PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES INC
SB-2/A, 1996-11-18
COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES, NEC
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<PAGE>   1
 
   
   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON NOVEMBER 18, 1996
    
                                                      REGISTRATION NO. 333-13767
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                            ------------------------
 
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 1
    
   
                                       TO
    
 
                                   FORM SB-2
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                     UNDER
 
                           THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                            ------------------------
 
                          PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                 (NAME OF SMALL BUSINESS ISSUER IN ITS CHARTER)
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                             <C>                             <C>
            OHIO                            4813                         34-1462198
(State or Other Jurisdiction    (Primary Standard Industrial          (I.R.S. Employer
     of Incorporation or         Classification Code Number)         Identification No.)
        Organization)
</TABLE>
    
 
                         1127 Euclid Avenue, Suite 650
                           Cleveland, Ohio 44115-1601
                                 (216) 241-2555
                        (Address and Telephone Number of
                        Principal Executive Offices and
                          Principal Place of Business)
                            ------------------------
 
                             TAMMY L. MARTIN, ESQ.
                           EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT,
                         CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER,
                         GENERAL COUNSEL AND SECRETARY
                          PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
                         1127 EUCLID AVENUE, SUITE 650
                           CLEVELAND, OHIO 44115-1601
                                 (216) 241-2555
                          (Name, Address and Telephone
                          Number of Agent For Service)
                            ------------------------
 
                                   Copies to:
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                             <C>
           Stephen M. Banker, Esq.                         Norman R. Miller, Esq.
  Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP           Wolin, Fuller, Ridley & Miller LLP
              919 Third Avenue                              3100 Bank One Center
          New York, New York 10022                            1717 Main Street
               (212) 735-3000                                Dallas, Texas 75201
                                                               (214) 939-4906
</TABLE>
    
 
                            ------------------------
 
                APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED SALE TO THE PUBLIC:
As soon as practicable after the effective date of this Registration Statement.
                            ------------------------
 
     If any of the securities being registered on this form are to be offered on
a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933, check the following box.  [ ]
 
     If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box
and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier
effective registration statement for the same offering.  [ ]
 
     If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c)
under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement
for the same offering.  [ ]
 
     If delivery of the prospectus is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434,
please check the following box.  [ ]
                            ------------------------
 
   
     THE REGISTRANT HEREBY AMENDS THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT ON SUCH DATE OR
DATES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO DELAY ITS EFFECTIVE DATE UNTIL THE REGISTRANT SHALL
FILE A FURTHER AMENDMENT WHICH SPECIFICALLY STATES THAT THIS REGISTRATION
STATEMENT SHALL THEREAFTER BECOME EFFECTIVE IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 8(a) OF
THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 OR UNTIL THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT SHALL BECOME
EFFECTIVE ON SUCH DATE AS THE COMMISSION, ACTING PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 8(a),
MAY DETERMINE.
    
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- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>   2
 
     INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS SUBJECT TO COMPLETION OR AMENDMENT. A
     REGISTRATION STATEMENT RELATING TO THESE SECURITIES HAS BEEN FILED WITH THE
     SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION. THESE SECURITIES MAY NOT BE SOLD NOR
     MAY OFFERS TO BUY BE ACCEPTED PRIOR TO THE TIME THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT
     BECOMES EFFECTIVE. THIS PROSPECTUS SHALL NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR
     THE SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY NOR SHALL THERE BE ANY SALE OF THESE
     SECURITIES IN ANY STATE IN WHICH SUCH OFFER, SOLICITATION OR SALE WOULD BE
     UNLAWFUL PRIOR TO REGISTRATION OR QUALIFICATION UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS
     OF ANY SUCH STATE.
 
   
                 SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED NOVEMBER 18, 1996
    
 
PROSPECTUS
 
   
                                6,750,000 SHARES
    
 
                          PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
 
LOGO
 
   
     Of the 6,750,000 shares of Common Stock offered hereby (the "Offering"),
6,250,000 shares are being sold by PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (the "Company"),
and 500,000 shares are being sold by certain shareholders of the Company (the
"Selling Shareholders"). See "Principal and Selling Shareholders." The Company
will not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of Common Stock by the
Selling Shareholders.
    
 
   
     The Common Stock is listed on the American Stock Exchange, Inc. ("AMEX")
under the trading symbol "PHN." On November 15, 1996, the closing price of the
Common Stock on AMEX was $3.50 per share. See "Price Range of Common Stock."
    
 
   
     The Company also intends to offer $110 million aggregate principal amount
of its Senior Notes due 2006 (the "Notes") by a separate prospectus (the
"Company Debt Offering"). The Offering is not conditioned upon consummation of
the Company Debt Offering.
    
 
   
     SEE "RISK FACTORS" BEGINNING ON PAGE 11 OF THIS PROSPECTUS FOR A DISCUSSION
OF CERTAIN FACTORS THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED BY PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS OF THE
COMMON STOCK OFFERED HEREBY.
    
 
                         ------------------------------
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
   EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR HAS THE
      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES
      COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS
        PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL
          OFFENSE.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<S>                  <C>         <C>              <C>              <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<CAPTION>
 
<S>                   <C>         <C>             <C>              <C>
                                                                     PROCEEDS
                      PRICE TO    UNDERWRITING     PROCEEDS TO      TO SELLING
                       PUBLIC      DISCOUNT(1)      COMPANY(2)     SHAREHOLDERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Per Share.........  $            $                $
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Total(3)..........  $            $                $

</TABLE> 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
(1) The Company and the Selling Shareholders have agreed to indemnify the
    several Underwriters against certain liabilities, including liabilities
    under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"). See
    "Underwriting."
 
(2) Before deducting certain expenses of the Offering payable by the Company
    estimated at $         , including a nonaccountable expense allowance of
    $100,000 payable to the Representative for due diligence and other
    out-of-pocket expenses. See "Underwriting."
 
   
(3) The Company has granted the Underwriters a 45-day option to purchase up to
    937,500 additional shares of Common Stock, solely to cover over-allotments,
    if any. If such option is exercised in full, the total Price to Public,
    Underwriting Discount and Proceeds to the Company will be $         ,
    $         and $         , respectively. See "Underwriting."
    
 
                         ------------------------------
 
     The shares of Common Stock are offered severally by the Underwriters named
herein subject to receipt and acceptance by them and subject to their right to
reject any order in whole or in part. It is expected that certificates
representing the shares will be ready for delivery at the offices of Southcoast
Capital Corporation, New York, New York, on or about             , 1996.
 
   
                               SOUTHCOAST CAPITAL
    
   
                        C  o  r  p  o  r  a  t  i  o  n
    
 
               THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS             , 1996.
<PAGE>   3
   
        [MAP DEPICTING LOCATION OF PHONETEL'S PAY TELEPHONES PER STATE
                      AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 (ACTUAL)]

     [MAP DEPICTING LOCATION OF PHONETEL'S PAY TELEPHONES PER STATE AS OF
     SEPTEMBER 30, 1996 ON PRO FORMA BASIS AFTER GIVING EFFECT TO PENDING
                                ACQUISITIONS]

IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFERING, THE UNDERWRITERS MAY OVER-ALLOT OR EFFECT
TRANSACTIONS WHICH STABILIZE OR MAINTAIN THE MARKET PRICE OF THE COMMON STOCK OF
THE COMPANY AT A LEVEL ABOVE THAT WHICH MIGHT OTHERWISE PREVAIL IN THE OPEN
MARKET. SUCH TRANSACTIONS MAY BE EFFECTED ON THE AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE, INC.,
IN THE OVER-THE-COUNTER MARKET OR OTHERWISE. SUCH STABILIZING, IF COMMENCED, MAY
BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME.
    
