FIRST FINANCIAL CORP /IN/
PRE 14A, 1997-03-11
STATE COMMERCIAL BANKS
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                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                     Information Required in Proxy Statement

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

Filed by the Registrant:        Yes.

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant:  No.

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 Section 240.14a-11(c) or
         Section 240.14a-12

                           FIRST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                (Name Of Registrant As Specified In Its Charter)
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]      No fee required
[ ]      Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4)
         and 0-11
         (1)      Title of each class of securities to which transaction
                  applies:             N/A
         (2)      Aggregate number of securities to which transaction
                  applies:             N/A
         (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):     N/A
         (4)      Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:     N/A
         (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.       N/A
         (1)      Amount Previously Paid:
         (2)      Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
         (3)      Filing Party:
         (4)      Date Filed:



<PAGE>

                           FIRST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                            One First Financial Plaza
                                  P.O. Box 540
                           Terre Haute, Indiana 47808

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                            to be held April 16, 1997

         Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to the call of its Directors,  an
Annual Meeting of Shareholders of First  Financial  Corporation  ("Corporation")
will be held on April 16, 1997 at 11:00 o'clock  a.m.,  local time, at One First
Financial Plaza, Terre Haute, Indiana.

         The purposes of the meeting are:

         (1)      To elect the Board of  Directors  of the  Corporation.  In the
                  event  the   proposed   Amended  and   Restated   Articles  of
                  Incorporation  specified  in Item 3 below are  adopted  by the
                  shareholders,  the nominees  will be elected in two classes of
                  five  nominees each and one class of four  nominees,  with one
                  class  having an initial  term of one year,  the second  class
                  having an  initial  term of two  years,  and the  third  class
                  having an initial  term of three  years.  If the  Amended  and
                  Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation  are  not  adopted,  all
                  nominees will be elected for a term of one year.

         (2)      To  adopt  an  amendment  to  the  Corporation's  Articles  of
                  Incorporation increasing the authorized shares of Common Stock
                  from  10,000,000 to 40,000,000.  This same change is a part of
                  the Amended and Restated  Articles of Incorporation  specified
                  in Item 3 below,  and is being  proposed as a separate item to
                  permit its adoption even if proposition 3 is not approved.

         (3)      To adopt Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation of the
                  Corporation as outlined in the accompanying Proxy Statement.

         (4)      To transact  such other  business as may properly be presented
                  at the meeting.

         Some of the  items to be voted on may have an  "anti-takeover"  effect.
Therefore,  you are urged to read carefully the  accompanying  Proxy  Statement.
Your Board of Directors recommends unanimously that you vote FOR the adoption of
the above proposals.

         Only  shareholders of record at the close of business on March 7, 1997,
will be entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting.

                                           By Order of the Board of Directors



                                           /s/ Donald E. Smith
                                           DONALD E. SMITH
                                           Chairman of the Board and President

March ___, 1997

                   IMPORTANT--PLEASE MAIL YOUR PROXY PROMPTLY

             IN ORDER THAT THERE MAY BE PROPER REPRESENTATION AT THE
          MEETING, YOU ARE URGED TO COMPLETE, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE
         ENCLOSED PROXY IN THE ENVELOPE PROVIDED. NO POSTAGE IS REQUIRED
                         IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES


                                                         1

<PAGE>



                               PROXY STATEMENT OF
                           FIRST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                            One First Financial Plaza
                                  P.O. Box 540
                           Terre Haute, Indiana 47808
                                 (812) 238-6000


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

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                            to be held April 16, 1997


                               GENERAL INFORMATION


         This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection  with the  solicitation
by the Board of Directors of First Financial  Corporation (the "Corporation") of
Proxies for use at an Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of the  Corporation to be
held on April 16, 1997 at 11:00 a.m. at One First Financial Plaza,  Terre Haute,
Indiana,  and at any and all  adjournment of such meeting.  This Proxy Statement
and accompanying form of proxy were first mailed to the shareholders on or about
March 17, 1997.

         The Corporation is a multi-bank  holding company which owns Terre Haute
First  National Bank ("Terre Haute  First"),  First State Bank,  First  Citizens
State Bank,  First Farmers State Bank,  First Ridge Farm State Bank, First Parke
State Bank, First National Bank of Marshall and First Crawford State Bank.

         Only  shareholders  of record as of March 7, 1997,  will be entitled to
notice  of,  and to vote  at,  the  Annual  Meeting.  As of  March  1,  1997 the
Corporation had issued and outstanding  6,681,876 shares of common stock,  which
were held by  approximately  1,130  shareholders  of record.  There are no other
outstanding securities of the Corporation entitled to vote.

         For the  matter to be voted on at this  Annual  Meeting,  each share is
entitled to one vote, exercisable in person or by proxy. Approval of a plurality
of the votes cast at the meeting,  assuming a quorum is present, is required for
election of each nominated director.  Action on any other matters to come before
the meeting must be approved by an affirmative  vote of a majority of the shares
present, in person, or by proxy. Abstentions, broker non-votes, and instructions
on the accompanying  proxy card to withhold authority to vote for one or more of
the named nominees will result in the respective nominee receiving fewer votes.


                                                         2

<PAGE>



         The cost of  soliciting  proxies will be borne by the  Corporation.  In
addition  to  use of the  mails,  proxies  may  be  solicited  personally  or by
telephone by officers, directors and certain employees who will not be specially
compensated for such soliciting.

         Any  shareholder  giving a proxy has the right to revoke it at any time
before it is  exercised.  Therefore,  execution of the proxy will not affect the
shareholder's  right  to  vote  in  person  if he or she  attends  the  meeting.
Revocation  may be made prior to the meeting (i) by written  notice sent to John
W. Perry,  Secretary,  First Financial  Corporation,  One First Financial Plaza,
P.O. Box 540, Terre Haute,  Indiana 47808,  (ii) personally upon oral or written
request at the Annual  Meeting,  or (iii) by duly  executing  a proxy  bearing a
later date.

         The shares  represented  by proxies will be voted as  instructed by the
shareholders giving the proxies. In the absence of specific  instructions to the
contrary,  proxies  will be voted in favor of the  election as  directors of the
fourteen  (14)  persons  named as nominees in this Proxy  statement.  If for any
reason any of the  director/nominees  becomes unable or is unwilling to serve at
the  time of the  meeting  (an  event  which  the  Board of  Directors  does not
anticipate), the persons named as proxies in the accompanying form of proxy will
have discretionary  authority to vote for a substitute nominee or nominees named
by the  Board  of  Directors  if the  Board of  Directors  elects  to fill  such
nominees' positions. Any other matters that may properly come before the meeting
will be acted upon by the persons named as proxies in the  accompanying  form of
proxy in accordance with their discretion.


                                                         3

<PAGE>



                        PROPOSAL I: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

         Fourteen (14) directors will be elected at the Annual  Meeting.  If the
proposed  Amended  Restated  Articles of  Incorporation,  as discussed  below in
"PROPOSAL  FOR  APPROVAL  AND  ADOPTION  OF AMENDED  AND  RESTATED  ARTICLES  OF
INCORPORATION,"  are adopted by the  shareholders,  the Board of Directors  will
consist of three classes  holding the terms of office  indicated  below. If such
amendments  are not adopted,  all fourteen  (14)  nominees  will be nominated to
serve for  one-year  terms,  until the next Annual  Meeting and until his or her
successor is elected and qualified:


Class I               (one-year term)                    Walter A. Bledsoe
                                                         Max L. Gibson
                                                         William A. Niemeyer
                                                         Donald E. Smith

Class II              (two-year term)                    B. Guille Cox, Jr.
                                                         Anton H. George
                                                         Gregory L. Gibson
                                                         John W. Ragle
                                                         Virginia L. Smith

Class III             (three-year term)                  Thomas T. Dinkel
                                                         Mari H. George
                                                         Norman L. Lowery
                                                         Patrick O'Leary
                                                         Chapman J. Root II



                                                         4

<PAGE>



For each of the fourteen  (14)  nominees  for  director  listed below there is a
brief  summary  of his or  her  present  principal  occupation,  other  business
experience  during the last five years,  age, and the year such individual first
became a director.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                     Title or
                                  Year Became      Position with             Principal Occupation
          Name and Age            a Director       Corporation               for the Last Five Years
          ------------            ----------       -----------               -----------------------
<S>                                 <C>           <C>                       <C>                       
Walter A. Bledsoe, 81                1983*          Director                 Personal Investments
B. Guille Cox, Jr., 51               1987           Director                 Attorney-At-Law with Cox Zwerner
                                                                             Gambill & Sullivan
Thomas T. Dinkel, 46                 1989           Director                 President of Sycamore Engineering, Inc.
Anton H. George, 37                  1987           Director                 President of Indianapolis Motor
                                                                             Speedway Corp.; Director of Indiana
                                                                             Energy, Inc.
Mari H. George, 62                   1989           Director                 Chairman of Indianapolis Motor
                                                                             Speedway Corp.
Gregory L. Gibson, 34                1994           Director                 President of ReTec, Inc.
Max L. Gibson, 56                    1983*          Director                 President of Majax Company; Director,
                                                                             IPALCO, Inc.
Norman L. Lowery, 50                 1989           Vice-Chairman of         President of Terre Haute First (effective
                                                    the Board                January 1, 1996); Attorney-At-Law with
                                                                             Wright Shagley & Lowery through 1995
William A. Niemeyer, 74              1983*          Director                 President of Niemeyer Coal Co.
Patrick O'Leary, 60                  1983*          Director                 President of Contract Services, LLC
John W. Ragle, 70                    1983*          Director                 President of Ragle & Company, Inc.
Chapman J. Root, II, 47              1989           Director                 President of Root Company; Director of
                                                                             International Speedway Corp.
Donald E. Smith, 70                  1983*          Chairman of the          President of Terre Haute First and First
                                                    Board and                Financial Corporation through 1995;
                                                    President                Director of Southern Indiana Gas and
                                                                             Electric Company
Virginia L. Smith, 49                1987           Director                 President of R.J. Oil Co., Inc.
</TABLE>



* First Financial Corporation was formed in 1983.


                                                         5

<PAGE>



Additional Information Concerning Board of Directors

         Attendance  at  Meetings.  During  1996,  the Board of Directors of the
Corporation  held 12 regular  meetings and a total of 19  meetings.  No director
standing for  re-election  attended  fewer than 75% of the  aggregate  number of
Board meetings and meetings on committees on which he or she served,  except Mr.
George,  Mr.  Root  and  Mrs.  George,  who  attended  60%,  50% and 40% of such
meetings, respectively.

         Certain  Relationships.  Certain family  relationships  exist among the
directors of the Corporation. Donald E. Smith is the father of Virginia L. Smith
and father-in-law of Norman L. Lowery.  Mari H. George is the mother of Anton H.
George.  Max L.  Gibson  is the  father  of  Gregory  L.  Gibson.  There  are no
arrangements or  understandings  between any of the directors  pursuant to which
any of them have been selected for their respective positions.

         Committees.  The Board of Directors  had no standing  nominating or any
committee performing similar functions during 1996; such functions are performed
by the Board of Directors as a whole.

         The Corporation's Examining Committee, which consists of John W. Ragle,
Max Gibson, and Patrick O'Leary, reviews the Corporation's accounting functions,
operations  and management  and the adequacy and  effectiveness  of the internal
controls and internal auditing methods and procedures. This Committee recommends
to the Board the  appointment  of the  independent  public  accountants  for the
Corporation. This Committee met twice during 1996.

         The  Corporation's  Compensation  Committee,  which consists of Messrs.
O'Leary,  Smith,  M. Gibson,  Niemeyer,  A. George,  and Lowery,  overviews  the
compensation  of the officers of subsidiary  banks and  recommends  salaries and
bonus amounts to the full Board of Directors.  Such  Committee met four times in
1996.

         Compensation of Directors.  Directors of the Corporation received a fee
of $100 per meeting  during 1996 if the meeting was held as a joint meeting with
the Board of Directors  of Terre Haute  First.  Only one meeting of the Board of
Directors of the  Corporation  was not held as a joint meeting with the Board of
Directors  of Terre  Haute  First  during  1996.  For  meetings  of the Board of
Directors of the  Corporation  which were not joint  meetings  with the Board of
Directors  of  Terre  Haute  First,  directors  received  a fee of $500 per such
meeting attended.

         Directors of Terre Haute First,  a wholly-owned  banking  subsidiary of
the Corporation,  received a fee in 1996 of $500 for each meeting attended and a
semi-annual fee of $2,300.  In addition,  Directors of Terre Haute First,  other
than those  employed by Terre Haute First,  received a fee of $300 for each Loan
Discount Committee meeting attended. Directors of Terre Haute First that are not
yet seventy (70) have the option of participating  in a deferred  director's fee
program,  pursuant to which each year, for five years, $6,000 of Director's fees
are deferred until the participant reaches the age of sixty-five (65) or seventy
(70), at which point the Director may elect

                                                         6

<PAGE>



to receive payments over a ten year period.  For 1996, the allocated cost of the
deferred Director's fees was $142,216, which is funded by Terre Haute First with
insurance products.

         Directors of First State Bank, a wholly-owned banking subsidiary of the
Corporation, received a fee of $200 for each meeting attended.

         Directors  of  First  Citizens  State  Bank,  a  wholly-owned   banking
subsidiary of the Corporation, received a fee of $300 for each meeting attended.

         Directors  of  First  Farmers  State  Bank,  a   wholly-owned   banking
subsidiary of the Corporation, received a fee of $200 for each meeting attended.

         Directors  of First  Ridge  Farm State  Bank,  a  wholly-owned  banking
subsidiary of the Corporation, received a fee of $200 for each meeting attended.

         Directors of First Parke State Bank, a wholly-owned  banking subsidiary
of the Corporation, received a fee of $200 for each meeting attended.

         Directors of First National Bank of Marshall,  a  wholly-owned  banking
subsidiary of the Corporation, received a fee of $325 for each meeting attended.

         Directors  of  First  Crawford  State  Bank,  a  wholly-owned   banking
subsidiary of the Corporation, received a fee of $500 for each meeting attended.

                      EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION

         The executive officers of the Corporation,  all of whom serve for a one
year term,  consist of Donald E.  Smith,  Chairman  of the Board and  President;
Norman L. Lowery,  Vice Chairman;  John W. Perry,  Secretary;  Michael A. Carty,
Treasurer;   and  W.  Edward  Jukes,  Chief  Credit  Officer.   Mr.  Perry,  age
fifty-three,  was  Treasurer of the  Corporation  from 1983 through 1990 and has
been  Secretary  from 1990  through  the  present.  For the past ten years,  Mr.
Perry's  principal  occupation  has been as the Senior Vice  President  of Terre
Haute First. Mr. Carty,  age forty-six,  has been Senior Vice President of Terre
Haute  First  since 1990 and was Vice  President  of Terre Haute First from 1983
until 1990. Mr. Jukes,  age fifty-four,  has been Senior Vice President of Terre
Haute First since 1989. For additional  information concerning Messrs. Smith and
Lowery, see "ELECTION OF DIRECTORS."


                                                         7

<PAGE>




                            COMPENSATION OF OFFICERS

Compensation Committee Report

         Decisions on compensation of the  Corporation's  executives are made by
the Compensation  Committee of the Board,  which also serves as the Compensation
Committee  of Terre  Haute  First.  Each member of the  Compensation  Committee,
except Mr. Smith and Mr. Lowery, was a non-employee  director.  All decisions of
the Compensation  Committee  relating to the  compensation of the  Corporation's
executive  officers  are  reviewed by the full  Board.  Pursuant to rules of the
Securities and Exchange Commission designed to enhance disclosure of corporation
policies toward executive compensation, set forth below is a report submitted by
Messrs.  O'Leary (Chairman),  Smith, Gibson,  Niemeyer,  A. George and Lowery in
their   capacity  as  the  Board's   Compensation   Committee   addressing   the
Corporation's  compensation  policies  for 1996 as they  affected  Mr. Smith and
Messrs.  Lowery, Perry, Jukes and Carty, the other executive officers other than
Mr.  Smith who,  for 1996,  were the  Corporation's  most highly paid  executive
officers whose total annual salary and bonus exceeded $100,000.

         Compensation  Policies  Toward  Executive  Officers.  The  Compensation
Committee's executive  compensation policies are designed to provide competitive
levels of  compensation  to the  executive  officers and to reward  officers for
satisfactory  individual  performance  and for  satisfactory  performance of the
Corporation as a whole.  There are no established goals or standards relating to
performance of the Corporation which have been utilized in setting  compensation
of individual employees.

         Base Salary.  Each executive  officer is reviewed  individually  by the
Compensation Committee,  which review includes an analysis of the performance of
the Corporation and Terre Haute First. In addition,  the review includes,  among
other things, an analysis of the individual's performance during the past fiscal
year,  focusing  primarily upon the following aspects of the individual's job or
characteristics of the individual  exhibited during the most recent fiscal year:
quality and quantity of work;  supervisory  skills;  dependability;  initiative;
attendance; overall skill level; and overall value to the Corporation.

         Annual Bonus Amounts.  The Compensation  Committee determines whether a
bonus  should  be paid  based  primarily  upon the  overall  performance  of the
Corporation.  For 1996,  Mr.  Smith  received a bonus of  $115,000  and  Messrs.
Lowery,  Perry,  Jukes and Carty each received a bonus,  equal to 10.0% of their
salary, of $20,000, $13,707, $10,891, and $9,291, respectively.

         Other Compensation  Plans. At various times in the past the Corporation
has adopted certain  broad-based  employee  benefit plans in which the executive
officers are  permitted to  participate  on the same terms as other  corporation
employees  who  meet  applicable  eligibility  criteria,  subject  to any  legal
limitations  on the amount that may be  contributed  or the benefits that may be
payable under the plans.

