to any such  option  until all  required  payments,
including payments for any required withholding amounts, have been made.

               The Administrators may, in their sole discretion (in the Contract
or otherwise),  permit payment of the exercise price of an option by delivery by
the  optionee  of a  properly  executed  notice,  together  with a  copy  of his
irrevocable instructions to a broker acceptable to the Administrators to deliver
promptly to the Company the amount of sale or loan  proceeds  sufficient  to pay
such  exercise  price.  In  connection  therewith,  the  Company  may enter into
agreements for coordinated procedures with one or more brokerage firms.

               A person entitled to receive Common Stock upon the exercise of an
option shall not have the rights of a stockholder with respect to such shares of
Common Stock until the date of issuance of a stock  certificate  for such shares
or, in the case of uncertificated shares, until the date an entry is made on the
books of the  Company's  transfer  agent  representing  such  shares;  provided,
however, that until such stock certificate is issued or until such book entry is
made, any optionee using  previously  acquired shares of Common Stock in payment
of an option  exercise  price shall continue to have the rights of a stockholder
with respect to such previously acquired shares.

               In no case may a fraction of a share of Common Stock be purchased
or issued under the Plan.

               8.  TERMINATION  OF  RELATIONSHIP.  Except  as may  otherwise  be
expressly provided in the applicable  Contract,  any optionee whose relationship
with the  Company,  its  Subsidiaries  and Parent as an  employee,  director  or
consultant has terminated for any reason (other than as a result of the death or
Disability (as such term is defined in Paragraph 19 hereof) of the Optionee) may
exercise such option, to the extent exercisable on the date of such termination,
at any  time  within  three  months  after  the  date  of  termination,  but not
thereafter  and in no event  after  the date the  option  would  otherwise  have
expired;  provided,  however, that if such relationship is terminated either (a)
for Cause (as such term is defined in Paragraph  19 hereof),  or (b) without the
consent of the Company, such option shall terminate  immediately.  Except as may
otherwise be expressly  provided in the  applicable  Contract,  options  granted
under the Plan to an employee,  director or consultant  shall not be affected by
any change in the status of the optionee so long as the optionee continues to be
an  employee  or  director  of, or a  consultant  to, the  Company or any of its
Subsidiaries

                                      -27-

<PAGE>



or a Parent  (regardless  of having changed from one to the other or having been
transferred from one corporation to another).

               For the purposes of the Plan, an employment relationship shall be
deemed to exist between an individual and the Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries
or a Parent if, at the time of the determination, the individual was an employee
of such corporation for purposes of Section 422(a) of the Code. As a result,  an
individual  on  military,  sick leave or other bona fide leave of absence  shall
continue to be considered an employee for purposes of the Plan during such leave
if the period of the leave does not exceed 90 days or, if longer, so long as the
individual's right to reemployment with the Company,  any of its Subsidiaries or
a Parent is guaranteed either by statute or by contract.  If the period of leave
exceeds 90 days and the individual's  right to reemployment is not guaranteed by
statute or by  contract,  the  employment  relationship  shall be deemed to have
terminated on the 91st day of such leave.

               Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,   except  as  may  otherwise  be
expressly  provided in the applicable  Contract,  options granted under the Plan
shall not be affected by any change in the status of the optionee so long as the
optionee  continues to be an employee or director  of, or a  consultant  to, the
Company,  any of its Subsidiaries or a Parent (regardless of having changed from
one position to another or having been transferred from one entity to another).

               Nothing in the Plan or in any option granted under the Plan shall
confer on any optionee any right to continue in the employ of, as a director of,
or as a consultant  to, the Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries  or a Parent,  or
interfere in any way with any right of the Company, any of its Subsidiaries or a
Parent to  terminate  the  optionee's  relationship  at any time for any  reason
whatsoever  without  liability  to the  Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries  or a
Parent.