 
                                        2
<PAGE>   4
 
                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION
 
   
The Company is subject to the informational requirements of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"), and in accordance
therewith files reports and other information with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "Commission"). Such reports and other information filed by the
Company with the Commission may be inspected at the public reference facilities
maintained by the Commission at Room 1024, Judiciary Plaza, 450 Fifth Street,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549 and should also be available for inspection and
copying at the regional offices of the Commission located at Seven World Trade
Center, 13th Floor, New York, New York 10048; and at Citicorp Center, 500 West
Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois 60661. Copies of such material may
also be obtained from the Public Reference Section of the Commission at 450
Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549 at prescribed rates. The Commission
maintains a Web site that contains reports, proxy and information statements and
other information regarding issuers, such as the Company, that file
electronically with the Commission and the address of such Web site is
http://www.sec.gov. Additionally, the Common Stock is listed on the American
Stock Exchange, Inc. and such reports and other information concerning the
Company are therefore available for inspection at the offices of the American
Stock Exchange, Inc. located at 86 Trinity Place, New York, NY 10006-1881.
    
 
This Prospectus constitutes a part of a Registration Statement on Form SB-2
filed by the Company with the Commission under the Securities Act. This
Prospectus omits certain of the information contained in the Registration
Statement, and reference is hereby made to the Registration Statement and to the
exhibits relating thereto for further information with respect to the Company
and the Common Stock offered hereby. Any statements contained herein concerning
the provisions of any document are not necessarily complete, and, in each
instance, reference is made to such copy filed as an exhibit to the Registration
Statement or otherwise filed with the Commission. Each such statement is
qualified in its entirety by such reference. The Registration Statement and the
exhibits thereto may be inspected without charge at the office of the Commission
at Judiciary Plaza, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549, and copies
thereof may be obtained from the Commission at prescribed rates.
 
                                        3
<PAGE>   5
 
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
   
The following summary is qualified in its entirety by, and should be read in
conjunction with, the more detailed information and financial statements and the
notes thereto appearing elsewhere in this Prospectus. Unless otherwise
indicated, all references in this Prospectus to the "Company" include PhoneTel
Technologies, Inc. and its subsidiaries, and the information in this Prospectus
(i) gives effect to a one-for-six reverse share split of the Common Stock
("Stock Split") effected on December 26, 1995 and (ii) assumes no exercise of
the Underwriters' over-allotment option. Terms used in this Prospectus but not
otherwise defined herein have the meanings set forth in the Glossary, which
begins on page A-1 of this Prospectus.
    
 
                                  THE COMPANY
 
   
The Company is currently the third largest independent public pay telephone
operator and the twelfth largest public pay telephone operator in the United
States. Upon consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition (as defined herein) and
the Texas Coinphone Acquisition (as defined herein) (collectively, the "Pending
Acquisitions") the Company believes that it will be one of the two largest
independent public pay telephone operators in the United States. As of September
30, 1996, after giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions, the Company would
have owned and operated 38,421 installed public pay telephones in 42 states, the
District of Columbia and Mexico, of which approximately 96% are located in 21
states. After giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions, approximately 44% of
the Company's public pay telephones will be located in Florida, Texas and
California, which are three of the four most populous states. See "The Pending
Acquisitions." As of September 30, 1996, the Company owned and operated 24,732
installed public pay telephones, of which approximately 95% are located in 17
states and approximately 46% are located in Florida, Texas and California. Since
September 1, 1995, the Company has added 19,053 public pay telephones through a
series of acquisitions by the Company of six independent public pay telephone
companies. In addition, the Company maintains an active program of installing
public pay telephones.
    
 
   
The Company owns, operates, services and maintains a system of microprocessor
controlled "smart" public pay telephones. The Company derives substantially all
of its revenues from calls placed from its public pay telephones through the
deposit of coins ("coin calls") and from calling card, credit card, collect,
third party billed and access code calls (collectively, "non-coin calls"). The
Company contracts with location providers to operate public pay telephones at
locations where significant demand exists for public pay telephone service, such
as shopping centers, convenience stores, service stations, grocery stores,
restaurants, truck stops and bus terminals.
    
 
   
On an actual basis, the Company had revenues and EBITDA (as defined in footnote
8 on page 11) of $28.3 million and $5.6 million, respectively, for the nine
months ended September 30, 1996. The Company's EBITDA margin has increased to
19.6% for the nine months ended September 30, 1996 from 2.8% for the nine months
ended September 30, 1995. The increase in the EBITDA margin is primarily due to
the significant increase in the number of installed public pay telephones and
the elimination of costs associated with the closing of certain offices, the
elimination of redundant executives and administrative personnel in billing and
other operational areas and leveraging the Company's existing field technicians.
    
 
   
After giving pro forma effect to the six acquisitions completed from September
1, 1995 to September 30, 1996, the Company would have achieved revenues of $59.6
million and $45.4 million for the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine
months ended September 30, 1996, respectively, and EBITDA of $10.4 million and
$9.8 million for the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended
September 30, 1996, respectively. After giving pro forma effect to such six
acquisitions and the Pending Acquisitions (collectively, the "Acquisitions"),
the Company would have achieved revenues of $91.5 million and $70.4 million for
the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1996,
respectively, and EBITDA of $21.2 million and $16.1 million for the year ended
December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1996, respectively.
See "Pro Forma Financial Data." Management believes that as a result of certain
recent regulatory changes implemented by the Federal Communications Commission
("FCC") relating to compensation for dial-around calls, the Company will
generate significant additional revenues, net of related expenses and processing
fees, commencing November 6, 1996. See "-- Recent Developments -- Recent
Regulatory Developments."
    
 
   
Public pay telephones are primarily owned or operated by Bell Operating
Companies ("BOCs"), other local exchange carriers ("LECs") and independent
public pay telephone companies. Of the approximately 2.54 million public pay
telephones operated in the United States in 1995, Multimedia Telecommunications
Association estimates that approximately 87% are operated by BOCs and other LECs
and approximately 13% (approximately 342,000 public pay telephones) are operated
by independent public pay telephone companies. Management believes that the
highly fragmented nature of the independent public pay telephone industry
presents a significant number of attractive acquisition opportunities for the
Company.
    
 
                                        4
<PAGE>   6
 
   
In June 1995, Peter Graf was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors and in
September 1995 was appointed Chief Executive Officer of the Company. In
September 1995, Stuart Hollander, Joseph Abrams, Aron Katzman and Steven Richman
were appointed to the board of directors of the Company, and the majority of the
existing board resigned at that time. The new board and management identified
and implemented the business strategy set forth under " -- Business Strategy"
below.
    
 
   
The Company was incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio on December 24,
1984. The Company's executive offices are located at 1127 Euclid Avenue, Suite
650, Cleveland, Ohio 44115-1601 and its telephone number is (216) 241-2555.
    
 
                               BUSINESS STRATEGY
 
   
The Company's objective is to grow through additional acquisitions and
internally, thereby achieving economies of scale while implementing cost
savings. The Company has implemented the following strategy to meet its
objective:
    
 
   
Grow through acquisitions.  The Company believes that there is a significant
opportunity to consolidate the highly fragmented independent segment of the
public pay telephone industry. Selective acquisitions enable the Company to
expand its geographic presence and further its strategy of clustering its public
pay telephones more rapidly than with new installations. Because smaller
companies typically are not able to achieve the economies of scale realized by
the Company, when acquisitions are integrated, the Company can operate the
public pay telephones at lower operating costs than the seller. Accordingly, the
Company maintains an active acquisition program to acquire public pay telephones
that are in, or contiguous to, its existing markets or that can form the basis
of a new cluster. Management believes that the Company's experience in
completing acquisitions of companies in the public pay telephone industry is
instrumental in identifying and negotiating additional acquisitions as well as
integrating such acquisitions. In addition, as the Company grows to become the
leading supplier of independent public pay telephone services in an area,
"fill-in" and contiguous acquisitions become less attractive to other potential
acquirors as their ability to create significant clusters is reduced. Moreover,
the Company believes that such growth will further enhance its ability to
negotiate favorable rates with long distance service providers and operator
service providers ("OSPs") as well as suppliers of pay telephones and other
related equipment.
    