                                                         8

<PAGE>



         Benefits.  The Corporation provides medical and pension benefits to the
executive officers that are generally available to other Corporation  employees.
The amount of  perquisites,  as determined  in accordance  with the rules of the
Securities and Exchange Commission relating to executive  compensation,  did not
exceed 10% of salary and bonus for fiscal 1996.

         Mr.  Smith's  1996  Compensation.  Regulations  of the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  require  that  the  Compensation  Committee  disclose  the
Committee's  basis for compensation  reported for Mr. Smith in 1996. Mr. Smith's
salary and bonus are determined in the same manner as discussed  above for other
executives,  except  that  $75,000  of Mr.  Smith's  $115,000  bonus was made in
connection  with an  employment  agreement  providing  for a  split-dollar  life
insurance arrangement between the Corporation,  Terre Haute First and Mr. Smith.
The Compensation  Committee  believes that Mr. Smith has managed the Corporation
well.

                   Members of the 1996 Compensation Committee

    Anton H. George               Max L. Gibson               Norman L. Lowery
    William A. Niemeyer           Patrick O'Leary             Donald E. Smith

Compensation Committee Insider Participation

         During the past fiscal year, Mr. Smith,  the Chief  Executive  Officer,
and Mr. Lowery, the Vice- Chairman, served on the Compensation Committee but did
not  participate  in any  discussion  or voting with  respect to the salaries or
bonuses of either Mr. Smith or Mr.  Lowery.  Moreover,  Mr. Smith and Mr. Lowery
excused  themselves  from the room  during the  discussion  by the  Compensation
Committee of the compensation of both Mr. Smith and Mr. Lowery.

Summary Compensation Table

         The following table sets forth for the fiscal years ending December 31,
1996, 1995, and 1994 the cash compensation  paid by the Corporation,  as well as
certain  other  compensation  paid or awarded  during those years,  to the Chief
Executive  Officer and any other executive officer whose total annual salary and
bonus exceeded $100,000 during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1996.



                                                         9

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

      Name and Principal             Year         Annual Compensation (1)           All Other
           Position                            Salary             Bonus (2)       Compensation (3)
- ---------------------------          ----      --------           --------        ----------------
<S>                                  <C>       <C>                <C>               <C>    
Donald E. Smith                      1996      $274,148           $ 115,000         $ 9,188 (4)
  President, CEO and                 1995      $263,604           $ 115,000         $14,997
  Chairman                           1994      $253,465           $  40,000         $36,144
Norman L. Lowery                     1996      $200,000           $  20,000         $15,395
   Vice Chairman (5)                                                           
John W. Perry                        1996      $137,075           $  13,707         $ 1,247 (4)
  Secretary                          1995      $131,801           $  12,673         $ 8,643
                                     1994      $126,732           $  12,673         $ 8,083
W. Edward Jukes                      1996      $108,912           $  10,891         $ 1,394 (4)
  Chief Credit  Officer              1995      $104,723           $  10,069         $ 7,185
                                     1994      $100,695           $  10,069         $ 6,844
Michael A. Carty                     1996      $ 92,964           $   9,296         $   354 (4)
    Treasurer                        1995      $ 89,389           $   8,595         $ 5,127
                                     1994      $ 85,951           $   8,595         $ 4,880
</TABLE>

(1)      While  officers  enjoy certain  perquisites,  such  perquisites  do not
         exceed the lesser of $50,000 or 10% of such officer's  salary and bonus
         and are  not  required  to be  disclosed  by  applicable  rules  of the
         Securities and Exchange Commission.

(2)      The bonus amounts are payable  pursuant to  determinations  made by the
         Compensation  Committee  of  the  Corporation,   as  described  in  the
         "Compensation Committee Report."

(3)      These  amounts  include  Corporation  payments  for the years  noted on
         behalf of the above-named  individuals (except Mr. Smith) pursuant to a
         life  insurance  program ("Life  Insurance  Program") for the executive
         officers of Terre Haute First. Under the Life Insurance Program,  Terre
         Haute  First  purchased  a life  insurance  policy  on  behalf  of each
         executive  officer  of Terre  Haute  First.  The policy is owned by the
         individual and will be paid at age 65 for those  presently 55 or older,
         and at age 60 for those who are less than 55 years of age.  The  annual
         cost of this insurance for those reported (except for Mr. Smith) was as
         follows:  $4,395 for Mr. Lowery;  $1,247 for Mr. Perry;  $1,394 for Mr.
         Jukes; and $354 for Mr. Carty.

         Mr.  Smith no  longer  participates  in the group  term life  insurance
         policy of the  Corporation  (which  coverage  would  terminate upon his
         retirement).  The  Corporation  paid  for  its  portion  of a  separate
         split-dollar  life insurance  policy for Mr. Smith in 1996,  which will
         continue  to be in effect  following  his  retirement  as an  executive
         officer of the  Corporation  and Terre Haute First. In 1996, the dollar
         value  of  the  benefit  to  Mr.  Smith  of  the  premium  paid  by the
         Corporation and Terre Haute First in connection with such policy, which
         was issued pursuant

                                                        10

<PAGE>



         to an Employment Agreement between the Corporation,  Terre Haute First,
         and Mr.  Smith,  was $9,188  (which  amount is  included  in the amount
         reported for Mr. Smith above).  The Corporation  expects to recover the
         premiums it pays for this split-dollar policy from the proceeds of such
         policy.

         Because  Mr.   Lowery  was  not  eligible  for  the  ESOP  in  1996,  a
         non-qualified    deferred   compensation   program   was   established.
         Contributions of $11,000 were made in 1996 to this  non-qualified  plan
         on behalf of Mr. Lowery.

(4)      Allocations  to  the  named  individual's  respective  account  in  the
         Corporation's  Employee Stock  Ownership Plan ("ESOP") for 1996,  which
         are properly  includable in this column,  were not calculable as of the
         date of this Proxy  Statement.  Such  amounts for 1995 were as follows:
         $7,216 for Mr. Smith;  $7,216 for Mr.  Perry;  $5,791 for Mr. Jukes and
         $4,773 for Mr. Carty.

(5)      Did not become an executive officer of the Corporation until January 1,
         1996.

Employee Benefit Plans

         Employee  Stock  Ownership  Plan.  The  Corporation  sponsors the First
Financial  Corporation  Employee  Stock  Ownership  Plan  ("ESOP") and the First
Financial  Corporation  Employees' Pension Plan ("Pension Plan") for the benefit
of substantially  all of the employees of the Corporation and its  subsidiaries.
As discussed below, these plans constitute a "floor-offset" retirement program.

         The Pension Plan is a defined  benefit "floor" plan which provides each
participant  with a minimum  benefit or "floor"  which is offset by the  benefit
provided  by the  ESOP.  Thus,  if a  participant's  benefit  under  the ESOP is
insufficient  to fund the minimum  "floor" of benefits  specified by the Pension
Plan, the Pension Plan will make up the difference.  If a participant's  benefit
under the ESOP is higher than the minimum or "floor"  benefit  under the Pension
Plan, the participant receives the higher benefit under the ESOP.

         All  employees  of  the   Corporation  and  its   subsidiaries   become
participants  in  the  ESOP  after  completing  one  year  of  service  for  the
Corporation  or its  subsidiaries  and  attaining age 21. Under the terms of the
ESOP, the  Corporation or its  subsidiaries,  as  participating  employers,  may
contribute  Corporation  common stock to the ESOP or contribute cash to the ESOP
which will be primarily  invested in the Corporation's  common stock. The amount
of contributions, when they are made, is determined by the Board of Directors of
the Corporation.  No participant contributions are required or allowed under the
ESOP.

         For a  discussion  of the forms in which  benefits  may be  distributed
under the ESOP, see the discussion under "Defined Benefit Plan" below.

         Participants  have the right to direct  the voting of the shares of the
Corporation's  stock allocated to their accounts under the ESOP on all corporate
matters.


                                                        11

<PAGE>



         For the year ended  December 31, 1996, the  Corporation  contributed to
the ESOP  $600,000 in  Corporation  stock.  The stock will be  allocated  to the
individual ESOP accounts of the participants  effective as of December 31, 1996,
although no allocation to the individual accounts had been made or calculated as
of the date of mailing of this Proxy Statement.

         Defined Benefit Plan. As described  above, the Pension Plan was adopted
in  conjunction  with,  but  is  separate  from,  the  ESOP.   Employees  become
participants  in the Pension Plan after  completing  one year of service for the
Corporation  or its  subsidiaries  and  attaining  age 21. All  employees of the
Corporation  and its  subsidiaries  are  eligible  to  become  participants.  No
participant  contributions  are required or allowed under the Pension Plan.  The
Pension Plan, in conjunction with the ESOP, is designed to provide  participants
with a minimum retirement benefit.

         The  monthly  guaranteed  minimum  benefit  under the  Pension  Plan is
reduced by the monthly benefit derived from the participant's  vested portion of
his ESOP account  balance,  calculated  by the actuary for the Pension Plan as a
single life annuity.  The normal retirement  benefit will begin at age 65 and be
paid monthly for as long as the participant lives.

         The normal form of  retirement  benefit under the ESOP and Pension Plan
is a monthly life annuity.  A married  participant  will receive an  actuarially
equivalent   joint  and  50%  survivor   annuity  (a  monthly  payment  for  the
participant's  life with the surviving  spouse  receiving 50% of that amount for
life),  unless the participant  otherwise  elects and the  participant's  spouse
consents  to such  election.  A  participant  may  also  elect  to  receive  his
retirement  income  from  the ESOP and  Pension  Plan in the form of: a  monthly
income  payable  for life;  a monthly  income  payable for life with either 50%,
66-2/3%,  or  100%  of the  participant's  benefit  paid  to  the  participant's
designated  beneficiary starting upon the participant's death and continuing for
as long as the beneficiary  lives; or a monthly income payable for life with 60,
120 or 180 monthly payments  guaranteed,  provided that the number of guaranteed
monthly  payments  cannot be for a period greater than the joint life expectancy
of the participant  and his spouse.  The ESOP also provides that a participant's
benefit may be distributed in a single lump sum or substantially  equal monthly,
quarterly  or  annual  installments  over a period  which  does not  exceed  the
participant's  life  expectancy (or the joint life expectancy of the participant
and his spouse).  However,  a  participant  may deem that all or any part of the
distribution from the ESOP be made in whole shares of the  Corporation's  common
stock prior to the date specified for  distribution,  with any fractional shares
distributed in cash.

         The following table shows the estimated  annual benefits  payable under
the  Pension  Plan upon  retirement  at age 65 for  various  periods  of Benefit
Service at specified  levels of remuneration.  The benefit amounts  presented in
the totals are annual straight life annuity amounts without deduction for social
security  or  other  offset  amounts.  A  participant's   Final  Average  Annual
Compensation shown under the Pension Plan is generally based on the compensation
set forth in the Summary Compensation Table.





                                                        12

<PAGE>

                   Estimated Minimum Annual Retirement Benefit
                        Final Average Annual Compensation



Years
of Benefit
Service


                                                                          250K
         70K        100K       130K      160K       190K       220K      or more
        ------     ------     ------    -------    -------    -------    -------
 10   $ 16,795   $ 24,550   $ 32,500   $ 40,497   $ 45,267   $ 50,037   $ 52,555
 20     33,200     49,100     65,000     81,025     93,745    106,465    113,181
 30     42,800     63,650     84,500    105,553    125,000    125,000    125,000
 40     44,100     65,925     87,750    109,848    125,000    125,000    125,000


         Maximum  benefits  under the  Pension  Plan are  subject  to the annual
limitation  ($125,000  for 1996)  imposed  on  qualified  plans by the  Internal
Revenue Code. The maximum  compensation  which may be taken into account for any
purpose  under the  Pension  Plan is limited  by the  Internal  Revenue  Code to
$160,000 for 1997.

         Under the Pension Plan, the executive officers of the Corporation named
in the Summary  Compensation  Table under  "COMPENSATION  OF OFFICERS"  have the
following current years of benefit service:  Donald E. Smith - 28 years; John W.
Perry - 22 years;  Michael A. Carty - 20 years;  W. Edward Jukes - 7 years;  and
Norman L. Lowery - 1 year.

                          TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT

         Directors  and  principal   officers  of  the   Corporation  and  their
associates  were customers of, and have had  transactions  with, the Corporation
and its  subsidiary  banks in the  ordinary  course  of  business  during  1996.
Comparable transactions may be expected to take place in the future.

         During 1996 various directors and officers of the Corporation and their
respective  associates were indebted to the subsidiary  banks from time to time.
These loans were made in the ordinary  course of business on  substantially  the
same terms, including interest rates and collateral,  as those prevailing at the
time for similar  transactions  with other persons and did not involve more than
the normal risk of collectability or present other unfavorable features.

         The law offices of B.  Guille Cox,  Jr., in which Mr. Cox is a partner,
were paid $16,113 in legal fees by the Corporation and its  subsidiaries for the
fiscal year ending December 31, 1996.



                                                        13

<PAGE>



                          COMPARATIVE PERFORMANCE GRAPH

         The following graph compares cumulative total shareholder return on the
Corporation's  common  stock over the last five fiscal years with the returns of
the CRSP Total  Return  Index for the NASDAQ  Stock  Market  (U.S.) and the CRSP
Total  Return  Index for NASDAQ  bank  stocks.  The graph  assumes  $100.00  was
invested on January 1, 1991 in the Corporation's common stock and in each of the
two indices shown, and the reinvestment of all dividends.


                                    FFC STOCK
                             TOTAL RETURN COMPARISON

[CHART OMITTED AND REPLACED WITH TABLE]

                      12/91     12/92     12/93     12/94     12/95     12/96
                      -----     -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
NASDAQ MARKET (US)     100     116.38     133.60    130.59    184.67    222.16
NASDAQ BANK            100     145.55     165.99    165.38    246.32    325.60
FFC STOCK              100     163.86     235.75    221.81    240.39    296.46


                                                        14

<PAGE>



                              EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS

         On January 3, 1995, the  Corporation,  Terre Haute First, and Mr. Smith
entered  into an  Employment  Agreement  ("Agreement")  whose  term  expires  on
December 31, 2000  (although the Agreement may be renewed for successive one (1)
year terms as agreed upon by the parties). The Agreement provides that Mr. Smith
will serve as President and Chief Executive  Officer of the  Corporation  during
the term of the agreement and perform such other duties as may be established by
the Board of Directors of the Corporation and Terre Haute First. Under the terms
of the Agreement, Mr. Smith will be paid an annual salary as set by the Board of
Directors of the Corporation  and Terre Haute First. In addition,  the Agreement
requires  that the  Corporation  and Terre Haute First  establish a split dollar
life  insurance  arrangement  with Mr.  Smith which will insure the lives of Mr.
Smith and his spouse.  Under the terms of the  Agreement,  the  Corporation  and
Terre Haute First expect to recover the  premiums  they pay for such policy from
the proceeds of such policy.

         Effective January 1, 1997, Terre Haute First entered into an Employment
Agreement with Norman L. Lowery, its President and Chief Executive Officer.  The
Employment  Agreement  is a  five-year  agreement  and extends  annually  for an
additional  one-year term to maintain its five-year  term if Terre Haute First's
Board of Directors  determines to so extend it. Under the Employment  Agreement,
Mr. Lowery receives an initial annual salary equal to his current salary subject
to increases approved by the Board of Directors.  The Employment  Agreement also
provides,  among other things, for Mr. Lowery's participation in other bonus and
fringe  benefit  plans  available to the  Corporation's  and Terre Haute First's
employees.  Mr. Lowery may terminate his employment upon ninety (90) days' prior
written notice to Terre Haute First.  Terre Haute First may discharge Mr. Lowery
for just  cause  (as  defined  in the  Employment  Agreement)  at any time or in
certain events specified by applicable law or regulations.

         If Terre Haute First terminates Mr. Lowery's  employment for other than
just cause or Mr. Lowery is constructively  discharged and such termination does
not occur within twelve months after a change in control of Terre Haute First or
the Corporation, the Employment Agreement provides for Mr. Lowery's receipt in a
lump-sum or periodic  payments of an amount equal to the sum of (A) Mr. Lowery's
base salary through the end of the  then-current  term, plus (B) in Mr. Lowery's
sole  discretion and in lieu of continued  participation  in Terre Haute First's
fringe  benefit and  retirement  plans,  cash in an amount  equal to the cost of
obtaining all health, life, disability,  retirement and other benefits which Mr.
Lowery would  otherwise be eligible to receive if he continued to participate in
those plans through the end of the  then-current  term. In the event Terre Haute
First terminates Mr. Lowery's employment for other than just cause or Mr. Lowery
is constructively  discharged within twelve months following a change in control
of Terre Haute First or the Corporation,  the Employment  Agreement provides for
Mr. Lowery's  receipt of a lump-sum payment of an amount equal to the difference
between (A) the  product of 2.99 times his "base  amount" (as defined in Section
280G(b)(3)  of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended (the "Code")) and
(B) the  sum of any  other  parachute  payments,  as  determined  under  Section
280G(b)(2)  of the Code,  in addition to the benefits  described  above which he
would  receive if the  termination  did not occur  within 12 months  following a
change in control.


                                                        15

<PAGE>



         If the payments provided for under the Employment  Agreement,  together
with any other payments made to Mr. Lowery by Terre Haute First,  are determined
to be payments in violation of the "golden  parachute"  rules of the Code,  such
payments will be reduced to the largest amount which would not cause Terre Haute
First to lose a tax  deduction for such  payments  under those rules.  As of the
date hereof,  the cash  compensation  that would be paid to Mr. Lowery under the
Employment  Agreement if such agreement were terminated within 12 months after a
change in control of Terre Haute First would be $621,920, plus all other amounts
he would otherwise be due under the Employment  Agreement for the balance of its
term.