               9. DEATH OR DISABILITY OF AN OPTIONEE. Except as may otherwise be
expressly provided in the applicable  Contract,  if an individual  optionee dies
(a) while he is an employee or director of, or a consultant to, the Company, any
of its  Subsidiaries or a Parent,  (b) within three months after the termination
of such  relationship  (unless  such  termination  was for Cause or without  the
consent  of the  Company  or such  Subsidiary  or Parent) or (c) within one year
following the  termination of such  relationship  by reason of  Disability,  the
optionee's option may be exercised, to the extent exercisable on the date of the
optionee's  death,  by  the  optionee's  Legal  Representative  (as  defined  in
Paragraph 19) at any time within one year after death, but not thereafter and in
no event after the date the option would otherwise have expired.

               Except as may otherwise be expressly  provided in the  applicable
Contract,  any optionee whose  relationship  as an employee or director of, or a
consultant to, the Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries or a Parent has terminated
by reason of  Disability  (without  continuing  in another  such  capacity)  may
exercise the optionee's  option,  to the extent  exercisable  upon the effective
date of such  termination,  at any time within one year after such date, but not
thereafter  and in no event  after  the date the  option  would  otherwise  have
expired.

                                      -28-

<PAGE>



               10.  COMPLIANCE  WITH  SECURITIES  LAWS. It is a condition to the
exercise  of any option  that  either  (a) a  Registration  Statement  under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities  Act"),  with respect to the
shares of Common Stock to be issued upon such  exercise  shall be effective  and
current at the time of exercise or (b) there is an exemption  from  registration
under the  Securities  Act for the  issuance of the shares of Common  Stock upon
such  exercise.  Nothing  herein shall be construed as requiring  the Company to
register  shares  subject to any option under the  Securities Act or to keep any
Registration Statement effective or current.

               The  Administrators may require,  in their sole discretion,  as a
condition  to the  receipt of an option or the  exercise  of any option that the
optionee execute and deliver to the Company such representations and warranties,
in  form,  substance  and  scope  satisfactory  to  the  Administrators,  as the
Administrators   determine  are  necessary  or  appropriate  to  facilitate  the
perfection of an exemption from the registration  requirements of the Securities
Act,  applicable  state securities laws or other legal  requirement,  including,
without  limitation,  that (a) the shares of Common  Stock to be issued upon the
exercise of the option are being acquired by the optionee for the optionee's own
account,  for investment  only and not with a view to the resale or distribution
thereof, and (b) any subsequent resale or distribution of shares of Common Stock
by such  optionee  will be made only  pursuant to (i) a  Registration  Statement
under the  Securities  Act which is  effective  and current  with respect to the
shares of  Common  Stock  being  sold,  or (ii) a  specific  exemption  from the
registration requirements of the Securities Act, but in claiming such exemption,
the optionee shall,  prior to any offer of sale or sale of such shares of Common
Stock,  provide  the  Company  with  a  favorable  written  opinion  of  counsel
satisfactory to the Company,  in form,  substance and scope  satisfactory to the
Company,  as to the  applicability  of such  exemption to the  proposed  sale or
distribution.

               In addition,  if at any time the Administrators  shall determine,
in their sole  discretion,  that the listing or  qualification  of the shares of
Common Stock subject to any option on any securities  exchange,  Nasdaq or under
any  applicable  law, or the consent or approval of any  governmental  agency or
regulatory  body,  is necessary or desirable as a condition to, or in connection
with,  the  granting of an option or the issuing of shares of Common  Stock upon
the exercise thereof,  such option may not be granted and such option may not be
exercised  in whole or in part unless such  listing,  qualification,  consent or
approval  shall  have been  effected  or  obtained  free of any  conditions  not
acceptable to the Administrators.

               11.  CONTRACTS.  Each option shall be evidenced by an appropriate
Contract  which shall be duly  executed by the Company and the  optionee,  which
Contract shall contain such terms,  provisions  and conditions not  inconsistent
herewith as may be  determined by the  Administrators.  The terms of each option
and Contract need not be identical.