 
   
Facilitate internal growth.  The Company actively seeks to install new public
pay telephones and intends to enhance its sales and marketing efforts to obtain
additional contracts to own and operate public pay telephones with new and
existing national, regional and local accounts. In evaluating locations for the
installation of public pay telephones, the Company generally conducts a site
survey to examine various factors, including population density, traffic
patterns, historical usage information and other geographic factors. The
installation of public pay telephones is generally less expensive than acquiring
public pay telephones.
    
 
   
Reduce operating costs through geographically concentrated clusters.  The
Company believes that in addition to facilitating fill-in and contiguous
acquisitions, the clustering of public pay telephones creates an opportunity to
generate savings through reduced field service and collection expenses, the
closing of duplicate offices, reduction in staff and general corporate overhead
expenses and reduced line and transmission expenses associated with interLATA
and intraLATA traffic.
    
 
   
Form strong relationships with service providers and suppliers.  As part of its
strategy to continue to reduce operating costs, the Company outsources its long
distance and operator services to a number of subcontractors that are OSPs,
principally Intellicall, Inc. ("Intellicall"). The Company intends to strengthen
its relationships with Intellicall, together with other OSPs, and the suppliers
of its public pay telephone equipment as its market presence increases. By
achieving closer working relationships with its OSPs and suppliers, the Company
believes that it will be in a position to negotiate more favorable agreements.
    
 
   
Use of state-of-the-art technology.  The Company's public pay telephones are
"smart" telephones and are operated by means of advanced microprocessor
technology that enables the telephones to perform substantially all of the
necessary coin-driven and certain non coin-driven functions independent of the
Company's central office. Unlike "dumb" telephones used by most BOCs and other
LECs, smart telephones, in concert with the Company's management information
systems, enable the Company to determine each telephone's operability and need
for service as well as its readiness for coin collection. In addition, rate
changes and other software-dependent functions can also be performed from the
central office without dispatching service technicians to individual public pay
telephones of the Company.
    
 
   
Provide superior customer service.  The Company strives to maximize the number
of its public pay telephones that are operational at any one time and thereby
retain existing customers and attract new ones. Accordingly, the Company employs
both advanced telecommunications technology and trained field technicians as
part of its commitment to provide superior customer service. The technology used
by the Company enables it to (i) maintain accurate records of telephone activity
which can be verified by
    
 
                                        5
<PAGE>   7
 
   
customers and (ii) respond quickly to equipment malfunctions. The Company's
standard of performance is to repair malfunctions within 24 hours of their
occurrence.
    
 
   
Achieve market recognition.  With the greater financial resources available to
the Company following the Company Debt Offering and the Offering, the Company
intends to promote actively its brand and customer service capabilities. The
Company seeks to promote and achieve recognition of its products and services by
posting on all of its public pay telephones the "PhoneTel" label and through
advertisements in trade magazines. The Company believes that achieving market
recognition will facilitate its expansion strategy by enhancing its ability to
obtain additional accounts and encouraging the use of its public pay telephones
in locations where consumers have multiple public pay telephone options.
    
 
   
                              RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
    
 
   
RECENT REGULATORY DEVELOPMENTS
    
 
   
On September 20, 1996, the FCC adopted new rules pursuant to the
Telecommunications Act (as defined herein) which require certain providers of
long distance services to pay to the Company (and all other owners of public pay
telephones) a flat fee of $45.85 per month per telephone as compensation for
dial-around calls from November 6, 1996 to October 6, 1997 (which fee was
established by the FCC by multiplying $0.35 per call by the estimated industry
average of 131 access code calls and "800" calls per pay telephone per month).
This replaces the $6.00 flat fee per month per telephone in place since May
1992. In October 1997, the flat fee will be replaced by a per-call compensation
mechanism at a rate initially set at $0.35 per call and for periods after
October 6, 1998, at the local coin drop rate, which the FCC has concluded will
be determined by the marketplace, not by regulation. Management believes that as
a result of these changes, the Company will generate significant additional
revenues, net of related expenses and processing fees, commencing November 6,
1996. The FCC's new rules include other changes, the effect of which on the
Company's operations cannot be estimated by management of the Company at this
time. See "Business -- Products and Services -- Operator Assisted Long Distance
Services" and "Business -- Governmental Regulations -- Federal."
    
 
   
RECENT ACQUISITIONS
    
 
   
In connection with its business strategy of growth through acquisitions, the
Company acquired 6,872 installed public pay telephones (located primarily in
California, Colorado and Washington) from Amtel Communications Services, Inc.
and certain of its affiliates (collectively, "Amtel") as of September 13, 1996
(the "Amtel Acquisition"). The Company acquired the public pay telephones in the
Amtel Acquisition for a purchase price of $13 million, in a combination of cash
and Common Stock. The Company acquired 3,115 installed public pay telephones
(located primarily in Illinois, Florida, Missouri and Virginia) from Payphones
of America, Inc. ("POA") as of August 1, 1996 (the "POA Acquisition"). The
Company acquired the public pay telephones in the POA Acquisition for a purchase
price of approximately $13 million, in a combination of cash, Common Stock, the
POA Sellers' Notes (as defined herein) and the assumption of certain
liabilities.
    
 
   
PENDING ACQUISITIONS
    
 
   
On October 16, 1996, the Company entered into a letter of intent to acquire
Cherokee Communications, Inc. ("Cherokee"), including approximately 14,000
public pay telephones (located primarily in Texas, New Mexico, Utah, Montana and
Colorado) of which 13,500 will be installed and certain other assets owned by
Cherokee. The Company will acquire Cherokee (the "Cherokee Acquisition") for a
purchase price of $54 million plus related fees and expenses, subject to certain
purchase price adjustments, which may include an increase of up to $6 million in
cash or Common Stock payable in two equal installments in January 1998 and 1999
if certain new regulatory changes are not implemented by the end of 1998. In
addition, the Company will pay $1.25 million in connection with certain
non-competition agreements. See "The Pending Acquisitions -- The Cherokee
Acquisition." On October 9, 1996, the Company entered into a letter of intent to
acquire 1,200 installed public pay telephones located in Texas from Texas
Coinphone ("Texas Coinphone"). The Company will acquire such assets from Texas
Coinphone for a purchase price of approximately $3.7 million, subject to certain
purchase price adjustments. See "The Pending Acquisitions -- The Texas Coinphone
Acquisition."
    
 
   
The Company is seeking an amendment to the Credit Agreement (as defined herein),
in part to fund deposits required in connection with the Pending Acquisitions.
The closings of the Pending Acquisitions are expected to occur in January 1997,
although there can be no assurance that either acquisition will be consummated
or, if consummated, as to the final terms thereof. The Company expects to use a
portion of the net proceeds from the Company Debt Offering to finance the
Pending Acquisitions. If the Company Debt Offering is not consummated and no
alternative financing is arranged, the Company will be unable to complete the
Pending Acquisitions. The closing of this Offering is not conditioned upon
completion of the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
                                        6
<PAGE>   8
 
   
                           THE COMPANY DEBT OFFERING
    
 
   
The Company also expects to offer to the public $110.0 million of Senior Notes
due 2006 (the "Notes"), which will be guaranteed by all of the Company's
subsidiaries (the "Company Debt Offering"), for estimated net proceeds to the
Company therefrom of approximately $104.15 million. The Company intends to use
the net proceeds from the Company Debt Offering to finance the Pending
Acquisitions, to repay all of the remaining outstanding debt under the Credit
Agreement, to repay certain capital lease obligations and other indebtedness and
for working capital and other general corporate purposes, including the possible
redemption of approximately $5.5 million of its mandatorily redeemable 14%
Preferred (as defined herein). The closing of the Company Debt Offering is
expected to occur in December 1996, although there can be no assurance that such
offering will be consummated. The consummation of the Offering is not
conditioned upon the consummation of the Company Debt Offering. If the Company
Debt Offering is not consummated, the Company may require additional sources of
financing other than the New Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
The Company will be required to make an offer to purchase $35.0 million
aggregate principal amount of the Notes on the Special Offer Date (as defined
herein) at the Special Offer Price (as defined herein) if the Cherokee
Acquisition is not consummated prior to             , 1997 (90 days after the
issuance of the Notes). A portion of the net proceeds of the Company Debt
Offering equal to the amount sufficient to permit the Company to purchase $35.0
million aggregate principal amount of the Notes on the Special Offer Date at the
Special Offer Price (such amount referred to herein as the "Trust Funds"), in
the form of cash, treasury securities and certain other cash equivalents, will
be deposited with the Trustee (as defined herein) for the benefit of the holders
of the Notes. See "Risk Factors -- Possible Non-Consummation of the Pending
Acquisitions and the Company Debt Offering" and "Description of Certain
Indebtedness -- The Notes."
    