                                                        16

<PAGE>



                      PROPOSAL II: AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF
               INCORPORATION TO INCREASE AUTHORIZED CAPITAL STOCK

         At a  meeting  held on  March  18,  1997,  the  Corporation's  Board of
Directors  adopted  resolutions  approving  and  submitting  to a  vote  of  the
shareholders,  an  amendment  of  the  first  sentence  of  Article  III  of the
Corporation's  Articles of  Incorporation  which would  increase the  authorized
shares of the  Corporation's  Common Stock from 10,000,000  shares to 40,000,000
shares (the  "Amendment").  This same change is part of the proposed Amended and
Restated Articles of Incorporation,  and is being proposed as a separate item so
that it may be adopted  even if  shareholders  do not  approve  the  Amended and
Restated Articles of Incorporation.

         On March 7, 1997, the number of the Corporation's outstanding shares of
Common Stock was  6,681,876;  and the number of shares of Common Stock  reserved
for the  exercise of rights  under the  Shareholder  Rights Plan was  3,318,124,
leaving no remaining authorized and unreserved shares of Common Stock.

         The Amendment is being proposed to make available  additional shares of
Common Stock for general corporate purposes, including acquisitions, financings,
stock dividends,  stock splits, and issuances pursuant to the Shareholder Rights
Plan. If the proposed Amendment becomes effective,  3,363,752  additional shares
will be reserved for the exercise of rights under the  Shareholder  Rights Plan.
See  "Proposal  III:  Proposal For Approval and Adoption of Amended and Restated
Articles of Incorporation - Shareholder Rights Plan." In addition, the Board has
concluded  that it would be in the best interest of the  Corporation  to be in a
position  to  continue  to  expand  its  banking  operations  by  means  of bank
acquisitions  involving  the issuance of its capital  stock.  In the judgment of
management, the additional shares authorized by the proposed Amendment should be
available  to provide  flexibility  in  corporate  decisions in the event shares
should be needed for any such  desirable  corporate  purpose.  At this time, the
Corporation has no specific plans,  understandings,  or arrangements for issuing
any of the shares of capital stock to be  authorized by the proposed  Amendment.
If additional shares are issued, the percentage  ownership interests of existing
shareholders  would be reduced and, depending on the terms pursuant to which new
shares are issued,  the book value and earnings per share of  outstanding  stock
might be diluted. Moreover, such additional share issuance could be construed as
having an anti-takeover  effect because the percentage  ownership of a potential
acquiror would be reduced upon the issuance of additional shares.  Except to the
extent shares will be reserved for issuance under the  Shareholder  Rights Plan,
no  consideration  was  given by the Board of  Directors  to the use of any such
additional shares as an "anti-takeover" measure.

         If the proposed Amendment is adopted by the shareholders,  the Board of
Directors  could  authorize the issuance of any authorized but unissued  shares,
including those  authorized by the Amendment,  on terms determined by it without
further action by the  shareholders,  unless issued in a transaction,  such as a
merger or  consolidation,  requiring  shareholder  approval.  All  attributes of
additional  Common  Stock  to be  authorized  would  be the same as those of the
existing shares of Common Stock.  There are no preemptive rights with respect to
the Corporation's shares of Common Stock.


                                                        17

<PAGE>



         The  consolidated  and parent company only financial  statements of the
Corporation and its subsidiaries,  the notes thereto,  and the related report of
Coopers  &  Lybrand  L.L.P.,  appearing  on pages 17 to 32 of the  Corporation's
Annual  Report  for 1996  and  Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis  of those
statements  appearing on pages 34 to 44 of such Annual  Report are  incorporated
herein by reference.

         Provided that a quorum of shares of Common Stock is  represented at the
Annual Meeting in person or by proxy (a "quorum"  constituting a majority of the
outstanding shares of Common Stock), the affirmative vote of a greater number of
shares  than the  number of shares  voted in  opposition  will be  required  for
approval  of the  proposed  Amendment  to the  Articles  of  Incorporation.  The
proposed Amendment,  if approved and adopted,  will become effective upon filing
of  Articles  of  Amendment  or a  Restatement  of Articles in the Office of the
Secretary  of  State  of  Indiana.  If the  shareholders  approve  the  proposed
Amendment,  the  Corporation  intends  to  accomplish  this  filing  as  soon as
practicable. The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR the proposed Amendment
and,  unless  directed  otherwise,  the proxies named in the proxy will vote the
shares  represented  by each proxy received by them FOR approval of the proposed
Amendment.

                                                        18

<PAGE>



               PROPOSAL III: PROPOSAL FOR APPROVAL AND ADOPTION OF
                 AMENDED AND RESTATED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

         The   Corporation's   Board  of  Directors  has   unanimously   adopted
resolutions   proposing   and   recommending   that  the  present   Articles  of
Incorporation  of the  Corporation  (the  "Current  Articles")  be  amended  and
restated by the adoption of Amended and Restated  Articles of  Incorporation  of
the  Corporation  (the  "Restated  Articles").  A copy of the proposed  Restated
Articles is attached to this Proxy Statement as Exhibit A.

         The following  information  should be read carefully since the Restated
Articles may be characterized as anti-takeover  measures which, if adopted,  may
tend to insulate  management  and make  accomplishment  of certain  transactions
involving a potential change of control of the Corporation more difficult.

         If the Restated  Articles are approved and adopted by the  shareholders
of the Corporation,  the Corporation's Board of Directors intends to approve and
adopt a new Code of By-Laws for the Corporation (the "Restated By-Laws"),  which
By-Laws  also  contain  provisions  not  included in the present  By-Laws of the
Corporation (the "Current  By-Laws"),  which may tend to make  accomplishment of
certain  transactions  involving  change  of  control  of the  Corporation  more
difficult. These changes will be described in this Proxy Statement.

         Although the Board of Directors of the  Corporation is not aware of any
effort  that might be made to obtain  control of the  Corporation,  the Board of
Directors  believes that it is appropriate to include certain  provisions in the
Corporation's   Articles  of  Incorporation  to  protect  the  interest  of  the
Corporation and its shareholders from unsolicited  changes in the control of the
Corporation  in  circumstances  under  which  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the
Corporation  concludes will not be in the best  interests of the  Corporation or
the Corporation's shareholders.

         Although  the  Corporation's  Board  of  Directors  believes  that  the
restrictions on acquisition described below are beneficial to shareholders,  the
provisions may have the effect of rendering the  Corporation  less attractive to
potential  acquirors thereby  discouraging  future takeover attempts which would
not be approved by the Board of Directors but which certain  shareholders  might
deem to be in their  best  interest  or  pursuant  to which  shareholders  might
receive a substantial  premium for their shares over then current market prices.
These  provisions  will  also  render  the  removal  of the  incumbent  Board of
Directors and of management more difficult. The Board of Directors has, however,
concluded that the potential benefits of these restrictive  provisions  outweigh
the possible disadvantages.

         The  following  general  discussion  contains a summary of the material
provisions  of the  Restated  Articles and By-Laws that may be deemed to have an
effect of  delaying,  deferring  or  preventing  a change in the  control of the
Corporation. The following description of certain of these provisions is general
and not necessarily  complete,  and with respect to provisions  contained in the
Restated Articles reference should be made in each case to Exhibit A hereto.

                                                        19

<PAGE>




Provisions of the Corporation's Restated Articles and Restated By-Laws

         Directors.  Certain  provisions  in the Restated  Articles and Restated
By-Laws will impede changes in majority control of the Board of Directors of the
Corporation.  The Restated  Articles  provide that the Board of Directors of the
Corporation  will be divided into three  classes,  with  directors in each class
elected for  three-year  staggered  terms.  Therefore,  it would take two annual
elections to replace a majority of the Corporation's Board. The Current Articles
provide  for  one-year  terms  for  directors.  Management  believes  that it is
desirable to ensure continuity and stability of the Corporation's leadership and
policies,  thereby enabling it to carry out its long-range plans for its benefit
and  that of its  shareholders,  and  that a  staggered  Board  will  assist  in
achieving such  continuity and stability.  Such a staggered Board would moderate
the pace of any change of control  of the  Corporation  since a person or entity
acquiring a majority stock interest in the Corporation would have to wait for at
least two consecutive annual meetings,  covering a period of two years, in order
to elect a majority of the  Corporation's  Board of Directors.  The inability to
change the composition of the Board of Directors immediately even if such change
and  composition  were  determined by the  shareholders of the Corporation to be
beneficial to them may tend to discourage a tender offer or takeover bid for the
Corporation's stock.

         The  Restated  Articles  also  provide  that the  size of the  Board of
Directors shall range between five (5) and twenty (20) directors, with the exact
number of  directors to be fixed from time to time  exclusively  by the Board of
Directors  pursuant to a resolution adopted by a majority of the total number of
directors of the Corporation.  The Current Articles provide that the By-Laws may
fix the number of directors,  without any limits on what that number may be. The
overall effect of this Restated Articles provision may be to prevent a person or
entity from immediately acquiring control of the Corporation through an increase
in the number of the Corporation's directors and election of his or its nominees
to fill the newly-created vacancies.

         The Restated  Articles provide that any vacancy  occurring in the Board
of  Directors,  including  a vacancy  created  by an  increase  in the number of
directors,  shall be filled for the  remainder of the  unexpired  term only by a
majority vote of the directors then in office.  The Current By-Laws provide that
directors who fill  vacancies on the Board will only serve until the next annual
meeting of the  shareholders,  and permit  shareholders to fill the vacancies if
there is a tie among the remaining  Board members on this issue.  Moreover,  the
Restated  By-Laws impose certain advance notice and information  requirements in
connection with the nomination by shareholders of candidates for election to the
Board of Directors or the proposal by  shareholders of business to be acted upon
at an annual meeting of  shareholders.  Notice and information  concerning these
matters must be provided to the  Corporation not less than 120 days prior to the
meeting,  assuming  sufficient  prior public notice of the meeting date has been
given by the  Corporation  (as  provided in the  By-Laws).  There are no similar
provisions in the Current  By-Laws.  Management  believes that it is in the best
interests of the Corporation and its shareholders to provide  sufficient time to
enable  management  to disclose to  shareholders  information  about a dissident
slate of  director  nominees.  This  advance  notice  requirement  may also give
management time to solicit its own proxies in an attempt to defeat any dissident
slate of nominations,  should management  determine that doing so is in the best
interests of shareholders generally.  Similarly,  adequate notice of shareholder
proposals will give management

                                                        20

<PAGE>



time to study  such  proposals  and to  determine  whether to  recommend  to the
shareholders that such proposals be adopted.

         The  Restated  Articles  provide that a director or the entire Board of
Directors may be removed only for cause and only by the  affirmative  vote of at
least 80% of the shares eligible to vote generally in the election of directors.
Removal for "cause"  includes removal for the director's  personnel  dishonesty,
incompetence,  willful  misconduct,  breach of fiduciary duty involving personal
profit,  intentional  failure to perform stated duties and willful  violation of
any  law,  rule or  regulation  (other  than  minor  offenses  such  as  traffic
violations) or final  cease-and-desist  order.  The Current By-Laws provide that
directors may be removed by a majority vote of the shareholders, with or without
cause. This provision may, under certain circumstances,  impede the removal of a
director or directors  of the  Corporation,  thus  precluding a person or entity
from  immediately  acquiring  control of the  Corporation's  Board  through  the
removal of existing  directors  and the  election of his or its nominees to fill
the newly-created vacancies.

         Restrictions on Call of Special Meetings. The Restated Articles provide
that a special meeting of shareholders may be called only by the Chairman of the
Board of the  Corporation  or pursuant to a resolution  adopted by a majority of
the  total  number  of  directors  of  the  Corporation.  Shareholders  are  not
authorized to call a special  meeting.  The Current By-Laws permit the President
and holders of not less than 25% of the Corporation's outstanding shares to call
special  meetings  of  shareholders.  Thus,  under  the  Restated  Articles  the
shareholders will lose any right to call special meetings.  Although  management
of the  Corporation  believes that this  provision will  discourage  shareholder
attempts to disrupt the business of the  Corporation  between annual meetings of
shareholders,  its effect may be to deter  hostile  takeovers  by making it more
difficult for a person or entity to obtain immediate  control of the Corporation
prior to the next annual meeting of shareholders of the  Corporation.  Moreover,
this provision may also prevent  shareholders  from using a special meeting as a
forum  to  address  matters  they  may  consider  of  immediate  importance  and
discourage takeovers which are desired by the shareholders.

         No Cumulative Voting. The Restated Articles provide that there shall be
no cumulative  voting  rights in the election of  directors.  This is consistent
with the  Current  Articles  which do not  provide for  cumulative  voting.  The
absence of  cumulative  voting  rights  effectively  means that the holders of a
majority  of the  shares  voted at a meeting  of  shareholders  may,  if they so
choose,  elect all directors of the  Corporation  being voted on at the meeting,
thus precluding minority  shareholder  representation in the Corporation's Board
of  Directors.  As of March 1, 1997,  the  Corporation's  officers and directors
beneficially owned 10.17% of the Corporation's outstanding shares.

         Authorization  of Common  Stock.  The  Restated  Articles  provide  for
40,000,000  authorized  shares of Common  Stock,  an  increase  from the current
10,000,000 authorized shares. This change is being made for the reasons provided
in "Proposal II: Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation to Increase  Authorized
Capital Stock."

         Authorization  of  Preferred  Stock.  The Restated  Articles  authorize
10,000,000  shares of preferred  stock,  without par value.  The  Corporation is
authorized  to issue  preferred  stock  from time to time in one or more  series
subject to applicable provisions of law, and the Board of Directors is

                                                        21

<PAGE>



authorized  to  fix  the   designations,   powers,   preferences   and  relative
participating,  optional  and other  special  rights of such  shares,  including
voting  rights (if any and which  could be as a separate  class) and  conversion
rights. In the event of a proposed merger, tender offer or other attempt to gain
control of the Corporation  not approved by the Board of Directors,  it might be
possible for the Board of  Directors  to  authorize  the issuance of a series of
preferred stock with rights and preferences  that would impede the completion of
such a  transaction.  An effect of the  possible  issuance of  preferred  stock,
therefore, may be to deter a future takeover attempt. The Board of Directors has
no present plans or  understandings  for the issuance of any preferred stock and
does not intend to issue any preferred  stock except on terms which the Board of
Directors  deems  to be in  the  best  interests  of  the  Corporation  and  its
shareholders. The Current Articles do not authorize any preferred stock.

         Evaluation of Offers. The Restated Articles of the Corporation  provide
that the Board of  Directors of the  Corporation,  when  determining  to take or
refrain  from  taking  corporate  action  on any  matter,  including  making  or
declining to make any recommendation to the Corporation's shareholders,  may, in
connection with the exercise of its judgment in determining  what is in the best
interest of the  Corporation,  the  Corporation's  banking  subsidiaries and the
shareholders of the Corporation, give due consideration to all relevant factors,
including,  without limitation, the social and economic effects of acceptance of
such  offer  on  the  Corporation's  customers  and  the  Corporations'  banking
subsidiaries'  present and future  account  holders,  borrowers,  employees  and
suppliers;  the  effect  on the  communities  in which the  Corporation  and the
Corporation's banking subsidiaries operate or are located; and the effect on the
ability of the Corporation to fulfill the objectives of a holding company and of
the   Corporation's   baking   subsidiaries  or  future  financial   institution
subsidiaries  to  fulfill  the  objectives  of  a  financial  institution  under
applicable   statutes  and   regulations.   The  Board  of  Directors   feels  a
responsibility  for  maintaining  the  financial  and business  integrity of the
Corporation.  Banks occupy  positions of special trust in the  communities  they
serve.  They  also  provide  opportunities  for  abuse by  those  who are not of
sufficient experience or competence or financial means to act professionally and
responsibly  with respect to  management  of a financial  institution.  It is of
concern to the Corporation that it be managed in the interest of the communities
that it serves and that it maintain  its  integrity as a  corporation  providing
financial  services  to the  communities  in which  it  operates.  The  Restated
Articles  of the  Corporation  also  authorize  the Board of  Directors  to take
certain  actions to encourage a person to  negotiate  for a change of control of
the Corporation or to oppose such a transaction  deemed undesirable by the Board
of Directors  including the adoption of so-called  shareholder rights plans. The
Corporation  adopted such a plan as of January 6, 1997. See "Shareholder  Rights
Plan." By having these standards and provisions in the Restated  Articles of the
Corporation, the Board of Directors may be in a stronger position to oppose such
a transaction if the Board  concludes that the  transaction  would not be in the
best interest of the  Corporation,  even if the price  offered is  significantly
greater  than the then market price of any equity  security of the  Corporation.
These  provisions  are not in the Current  Articles,  but are  contained  in the
Indiana   Business   Corporation  Law  ("IBCL"),   already   applicable  to  the
Corporation.

         Procedures for Certain  Business  Combinations.  The Restated  Articles
require that  certain  business  combinations  between the  Corporation  (or any
majority-owned subsidiary thereof) and a 10% or greater shareholder ("Interested
Shareholder")  either be (i)  approved  by at least  80% of the total  number of
outstanding  voting shares of the  Corporation or (ii) approved by a majority of
certain

                                                        22

<PAGE>



directors unaffiliated with such Interested Shareholder or involve consideration
per share  generally  equal to the higher of (A) the highest amount paid by such
Interested  Shareholder  or its affiliates in acquiring any shares of the Common
Stock or (B) the "Fair Market Value"  (generally,  the highest  closing bid paid
for  the  Common  Stock  during  the  thirty  days  preceding  the  date  of the
announcement of the proposed business  combination or on the date the Interested
Shareholder  became such,  whichever is higher).  No similar provision is in the
Corporation's  Current  Articles  or  Current  ByLaws,  but  there is a  similar
provision in the IBCL. See "Other Restrictions on Acquisition of the Corporation
- - State Law."