               12. ADJUSTMENTS UPON CHANGES IN COMMON STOCK. Notwithstanding any
other  provision  of the  Plan,  in the  event  of a stock  dividend,  split-up,
combination , reclassification, recapitalization, merger in which the Company is
the  surviving  corporation,  spin-off  or  exchange of shares or the like which
results  in a change in the  number or kind of shares of Common  Stock  which is
outstanding immediately prior to such event, the aggregate number and kind

                                      -29-

<PAGE>



of shares subject to the Plan,  the aggregate  number and kind of shares subject
to each  outstanding  option  and the  exercise  price  thereof,  and the 162(m)
Maximum  shall  be  appropriately  adjusted  by the  Board of  Directors,  whose
determination  shall be  conclusive  and  binding on all parties  thereto.  Such
adjustment  may provide for the  elimination  of  fractional  shares which might
otherwise be subject to options without payment therefor.

               In the  event  of  (a)  the  liquidation  or  dissolution  of the
Company,  or (b) a  transaction  (or  series of  related  transactions)  that is
approved by a majority of the  Company's  Board of Directors who were elected by
stockholders  prior  to the  first  of  such  transactions  (including,  without
limitation,  a  merger,  consolidation,  sale of  stock  by the  Company  or its
stockholders,  tender offer or sale of assets) in which the voting power (in the
election of directors generally) of the Company's voting securities  outstanding
immediately   prior   to  such   transaction(s)   cease  to   represent   (which
representation may be by voting securities of the Company remaining  outstanding
or by being converted into voting  securities of the surviving  entity) at least
50% of the combined voting power (in the election of directors generally) of the
Company  or  such   surviving   entity   outstanding   immediately   after  such
transaction(s),  then all outstanding  options shall terminate upon the earliest
of any such event, unless other provision is made therefor in the transaction.

               13.     AMENDMENTS AND TERMINATION OF THE PLAN.  The Plan was
adopted by the Board of  Directors  on  October  8, 1998.  No ISO may be granted
under the Plan after October 7, 2007.  The Board of Directors,  without  further
approval of the Company's stockholders, may at any time suspend or terminate the
Plan,  in whole or in part, or amend it from time to time in such respects as it
may deem advisable,  including,  without limitation,  in order that ISOs granted
hereunder meet the requirements for "incentive stock options" under the Code, or
to comply with the  provisions of Rule 16b-3,  Section 162(m) of the Code or any
change  in  applicable  law,   regulations,   rulings  or   interpretations   of
administrative agencies; provided, however, that no amendment shall be effective
without the requisite prior or subsequent  stockholder  approval which would (a)
except as  contemplated  in Paragraph 12 hereof,  increase the maximum number of
shares of Common  Stock for which  options may be granted  under the Plan or the
162(m)  Maximum,  (b) change the  eligibility  requirements  to receive  options
hereunder or (c) make any change for which  applicable law requires  stockholder
approval. No termination, suspension or amendment of the Plan shall, without the
consent of the optionee, adversely affect the optionee's rights under any option
granted  under  the  Plan.  The  power of the  Administrators  to  construe  and
administer  any  option  granted  under  the Plan  prior to the  termination  or
suspension of the Plan  nevertheless  shall continue  after such  termination or
during such suspension.

               14.  NON-TRANSFERABILITY.  No option granted under the Plan shall
be transferable  otherwise than by will or the laws of descent and distribution,
and options may be exercised,  during the lifetime of the optionee,  only by the
optionee  or his Legal  Representatives.  Except to the extent  provided  in the
immediately  preceding  sentence,  options  may  not be  assigned,  transferred,
pledged,  hypothecated or disposed of in any way (whether by operation of law or
otherwise) and shall not be subject to execution, attachment or similar process,
and any such

                                      -30-

<PAGE>



attempted assignment,  transfer,  pledge,  hypothecation or disposition shall be
null and void ab initio and of no force or effect.

               15.  WITHHOLDING  TAXES. The Company,  a Subsidiary or Parent may
withhold (a) cash or (b) with the consent of the Administrators (in the Contract
or  otherwise),  shares of Common Stock to be issued upon  exercise of an option
having an  aggregate  fair market  value on the  relevant  date  (determined  in
accordance  with Paragraph 5 hereof) or a combination of cash and shares,  in an
amount  equal to the amount which the  Administrators  determine is necessary to
satisfy  the  obligation  of the  Company,  a  Subsidiary  or Parent to withhold
Federal, state and local income taxes or other amounts incurred by reason of the
grant, vesting,  exercise or disposition of an option, or the disposition of the
underlying shares of Common Stock.  Alternatively,  the Company, a Subsidiary or
Parent may require the holder to pay to it such amount,  in cash,  promptly upon
demand.