 
   
                           SOURCES AND USES OF FUNDS
    
 
   
The following table sets forth the estimated sources and uses of the proceeds to
be received by the Company from the Offering and, if consummated, the Company
Debt Offering (determined as of September 30, 1996):
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              ------
                                         In millions                                          AMOUNT
                                                                                              ------
    <S>                                                                                       <C>
    SOURCES OF FUNDS:
    Offering..............................................................................    $25.0
    Company Debt Offering.................................................................    110.0
                                                                                              ------
      Total sources of funds..............................................................    $135.0
                                                                                              ======
    USES OF FUNDS:
    Cherokee Acquisition (1)..............................................................    $55.7
    Texas Coinphone Acquisition...........................................................      3.7
    Repay Credit Agreement................................................................     41.0
    Repay capitalized lease obligations...................................................      7.8
    Repay POA Sellers' Notes..............................................................      3.3
    Related fees and expenses (2).........................................................      9.1
    Working capital and general corporate purposes (3)....................................     14.4
                                                                                              ------
              Total uses of funds.........................................................    $135.0
                                                                                              ======
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
   
(1) Represents the purchase price of $54 million plus related fees and expenses
    of approximately $1.1 million and a $625,000 initial payment for the
    non-competition agreements.
    
 
   
(2) Represents (i) estimated underwriting discount and other expenses of the
    Offering of $2.5 million, (ii) estimated underwriting discount and other
    expenses of the Company Debt Offering of $5.85 million, and (iii) estimated
    fees and expenses incurred in connection with the New Credit Agreement of
    $750,000.
    
 
   
(3) The Company may elect, at its option, to use a portion of the proceeds to
    redeem approximately $5.5 million of the 14% Preferred in lieu of using such
    funds for working capital purposes.
    
 
                                        7
<PAGE>   9
 
                                  THE OFFERING
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                              <C>
Common Stock Offered:
  By the Company...............................  6,250,000 shares
  By the Selling Shareholders..................  500,000 shares
Common Stock to be Outstanding after the
  Offering (1).................................  14,389,709 shares
Use of Proceeds to the Company.................  To pay a portion of the indebtedness under the Credit
                                                 Agreement (as defined herein) and for working capital
                                                 and other general corporate purposes.
AMEX Symbol....................................  "PHN"
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
 
   
(1) Based on the shares outstanding at September 30, 1996. Does not include an
    aggregate of 12,557,876 shares of Common Stock reserved at September 30,
    1996 for issuance under the following circumstances: (i) the exercise of
    warrants to purchase shares of Series A Preferred (as defined herein), which
    are immediately convertible into Common Stock, (ii) the conversion of the
    14% Preferred into Common Stock, (iii) the exercise of the Nominal Value
    Warrants (as defined herein) and certain other warrants, (iv) the exercise
    of outstanding options and (v) the conversion of certain outstanding
    indebtedness under the Credit Agreement into shares of Series B Preferred
    (as defined herein), which are immediately convertible into Common Stock.
    See "Capitalization," "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Results of
    Operations and Financial Conditions -- Liquidity and Capital Resources" and
    "Description of Capital Stock -- Equity Securities Reserved for Issuance."
    
 
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
Prospective investors should consider carefully all of the information set forth
in this Prospectus, particularly the matters set forth under the caption "Risk
Factors."
 
                                        8
<PAGE>   10
 
                      SUMMARY FINANCIAL AND OPERATING DATA
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                               ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                   ---------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   PRO FORMA FOR
                                                                                                     1995 AND
                                                                                   PRO FORMA FOR       1996
                                                                                     1995 AND      ACQUISITIONS,              
                                                                   PRO FORMA FOR       1996           PENDING                 
                                                                     1995 AND      ACQUISITIONS,   ACQUISITIONS,              
                                                                       1996          OFFERING        OFFERING                 
                                    YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,        ACQUISITIONS         AND             AND                   
                               ---------------------------------        AND        COMPANY DEBT    COMPANY DEBT               
                                 1993        1994        1995      OFFERING (1)    OFFERING (2)    OFFERING (3)               
                               ---------   ---------   ---------   -------------   -------------   -------------              
                                        Dollars in thousands, except per share data (unaudited)                               
<S>                            <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>             <C>             <C>                        
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:                                                                                                 
  Total revenues                 $11,070     $15,866     $18,718         $59,610        $ 59,610        $ 91,496              
  Costs and expenses              11,683      17,180      24,007          68,734          68,734         101,106              
  Loss from operations              (613)     (1,314)     (5,289)         (9,124)         (9,124)         (9,609)             
  Interest expense                   175         388         837           8,771          12,070          14,520              
  Loss before extraordinary                                                                                                   
    item                            (779)     (1,695)     (6,110)        (18,055)        (20,479)        (24,505)             
  Net loss                          (779)     (1,695)     (6,110)             --              --              --              
  Net loss applicable to                                                                                                      
    common shareholders (7)         (986)     (1,987)     (6,419)        (18,708)        (21,132)        (25,158)             
  Net loss per common share                                                                                                   
    (7)                            (0.96)      (1.35)      (3.29)          (1.54)          (1.74)          (2.08)             
  Weighted average number of                                                                                                  
    common shares              1,031,384   1,470,188   1,950,561      12,113,084      12,113,084      12,113,084              
FINANCIAL RATIOS AND                                                                                                          
  OPERATING DATA:                                                                                                             
  EBITDA (8)                        $283        $922      $1,264         $10,382         $10,382         $21,245              
  EBITDA margin (9)                 2.56%       5.81%       6.75%          17.42%          17.42%          23.22%             
  Ratio of EBITDA to interest                                                                                                 
    expense                         1.62        2.38        1.51            1.16             .86            1.46              
  Number of public pay                                                                                                        
    telephones                                                                                                                
    in service                     2,350       4,891       9,458          24,074          24,074          37,763              
 