         Management  believes it has become a not uncommon practice in corporate
takeovers to pay cash to acquire a controlling  equity interest in a company and
then to acquire  the  remaining  equity  interest  in the  company by paying the
balance of the  shareholders  a price for their  shares  which is lower than the
price paid to acquire control and/or is in a less desirable form (e.g.,  debt or
other securities of the purchaser  instead of cash).  Management  believes it is
often the case that in  two-step  acquisitions,  arbitrageurs  and  professional
investors,  because of their  sophistication and expertise in the takeover area,
can take advantage of the more  lucrative  first-step  tender offer,  while many
long-term stockholders must accept the price paid in the second-step merger. The
Board is of the view that such "two-tier pricing" could work to the disadvantage
of long-term shareholders and could give arbitrageurs and professional investors
an unfair advantage over such shareholders in a takeover situation.

         The business  combination  provision is designed to prevent a purchaser
from utilizing two-tier pricing and similar  inequitable tactics in the event of
an  attempt to take over the  Corporation.  The  provision  is not  designed  to
prevent or  discourage  tender offers for 80% or more of the Common Stock of the
Corporation.  If an Interested  Shareholder  owns (or can obtain the affirmative
votes  of)  at  least  80% of the  Voting  Shares  with  respect  to a  business
combination,  this  provision  will not  limit  the  ability  of the  Interested
Shareholder  to effect  such  business  combination  and thereby  eliminate  the
minority interest of the Corporation.  However,  the fact that the Corporation's
officers and directors  currently  beneficially own 10.17% of the  Corporation's
voting  shares  could  deter  hostile  tender  offers  for  80% or  more  of the
Corporation's  outstanding  Common  Stock  or  open-market  acquisitions  of the
Corporation's  Common Stock.  Thus,  this business  combination  provision might
deprive holders of the Corporation's stock of an opportunity to sell their stock
to such persons at prices which might be higher than the current market price of
such stock.

         One effect of this provision  might be to encourage  consultation by an
offeror with the Board of Directors prior to or after  commencing a tender offer
in an attempt to prevent a contest from  developing.  This  provision may, thus,
strengthen  the Board of  Directors'  position  in  dealing  with any  potential
offeror  which  might  attempt  to effect a  takeover  of the  Corporation.  The
provision  will  not  make a  business  combination  regarded  by the  Board  of
Directors  as  being in the  interests  of the  Corporation  more  difficult  to
accomplish,  but it will  permit  the Board of  Directors  to  determine  that a
business  combination or tender or exchange offer is not in the interests of the
Corporation  (and thus to  oppose  it) on the basis of  various  factors  deemed
relevant.  This  provision,  however,  gives the Board of Directors the power to
oppose a business combination which the shareholders believe would be beneficial
to the Corporation.


                                                        23

<PAGE>



         Amendments to Restated Articles and Bylaws.  Amendments to the Restated
Articles  must be  approved  by a majority  vote of the  Corporation's  Board of
Directors and also by a majority of the outstanding  shares of the Corporation's
voting  shares;  provided,  however,  that  approval  by at  least  80%  of  the
outstanding voting shares is required for amendment of certain provisions (i.e.,
provisions  relating  to  number,  classification,  and  removal  of  directors;
provisions  relating  to  the  manner  of  amending  By-Laws;  call  of  special
shareholder  meetings;  criteria  for  evaluating  certain  offers;  and certain
business  combinations).  These voting  requirements are intended to prevent the
holders  of less  than the  required  percentages  of  outstanding  stock of the
Corporation from  circumventing any of the foregoing  provisions by amending the
Articles of  Incorporation  to delete or modify one or more of such  provisions.
There  is no  supermajority  voting  requirement  in the  Corporation's  Current
Articles  or  Current  By-Laws,  which  may be  amended  by a  majority  vote of
shareholders and by a majority vote of directors, respectively.

         The  Restated  By-Laws  may be amended  only by a majority  vote of the
total number of directors of the Corporation.

         Indemnification  of Officers and Directors and Limitation of Liability.
Article 11 of the Restated Articles  generally  provides for  indemnification of
any  person  who  is or was a  director,  officer,  employee,  or  agent  of the
Corporation,  or who served at the Corporation's request as a director, officer,
employee,   partner,   trustee,   employee  or  agent  of  another  corporation,
partnership,  joint venture,  trust, employee benefit plan, or other enterprise.
To  qualify  for  indemnification,  such  a  person  generally  must  have  been
successful on the merits or otherwise,  or (i) must have acted in good faith and
in a manner he  reasonably  believed,  in the case of  conduct  in his  official
capacity, was in the best interest of the Corporation,  and, in all other cases,
was not opposed to the  Corporation's  best  interests  and (ii) in any criminal
proceeding,  either had reasonable  cause to believe that his conduct was lawful
or had no reasonable  cause to believe that his conduct was  unlawful.  A person
who  qualifies  for  indemnification  generally is entitled to indemnity for any
obligation  to pay any  judgments,  settlements,  penalties,  fines and expenses
actually or reasonably incurred in any threatened,  pending or completed action,
suit or proceeding,  whether civil,  criminal,  administrative or investigative,
and whether formal or informal, in which he or she was made party as a result of
his or her service on behalf of the Corporation.

         To the  extent  that a  director,  officer,  employee  or  agent of the
Corporation has been successful,  on the merits or otherwise,  in the defense of
any action, suit or proceeding,  or in the defense of any claim, issue or matter
therein, the Corporation shall indemnify such person against expenses (including
counsel  fees)  actually and  reasonably  incurred by such person in  connection
therewith.  Any other indemnification  (unless ordered by a court) shall be made
by  the  Corporation   only  as  authorized  in  the  specific  case,  upon  the
determination that indemnification of the director,  officer,  employee or agent
is permissible in the circumstances  because he has met the applicable  standard
of conduct.  Such determination shall be made (1) by the Board of Directors by a
majority  vote of a  quorum  consisting  of  directors  who were not at the time
parties  to such  action,  suit or  proceeding;  or (2) if a  quorum  cannot  be
obtained  under  subdivision  (1),  by  a  majority  vote  of a  committee  duly
designated  by the Board of Directors  (in which  designation  directors who are
parties may participate),  consisting solely of two or more directors not at the
time  parties  to such  action,  suit or  proceeding;  or (3) by  special  legal
counsel: (A) selected by the Board of Directors or its

                                                        24

<PAGE>



committee in the manner prescribed in subdivision (1) or (2), or (B) if a quorum
of the  Board of  Directors  cannot  be  obtained  under  subdivision  (1) and a
committee  cannot be designated under  subdivision  (2),  selected by a majority
vote of the full  Board of  Directors  (in  which  selection  directors  who are
parties may  participate);  or (4) by the  shareholders,  but shares owned by or
voted under the control of directors who are at the time parties to such action,
suit or proceeding may not be voted on the determination.

         Authorization of indemnification and evaluation as to reasonableness of
expenses  shall  be  made  in  the  same  manner  as  the   determination   that
indemnification  is  permissible,  except that if the  determination  is made by
special legal counsel,  authorization  of  indemnification  and evaluation as to
reasonableness  of expenses shall be made by those entitled under subsection (3)
to select counsel.

         These  provisions are generally  consistent with the Current  Articles,
although they provide more detail  regarding the method for  determining  if the
standard for permissive  indemnification and reasonableness of expenses has been
met.

         Chapter 35 of the IBCL and the Corporation's  Articles of Incorporation
also generally  provide that no director of the Corporation  shall be subject to
liability for any action taken as a director,  or any failure to take any action
as a director,  unless both the  director  has breached or failed to perform the
duties of the director's office in compliance with Indiana law and the breach or
failure to perform  constitutes willful misconduct or recklessness under Indiana
or other governing law. Under Indiana law and Section 9.05,  Clause 9.051 of the
Corporation's  Restated  Articles,  a  director  does not breach his duties as a
director if he acts in good faith,  with the care of an ordinary  prudent person
similarly  situated,  and in a manner the director  reasonably believes to be in
the best  interests of the  corporation.  The  Corporation's  Restated  Articles
extend these limited liability  provisions to officers,  employees and agents of
the Corporation, as well as directors.

         This provision  eliminates the potential liability of the Corporation's
directors  and  officers for  failure,  except  through  willful  misconduct  or
recklessness,  to satisfy their duty of care. It may thus reduce the  likelihood
of derivative  litigation against directors and officers and discourage or deter
shareholders  or  management  from  bringing  a lawsuit  against  directors  and
officers  for  breach of their duty of care,  even  though  such an  action,  if
successful,  might  otherwise have been  beneficial to the  Corporation  and its
shareholders.  The provision will not preclude all equitable remedies for breach
of the  duty of  care,  although  such  remedies  might  not be  available  as a
practical matter. Although there is no similar provision in the Current Articles
or Current By-Laws, this provision is consistent with existing provisions of the
IBCL, currently applicable to the Corporation.

         To the best of management's knowledge, there is currently no pending or
threatened  litigation  for which  indemnification  may be sought or any  recent
litigation  involving directors of the Corporation that might have been affected
by  the  limited   liability   provision  in  the   Corporation's   Articles  of
Incorporation had it been in effect at the time of the litigation.

         The  above   provisions   seek  to  ensure  that  the  ability  of  the
Corporation's directors to exercise their best business judgment in managing the
Corporation's affairs is not unreasonably impeded by

                                                        25

<PAGE>



exposure  to the  potentially  high  personal  costs or other  uncertainties  of
litigation.  The Board  believes  that  provisions  are necessary to attract and
retain qualified directors, officers, and employees.

Purpose and Effects of the Anti-Takeover  Provisions of the Corporation Restated
Articles and By-Laws.

         The  Corporation's  Board of  Directors  believes  that the  provisions
described above are prudent and will reduce the  Corporation's  vulnerability to
takeover attempts and certain other  transactions which have not been negotiated
with and approved by its Board of  Directors.  The Board of  Directors  believes
these provisions are in the best interest of the Corporation,  its shareholders,
and its banking  subsidiaries.  In the judgment of the Board of  Directors,  the
Corporation's  Board of Directors  will be in the best position to determine the
true value of the Corporation and to negotiate more  effectively for what may be
in the best  interests of the  Corporation  and its  shareholders.  The Board of
Directors believes that these provisions will encourage  potential  acquirors to
negotiate directly with the Board of Directors of the Corporation and discourage
hostile  takeover  attempts.  It is also the view of the Board of Directors that
these provisions should not discourage  persons from proposing a merger or other
transaction at prices  reflecting the true value of the Corporation and which is
in the best interests of all shareholders.

         Attempts  to  take  over  financial   institutions  and  their  holding
companies  have  recently  increased.  Takeover  attempts  that  have  not  been
negotiated  with and approved by the Board of Directors  present to shareholders
the risk of a takeover on terms that may be less favorable than might  otherwise
be  available.  A transaction  that is  negotiated  and approved by the Board of
Directors,  on the other hand,  can be carefully  planned and  undertaken  at an
opportune time to obtain maximum value for the Corporation and its shareholders,
with due  consideration  given to matters such as the management and business of
the acquiring corporation and maximum strategic development of the Corporation's
assets.

         An unsolicited takeover proposal can seriously disrupt the business and
management of a corporation  and cause it to undertake  defensive  measures at a
great expense.  Although a tender offer or other takeover attempt may be made at
a price  substantially  above  then  current  market  prices,  such  offers  are
sometimes made for less than all of the outstanding  shares of a target company.
As a result,  shareholders  may be presented  with the  alternative of partially
liquidating their investment at a time that may be disadvantageous, or retaining
their investment in an enterprise which is under different  management and whose
objective  may  not be  similar  to  that  of the  remaining  shareholders.  The
concentration  of  control,  which  could  result  from a tender  offer or other
takeover attempt, could also deprive the Corporation's remaining shareholders of
the benefits of certain protective  provisions of the 1934 Act, if the number of
record  owners  becomes  less  than  300  and  the  Corporation  terminates  its
registration under the 1934 Act.

         Despite  the  belief of the  Corporation's  Board of  Directors  in the
benefits to  shareholders of the foregoing  provisions,  the provisions may also
have the effect of  discouraging  future  takeover  attempts  which would not be
approved by the Board of Directors, but which certain shareholders might deem to
be in their best  interest  or pursuant to which  shareholders  might  receive a
substantial  premium for their  shares over then  current  market  prices.  As a
result, shareholders who might desire

                                                        26

<PAGE>



to participate in such a transaction may not have an opportunity to do so. These
provisions  will also render the removal of the incumbent Board of Directors and
of management more  difficult.  The Board of Directors has,  however,  concluded
that  the  potential  benefits  of these  restrictive  provisions  outweigh  the
possible disadvantages.

Other Restrictions on Acquisition of the Corporation

         State Law. Several  provisions of the IBCL could affect the acquisition
of  shares  of  the  Common  Stock  or  otherwise  affect  the  control  of  the
Corporation.  Chapter 43 of the IBCL prohibits  certain  business  combinations,
including mergers, sales of assets, recapitalizations, and reverse stock splits,
between  corporations  such as the  Corporation  (assuming  that it has over 100
shareholders) and an interested shareholder,  defined as the beneficial owner of
10% or more of the voting power of the outstanding voting shares, for five years
following the date on which the  shareholder  obtained 10% ownership  unless the
acquisition  was approved in advance of that date by the board of directors.  If
prior approval is not obtained,  several price and procedural  requirements must
be met before the business combination can be completed.  These requirements are
similar to those contained in the proposed Restated  Articles  described in " --
Provisions of the  Corporation's  Restated Articles and ByLaws -- Procedures for
Certain Business  Combinations." In general, the price requirements contained in
the IBCL may be more stringent than those imposed in the Corporation's  Restated
Articles.  However,  the  procedural  restraints  imposed  by the  Corporation's
Restated Articles are somewhat broader than those imposed by the IBCL. Also, the
provisions  of the  IBCL  may  change  at some  future  date,  but the  relevant
provisions of the Corporation's  Restated Articles may only be amended by an 80%
vote of the shareholders of the Corporation.

         In  addition,  the IBCL  contains  provisions  designed  to assure that
minority  shareholders  have some say in their future  relationship with Indiana
corporations  in the event that a person made a tender  offer for, or  otherwise
acquired,  shares  giving that  person  more than 20%,  33 1/3%,  and 50% of the
outstanding  voting  securities of corporations  having 100 or more shareholders
(the "Control Share Acquisitions Statute"). Under the Control Share Acquisitions
Statute, if an acquiror purchases those shares at a time that the corporation is
subject to the  Control  Share  Acquisitions  Statute,  then until each class or
series of shares entitled to vote  separately on the proposal,  by a majority of
all votes entitled to be cast by that group  (excluding  shares held by officers
of the  corporation,  by employees of the corporation who are directors  thereof
and by the acquiror),  approves in a special or annual meeting the rights of the
acquiror to vote the shares which take the acquiror over each level of ownership
as stated in the statute,  the  acquiror  cannot vote these  shares.  An Indiana
corporation  otherwise  subject to the Control  Share  Acquisitions  Statute may
elect not to be  covered by the  statute  by so  providing  in its  Articles  of
Incorporation  or By-Laws.  The  Corporation,  however,  will be subject to this
statute   following  the   Conversion   because  of  its  desire  to  discourage
non-negotiated hostile takeovers by third parties.

         The IBCL specifically authorizes Indiana corporations to issue options,
warrants  or  rights  for the  purchase  of shares  or other  securities  of the
corporation  or any  successor in interest of the  corporation.  These  options,
warrants or rights may, but need not be,  issued to  shareholders  on a pro rata
basis.


                                                        27

<PAGE>



         The IBCL  specifically  authorizes  directors,  in considering the best
interest  of  a   corporation,   to  consider  the  effects  of  any  action  on
shareholders,  employees,  suppliers,  and  customers  of the  corporation,  and
communities in which offices or other facilities of the corporation are located,
and any other factors the directors consider pertinent.  As described above, the
Corporation's  Restated  Articles  contain a provision  having a similar effect.
Under the IBCL,  directors  are not  required  to  approve a  proposed  business
combination or other corporate  action if the directors  determine in good faith
that such approval is not in the best interest of the corporation.  In addition,
the IBCL states that  directors  are not  required to redeem any rights under or
render  inapplicable a shareholder rights plan or to take or decline to take any
other action  solely  because of the effect such action might have on a proposed
change of control of the  corporation or the amounts to be paid to  shareholders
upon such a change of control.  The IBCL explicitly  provides that the different
or higher degree of scrutiny imposed in Delaware and certain other jurisdictions
upon director actions taken in response to potential changes in control will not
apply. The Delaware  Supreme Court has held that defensive  measures in response
to a potential takeover must be "reasonable in relation to the threat posed".

         In  taking  or   declining   to  take  any  action  or  in  making  any
recommendation  to a  corporation's  shareholders  with  respect to any  matter,
directors  are  authorized  under the IBCL to consider both the  short-term  and
long-term   interests  of  the   corporation  as  well  as  interests  of  other
constituencies  and other relevant factors.  Any determination made with respect
to the foregoing by a majority of the disinterested directors shall conclusively
be presumed to be valid unless it can be  demonstrated  that such  determination
was not made in good faith.