               16.  LEGENDS;  PAYMENT OF EXPENSES.  The Company may endorse such
legend or legends upon the  certificates  for shares of Common Stock issued upon
exercise  of an  option  under  the  Plan and may  issue  such  "stop  transfer"
instructions  to its transfer  agent in respect of such shares as it determines,
in its discretion, to be necessary or appropriate to (a) prevent a violation of,
or to perfect an exemption from, the registration requirements of the Securities
Act and any applicable  state  securities  laws, (b) implement the provisions of
the Plan or any  agreement  between the Company and the optionee with respect to
such  shares  of  Common  Stock or (c)  permit  the  Company  to  determine  the
occurrence of a  "disqualifying  disposition," as described in Section 421(b) of
the Code, of the shares of Common Stock issued or transferred  upon the exercise
of an ISO granted under the Plan.

               The  Company  shall pay all  issuance  taxes with  respect to the
issuance of shares of Common Stock upon the exercise of an option  granted under
the Plan, as well as all fees and expenses incurred by the Company in connection
with such issuance.

               17. USE OF PROCEEDS. The cash proceeds received upon the exercise
of an option  under the Plan shall be added to the general  funds of the Company
and used for such corporate purposes as the Board of Directors may determine, in
its discretion.

               18.   SUBSTITUTIONS   AND   ASSUMPTIONS  OF  OPTIONS  OF  CERTAIN
CONSTITUENT CORPORATIONS. Anything in this Plan to the contrary notwithstanding,
the  Board  of  Directors  may,   without  further  approval  by  the  Company's
stockholders,  substitute  new  options  for  prior  options  of  a  Constituent
Corporation  (as such term is defined in  Paragraph  19  thereof)  or assume the
prior options of such Constituent Corporation.

               19.  DEFINITIONS.  For purposes of the Plan, the following  terms
shall be defined as set forth below:

                       (a) "Cause"  shall mean (i) in the case of an employee or
consultant, if there is a written employment or consulting agreement between the
optionee and the Company, any of its

                                      -31-

<PAGE>



Subsidiaries  or a Parent which defines  termination  of such  relationship  for
cause,  cause as defined in such agreement,  and (ii) in all other cases,  cause
within the meaning of applicable state law.

                       (b) "Constituent  Corporation" shall mean any corporation
which  engages  with the  Company,  any of its  Subsidiaries  or a  Parent  in a
transaction  to which Section  424(a) of the Code applies (or would apply if the
option assumed or  substituted  were an ISO), or any Parent or any Subsidiary of
such corporation.

                       (c)  "Disability"   shall  mean  a  permanent  and  total
disability within the meaning of Section 22(e)(3) of the Code.

                       (d)  "Legal  Representative"  shall  mean  the  executor,
administrator or other person who at the time is entitled by law to exercise the
rights of a deceased or incapacitated optionee with respect to an option granted
under the Plan.

                       (e) "Parent"  shall have the same  definition  as "parent
corporation" in Section 424(e) of the Code.

                       (f)  "Subsidiary"  shall  have  the  same  definition  as
"subsidiary corporation" in Section 424(f) of the Code.

               20.  GOVERNING  LAW;  CONSTRUCTION.  The Plan,  the  options  and
Contracts  hereunder and all related matters shall be governed by, and construed
in  accordance  with,  the laws of the  State of  Delaware,  without  regard  to
conflict of law provisions.

               Neither  the  Plan  nor  any  Contract   shall  be  construed  or
interpreted  with any  presumption  against the Company by reason of the Company
causing the Plan or Contract to be drafted. Whenever from the context it appears
appropriate,  any term stated in either the singular or plural shall include the
singular and plural,  and any term stated in the  masculine,  feminine or neuter
gender shall include the masculine, feminine and neuter.