<CAPTION>
                                                               NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996    
                                                          ---------------------------------------------
                                                                                          PRO FORMA    
                                                                                          FOR 1996     
                                                                          PRO FORMA       ACQUISITIONS,
                                                                          FOR 1996        PENDING      
                                                          PRO FORMA       ACQUISTIONS,    ACQUISITIONS,
                                     NINE MONTHS          FOR 1996        OFFERING        OFFERING     
                                 ENDED SEPTEMBER 30,      ACQUISITIONS    AND             AND          
                               ------------------------   AND             COMPANY DEBT    COMPANY DEBT 
                                 1995           1996      OFFERING(4)     OFFERINGING(5)  OFFERING(6)  
                               ---------      ---------   ------------   -------------   -------------- 
                               (unaudited)                                                             
<S>                            <C>            <C>         <C>            <C>             <C>           
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:                                                                          
  Total revenues                 $11,957        $28,315       $45,379          $45,379         $70,447 
  Costs and expenses              15,203         37,156        54,354           54,354          81,389 
  Loss from operations            (3,246)        (8,840)       (8,975)          (8,975)        (10,942)
  Interest expense                   304          4,140         5,041            9,127          10,527 
  Loss before extraordinary                                                                            
    item                          (3,538)       (12,980)      (14,086)         (17,297)        (21,534)
  Net loss                        (3,538)       (13,247)           --               --              -- 
  Net loss applicable to                                                                               
    common shareholders (7)       (3,770)       (15,519)      (14,356)         (17,567)        (21,803)
  Net loss per common share                                                                            
    (7)                            (2.22)         (3.60)        (1.07)           (1.31)          (1.63)
  Weighted average number of                                                                           
    common shares              1,695,280      4,305,130    13,376,413       13,376,413      13,376,413 
FINANCIAL RATIOS AND                                                                                   
  OPERATING DATA:                                                                                      
  EBITDA (8)                        $337         $5,554        $9,766           $9,776         $16,055 
  EBITDA margin (9)                 2.82%         19.62%        21.52%           21.52%          22.79%
  Ratio of EBITDA to interest                                                                          
    expense                         1.11           1.34          1.94             1.07            1.53 
  Number of public pay                                                                                 
    telephones                                                                                         
    in service                     8,344         24,732        24,732           24,732          38,421 
</TABLE>
    
   


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>  
                                                                                      -------------------------
                                                                                      AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1996  
                                                                                                               PRO FORMA FOR THE
                                                                                       PRO FORMA FOR           PENDING ACQUISITIONS,
                                                                                       THE COMPANY             THE COMPANY
                                                                    PRO FORMA          DEBT OFFERING           DEBT OFFERING
                                                        ACTUAL     FOR OFFERING(10)    AND THE OFFERING(11)    AND THE OFFERING(12)
                                                       --------    --------------      --------------------    ---------------
<S>                                                    <C>         <C>                 <C>                       <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:                                                                                           
Total assets                                           $ 74,940           $89,445      $115,797                   $151,751
Long-term debt and obligations under                                                                                      
  capital leases (including current installments)        49,521(13)        41,521        77,677                    113,239
14% Mandatorily redeemable preferred stock                6,539             6,539         6,539                      6,539
Non-mandatorily redeemable preferred stock,                                                                               
  common stock and other shareholders' equity            11,645            34,150        24,344                     24,344
Working capital (deficit) (14)                          (11,319)            3,186        32,889                      9,789
                                                                                  

</TABLE>
    
 
                                        9
<PAGE>   11
 
- ---------------
   
 (1) Gives effect to the acquisitions of International Pay Phones, Inc. of
     Tennessee and of International Pay Phones, Inc. of South Carolina (herein
     collectively referred to as "IPP"), Paramount Communications Systems, Inc.
     ("Paramount"), POA and Amtel (collectively, the "1996 Acquisitions") and
     the acquisitions of World Communications, Inc. ("World") and Public
     Telephone Corporation ("Public Telephone") (together, the "1995
     Acquisitions") and the Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on
     January 1, 1995. Such unaudited pro forma financial data is not necessarily
     indicative of the results of operations that might have occurred if the
     transactions had taken place on such date or which might occur in any
     future period.
    
 
   
 (2) Gives effect to the 1995 Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions, the Offering
     and the Company Debt Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on
     January 1, 1995, and assuming $35 million is held in excrow for five months
     and is then utilized to purchase Notes from the bondholders. Such unaudited
     pro forma financial data is not necessarily indicative of the results of
     operations that might have occurred if the transactions had taken place on
     such date or which might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (3) Gives effect to the 1995 Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions, and the
     Pending Acquisitions (collectively, the "Acquisitions"), the Offering and
     the Company Debt Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on January
     1, 1995. Such unaudited pro forma financial data is not necessarily
     indicative of the results of operations that might have occurred if the
     transactions had taken place on such date or which might occur in any
     future period. Because Cherokee's fiscal year ends on September 30, the
     historical and pro forma information relating to Cherokee is for the nine
     months ended June 30, 1996.
    
 
   
 (4) Gives effect to the 1996 Acquisitions and the Offering, as if such
     transactions had occurred on January 1, 1996. Such unaudited pro forma
     financial data is not necessarily indicative of the results of operations
     that might have occurred if the transactions had taken place on such date
     or which might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (5) Gives effect to the 1996 Acquisitions, the Offering and the Company Debt
     Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on January 1, 1996, and
     assuming $35 million is held in escrow for five months and is then utilized
     to purchase Notes from the bondholders. Such unaudited pro forma financial
     data is not necessarily indicative of the results of operations that might
     have occurred if the transactions had taken place on such date or which
     might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (6) Gives effect to the 1996 Acquisitions, the Pending Acquisitions, the
     Offering and the Company Debt Offering, as if such transactions had
     occurred on January 1, 1996. Such unaudited pro forma financial data is not
     necessarily indicative of the results of operations that might have
     occurred if the transactions had taken place on such date or which might
     occur in any future period. Because Cherokee's fiscal year ends on
     September 30, the historical and pro forma information relating to Cherokee
     is for the nine months ended June 30, 1996.
    
 
   
 (7) Pro forma net loss applicable to common shareholders excludes the
     extraordinary loss on debt restructuring and the loss on redemption of the
     10% Preferred (as defined herein), the 8% Preferred (as defined herein) and
     the 7% Preferred (as defined herein) realized in March 1996.
    
 
   
 (8) EBITDA represents earnings before interest income, interest expense, income
     taxes, depreciation, amortization and other unusual charges and settlements
     of employment contracts. EBITDA is not intended to represent an alternative
     to operating income (as determined in accordance with generally accepted
     accounting principles) as an indicator of the Company's operating
     performance, or as an alternative to cash flows from operating activities
     (as determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles)
     as a measure of liquidity. The Company believes that EBITDA is a meaningful
     measure of performance because it is commonly used in the public pay
     telephone industry to analyze comparable public pay telephone companies on
     the basis of operating performance, leverage and liquidity.
    
 
   
 (9) EBITDA margin is calculated by dividing (a) EBITDA by (b) total revenues.
     EBITDA margin is a measure commonly used in the Company's industry as an
     indicator of the efficiency of the Company's operations.
    
 
   
(10) Gives effect to the Offering as if such transaction had occurred on
     September 30, 1996.
    
 
   
(11) Gives effect to the Company Debt Offering and the Offering, as if such
     transactions had occurred on September 30, 1996 and assuming $35 million is
     held in escrow for five months and is then utilized to purchase Notes from
     the bondholders.
    
 
   
(12) Gives effect to the Pending Acquisitions, the Company Debt Offering and the
     Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on September 30, 1996.
     Because Cherokee's fiscal year ends on September 30, the historical and pro
     forma information relating to Cherokee is as of June 30, 1996.
    
 
   
(13) Excludes $5,228,956 constituting the unamortized portion of long-term debt
     discount, which arose from the original allocation of proceeds to warrants
     issued to the Lenders (as defined herein) in connection with the Credit
     Agreement.
    
 
   
(14) Working capital (deficit) is calculated by subtracting the Company's
     current liabilities from its current assets.
    
 
                                       10
<PAGE>   12
 
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
   
An investment in the Common Stock offered hereby involves a high degree of risk.
In addition to the other information contained in this Prospectus, prospective
investors should carefully consider the following risk factors in evaluating the
Company and its business before purchasing any of the shares of Common Stock
offered hereby.
    