         Because of the foregoing  provisions  of the IBCL,  the Board will have
flexibility in responding to unsolicited  proposals to acquire the  Corporation,
and  accordingly it may be more difficult for an acquiror to gain control of the
Corporation in a transaction not approved by the Board.

         Under the Indiana Financial Institutions Act, the prior approval of the
Indiana Department of Financial  Institutions is required before the acquisition
of "control" of the Corporation or any of its state-chartered bank subsidiaries.
For  these  purposes,  "control"  means the  acquisition  of at least 25% of the
voting  stock of an  institution  or the  ability  to direct the  management  or
policies of a bank or bank holding company.

         Federal Law. The Change in Bank Control Act provides  that no "person,"
acting  directly  or  indirectly,  or  through  or in  concert  with one or more
persons,  other than a company,  may acquire  control of a bank holding  company
unless at least 60 days prior written  notice is given to the Board of Governors
of the Federal  Reserve  System (the "FRB") and the FRB has not  objected to the
proposed acquisition.

         The Bank  Holding  Company Act of 1956 also  prohibits  any  "company,"
directly or indirectly or acting in concert with one or more other  persons,  or
through one or more  subsidiaries or transactions,  from acquiring control of an
insured  bank without the prior  approval of the FRB. In  addition,  any company
that  acquires  such  control  becomes  a  "bank  holding  company"  subject  to
registration, examination and regulation as a bank holding company by the FRB.


                                                        28

<PAGE>



         The term  "control"  for purposes of the Change in Bank Control Act and
the Bank Holding Company Act includes the power, directly or indirectly, to vote
more than 25% of any class of voting stock of the bank or bank  holding  company
or to control, in any manner, the election of a majority of the directors of the
bank or bank holding  company.  It also includes a determination by the FRB that
such  company or person has the power,  directly  or  indirectly,  to exercise a
controlling influence over or to direct the management or policies of the bank.

         FRB regulations set forth certain "rebuttable  control  determinations"
which arise upon (a) the acquisition of any voting  securities of a state member
bank or bank holding company if, after the transaction, the acquiring person (or
persons  acting in  concert)  owns,  controls,  or holds  with  power to vote 25
percent or more of any class of voting securities of the institution; or (b) the
acquisition  of any voting  securities  of a state  member bank or bank  holding
company if, after the  transaction,  the acquiring  person (or persons acting in
concert)  owns,  controls,  or holds  with power to vote 10 percent or more (but
less than 25 percent) of any class of voting securities of the institution,  and
if (i) the  institution has registered  securities  under Section 12 of the 1934
Act or (ii) no other  person  will own a  greater  percentage  of that  class of
voting securities immediately after the transaction.

         The  regulations  also  specify  the  criteria  which  the FRB  uses to
evaluate control applications. The FRB is empowered to disapprove an acquisition
of control if it finds,  among  other  things,  that (i) the  acquisition  would
substantially lessen competition,  (ii) the financial condition of the acquiring
person  might  jeopardize  the  institution  or its  depositors,  or  (iii)  the
competency,  experience,  or integrity of the acquiring person indicates that it
would not be in the interest of the depositors,  the institution,  or the public
to permit the acquisition of control by such person.

         Shareholder  Rights  Plan.  The  Corporation,  as of  January  6, 1997,
adopted a Shareholder Rights Plan (the "Plan").  The Plan is intended to protect
the  long-term  value  of  shareholders'   investments  in  the  Corporation  by
encouraging any potential acquiror to negotiate with its Board of Directors. The
Plan will guard against partial or inadequate  tender offers,  open-market share
accumulations,  and other abusive or coercive  takeover  tactics,  and allow the
Board time to evaluate any offer and all options for long-term growth.

         To implement the Plan,  shareholders  of record as of January 20, 1997,
received one right for each outstanding share of the Corporation's Common Stock.
Initially,  the Rights  trade  automatically  with the Common Stock and separate
Right  Certificates  will not be issued.  The Rights  will  expire on January 6,
2007, unless earlier redeemed or exchanged.

         Each Right entitles the registered holder,  subject to the terms of the
Plan, to purchase from the  Corporation  one share of the  Corporation's  Common
Stock at a purchase price of $95.00 per share, subject to adjustment. The Rights
will not be  exercisable  until a subsequent  distribution  date which will only
occur if a person or group acquires  beneficial  ownership of 12% or more of the
Corporation's  Common Stock (or is declared an "Adverse Person" by the Company's
Board)  (subject to certain  limits  applicable  to existing  shareholders),  or
announces a tender or exchange  offer that would  result in such person or group
owning 30% or more of the Common Stock.


                                                        29

<PAGE>



         If a person or group  acquires  beneficial  ownership of 15% or more of
the Corporation's outstanding Common Stock (subject to certain limits applicable
to existing  shareholders),  each  holder of a Right  (other than the 15% holder
whose  Rights  become void once such  holder  reaches  the 15%  threshold)  will
thereafter  have a right to purchase,  upon payment of the purchase price of the
Right, that number of shares of the Corporation's Common Stock which at the time
of such  transaction  will have a market  value equal to two times the  purchase
price of the Right.

         In the event  that the  Corporation  is  acquired  in a merger or other
business  combination  transaction or 50% or more of its consolidated  assets or
earning power are sold, each holder of a Right will thereafter have the right to
purchase, upon payment of the purchase price of the Right, that number of shares
of common stock of the acquiring  company which at the time of such  transaction
will have a market value of two times the purchase price of the Right.

         The Board of  Directors  of the  Corporation  may  exchange  the Rights
(other than Rights  owned by such  person or group which have become  void),  in
whole or in part,  at an exchange  ratio of one share of Common  Stock per Right
(subject to adjustment).

         Under certain circumstances,  the Board of Directors of the Corporation
may redeem the Rights in whole, but not in part, at a price of $0.01 per Right.

Vote Required For Approval and Adoption of Restated Articles

         Provided that a quorum of shares of Common Stock is  represented at the
Annual Meeting in person or by proxy (a "quorum" consisting of a majority of the
outstanding shares of Common Stock), the affirmative vote of a greater number of
shares  than the  number of shares  voted in  opposition  will be  required  for
approval and adoption of the proposed Restated  Articles.  The proposed Restated
Articles,  if approved and  adopted,  will become  effective  upon filing of the
Restatement  of Articles in the Office of the Secretary of State of Indiana.  If
the shareholders approve the proposed Restated Articles, the Corporation intends
to  accomplish  this  filing  as soon as  practicable.  The  Board of  Directors
recommends  a vote FOR the  proposed  Restated  Articles  and,  unless  directed
otherwise,  the proxies named in the proxy will vote the shares  represented  by
each proxy received by them FOR approval of the proposed Restated Articles.

                                                        30

<PAGE>



           PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS AND SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT

         The following  table  contains  information  concerning  individuals or
entities who, to the knowledge of the Corporation,  beneficially  owned on March
1, 1997, more than 5% of the common stock of the Corporation:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

            Name and Address
           of Beneficial Owner                     Shares Beneficially Owned                     Percent of Class
<S>                                                         <C>                                       <C>   
First Financial Corporation                               433,903 (1)                                  6.49%
  Employee Stock Ownership
   Plan ("ESOP")
One First Financial Plaza
Terre Haute, Indiana 47807

Mary F. Hulman                                              718,066                                   10.75%
900 Wabash Avenue
Terre Haute, Indiana 47807

Princeton Mining Company                                    599,424                                    8.97%
State Road 46 South
Terre Haute, Indiana 47803
</TABLE>

(1) Represents shares held in trust by the Corporation's subsidiary, Terre Haute
First.

         The Trust  Departments of five (5) subsidiary  banks of the Corporation
which have trust departments hold, as of March 1, 1997,  1,089,511 shares of the
Corporation's common stock for the beneficiaries of certain trusts,  estates and
agencies  administered by the subsidiary banks. The respective trust departments
are  authorized to vote 397,530 shares of the  Corporation's  common stock which
such trust departments hold of record,  either in person or by proxy, so long as
each vote is in the best  interest of any such  trust,  estate or agency and the
beneficiaries or principals  thereof.  All shares held by such trust departments
will  be  voted  in  accordance  with  the   instructions   of   co-fiduciaries,
beneficiaries or principals, as applicable.

Security Ownership Management

         The following  table sets forth as of March 1, 1997 the total number of
shares of common stock of the  Corporation  beneficially  owned by each Director
and certain  executive  officers of the  Corporation  and by all  Directors  and
executive  officers as a group. The number of shares shown as being beneficially
owned by each Director and executive  officer are those over which he or she has
sole or shared voting or investment power.

                                                        31

<PAGE>

 Name of Beneficial Owner     Shares Beneficially Owned (1)   Percent of Class
 ------------------------     -------------------------       ----------------
Walter A. Bledsoe                         14,278                     .21%
B. Guille Cox, Jr.                        40,714                     .61%  (2)
Thomas T. Dinkel                           4,462                     .07%
Anton H. George                              295                     .01%
Mari H. George                               220                     .01%
Gregory L. Gibson                         28,742                     .43%
Max L. Gibson                            113,510                    1.70%
Norman L. Lowery                          11,310                     .17%
William A. Niemeyer                        6,790                     .10%
Patrick O'Leary                           23,143                     .35%
John W. Ragle                             54,280                     .81%
Chapman J. Root, II                      291,661                    4.36% (3)
Donald E. Smith                           61,608                     .92%
Virginia L. Smith                          2,914                     .04%
John W. Perry                              9,991                     .15%
W. Edward Jukes                           10,886                     .16%
Michael A. Carty                           4,588                     .07%

All Directors and Executive
Officers as a group
(17 individuals)(4)                      679,392                   10.17%
- ---------------
(1)      The  information  contained  in this  column is based upon  stockholder
         records of the Corporation and information furnished to the Corporation
         by the individuals identified above.

(2)      Mr. Cox, under certain  circumstances,  has the power, with the consent
         of others, to vote an additional  218,609 shares (3.27%).  These shares
         are not reflected in the above amount.

(3)      Includes  291,297  shares  held by the 1992  Root  Children's  Business
         Trust,  of which Mr. Root is a trustee.  Mr. Root disclaims  beneficial
         ownership  with respect to all such shares in the trust except those in
         which he is the beneficiary.

                                                        32

<PAGE>



(4)      Excludes   218,609  shares  over  which  Mr.  Cox  may,  under  certain
         circumstances,  exercise voting  control.  Includes shares held for the
         accounts of Donald E. Smith,  John W. Perry,  Michael A. Carty,  and W.
         Edward  Jukes  in  the  First  Financial   Corporation  Employee  Stock
         Ownership Plan described above.

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

         Section 16(a) of the  Securities  and Exchange Act of 1934 requires the
Corporation's  directors and executive  officers,  and persons who own more than
ten percent of a registered class of the  Corporation's  equity  securities,  to
file with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC")  initial  reports of
ownership  and reports of changes in ownership of  Corporation  common stock and
other equity securities of the Corporation. Officers, directors and greater than
ten-percent  shareholders  are  required  by  SEC  regulations  to  furnish  the
Corporation  with  copies of all  Section  16(a)  forms they  file.  To the best
knowledge of the  Corporation,  during the most recent fiscal year all officers,
directors  and greater than  ten-percent  beneficial  owners of the  Corporation
timely filed all  statements of beneficial  ownership  required to be filed with
the SEC.

                             INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

         The Board of Directors  appointed  Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.,  Certified
Public  Accountants as independent  accountants to audit the books,  records and
accounts of the Corporation for 1996. The Board of Directors anticipates that it
will appoint an independent public accountant to audit the books,  records,  and
accounts of the Corporation for 1997 in April, 1997.  Representatives of Coopers
& Lybrand L.L.P. are expected to be in attendance at the annual meeting and will
be provided an opportunity  to make a statement  should they desire to do so and
to respond to  appropriate  inquiries from the  shareholders.  Coopers & Lybrand
L.L.P. have been independent accountants for the Corporation since 1984.


                             SHAREHOLDERS PROPOSALS

         Any proposals which  shareholders  desire to present at the 1998 Annual
meeting must be received by the Corporation at its principal  executive  offices
on  or  before  November  17,  1997  to  be  considered  for  inclusion  in  the
Corporation's proxy material for that meeting.


                          ANNUAL REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS

         The 1996 Annual Report to Shareholders, containing financial statements
for the year ended  December  31, 1996,  and other  information  concerning  the
operations of the Corporation is enclosed herewith, but is not to be regarded as
proxy soliciting material.



                                                        33

<PAGE>


         UPON WRITTEN  REQUEST,  THE CORPORATION  WILL PROVIDE WITHOUT CHARGE TO
EACH REQUESTING  SHAREHOLDER,  A COPY OF THE CORPORATION'S ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM
10-K WHICH IS REQUIRED TO BE FILED WITH THE SECURITIES  AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996. ADDRESS ALL REQUESTS TO:

                           MICHAEL A. CARTY, TREASURER
                           FIRST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                            ONE FIRST FINANCIAL PLAZA
                                  P.O. BOX 540
                           TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA 47808


                                  OTHER MATTERS

         The Annual  Meeting is called for the purposes set forth in the Notice.
The Board of  Directors  of the  Corporation  does not know of any  matters  for
action by shareholders  at such Annual Meeting other than the matters  described
in the notice.  However, the enclosed Proxy will confer discretionary  authority
with  respect to matters  which are not known to the Board of  Directors  at the
time of the  printing  hereof  and which may  properly  come  before  the Annual
Meeting.  It is the intention of the persons named in the Proxy to vote pursuant
to the Proxy  with  respect  to such  matters  in  accordance  with  their  best
judgment.

                       By Order of the Board of Directors



                       /s/ Donald E. Smith
                       DONALD E. SMITH
                       Chairman of the Board and President


                                                        34




                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                            ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                           FIRST FINANCIAL CORPORATION



                                    ARTICLE 1
                                      Name
     The name of the Corporation is First Financial Corporation.

                                    ARTICLE 2
                               Purposes and Powers
     Section 2.01.  Purposes.  The purposes for which the  Corporation is formed
are the transaction of any or all lawful business for which  corporations may be
incorporated  under the Indiana Business  Corporation Law, as the same may, from
time to time, be amended (the "Act").

     Section  2.02.  Powers.  The  Corporation  shall have the same powers as an
individual  to do all things  necessary or  convenient to carry out its business
and  affairs,   including  without  limitation,   all  the  powers  specifically
enumerated in the Act.

                                    ARTICLE 3
                                Term of Existence
     The period during which the Corporation shall continue is perpetual.

                                    ARTICLE 4
                      Registered Office and Resident Agent

     The street address of the registered office of the Corporation is:

                            One First Financial Plaza
                                  P.O. Box 540
                           Terre Haute, Indiana 47808

     and the name and business office address of its registered  agent in charge
of such office are:

                                 Donald E. Smith
                           First Financial Corporation
                            One First Financial Plaza
                                  P.O. Box 540
                           Terre Haute, Indiana 47808

                                    ARTICLE 5
                                Number of Shares

     The total number of shares which the  Corporation  shall have  authority to
issue is Fifty Million (50,000,000) shares, all of which are without par value.

                                    ARTICLE 6
                                 Terms of Shares

     Section 6.01.  Designation of Classes,  Number and Par Value of Shares. The
shares of  authorized  capital  shall be divided  into Ten Million  (10,000,000)
shares  of  Preferred  Stock,   without  par  value,  as  hereinafter   provided
("Preferred  Stock"),  and Forty  Million  (40,000,000)  shares of Common Stock,
without par value ("Common Stock"), as hereinafter provided.


<PAGE>

     Section 6.02. Rights, Privileges, Limitations and Restrictions of Preferred
Stock.  The Board of Directors of the  Corporation  is vested with  authority to
determine and state the designations and the relative preferences,  limitations,
voting  rights,  if any,  and other  rights of the  Preferred  Stock and of each
series of Preferred Stock by the adoption and filing in accordance with the Act,
before the issuance of any shares of such Preferred Stock or series of Preferred
Stock, of an amendment or amendments to these Articles of  Incorporation  as the
same may, from time to time, be amended, determining the terms of such Preferred
Stock or series of Preferred Stock ("Preferred Stock  Designation").  All shares
of Preferred  Stock of the same series shall be identical with each other in all
respects. The number of authorized shares of Preferred Stock may be increased or
decreased (but not below the number of shares thereof then  outstanding)  by the
affirmative  vote of the holders of a majority of the voting power of all of the
then outstanding shares of the capital stock of the Corporation entitled to vote
generally in the election of Directors, after giving effect to the provisions in
Article 11 hereof ("Voting Stock"), voting as a single class, without a separate
vote of the holders of the Preferred Stock or any series thereof,  unless a vote
of any such holders is required pursuant to the Preferred Stock Designation.

     Section 6.03.  Rights,  Privileges,  Limitations and Restrictions of Common
Stock.

          Clause  6.031.   Single  Class.  The  shares  of  Common  Stock  shall
     constitute  a separate  and single class and shall not be issued in series.
     All  shares of  Common  Stock  shall be  identical  with each  other in all
     respects.

         Clause 6.032. Liquidation. In the event of any voluntary or involuntary
     liquidation,  dissolution, or winding up of the Corporation, the holders of
     the shares of Common  Stock shall be entitled,  after  payment or provision
     for payment of the debts and other  liabilities of the  Corporation  and of
     all shares of stock having  priority over the Common Stock, in the event of
     voluntary or involuntary  liquidation,  dissolution or winding up, to share
     ratably in the remaining net assets of the Corporation.

         Clause  6.033.  Voting  Rights.  Every holder of shares of Common Stock
     shall have the right, at every Shareholders'  meeting, to one vote for each
     share of Common Stock standing in his name on the books of the Corporation,
     except as otherwise provided in the Act.