               21.   PARTIAL   INVALIDITY.   The   invalidity,   illegality   or
unenforceability  of any provision in the Plan, any option or Contract shall not
affect the validity,  legality or enforceability of any other provision,  all of
which shall be valid,  legal and enforceable to the fullest extent  permitted by
applicable law.

               22. STOCKHOLDER  APPROVAL.  The Plan shall be subject to approval
by a majority  of the votes  present in person or by proxy and  entitled to vote
thereon at the next duly held meeting of the Company's  stockholders  at which a
quorum is present.  No options granted  hereunder may be exercised prior to such
approval;  provided,  however,  that the date of  grant of any  option  shall be
determined as if the Plan had not been subject to such approval. Notwithstanding
the foregoing,  if the Plan is not approved by a vote of the stockholders of the
Company on or before October 7, 1999, the Plan and any options granted hereunder
shall terminate.

                                      -32-

<PAGE>




PROXY                      TII INDUSTRIES, INC.                      PROXY  

           Proxy for Annual Meeting of Stockholders - December 8, 1998
           THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         The  undersigned  hereby  appoints,  as  proxies  for the  undersigned,
TIMOTHY J. ROACH and  VIRGINIA  M. HALL,  or either of them,  with full power of
substitution,  to vote all shares of the capital stock of TII  Industries,  Inc.
(the "Company")  which the undersigned is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting
of  Stockholders  of the Company to be held on  Wednesday,  December 8, 1998, at
4:00 p.m.,  New York time,  at the  Huntington  Hilton,  598 Broad  Hollow Road,
Melville,  New York,  receipt of Notice of which meeting and the Proxy Statement
accompanying the same being hereby  acknowledged by the undersigned,  and at any
adjournments or postponements  thereof, upon the matters described in the Notice
of Meeting and Proxy Statement and upon such other business as may properly come
before the meeting or any adjournments or postponements thereof, hereby revoking
any proxies heretofore given.

         EACH  PROPERLY  EXECUTED  PROXY  WILL BE VOTED IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH THE
SPECIFICATIONS MADE ON THE REVERSE SIDE HEREOF.  WHERE NO DIRECTION TO VOTE ON A
SPECIFIC MATTER IS GIVEN, THE PROXIES WILL BE DEEMED AUTHORIZED TO VOTE FOR EACH
LISTED NOMINEE TO SERVE AS A DIRECTOR AND FOR PROPOSALS 2, 3 AND 4.


               PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND MAIL THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY
                          USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.
                  (Continued and to be signed on reverse side)


<PAGE>




                              TII INDUSTRIES, INC.
    PLEASE MARK VOTE IN OVAL IN THE FOLLOWING MANNER USING DARK INK ONLY. |_|

A vote FOR each nominee and FOR proposals 2, 3 and 4 is recommended by the Board
of Directors.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


<S>                                                           <C>                 <C>            <C>                  
1.     ELECTION OF DIRECTORS -                                      For            Withhold           For All
       Nominees:   C. Bruce Barksdale, Dr. Joseph C.                All               All             Except
                   Hogan, William G. Sharwell                       |_|               |_|               |_|

       (Except Nominee(s) written above)





                                                                    FOR             AGAINST           ABSTAIN
2.     To approve to the Company's 1998 Stock Option                |_|               |_|               |_|
       Plan.

3.     To approve the issuance of additional shares of              |_|               |_|               |_|
       Common Stock upon conversion of the
       Company's Series C Convertible Preferred Stock.

4.     To ratify the selection of Arthur Andersen LLP as |_| |_| |_| independent
       public accountants for the Company.


                                                           Dated ________ , 1998
</TABLE>

                                        Signature(s) ___________________________
                                        ________________________________________
                                        NOTE:  Please  sign  your  name or names
                                        exactly as set forth hereon.  If signing
                                        as  attorney,  executor,  administrator,
                                        trustee or guardian, please indicate the
                                        capacity   in  which  you  are   acting.
                                        Proxies executed by corporations  should
                                        be signed by a duly  authorized  officer
                                        and should bear the corporate seal.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            o FOLD AND DETACH HERE o
                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT.
 PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND MAIL THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.


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