 
   
SUBSTANTIAL LEVERAGE AND EFFECT ON ABILITY TO PAY INDEBTEDNESS
    
 
   
The Company has, and upon the consummation of the Company Debt Offering will
continue to have, substantial indebtedness. In addition, earnings were
insufficient to cover fixed charges by approximately $6.1 million and $13.0
million for the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended September
30, 1996, respectively. As of September 30, 1996 on a pro forma basis after
giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions, the Company Debt Offering and the
Offering, the Company's total indebtedness would have been $113.2 million, its
total assets would have been $151.8 million and its mandatorily redeemable
preferred stock and other equity would have been $30.9 million. The Company will
repay indebtedness under, and terminate, the Credit Agreement upon consummation
of the Company Debt Offering and is negotiating with lenders to enter into a new
$25 to $50 million senior credit facility (the "New Credit Agreement") upon
consummation of the Company Debt Offering. There can be no assurance that the
New Credit Agreement will be executed. The completion of this Offering is not
conditioned upon the consummation of the Company Debt Offering or the execution
of the New Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
The Company's high degree of leverage could have important consequences for the
Company, including: (i) the ability of the Company to obtain additional
financing for acquisitions, working capital, capital expenditures or other
purposes, if necessary, may be impaired or such financing may not be on terms
favorable to the Company; (ii) a substantial portion of the Company's cash flow
will be used to pay the Company's interest expense, which will reduce the funds
that would otherwise be available to the Company for its operations and future
business opportunities; (iii) a decrease in net operating cash flows or an
increase in expenses of the Company could make it difficult for the Company to
meet its debt service requirements and force it to modify its operations; (iv)
the Company may be more highly leveraged than some of its competitors which may
place it at a competitive disadvantage; and (v) the Company's high degree of
leverage may make it more vulnerable to a downturn in its business or the
economy generally. Any inability of the Company to service its indebtedness or
obtain additional financing as needed would have a material adverse effect on
the Company's business, results of operations or financial condition. See
"-- Risks of Growth Strategy."
    
 
   
The ability of the Company to make cash payments to satisfy its substantial
indebtedness, including the Notes, will depend upon its future operating
performance, which is subject to prevailing economic conditions, and to
financial, business and other factors beyond the Company's control. Based upon
the Company's cash flow from operations and the proceeds to the Company from the
Offering and from the Company Debt Offering or the New Credit Agreement, the
Company believes that it will have the funds necessary to meet the principal and
interest payments on its debt as they become due and to operate its business,
although, there can be no assurance that the Company will be able to do so.
There can be no assurance that the Company will enter into the New Credit
Agreement or consummate the Company Debt Offering or that the New Credit
Agreement or the Indenture pursuant to which the Notes are issued will be on
terms favorable to the Company. If the Company Debt Offering is not consummated,
the Company may require additional sources of financing, other than the New
Credit Agreement. See "-- Possible Non-Consummation of the Pending Acquisitions
and the Company Debt Offering." If the Company is unable to generate sufficient
earnings and cash flow to meet its obligations with respect to its outstanding
indebtedness, including, if issued, the Notes, refinancing of certain of the
debt obligations or asset dispositions might be required. In the event debt
refinancing is required, there can be no assurance that the Company can effect
such refinancing on satisfactory terms or that the refinancing will be permitted
by the lenders under the New Credit Agreement, the other creditors of the
Company or by the terms of the Indenture pursuant to which the Notes will be
issued. In addition, asset dispositions may be made under circumstances which
might not be favorable to realizing the best price for such assets. Moreover,
there can be no assurance that assets can be sold promptly enough, or for
amounts sufficient to satisfy outstanding debt obligations. The New Credit
Agreement is expected to contain certain restrictions on the Company's ability
to sell assets and on the use of proceeds from permitted asset sales. See
"Description of Certain Indebtedness -- The New Credit Agreement." For
restrictions on debt refinancing and asset dispositions under the Indenture, see
"Description of Certain Indebtedness -- The Notes."
    
 
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
 
   
The operations of the public pay telephone industry are regulated by the public
service or utility commissions of the various states and by the FCC. In
particular, the Company must obtain approvals to operate public pay telephones
from the public utility commissions of most states in which the Company
operates. In addition, from time to time legislation is enacted by Congress or
the various state legislatures that affects the telecommunications industry
generally and the public pay telephone industry specifically. Court decisions
interpreting laws applicable to the telecommunications industry may also have a
significant effect on the
    
 
                                       11
<PAGE>   13
 
   
public pay telephone industry. Changes in existing laws and regulations as well
as the creation of new ones, applicable to the activities of the Company or
other telecommunication businesses (including the extent of competition, the
charges of providers of interexchange and operator services and the
implementation of new technologies), particularly in the states of Florida,
Texas, Missouri and California, may have a material adverse effect on the
Company's business, results of operations or financial condition.
    
 
   
The recently enacted Section 276 ("Section 276") of the Telecommunications Act
of 1996 (the "Telecommunications Act") and the implementing rules adopted by the
FCC pursuant to Section 276 are expected to have a significant effect on the
public pay telephone industry. For a discussion of the potential effects of
Section 276 on the public pay telephone industry and competition within this
industry, including the FCC's rules to implement Section 276, see "Business
- -- Governmental Regulations -- Federal" and "-- Competition." Since neither
Section 276 nor the FCC rules have yet been interpreted by the courts, there can
be no assurance that the rules and policies ultimately adopted thereunder will
not adversely affect the Company.
    
 
   
HISTORY OF LOSSES
    
 
   
The Company was incorporated in 1984 and began providing public pay telephone
services in 1986. Although the Company has experienced revenue growth since the
beginning of its operations, the Company has operated at a loss since its
inception. For the year ended December 31, 1995 and for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996, the Company has incurred losses before taxes and
extraordinary item of $6,109,697 and $12,980,078, respectively, and on a pro
forma basis after giving effect to the Acquisitions, the Company Debt Offering
and the Offering would have incurred losses before taxes and extraordinary items
of $23,383,752 and $21,552,937, respectively. There can be no assurance that
revenue growth will continue or that the Company will ever achieve or sustain
profitability. See "Pro Forma Financial Data," "Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" and the consolidated
financial statements of the Company and notes thereto contained elsewhere in
this Prospectus.
    
 
   
RESTRICTIONS IMPOSED BY TERMS OF THE COMPANY'S INDEBTEDNESS
    
 
   
The terms and conditions of the New Credit Agreement and the Indenture expected
to be entered into by the Company are expected to impose restrictions that
affect, among other things, the ability of the Company to incur debt, pay
dividends, merge, dispose of assets, create liens and make investments and
capital expenditures. See "Description of Certain Indebtedness." The New Credit
Agreement is expected to be secured and guaranteed by all of the Company's
subsidiaries. The Credit Agreement requires, and the New Credit Agreement is
expected to require, the Company to satisfy certain financial covenants on a
quarterly basis. The Company was not in compliance with various financial
covenants contained in the Credit Agreement at June 30, 1996 and subsequently
received a waiver of such non-compliance from the Lenders. The Credit Agreement
was amended on October 8, 1996 to make the covenants less restrictive and the
Company was in compliance with such covenants as of September 30, 1996. The
ability of the Company to comply with such financial covenants can be affected
by events beyond the Company's control, and there can be no assurance that the
Company will achieve operating results that comply with such covenants. A breach
of any of these covenants could result in a default under the New Credit
Agreement and other indebtedness of the Company. In the event of any such
default, the lenders could elect to declare all amounts borrowed under the New
Credit Agreement, together with accrued interest, to be due and payable. If the
Company were unable to pay such amounts, the lenders could proceed against their
collateral. If the indebtedness under the New Credit Agreement were to be
accelerated, there can be no assurance that the assets of the Company would be
sufficient to repay in full such indebtedness and the other indebtedness of the
Company.
    