     Section 6.04.  Issuance of Shares.  The Board of Directors has authority to
authorize  and direct the  issuance by the  Corporation  of shares of  Preferred
Stock and Common Stock at such times, in such amounts, to such persons, for such
considerations  and upon such terms and conditions as it may, from time to time,
determine upon,  subject only to the restrictions,  limitations,  conditions and
requirements  imposed by the Act,  other  applicable  laws and these Articles of
Incorporation, as the same may, from time to time, be amended.

     Section  6.05.  Distributions  Upon  Shares.  The  Board of  Directors  has
authority  to authorize  and direct the payment of  dividends  and the making of
other  distributions by the Corporation in respect of the issued and outstanding
shares of Preferred Stock and Common Stock (i) at such times, in such amount and
forms, from such sources and upon such terms and conditions as it may, from time
to  time,  determine  upon,  subject  only  to  the  restrictions,  limitations,
conditions and requirements  imposed by the Act, other applicable laws and these
Articles of Incorporation,  as the same may, from time to time, be amended,  and
(ii) in  shares of the same  class or series or in shares of any other  class or
series  without  obtaining the  affirmative  vote or the written  consent of the
holders  of  the  shares  of the  class  or  series  in  which  the  payment  or
distribution is to be made.

     Section 6.06.  Acquisition of Shares.  The Board of Directors has authority
to authorize and direct the  acquisition  by the  Corporation  of the issued and
outstanding  shares of Preferred  Stock and Common Stock at such times,  in such
amounts, from such persons, for such considerations,  from such sources and upon
such terms and conditions as it may, from time to time,  determine upon, subject
only to the restrictions,  limitations,  conditions and requirements  imposed by
the Act, other applicable laws and these Articles of Incorporation,  as the same
may, from time to time, be amended.

     Section 6.07.  Recognition  Procedure for Beneficial Ownership of Shares or
Rights.  The Board of  Directors  may  establish  in the Code of  By-Laws of the
Corporation a recognition  procedure by which the beneficial  owner of any share

<PAGE>

or right of the  Corporation  that is registered on the books of the Corporation
in the  name of a  nominee  is  recognized  by the  Corporation,  to the  extent
provided in any such recognition procedure, as the owner thereof.

     Section 6.08.  Disclosure  Procedure for Beneficial  Ownership of Shares or
Rights.  The Board of  Directors  may  establish  in the  Corporation's  Code of
By-Laws a disclosure  procedure by which the name of the beneficial owner of any
share  or  right  of the  Corporation  that is  registered  on the  books of the
Corporation in the name of a nominee shall,  to the extent not prohibited by the
Act or other applicable  laws, be disclosed to the  Corporation.  Any disclosure
procedure established by the Board of Directors may include reasonable sanctions
to ensure compliance therewith, including without limitation (i) prohibiting the
voting of,  (ii)  providing  for  mandatory  or  optional  reacquisition  by the
Corporation of, and (iii) the withholding or payment into escrow of any dividend
or other distribution in respect of, any share or right of the Corporation as to
which the name of the  beneficial  owner is not disclosed to the  Corporation as
required by such disclosure procedure.

     Section 6.09. No  Pre-emptive  Rights.  The holders of the Common Stock and
the holders of the Preferred  Stock or any series of the  Preferred  Stock shall
have no  pre-emptive  rights to  subscribe  to or purchase  any shares of Common
Stock, Preferred Stock or other securities of the Corporation.

     Section 6.10. Record Ownership of Shares or Rights. The Corporation, to the
extent permitted by law, shall be entitled to treat the person in whose name any
share or right of the  Corporation is registered on the books of the Corporation
as the owner thereof for all  purposes,  and shall not be bound to recognize any
equitable or any other claim to, or interest in, such share or right on the part
of any other person, whether or not the Corporation shall have notice thereof.

                                    ARTICLE 7

                                    Directors

     Section 7.01.  Number. The number of Directors of the Corporation shall not
be less than five (5) nor more than twenty (20),  as may be specified  from time
to  time  by  resolution  adopted  by a  majority  of the  total  number  of the
Corporation's  Directors.  If and  whenever  the  Board  of  Directors  has  not
specified  the number of  Directors,  the number  shall be  fourteen  (14).  The
directors  elected by the Shareholders  shall be divided into three (3) classes,
as  nearly  equal in number  as  possible,  with the term of office of the first
class to expire at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders  held following the fiscal
year ended  December 31, 1997,  the term of office of the second class to expire
at the Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  held  following  the fiscal  year ended
December  31,  1998,  and the term of office of the third class to expire at the
Annual Meeting of Shareholders held following the fiscal year ended December 31,
1999.  At  each  Annual   Meeting  of   Shareholders   following   such  initial
classification, Directors elected by the Shareholders to succeed those Directors
whose term expires  shall be elected for a term of office to expire at the third
succeeding  Annual Meeting of Shareholders  after their election.  Each Director
shall hold office until his successor is chosen and qualified. There shall be no
cumulative  voting by  Shareholders  of any class or series in the  election  of
Directors of the Corporation.

     Section 7.02. Vacancies. Subject to the rights of the holders of any series
of Preferred Stock then outstanding,  newly-created directorships resulting from
any increase in the authorized number of Directors or any vacancies in the Board
of Directors resulting from death,  resignation,  retirement,  disqualification,
removal  from office or other  cause shall be filled only by a majority  vote of
the  Continuing  Directors,  as defined  in Section  11.02 of Article 11 hereof,
although less than a quorum of the Board of Directors. Directors so chosen shall
hold office for a term expiring at the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  at which
the term of the class to which they have been  elected  expires.  No decrease in
the number of authorized  Directors  constituting  the entire Board of Directors
shall shorten the term of any incumbent Director.

     Section 7.03.  Removal.  Subject to the rights of the holders of any series
of  Preferred  Stock then  outstanding,  any  Director,  or the entire  Board of
Directors,  may be removed from office at any time,  but only for cause and only

<PAGE>

by the  affirmative  vote of the holders of at least 80% of the voting  power of
all of the shares of the Corporation  entitled to vote generally in the election
of Directors,  voting together as a single class.  For purposes of this section,
removal for cause shall be limited to the grounds then  specifically  enumerated
in 12 C.F.R. ss. 563.39 (or any successor provision) with respect to termination
for cause.

     Section   7.04.   Shareholder   Nomination  of  Director   Candidates   and
Introduction  of Business.  Advance  notice of Shareholder  nominations  for the
election of Directors and of business to be brought by  Shareholders  before any
meeting  of the  Shareholders  of the  Corporation  shall be given in the manner
provided in the Corporation's Code of By-Laws.

     Section 7.05. Calling of Special Shareholder Meetings.  Special meetings of
the  Shareholders  of the  Corporation may only be called by the Chairman of the
Board of Directors or by the Board of Directors pursuant to a resolution adopted
by a majority of the total number of Directors of the Corporation.

     Section 7.06.  Code of By-Laws.  The Board of Directors of the  Corporation
shall  have  power,  without  the assent or vote of the  Shareholders,  to make,
alter, amend or repeal the Code of By-Laws of the Corporation by the affirmative
vote of a number of Directors equal to a majority of the number who constitute a
full Board of Directors at the time of such action.  Shareholders shall not have
any power to make, alter, amend or repeal the Corporation's Code of By-Laws.

     Section 7.07.  Factors to be Considered by Board.  In addition to any other
considerations  which the Board of Directors may lawfully take into account,  in
determining  whether to take or to refrain from taking  corporate  action on any
matter,  including  making  or  declining  to  make  any  recommendation  to the
Shareholders  of the  Corporation,  the Board of Directors may in its discretion
consider the long-term as well as short-term  best interests of the  Corporation
(including  the  possibility  that  these  interests  may be best  served by the
continued independence of the Corporation), taking into account, and weighing as
the Directors deem  appropriate,  the social and economic effects of such action
on present and future employees, suppliers, customers of the Corporation and its
subsidiaries   (including   account   holders  and   borrowers  of  any  of  the
Corporation's  subsidiaries),  the effect upon  communities  in which offices or
other  facilities  of  the  Corporation  are  located,  and  the  effect  on the
Corporation's  ability to fulfill its  corporate  obligations  as a bank holding
company and on the ability of any of its subsidiary  financial  institutions  to
fulfill the objectives of a financial  institution under applicable statutes and
regulations, and any other factors the Directors consider pertinent.

     Section  7.08.   Authorized  Board  Actions.  In  furtherance  and  not  in
limitation of the powers conferred by law or in these Articles of Incorporation,
as the same may, from time to time, be amended,  the Board of Directors (and any
committee  of the Board of  Directors)  is expressly  authorized,  to the extent
permitted by law, to take such action or actions as the Board or such  committee
may  determine to be  reasonably  necessary or  desirable to (A)  encourage  any
person  (as  defined  in  Section  12.03,  Clause  12.031  hereof) to enter into
negotiations  with the Board of Directors and management of the Corporation with
respect  to any  transaction  which may  result in a change  in  control  of the
Corporation  which is  proposed  or  initiated  by such person or (B) contest or
oppose  any such  transaction  which the Board of  Directors  or such  committee
determines to be unfair,  abusive or otherwise  undesirable  with respect to the
Corporation  and its business,  assets or properties or the  Shareholders of the
Corporation,  including,  without limitation,  the adoption of such plans or the
issuance of such rights,  options,  capital  stock,  notes,  debentures or other
evidences of indebtedness or other securities of the Corporation (which issuance
may be with or  without  consideration,  and may (but need  not) be  issued  pro
rata), which rights,  options,  capital stock, notes,  evidences of indebtedness
and other  securities (i) may be  exchangeable  for or convertible  into cash or
other  securities on such terms and conditions as may be determined by the Board
or such  committee and (ii) may provide for the treatment of any holder or class
of holders thereof designated by the Board of Directors or any such committee in
respect of the terms, conditions, provisions and rights of such securities which
is different from, and unequal to, the terms, conditions,  provisions and rights
applicable to all other holders thereof.


<PAGE>

     Section 7.09. Amendment, Repeal.  Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Articles  of  Incorporation  or the Code of  By-Laws of the  Corporation  to the
contrary  and  notwithstanding  that  a  lesser  percentage  or no  vote  may be
specified by law, but in addition to any affirmative  vote of the holders of any
particular  class or series of capital stock of the Corporation  required by law
or any Preferred Stock  Designation,  the affirmative  vote of the holders of at
least 80% of the voting  power of all of the  then-outstanding  shares of Voting
Stock,  voting  together as a single class,  shall be required to alter,  amend,
change or repeal this Article 7.

                                    ARTICLE 8
                                    Directors
     The names and post office  addresses  of the initial  Board of Directors of
the Corporation are as follows:

               Name                                Post Office Address
               Walter A. Bledsoe                   P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               B. Guille Cox, Jr.                  P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Thomas T. Dinkel                    P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Anton H. George                     P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Mari H. George                      P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Gregory L. Gibson                   P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Max L. Gibson                       P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Norman L. Lowery                    P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               William A. Niemeyer                 P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Patrick O'Leary                     P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

<PAGE>


               John W. Ragle                       P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Chapman J. Root II                  P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Donald E. Smith                     P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808

               Virginia L. Smith                   P.O. Box 540
                                                   One First Financial Plaza
                                                   Terre Haute, Indiana  47808



                                    ARTICLE 9

                Provisions for Regulation of Business and Conduct
                            of Affairs of Corporation

     Section 9.01. Amendments of Articles of Incorporation.  Except as otherwise
provided  in Articles 7 and 10 hereof,  the  Corporation  reserves  the right to
increase or decrease the number of its authorized shares, or any class or series
thereof,  and to reclassify the same, and to amend,  alter, change or repeal any
provision contained in these Articles of Incorporation, or any amendment hereto,
or to add any provision to these Articles of  Incorporation  or to any amendment
hereto, in any manner now or hereafter prescribed or permitted by the Act or any
other applicable  laws, and all rights and powers  conferred upon  Shareholders,
Directors and/or Officers in these Articles of  Incorporation,  or any amendment
hereto,  are granted  subject to this reserve power. No Shareholder has a vested
property right resulting from any provision in these Articles of  Incorporation,
or any  amendment  hereto,  or  authorized  to be in the Code of  By-Laws of the
Corporation or these Articles of  Incorporation by the Act,  including,  without
limitation,  provisions  relating to  management,  control,  capital  structure,
dividend entitlement, or purpose or duration of the Corporation.

     Section 9.02.  Action by Shareholders.  Meetings of the Shareholders of the
Corporation shall be held at such place, within or without the State of Indiana,
as  may be  specified  in the  Code  of  By-Laws  of the  Corporation  or in the
respective  notices,  or waivers  of notice,  thereof.  Any action  required  or
permitted to be taken at any meeting of the  Shareholders may be taken without a
meeting if a consent in writing  setting  forth the action so taken is signed by
all the  Shareholders  entitled to vote with respect  thereto,  and such written
consent is filed with the minutes of the proceedings of the Shareholders.

     Section 9.03.  Action by  Directors.  Meetings of the Board of Directors of
the Corporation or any committee thereof shall be held at such place,  within or
without the State of Indiana,  as may be specified in the Code of By-Laws of the
Corporation or in the respective  notices,  or waivers of notice,  thereof.  Any
action  required  or  permitted  to be  taken  at any  meeting  of the  Board of
Directors,  or of any  committee  thereof,  may be taken  without a meeting if a
consent in writing setting forth the action so taken is signed by all members of
the  Board of  Directors  or of such  committee,  as the  case may be,  and such
written  consent is filed with the minutes of the  proceedings  of such Board or
committee.

     Section 9.04. Places of Keeping of Corporate Records. The Corporation shall
keep at its principal  office a copy of (1) its Articles of  Incorporation,  and
all amendments  thereto  currently in effect;  (2) its Code of By-Laws,  and all
amendments  thereto  currently  in effect;  (3)  minutes of all  meetings of the
Shareholders  and records of all  actions  taken by the  Shareholders  without a

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meeting  (collectively,  "Shareholders  Minutes") for the prior three years; (4)
all written  communications by the Corporation to the Shareholders including the
financial   statements   furnished  by  the  Corporation  to  the   Shareholders
("Shareholder  Communications")  for the prior  three  years;  (5) a list of the
names and business  addresses of the current  Directors and the current Officers
of the Corporation;  and (6) the most recent Annual Report of the Corporation as
filed with the Secretary of State of Indiana.  The  Corporation  shall also keep
and maintain at its principal office, or at such other place or places within or
without the State of Indiana as may be provided,  from time to time, in the Code
of By-Laws,  (1) minutes of all meetings of the Board of  Directors  and of each
committee  of such  Board,  and  records  of all  actions  taken by the Board of
Directors and by each committee  without a meeting;  (2) appropriate  accounting
records  of the  Corporation;  (3) a record of the  Shareholders  in a form that
permits   preparation  of  a  list  of  the  names  and  addresses  of  all  the
Shareholders,  in alphabetical order,  stating the number of shares held by each
Shareholder;  and (4) Shareholders Minutes for periods preceding the prior three
years.  All of the records of the  Corporation  described  in this  Section 9.04
(collectively,  the "Corporate  Records") shall be maintained in written form or
in another  form  capable of  conversion  into  written form within a reasonable
time.

     Section 9.05. Limitation of Liability and Reliance on Corporate Records and
Other Information.

         Clause 9.051. General Limitation.  No Director, member of any committee
     of the Board of Directors,  or of another committee appointed by the Board,
     Officer, employee or agent of the Corporation ("Corporate Person") shall be
     liable for any loss or damage if, in taking or  omitting to take any action
     causing such loss or damage,  either (1) such Corporate Person acted (A) in
     good  faith,  (B) with  the care an  ordinarily  prudent  person  in a like
     position would have  exercised  under similar  circumstances,  and (C) in a
     manner such Corporate Person reasonably  believed was in the best interests
     of the Corporation,  or (2) such Corporate Person's breach of or failure to
     act in  accordance  with the  standards  of  conduct  set  forth in  Clause
     9.051(1)  above (the  "Standards  of Conduct") did not  constitute  willful
     misconduct or recklessness.

          Clause 9.052. Reliance on Corporate Records and Other Information. Any
     "Corporate  Person" shall be fully  protected,  and shall be deemed to have
     complied  with the  Standards  of Conduct,  in relying in good faith,  with
     respect  to any  information  contained  therein,  upon  (1) the  Corporate
     Records,  or (2) information,  opinions,  reports or statements  (including
     financial statements and other financial data) prepared or presented by (A)
     one or more other Corporate  Persons whom such Corporate Person  reasonably
     believes to be  competent  in the  matters  presented,  (B) legal  counsel,
     public  accountants  or other  persons  as to matters  that such  Corporate
     Person reasonably believes are within such person's  professional or expert
     competence,  (C) a committee of the Board of  Directors or other  committee
     appointed by the Board of Directors,  of which such Corporate Person is not
     a member,  if such Corporate Person  reasonably  believes such committee of
     the Board of Directors or such appointed  committee merits  confidence,  or
     (D) the Board of Directors,  if such Corporate Person is not a Director and
     reasonably believes that the Board merits confidence.

     Section  9.06.  Interest of Directors in  Contracts.  Any contract or other
transaction  between  the  Corporation  and  (i)  any  Director,   or  (ii)  any
corporation,  unincorporated  association,  business trust, estate, partnership,
trust,  joint venture,  individual or other legal entity ("Legal Entity") (A) in
which any Director has a material financial interest or is a general partner, or
(B) of which any Director is a director,  officer, or trustee  (collectively,  a
"Conflict Transaction"),  shall be valid for all purposes, if the material facts
of the Conflict  Transaction and the Director's interest were disclosed or known
to the Board of Directors,  a committee of the Board of Directors with authority
to act thereon, or the Shareholders  entitled to vote thereon,  and the Board of
Directors, such committee or such Shareholders authorized,  approved or ratified
the Conflict  Transaction.  A Conflict  Transaction is  authorized,  approved or
ratified:

         (1) By the Board of  Directors  or such  committee,  if it receives the
     affirmative vote of a majority of the Directors who have no interest in the
     Conflict  Transaction,  notwithstanding the fact that such majority may not
     constitute  a  quorum  or a  majority  of the  Board of  Directors  or such
     committee  or a  majority  of the  Directors  present at the  meeting,  and

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     notwithstanding  the presence or vote of any Director who does have such an
     interest;   provided,   however,   that  no  Conflict  Transaction  may  be
     authorized, approved or ratified by a single Director; and

         (2) By such Shareholders,  if it receives the vote of a majority of the
     shares  entitled to be counted,  in which vote shares  owned or voted under
     the  control of any  Director  who,  or of any Legal  Entity  that,  has an
     interest in the Conflict  Transaction  may be counted;  provided,  however,
     that a majority of such shares,  whether or not present, shall constitute a
     quorum for the purpose of  authorizing,  approving  or ratifying a Conflict
     Transaction.

     This  Section  9.06  shall  not  be  construed  to  require  authorization,
ratification or approval by the Shareholders of any Conflict Transaction,  or to
invalidate  any Conflict  Transaction,  that would  otherwise be valid under the
common and statutory law applicable thereto.

     Section 9.07.  Compensation of Directors.  The Board of Directors is hereby
specifically authorized, in and by the Code of By-Laws of the Corporation, or by
resolution  duly  adopted  by such  Board,  to  make  provision  for  reasonable
compensation  to its members for their  services  as  Directors,  and to fix the
basis and conditions upon which such compensation shall be paid. Any Director of
the Corporation may also serve the Corporation in any other capacity and receive
compensation therefor in any form.

     Section  9.08.  Direction of Purposes and Exercise of Powers by  Directors.
The Board of  Directors,  subject to any specific  limitations  or  restrictions
imposed by the Act or these  Articles of  Incorporation,  as the same may,  from
time to time,  be amended,  shall  direct the  carrying  out of the purposes and
exercise  the  powers of the  Corporation,  without  previous  authorization  or
subsequent approval by the Shareholders of the Corporation.

                                   ARTICLE 10

                  Provisions for Certain Business Combinations

     Section 10.01.   Vote Required.

         Clause  10.011.  Higher  Vote for  Certain  Business  Combinations.  In
     addition  to any  affirmative  vote  required  by law or these  Articles of
     Incorporation,  and except as otherwise expressly provided in Section 10.02
     of this Article 10:

         1.   any merger or  consolidation  of the Corporation or any Subsidiary
              (as hereinafter  defined) with (A) any Interested  Shareholder (as
              hereinafter defined), or (B) any other corporation (whether or not
              itself an Interested  Shareholder)  which is, or after such merger
              or consolidation  would be, an Affiliate (as hereinafter  defined)
              of an Interested Shareholder; or

         2.   any sale, lease,  exchange,  mortgage,  pledge,  transfer or other
              disposition (in one transaction or a series of transactions) to or
              with any Interested Shareholder or any Affiliate of any Interested
              Shareholder,  of any assets of the  Corporation  or any Subsidiary
              having an aggregate Fair Market Value equaling or exceeding 25% or
              more  of  the  combined   assets  of  the   Corporation   and  its
              Subsidiaries; or

         3.   the issuance or transfer by the  Corporation or any Subsidiary (in
              one transaction or a series of  transactions) of any securities of
              the Corporation or any Subsidiary to any Interested Shareholder or
              any Affiliate of any Interested  Shareholder in exchange for cash,
              securities or other property (or a combination  thereof) having an
              aggregate  Fair  Market  Value  equaling or  exceeding  25% of the
              combined  assets of the Corporation  and its  Subsidiaries  except
              pursuant to an employee  benefit  plan of the  Corporation  or any
              Subsidiary thereof; or

          4.   the  adoption  of any plan or  proposal  for the  liquidation  or
               dissolution  of the  Corporation  proposed  by or on behalf of an
               Interested   Shareholder  or  any  Affiliate  of  any  Interested
               Shareholder; or

         5.   any  reclassification  of securities  (including any reverse stock
              split) or  recapitalization  of the Corporation,  or any merger or
              consolidation  of the Corporation  with any of its Subsidiaries or
              any other  transaction  (whether or not with or into or  otherwise
              involving  any  Interested  Shareholder)  which  has  the  effect,
              directly or indirectly,  of increasing the proportionate  share of

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              the  outstanding  shares  of any  class or  series  of  equity  or
              convertible  securities of the Corporation or any Subsidiary which
              is  Beneficially  Owned  (as  hereinafter   defined)  directly  or
              indirectly by any  Interested  Shareholder or any Affiliate of any
              Interested Shareholder;

     shall  require the  affirmative  vote of the holders of at least 80% of the
     voting power of all of the then-outstanding  shares of Voting Stock, voting
     together  as a single  class.  Such  affirmative  vote  shall  be  required
     notwithstanding   that  any  other   provisions   of  these   Articles   of
     Incorporation, or any provision of law, or any Preferred Stock Designation,
     or any agreement with any national  securities  exchange or otherwise might
     otherwise permit a lesser vote or no vote.

         Clause 10.012. Definition of "Business Combination." The term "Business
     Combination" as used in this Article 11 shall mean any transaction which is
     referred  to in any one or more of  paragraphs  (1)  through  (5) of Clause
     10.011 of this Section 10.01.

     Section 10.02. When Higher Vote is Not Required.  The provisions of Section
10.01 of this  Article 10 shall not be  applicable  to any  particular  Business
Combination,  and such Business  Combination shall require only such affirmative
vote as is  required  by law,  and any  other  provision  of these  Articles  of
Incorporation,  and  any  Preferred  Stock  Designation,  if,  in the  case of a
Business Combination that does not involve any cash or other consideration being
received by the  Shareholders  of the  Corporation,  solely in their capacity as
Shareholders of the Corporation, the condition specified in the following Clause
10.021 is met or, in the case of any other Business Combination,  the conditions
specified in either of the following Clause 10.021 or 10.022 are met:

         Clause  10.021.   Approval  by  Continuing   Directors.   The  Business
     Combination  shall  have been  approved  by a  majority  of the  Continuing
     Directors (as hereinafter defined);  provided, however, that this condition
     shall not be  capable  of  satisfaction  unless  there  are at least  three
     Continuing Directors.

         Clause 10.022.  Price and Procedure Requirements.  All of the following
     conditions shall have been met:

         1.   The  consideration  to be  received  by  holders  of  shares  of a
              particular   class  (or  series)  of  outstanding   capital  stock
              (including  Common  Stock) shall be in cash or in the same form as
              the Interested Shareholder or any of its Affiliates has previously
              paid for shares of such class (or series) of capital stock. If the
              Interested  Shareholder  or any of its  Affiliates  has  paid  for
              shares of any class (or  series)  of capital  stock  with  varying
              forms of  consideration,  the form of consideration to be received
              per  share by  holders  of shares of such  class  (or  series)  of
              capital stock shall be either cash or the form used to acquire the
              largest  number of shares of such  class (or  series)  of  capital
              stock previously acquired by the Interested Shareholder.

         2.   The aggregate amount of (x) the cash and (y) the Fair Market Value
              as of the date (the  "Consummation  Date") of the  consummation of
              the Business Combination,  of the consideration other than cash to
              be received per share by holders of Common Stock in such  Business
              Combination shall be at least equal to the higher of the following
              (in each  case  appropriately  adjusted  in the event of any stock
              dividend, stock split, combination of shares or similar event):

              A.  (if  applicable)  the highest per share price  (including  any
                  brokerage commissions,  transfer taxes and soliciting dealers'
                  fees)  paid  by  the  Interested  Shareholder  or  any  of its
                  Affiliates  for any shares of Common  Stock  acquired  by them
                  within the two-year  period  immediately  prior to the date of
                  the first public  announcement of the proposal of the Business
                  Combination (the "Announcement Date") or in any transaction in
                  which  the   Interested   Shareholder   became  an  Interested
                  Shareholder, whichever is higher; and


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              B.  The  Fair  Market  Value  per  share  of  Common  Stock on the
                  Announcement  Date or on the  date  on  which  the  Interested
                  Shareholder    became   an   Interested    Shareholder    (the
                  "Determination Date"), whichever is higher.

         3.   The  aggregate  amount  of (x) the cash  and (y) the  Fair  Market
              Value, as of the  Consummation  Date, of the  consideration  other
              than cash to be  received  per share by  holders  of shares of any
              class (or series), other than Common Stock, of outstanding capital
              stock of the Corporation shall be at least equal to the highest of
              the following (in each case appropriately adjusted in the event of
              any stock dividend,  stock split, combination of shares or similar
              event),   it  being  intended  that  the   requirements   of  this
              subparagraph (3) shall be required to be met with respect to every
              such class (or series) of outstanding capital stock whether or not
              the Interested Shareholder or any of its Affiliates has previously
              acquired any shares of a  particular  class (or series) of capital
              stock:

              A.  (if  applicable)  the highest per share price  (including  any
                  brokerage commissions,  transfer taxes and soliciting dealers'
                  fees)  paid  by  the  Interested  Shareholder  or  any  of its
                  Affiliates for any shares of such class (or series) of capital
                  stock acquired by them within the two-year period  immediately
                  prior to the Announcement  Date or in any transaction in which
                  it became an Interested Shareholder, whichever is higher;

              B.  the Fair Market Value per share of such class (or series) of
                  capital   stock   on  the   Announcement   Date  or  on  the
                  Determination Date, whichever is higher; and

              C.  (if applicable) the highest  preferential amount per share, if
                  any,  to which the holders of shares of such class (or series)
                  of  capital  stock  would  be  entitled  in the  event  of any
                  voluntary or involuntary  liquidation,  dissolution or winding
                  up of the Corporation.

          4.   After  such  Interested  Shareholder  has  become  an  Interested
               Shareholder  and  prior  to the  consummation  of  such  Business
               Combination:  (a)  except  as  approved  by  a  majority  of  the
               Continuing Directors, there shall have been no failure to declare
               and pay at the regular date therefor any full quarterly dividends
               (whether or not cumulative) on any outstanding  Preferred  Stock;
               (b) there shall have been (I) no  reduction in the annual rate of
               dividends  paid on the  Common  Stock  (except  as  necessary  to
               reflect any subdivision of the Common Stock),  except as approved
               by a majority of the Continuing  Directors,  and (II) an increase
               in such  annual rate of  dividends  as  necessary  to reflect any
               reclassification    (including    any   reverse   stock   split),
               recapitalization, reorganization or any similar transaction which
               has the effect of reducing  the number of  outstanding  shares of
               the Common  Stock,  unless the failure so to increase such annual
               rate is approved by a majority of the Continuing  Directors;  and
               (c) neither such Interested Shareholder nor any of its Affiliates
               shall have become the beneficial  owner of any additional  shares
               of Voting Stock except as part of the  transaction  which results
               in   such   Interested   Shareholder   becoming   an   Interested
               Shareholder;  provided,  however,  that no approval by Continuing
               Directors shall satisfy the requirements of this subparagraph (4)
               unless  at the time of such  approval  there  are at least  three
               Continuing Directors.

         5.   After  such  Interested   Shareholder  has  become  an  Interested
              Shareholder, such Interested Shareholder and any of its Affiliates
              shall  not have  received  the  benefit,  directly  or  indirectly
              (except  proportionately,  solely in such Interested Shareholder's
              or Affiliate's  capacity as a Shareholder of the Corporation),  of
              any  loans,  advances,  guarantees,  pledges  or  other  financial
              assistance or any tax credits or other tax advantages  provided by
              the Corporation,  whether in anticipation of or in connection with
              such Business Combination or otherwise.

         6.   A proxy or information  statement describing the proposed Business
              Combination and complying with the  requirements of the Securities
              Exchange Act of 1934,  as amended,  and the rules and  regulations
              thereunder (or any subsequent provisions replacing such Act, rules
              or  regulations)  shall  be  mailed  to  all  Shareholders  of the
              Corporation  at least 30 days  prior to the  consummation  of such

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              Business  Combination  (whether  or not such proxy or  information
              statement  is  required  to be  mailed  pursuant  to  such  Act or
              subsequent provisions).

         7.   Such  Interested  Shareholder  shall have provided the Corporation
              with such  information  as shall have been  requested  pursuant to
              Section  10.05 of this Article 10 within the time period set forth
              therein.

     Section 10.03.   Certain Definitions.  For the purposes of this Article 10:

         Clause 10.031.  A "person" shall include an individual,  a group acting
     in concert, a corporation, a partnership,  an association, a joint venture,
     a pool, a joint stock company,  a trust, an unincorporated  organization or
     similar  company,  a syndicate or any other group formed for the purpose of
     acquiring, holding or disposing of securities.

          Clause 10.032.  "Interested  Shareholder" means any person (other than
     the Corporation or any Subsidiary) who or which:

          1.   is the beneficial  owner (as  hereinafter  defined),  directly or
               indirectly,  of ten  percent or more of the  voting  power of the
               outstanding Voting Stock; or

          2.   is an Affiliate or an  Associate  of the  Corporation  and at any
               time within the two-year period  immediately prior to the date in
               question was the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of ten
               percent  or more of the  voting  power  of the  then  outstanding
               Voting Stock; or

          3.   is an assignee  of or has  otherwise  succeeded  to any shares of
               Voting  Stock which were at any time within the  two-year  period
               immediately prior to the date in question  beneficially  owned by
               any  Interested  Shareholder,  if such  assignment  or succession
               shall have occurred in the course of a  transaction  or series of
               transactions  not involving a public  offering within the meaning
               of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

         Clause  10.033.  A person  shall be a  "beneficial  owner" of, or shall
"Beneficially Own," any Voting Stock:

          1.   which such  person or any of its  Affiliates  or  Associates  (as
               hereinafter  defined)  beneficially owns,  directly or indirectly
               within the  meaning of Rule 13d-3 under the  Securities  Exchange
               Act of 1934, as in effect on April 16, 1997; or

          2.   which such person or any of its  Affiliates or Associates has (a)
               the  right  to  acquire   (whether  such  right  is   exercisable
               immediately  or only after the passage of time),  pursuant to any
               agreement,  arrangement or  understanding or upon the exercise of
               conversion  rights,  exchange  rights,  warrants or  options,  or
               otherwise,  or (b) the right to vote  pursuant to any  agreement,
               arrangement  or  understanding  (but  neither such person nor any
               such Affiliate or Associate  shall be deemed to be the beneficial
               owner of any  shares  of  Voting  Stock  solely  by  reason  of a
               revocable proxy granted for a particular meeting of Shareholders,
               pursuant to a public  solicitation  of proxies for such  meeting,
               and with respect to which shares neither such person nor any such
               Affiliate or Associate is otherwise deemed the beneficial owner);
               or

          3.   which are beneficially owned, directly or indirectly,  within the
               meaning of Rule 13d-3 under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
               as in effect on April 16,  1997,  by any other  person with which
               such  person  or any of its  Affiliates  or  Associates  has  any
               agreement,  arrangement  or  understanding  for  the  purpose  of
               acquiring,  holding,  voting  (other  than  solely by reason of a
               revocable proxy as described in  subparagraph  (2) of this Clause
               10.033) or  disposing  of any shares of Voting  Stock;  provided,
               however,  that in the case of any  employee  stock  ownership  or
               similar plan of the Corporation or of any Subsidiary in which the
               beneficiaries  thereof  possess  the right to vote any  shares of
               Voting Stock held by such plan, no such plan nor any trustee with

<PAGE>

               respect  thereto (nor any Affiliate of such  trustee),  solely by
               reason of such capacity of such trustee, shall be deemed, for any
               purpose hereof,  to  beneficially  own any shares of Voting Stock
               held under any such plan.

         Clause 10.034.  For the purposes of determining  whether a person is an
     Interested Shareholder pursuant to Clause 10.032 of this Section 10.03, the
     number of shares of Voting Stock  deemed to be  outstanding  shall  include
     shares  deemed owned through  application  of Clause 10.033 of this Section
     10.03 but shall not include any other unissued shares of Voting Stock which
     may be issuable pursuant to any agreement, arrangement or understanding, or
     upon exercise of conversion rights, warrants or options, or otherwise.

         Clause 10.035.  "Affiliate"  or  "Associate"  shall have the respective
     meanings  ascribed  to such  terms in Rule 12b-2 of the  General  Rules and
     Regulations  under the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as in effect on
     April 16, 1997.

         Clause 10.036.  "Subsidiary"  means any corporation of which a majority
     of any class of equity  security is owned,  directly or indirectly,  by the
     Corporation;  provided, however, that for the purposes of the definition of
     Interested  Shareholder  set forth in Clause 10.032 of this Section  10.03,
     the term "Subsidiary"  shall mean only a corporation of which a majority of
     each class of equity  security  is owned,  directly or  indirectly,  by the
     Corporation.

         Clause  10.037.  "Continuing  Director" for purposes of this Article 10
     means any  member  of the  Board of  Directors  of the  Corporation  who is
     unaffiliated with the Interested  Shareholder and was a member of the Board
     prior to the time that the  Interested  Shareholder  became  an  Interested
     Shareholder,  and any director who is thereafter chosen to fill any vacancy
     on the Board of  Directors or who is elected and who, in either  event,  is
     unaffiliated with the Interested  Shareholder and in connection with his or
     her initial assumption of office is recommended for appointment or election
     by a majority of Continuing Directors then on the Board.

         Clause 10.038. "Fair Market Value" means: (i) in the case of stock, the
     highest closing sale price during the 30-day period  immediately  preceding
     the date in question of a share of such stock on the Composite Tape for New
     York Stock  Exchange-Listed  Stocks, or, if such stock is not quoted on the
     Composite  Tape, on the New York Stock  Exchange,  or, if such stock is not
     listed on such Exchange, on the principal United States securities exchange
     registered under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, on which
     such stock is listed, or, if such stock is not listed on any such exchange,
     the highest  closing bid  quotation  with  respect to a share of such stock
     during the 30-day  period  preceding  the date in question on the  National
     Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc. Automated Quotations System or any
     system then in use, or if no such quotations are available, the fair market
     value on the date in question of a share of such stock as determined by the
     Board in  accordance  with  Section  10.04 of this Article 10, in each case
     with respect to any class of stock, appropriately adjusted for any dividend
     or   distribution   in  shares  of  such  stock  or  any   combination   or
     reclassification  of outstanding shares of such stock into a smaller number
     of shares of such stock;  and (ii) in the case of property  other than cash
     or stock, the fair market value of such property on the date in question as
     determined  by the Board in  accordance  with Section 10.04 of this Article
     10.

         Clause  10.039.  Reference  to "highest  per share price" shall in each
     case with respect to any class of stock reflect an  appropriate  adjustment
     for any dividend or distribution in shares of such stock or any stock split
     or  reclassification  of  outstanding  shares of such  stock into a greater
     number of shares of such stock or any  combination or  reclassification  of
     outstanding  shares of such stock  into a smaller  number of shares of such
     stock.

         Clause  10.310.  In the event of any Business  Combination in which the
     Corporation  survives,  the  phrase  "consideration  other  than cash to be
     received" as used in Clauses  10.022(2)  and  10.022(3) of Section 10.02 of
     this Article 10 shall  include the shares of Common Stock and/or the shares
     of any other class (or series) of outstanding capital stock retained by the
     holders of such shares.

     Section  10.04.  Powers of the Board of Directors.  A majority of the total
number of Directors of the Corporation, but only if a majority of such Directors
shall then consist of Continuing Directors or, if a majority of the total number

<PAGE>

of Directors shall not then consist of Continuing  Directors,  a majority of the
then Continuing  Directors,  shall have the power and duty to determine,  on the
basis of information known to them after reasonable inquiry, all facts necessary
to determine compliance with this Article 10, including, without limitation, (a)
whether  a person  is an  Interested  Shareholder,  (b) the  number of shares of
Voting  Stock  beneficially  owned by any  person,  (c)  whether  a person is an
Affiliate or Associate of another,  (d) whether the  applicable  conditions  set
forth in Clause  10.022 of  Section  10.02  have  been met with  respect  to any
Business  Combination,  (e) the Fair Market Value of stock or other  property in
accordance  with  Clause  10.038 of Section  10.03 of this  Article  10, and (f)
whether the assets which are the subject of any Business Combination referred to
in Clause  10.011(2) of Section 10.01 have, or the  consideration to be received
for the issuance or transfer of securities by the  Corporation or any Subsidiary
in any Business  Combination  referred to in Clause  10.011(3) of Section  10.01
has, an aggregate  Fair Market Value  equaling or exceeding  25% of the combined
assets of the Corporation and its Subsidiaries.

     Section 10.05. Information to be Supplied to the Corporation. A majority of
the total number of Directors of the Corporation, but only if a majority of such
Directors  shall then consist of  Continuing  Directors or, if a majority of the
total number of  Directors  shall not then consist of  Continuing  Directors,  a
majority of the then Continuing  Directors,  shall have the right to demand that
any person who it is reasonably believed is an Interested  Shareholder (or holds
of  record  shares  of  Voting  Stock   Beneficially  Owned  by  any  Interested
Shareholder)  supply the  Corporation  with complete  information  as to (i) the
record  owner(s)  of all  shares  Beneficially  Owned by such  person  who it is
reasonably believed is an Interested Shareholder,  (ii) the number of, and class
or series of,  shares  Beneficially  Owned by such  person who it is  reasonably
believed  is an  Interested  Shareholder  and held of record by each such record
owner and the number(s) of the stock certificate(s)  evidencing such shares, and
(iii) any other factual matter relating to the  applicability  or effect of this
Article 10, as may be reasonably requested of such person, and such person shall
furnish such information within 10 days after receipt of such demand.

     Section   10.06.   No  Effect  on  Fiduciary   Obligations   of  Interested
Shareholders. Nothing contained in this Article 10 shall be construed to relieve
any Interested Shareholder from any fiduciary obligation imposed by law.

     Section 10.07. Amendment, Repeal, Etc. Notwithstanding any other provisions
of these Articles of  Incorporation or the Code of By-Laws of the Corporation to
the contrary and notwithstanding  that a lesser vote or no vote may be specified
by law, but in addition to any affirmative vote of the holders of any particular
class or  series  of the  Corporation's  capital  stock  required  by law or any
Preferred Stock Designation,  the affirmative vote of the holders of at least 80
percent  of the  voting  power of all of the  then-outstanding  shares of Voting
Stock,  voting together as a single class,  shall be required to alter, amend or
repeal this Article 10.

                                   ARTICLE 11
                                 Indemnification

     Section 11.01.  General.  The  Corporation  shall, to the fullest extent to
which it is empowered to do so by the Act, or any other applicable laws, as from
time to time in  effect,  indemnify  any  person  who was or is a  party,  or is
threatened to be made a party, to any threatened,  pending or completed  action,
suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or investigative and
whether formal or informal,  by reason of the fact that he is or was a Director,
Officer,  employee or agent of the  Corporation,  or who,  while serving as such
Director,  Officer,  employee or agent of the Corporation,  is or was serving at
the  request  of the  Corporation  as a  director,  officer,  partner,  trustee,
employee or agent of another  corporation,  partnership,  joint venture,  trust,
employee  benefit plan or other  enterprise,  whether for profit or not, against
expenses (including counsel fees), judgments,  settlements,  penalties and fines
(including  excise  taxes  assessed  with  respect to  employee  benefit  plans)
actually or reasonably  incurred by him in accordance with such action,  suit or
proceeding, if he acted in good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed, in
the case of conduct in his official  capacity,  was in the best interests of the

<PAGE>

Corporation,  and in all other cases,  was not opposed to the best  interests of
the  Corporation,  and, with respect to any criminal  action or  proceeding,  he
either had  reasonable  cause to believe his conduct was lawful or no reasonable
cause to believe his conduct was unlawful.  The termination of any action,  suit
or proceeding by judgment,  order,  settlement or conviction,  or upon a plea of
nolo  contendere or its equivalent,  shall not, of itself,  create a presumption
that the person did not meet the prescribed standard of conduct.

     Section  11.02.  Authorization  of  Indemnification.  To the extent  that a
Director,  Officer, employee or agent of the Corporation has been successful, on
the merits or  otherwise,  in the  defense  of any  action,  suit or  proceeding
referred to in Section  11.01 of this  Article,  or in the defense of any claim,
issue or matter  therein,  the  Corporation  shall indemnify such person against
expenses  (including  counsel  fees)  actually and  reasonably  incurred by such
person in connection therewith. Any other indemnification under Section 11.01 of
this Article (unless  ordered by a court) shall be made by the Corporation  only
as authorized in the specific case, upon a determination that indemnification of
the Director,  Officer,  employee or agent is permissible  in the  circumstances
because he has met the applicable standard of conduct.  Such determination shall
be made (1) by the Board of Directors by a majority vote of a quorum  consisting
of  Directors  who  were  not at the  time  parties  to  such  action,  suit  or
proceeding;  or (2) if a quorum cannot be obtained under  subdivision  (1), by a
majority vote of a committee duly designated by the Board of Directors (in which
designation Directors who are parties may participate), consisting solely of two
or more Directors not at the time parties to such action, suit or proceeding; or
(3) by special  legal  counsel:  (A)  selected by the Board of  Directors or its
committee in the manner prescribed in subdivision (1) or (2), or (B) if a quorum
of the  Board of  Directors  cannot  be  obtained  under  subdivision  (1) and a
committee  cannot be designated under  subdivision  (2),  selected by a majority
vote of the full  Board of  Directors  (in  which  selection  Directors  who are
parties may  participate);  or (4) by the  Shareholders,  but shares owned by or
voted under the control of Directors who are at the time parties to such action,
suit or proceeding may not be voted on the determination.

     Authorization of  indemnification  and evaluation as to  reasonableness  of
expenses  shall  be  made  in  the  same  manner  as  the   determination   that
indemnification  is  permissible,  except that if the  determination  is made by
special legal counsel,  authorization  of  indemnification  and evaluation as to
reasonableness  of expenses shall be made by those entitled under subsection (3)
to select counsel.

     Section 11.03. Good Faith Defined.  For purposes of any determination under
Section 11.01 of this Article 11, a person shall be deemed to have acted in good
faith and to have otherwise met the applicable  standard of conduct set forth in
Section  11.01 if his  action is based on  information,  opinions,  reports,  or
statements, including financial statements and other financial data, if prepared
or presented by (1) one or more  Officers or  employees  of the  Corporation  or
another  enterprise whom he reasonably  believes to be reliable and competent in
the matters  presented;  (2) legal counsel,  public  accountants,  appraisers or
other  persons as to  matters he  reasonably  believes  are within the  person's
professional or expert competence;  or (3) a committee of the Board of Directors
of the Corporation or another  enterprise of which the person is not a member if
he  reasonably  believes the  committee  merits  confidence.  The term  "another
enterprise"  as used in this Section 11.03 shall mean any other  corporation  or
any partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise
of which such person is or was serving at the  request of the  Corporation  as a
director,  officer,  partner, trustee, employee or agent. The provisions of this
Section  11.03  shall not be deemed to be  exclusive  or to limit in any way the
circumstances  in  which a  person  may be  deemed  to have  met the  applicable
standards of conduct set forth in Section 11.01 of this Article 11.

     Section  11.04.  Payment of  Expenses  in  Advance.  Expenses  incurred  in
connection with any civil or criminal action, suit or proceeding may be paid for
or reimbursed by the  Corporation  in advance of the final  disposition  of such
action,  suit or  proceeding,  as  authorized  in the specific  case in the same
manner  described in Section  11.02 of this  Article,  upon receipt of a written
affirmation of the Director, Officer, employee or agent's good faith belief that
he has met the standard of conduct  described  in Section  11.01 of this Article
and upon  receipt  of a written  undertaking  by or on  behalf of the  Director,
Officer,  employee  or agent to repay  such  amount  if it shall  ultimately  be
determined  that he did not meet  the  standard  of  conduct  set  forth in this
Article  11,  and a  determination  is made that the facts  then  known to those

<PAGE>

making the determination would not preclude  indemnification  under this Article
11.

     Section 11.05.  Provisions Not Exclusive.  The indemnification  provided by
this Article shall not be deemed exclusive of any other rights to which a person
seeking  indemnification  may be entitled under these Articles of Incorporation,
the Corporation's  Code of By-Laws,  any resolution of the Board of Directors or
Shareholders,  any other  authorization,  whenever  adopted,  after notice, by a
majority vote of all Voting Stock then outstanding,  or any contract, both as to
action in his  official  capacity  and as to action in  another  capacity  while
holding  such office,  and shall  continue as to a person who has ceased to be a
Director,  Officer,  employee  or agent,  and shall  inure to the benefit of the
heirs, executors and administrators of such a person.

     Section 11.06. Vested Right to Indemnification. The right of any individual
to  indemnification  under this Article  shall vest at the time of occurrence or
performance  of any event,  act or omission  giving rise to any action,  suit or
proceeding  of the nature  referred to in Section  11.01 of this Article 11 and,
once vested,  shall not later be impaired as a result of any amendment,  repeal,
alteration  or  other   modification   of  any  or  all  of  these   provisions.
Notwithstanding the foregoing,  the indemnification  afforded under this Article
shall be  applicable  to all alleged  prior acts or omissions of any  individual
seeking indemnification hereunder, regardless of the fact that such alleged acts
or omissions  may have occurred  prior to the adoption of this  Article.  To the
extent  such  prior  acts or  omissions  cannot be deemed to be  covered by this
Article 11, the right of any individual to indemnification  shall be governed by
the  indemnification  provisions  in  effect at the time of such  prior  acts or
omissions.

     Section  11.07.  Insurance.  The  Corporation  may  purchase  and  maintain
insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a Director, Officer, employee or
agent  of  the  Corporation,  or who is or was  serving  at the  request  of the
Corporation  as a  director,  officer,  partner,  trustee,  employee or agent of
another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or
other  enterprise,  against any  liability  asserted  against or incurred by the
individual  in that  capacity  or  arising  from the  individual's  status  as a
Director,  Officer, employee or agent, whether or not the Corporation would have
power to indemnify the individual  against the same liability under this Article
11.

     Section  11.08.  Additional  Definitions.  For  purposes  of this  Article,
references  to  the   "Corporation"   shall  include  any  domestic  or  foreign
predecessor  entity of the Corporation in a merger or other transaction in which
the predecessor's existence ceased upon consummation of the transaction.

     For  purposes  of this  Article,  serving an employee  benefit  plan at the
request of the  Corporation  shall  include any service as a Director,  Officer,
employee  or agent of the  Corporation  which  imposes  duties  on, or  involves
services  by such  Director,  Officer,  employee,  or agent  with  respect to an
employee benefit plan, its participants, or beneficiaries. A person who acted in
good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed to be in the best interests of
the participants  and  beneficiaries of an employee benefit plan shall be deemed
to have acted in a manner "not opposed to the best interests of the Corporation"
referred to in this Article.

     For purposes of this Article, "party" includes any individual who is or was
a plaintiff,  defendant or respondent in any action, suit or proceeding,  or who
is threatened to be made a named defendant or respondent in any action,  suit or
proceeding.

     For purposes of this Article,  "official  capacity," when used with respect
to a Director,  shall mean the office of director of the  Corporation;  and when
used with respect to an individual other than a Director,  shall mean the office
in the Corporation held by the Officer or the employment or agency  relationship
undertaken  by the  employee  or agent on behalf of the  Corporation.  "Official
capacity" does not include service for any other foreign or domestic corporation
or any  partnership,  joint  venture,  trust,  employee  benefit  plan, or other
enterprise, whether for profit or not.

     Section  11.09.  Payments  a Business  Expense.  Any  payments  made to any
indemnified  party under this Article  under any other right to  indemnification
shall  be  deemed  to be an  ordinary  and  necessary  business  expense  of the
Corporation,  and payment  thereof shall not subject any person  responsible for
the payment, or the Board of Directors,  to any action for corporate waste or to
any similar action.

<PAGE>

                           FIRST FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                            One First Financial Plaza
                                  P.O. Box 540
                           Terre Haute, Indiana 47808

            THIS PROXY SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         The  undersigned  hereby appoints James E. Brown and Ronald K. Rich, or
either of them, as Proxies,  each with the power to appoint his substitute,  and
hereby authorizes them to represent and to vote, as designated below, all shares
of common stock of First Financial Corporation which the undersigned is entitled
to vote at the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders to be held at One First Financial
Plaza, Terre Haute, Indiana, on Wednesday,  April 16, 1997, at 11:00 a.m. (local
time), or any adjournment thereof, on the following matters:

         1. If the  proposed  Amended and  Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation
specified  in Item 3 below are  adopted  by the  shareholders,  the  Board  will
consist of three classes as indicated  below. If such Articles of  Incorporation
are not  adopted,  all fourteen of the  director  nominees  will be nominated to
serve until the next succeeding Annual Meeting of Shareholders.


FOR all nominees listed below |_|              WITHHOLD AUTHORITY |_|
       (except as marked                        to vote for all 
      to the contrary below)                   nominees listed below

     Class I (one-year term)              Walter A. Bledsoe, Max L. Gibson,
                                        William A. Niemeyer, Donald E. Smith

     Class II (two-year term)           B. Guille Cox, Jr., Anton H. George,
                                          Gregory L. Gibson, John W. Ragle,
                                                  Virginia L. Smith

   Class III (three-year term)        Thomas T. Dinkel, Mari H. George, Norman
                                             L. Lowery, Patrick O'Leary,
                                                 Chapman J. Root II

(Instruction: to withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, strike a
line through the nominee's name in the list provided above.)

         2. Proposal to amend the  Corporation's  Articles of  Incorporation  to
increase the  authorized  shares of Common Stock from  10,000,000 to 40,000,000.
This same change is a part of the Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation
specified in Item 3 below,  and is being  proposed as a separate  item to permit
its adoption even if Item 3 is not approved.

         FOR [ ]               AGAINST [ ]             ABSTAIN [ ]

         3. Proposal to adopt Amended and Restated  Articles of Incorporation of
the Corporation.

         FOR [ ]               AGAINST [ ]             ABSTAIN [ ]


<PAGE>


         4. In their  discussion,  on such other  matters as may  properly  come
before the meeting.

THIS PROXY, WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED, WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED OR IF NO DIRECTION
IS INDICATED, WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSAL NOS. 1 THROUGH 3.

         Please sign  exactly as name  appears  below.  If there are two or more
owners,  both should sign.  When signing as attorney,  executor,  administrator,
trustee or guardian,  please give full title as such. If a  corporation,  please
sign in full corporate name by President or other authorized officer.
If a partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.



Dated:__________________, 1997     ---------------------------------------------
                                   (Signature)



                                    --------------------------------------------
                                    (Signature, if held jointly)

                                    Your vote is important.  Please mark,  sign,
                                    date and return  this Proxy  promptly  using
                                    the enclosed envelope.





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