 
   
POSSIBLE NON-CONSUMMATION OF THE PENDING ACQUISITIONS AND THE COMPANY DEBT
OFFERING
    
 
   
The consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition, which is expected to occur in
January 1997, is subject to certain closing conditions, including the
negotiation and execution of a definitive purchase agreement by November 30,
1996 and the receipt of approval from the board of directors and stockholders of
Cherokee. The consummation of the Texas Coinphone Acquisition, which is also
expected to occur in January 1997, is subject to similar closing conditions. The
Company expects to use a portion of the net proceeds from the Company Debt
Offering to finance the Pending Acquisitions. Although management believes that
all such conditions to consummate the Pending Acquisitions will be satisfied,
including the consummation of the Company Debt Offering, there can be no
assurance that such conditions will be satisfied or waived or that the closings
will occur. The Company is seeking to amend the Credit Agreement, in part to
fund the deposits required in connection with the Pending Acquisitions. The
consummation of the Offering is not conditioned upon the consummation of the
Cherokee Acquisition or the Texas Coinphone Acquisition. A portion of the Notes
will be subject to an offer to purchase by the Company at the Special Offer
Price if the Cherokee Acquisition is not consummated prior to             ,
1997. See "Description of Certain Indebtedness -- The Notes."
    
 
   
If the Company Debt Offering is not consummated and no alternative financing is
arranged, the Company will be unable to complete the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
                                       12
<PAGE>   14
 
   
RISKS OF GROWTH STRATEGY
    
 
   
The Company's strategy is to grow by acquisitions and internal growth. The
Company is subject to various risks associated with an acquisition growth
strategy, including the risks that the Company will be unable to integrate and
manage successfully the acquired companies or to identify and acquire suitable
companies in the future or to integrate and manage successfully any additional
acquired companies. Since September 1, 1995, the Company has acquired 19,053
public pay telephones, which represent approximately 77% of the Company's public
pay telephones in operation after giving effect to such completed acquisitions.
Accordingly, prospective investors have a limited basis for evaluating the
performance of these assets under the Company's management. There can be no
assurance that the companies acquired or to be acquired will be beneficial to
the successful implementation of the Company's overall strategy or will
ultimately produce returns that justify the Company's investment, or that the
Company will be successful in integrating and managing the acquired companies or
achieving meaningful economies of scale. The Company may also be required to
hire additional personnel and senior management in order to continue its
acquisition program. The dedication of management resources to such efforts may
detract attention from the day-to-day business of the Company. There can be no
assurance that there will not be substantial costs associated with such
activities or that there will not be other material adverse effects of these
integration efforts, which could have a material adverse effect on the Company's
business, results of operations or financial condition. Furthermore, there can
be no assurance that competition for acquisitions will not grow, thereby
increasing the costs of making acquisitions. In addition, the Company's ability
to grow internally by installing additional public pay telephones depends on
numerous factors, including locating satisfactory sites for public pay
telephones, hiring qualified employees to service the sites and raising
additional capital or otherwise financing such expansion. While management
believes that pursuing its growth strategy will improve its overall market
position and, ultimately, its profitability, there can be no assurance that this
will occur. See "Business -- Business Strategy."
    
 
   
The Company's growth strategy requires substantial capital investment. Capital
is needed not only for acquisitions, but also for the effective integration of
acquired companies and internal expansion. The Company may incur additional debt
to finance its growth strategy which may cause an increase in its interest
expense and divert cash flow which would otherwise be available to the Company
for its operations and future business opportunities. The Company may issue
shares of Common Stock or other equity-related securities to finance future
acquisitions, which may result in the dilution of the Company's shareholders. In
the event that the Company chooses to issue Common Stock as acquisition
consideration and the Common Stock does not maintain a sufficient valuation, or
potential acquisition candidates are unwilling to accept Common Stock as part of
the consideration for the sale of their businesses, the Company may be required
to utilize more of its cash resources, if available, in order to continue its
acquisition program. There can be no assurance that acceptable financing for
future acquisitions or for the integration and expansion of existing businesses
can be obtained when it is needed or that, if available, it will be on terms the
Company deems acceptable. As a result, the Company might be unable to implement
successfully its growth strategy.
    
 
RELIANCE ON KEY PERSONNEL
 
   
The Company's success depends to a significant extent upon the contributions of
its executive officers and other key personnel. The loss of services of one or
more of its executive officers or key personnel could have a material adverse
effect on the Company's business, results of operations or financial condition.
The Company's success also will depend in part on its ability to attract and
retain other qualified and skilled employees. There can be no assurance that the
Company will be able to identify, hire or retain such employees. The Company's
inability to identify, hire or retain qualified personnel could have a material
adverse effect on the Company's business, results of operations or financial
condition. See "Management" and "Business -- Employees."
    
 
SERVICE INTERRUPTIONS; EQUIPMENT FAILURE
 
   
The Company outsources its long distance service and operator service operations
to a number of subcontractors, including Intellicall, the Company's primary
provider of such services, American Telephone & Telegraph Company ("AT&T"), Bell
South Telecommunications, Inc. ("Bell South"), Opticom, a division of One Call
Communications, Inc. ("Opticom"), and Conquest Telecommunications Service
Company ("Conquest"). Such operations require that the switching equipment and
the equipment of its long distance service and operator service providers be
operational 24 hours per day, 365 days per year. The Company's long distance
service providers and OSPs may experience temporary service interruptions or
equipment failure which may result from causes beyond the Company's control. In
addition, the Company's public pay telephones may experience line interruptions
in their connections to the LECs due to weather conditions or other natural
occurrences such as earthquakes or floods which are beyond the Company's
control. Any such event could have a material adverse effect on the Company.
    
 
                                       13
<PAGE>   15
 
DEPENDENCE UPON THIRD-PARTY PROVIDERS
 
   
The Company's ability to complete operator service and direct dial long distance
calls is dependent upon third party carriers for the transmission of calls,
providers of operator support, validation of credit card and calling card
billing information and billing and collection services. While the Company
believes that it has access to several providers of these services at
competitive rates and expects to continue to have such access in the foreseeable
future, the continuing availability of these resources cannot be assured.
    
 
COMPETITION
 
   
The public pay telephone industry is, and can be expected to remain, highly
competitive. While the Company's principal competition comes from BOCs and other
LECs, the Company also competes for locations with other independent public pay
telephone companies, some of which may have greater financial resources than the
Company. Competition from these sources could prevent the Company from obtaining
or maintaining desirable locations for its public pay telephones, could cause
the Company to pay higher commissions on the revenues generated by its public
pay telephones or could affect the Company's ability to complete future
acquisitions at attractive prices or at all, thereby reducing the Company's
profits. The Company also competes with long distance companies that provide
operator service to owners of property on which LEC-owned public pay telephones
are located and to hotels, motels and similar locations. In addition, the
Company competes with providers of cellular communications services and personal
communications services (wireless), which provide an alternative to the use of
public pay telephones.
    
 
   
Furthermore, pursuant to the recently enacted Section 271 of the
Telecommunications Act and the FCC's implementing regulations, BOCs may now seek
FCC approval to offer interLATA long distance service to their customers,
including interLATA service originating from public pay telephones. The FCC may
grant such approval on a state-by-state basis once a BOC has met the
requirements of the Telecommunications Act's fourteen point competitive
checklist, which includes, among other things, that the BOC has entered into an
approved interconnection agreement with at least one unaffiliated,
facilities-based competitor in some portion of the state pursuant to which such
competitor provides local telecommunications service (or that by a certain date
no such competitors have "requested" interconnection as defined in the
Telecommunications Act). Certain BOCs may receive permission from the FCC to
offer interLATA long distance service as early as 1997, although the timing of
the FCC's approval depends in part on the outcome of pending federal appeals
court litigation concerning related FCC regulations. Once it has received FCC
approval for a particular state, a BOC will be able to generate revenues from
this new interLATA long distance service. In addition, the BOC may be better
able to compete with independent public pay telephone providers for locations to
install its public pay telephones because it will be able to offer location
providers higher commissions for long distance calls than those currently
offered by independent public pay telephone providers. This potential
competition for locations may have a material adverse effect on the Company's
business, results of operation or financial condition.
    
 
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
 
The telecommunications industry has been characterized by steady technological
change, frequent new service introductions and evolving industry standards. The
Company believes that its future success will depend on its ability to
anticipate and respond to such changes on a timely basis. There can be no
assurance that the Company will have sufficient resources to make the
investments necessary to acquire new technology or to introduce new services
that would satisfy an expanded range of customer needs.
 
ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS
 
Certain provisions of the Company's Articles of Incorporation could, together or
separately, discourage potential acquisition proposals, delay or prevent a
change in control of the Company and limit the price that certain investors
might be willing to pay in the future for shares of the Company's Common Stock.
These provisions include the authority of the Board of Directors to issue shares
of preferred stock with rights and privileges which could be senior to the
Common Stock, without obtaining shareholder approval. The issuance of preferred
stock, while providing flexibility in connection with possible acquisitions and
other corporate transactions, could have the effect of making it more difficult
for a third party to acquire, or discourage a third party from acquiring, a
significant percentage of the outstanding voting stock of the Company. Although
the Company has the ability to use such provisions as anti-takeover measures,
the Company currently has no intention to issue such preferred stock in the
future. See "Description of Capital Stock."
 
SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE; POSSIBLE ADVERSE EFFECT ON FUTURE MARKET PRICES
 
The Company can make no prediction as to the effect, if any, that sales of
additional shares of Common Stock or the availability of shares for future sale
will have on the market price of the Common Stock. Sales in the public market of
substantial amounts of the
 
                                       14
<PAGE>   16
 
Common Stock (including shares issued upon the exercise of outstanding options
or warrants), or the perception that such sales could occur, could depress
prevailing market prices for the Common Stock. Such sales also may make it more
difficult for the Company to sell equity securities or equity-related securities
in the future at a time and price that the Company deems appropriate.
 
   
After giving effect to the Offering, the Company would have 14,389,709 shares of
Common Stock outstanding as of September 30, 1996. In addition, at September 30,
1996, an aggregate of 12,557,876 shares of Common Stock have been reserved for
issuance pursuant to (i) the exercise of options and warrants to purchase
2,464,902 shares of Common Stock, all of which were immediately exercisable, and
(ii) the conversion of shares of the Company's Series A Preferred (as defined
herein), Series B Preferred (as defined herein) and 14% Preferred (as defined
herein). All of the 6,750,000 shares of Common Stock, when sold hereby, together
with approximately 14,526,489 shares (consisting of 13,304,263 shares registered
pursuant to the Shelf Registration Statement (as defined below) and the
1,222,226 shares of Common Stock which were either registered or sold pursuant
to Rule 144 as described below) will be freely transferable without restriction
under the Securities Act, unless held by an affiliate of the Company. The
remaining outstanding shares of Common Stock held by existing stockholders are
"restricted securities" of the Company within the meaning of Rule 144 under the
Securities Act and may not be sold unless they are registered under the
Securities Act or sold pursuant to an exemption from registration thereunder,
including the exemption contained in Rule 144, which contains certain volume and
other resale limitations. Pursuant to Rule 144(k), however, a person (or persons
whose shares are aggregated) who is not deemed to have been an affiliate of the
Company at the time of sale and has not been an affiliate during the three
months immediately preceding the sale may sell such shares without regard to
such volume and other resale limitations of Rule 144 provided that a period of
at least three years has elapsed since the later of the date the securities were
acquired from the issuer or from an affiliate of the issuer.
    
 
   
Holders of the Company's options, warrants and convertible preferred stock and
certain holders of the Company's Common Stock have entered into registration
rights agreements with the Company and have demand and/or piggyback registration
rights under certain circumstances. The Company has obtained waivers of such
registration rights in connection with the Offering from the holders of
approximately 92% of the underlying shares of Common Stock having piggyback
registration rights as a result of the filing of the Registration Statement of
which this Prospectus forms a part. However, in order to satisfy its obligations
under such registration rights agreements, the Company has filed a shelf
registration statement (the "Shelf Registration Statement") to register under
the Securities Act 13,304,263 shares of Common Stock, including the shares
issuable upon the exercise or conversion of such options, warrants and
convertible preferred stock. The Company expects that the Shelf Registration
Statement will be declared effective concurrently with the Registration
Statement of which this Prospectus forms a part. Upon effectiveness of the Shelf
Registration Statement, all of such shares of Common Stock, when issued, will be
eligible for sale without restriction under the Securities Act. However, each of
the Selling Shareholders, who hold approximately 69% of the underlying shares of
Common Stock having registration rights, other holders of approximately 24% of
the underlying shares of Common Stock having registration rights have entered
into lock-up agreements with the representative of the Underwriters. See
"Underwriting".
    
 
   
In connection with the Offering, the Company and its executive officers and
directors have agreed pursuant to lock-up agreements that they will not offer or
sell any shares of Common Stock of the Company beneficially owned by them during
a period of 180 days (the "Lock-up Period") following the Effective Date without
the prior written consent of Southcoast Capital Corporation, except that the
Company may issue shares of Common Stock upon the exercise of options or in
connection with acquisitions. After the Lock-up Period, all such shares may be
sold in accordance with Rule 144 under the Securities Act.
    
 
POSSIBLE VOLATILITY OF STOCK PRICE
 
There may be significant volatility in the market price for the Company's Common
Stock. Quarterly operating results of the Company, changes in general conditions
in the economy, the financial markets of the telecommunications industry or
other developments affecting the Company or its competitors, could cause the
market price of the Company's Common Stock to fluctuate substantially. In
addition, in recent years, the stock market and, in particular, the
telecommunications industry segment, has experienced significant price and
volume fluctuations. This volatility has affected the market prices of
securities issued by many companies for reasons unrelated to their operating
performance.
 
SEASONALITY
 
   
The Company's revenues have fluctuated seasonally on a historical basis. The
Company's public pay telephones in the northern and western states, some of
which are located outdoors, typically experience reduced revenues in the first
quarter due to weather conditions, which may have a material adverse effect on
the Company's operating performance. Revenues are typically highest in the
fourth quarter because of the increased volume of calls made during the holiday
season.
    
 
                                       15
<PAGE>   17
 
DEPENDENCE ON SIGNIFICANT CUSTOMER
 
   
The Company's public pay telephone operations are diversified on both a
geographical and customer account basis. Currently, it owns and operates public
pay telephones in 40 states and the District of Columbia (approximately 95% of
such public pay telephones are located in 17 states) through agreements with
both multi-station customers such as shopping centers, convenience stores,
service stations, grocery stores, restaurants, truck stops and bus terminals as
well as with single station customers. After giving effect to the consummation
of the Pending Acquisitions, the Company will own and operate public pay
telephones in 42 states, the District of Columbia and Mexico (approximately 96%
of such public pay telephones are located in 21 states).
    
 
   
The Company owns and operates the public pay telephones for certain properties
owned by Simon DeBartolo Group, Inc. ("Simon DeBartolo"). The Company derived
approximately 15% and 7% of its total revenues for the year ended December 31,
1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1996, respectively, from the
operation of these public pay telephones. As the Company expands its installed
public pay telephone base through additional acquisitions and internal growth,
it expects that the percentage of total revenues derived from Simon DeBartolo
will continue to decline. There can be no assurance that the agreements covering
these phones will be renewed upon expiration. Other than Simon DeBartolo, no
single customer generated more than 5% of the Company's total revenues for the
year ended December 31, 1995 or the nine months ended September 30, 1996. On a
pro forma basis after giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions, no single
customer would have accounted for more than 5% of the Company's total revenues
for the year ended December 31, 1995 or the nine months ended September 30,
1996.
    
 
DIVIDEND POLICY
 
The Company has never declared or paid any dividend on its Common Stock. The
Company currently intends to retain its earnings to finance the growth and
development of its business and does not anticipate paying cash dividends in the
foreseeable future. The Credit Agreement restricts the Company's ability to pay
dividends, and the Company cannot pay dividends on the Common Stock unless
dividends are also paid on the Series A Preferred and the Series B Preferred.
See "Dividend Policy."
 
POSSIBLE CHANGE IN CONTROL
 
   
In connection with the Company's Credit Agreement dated March 15, 1996, as
amended (the "Credit Agreement"), with the Lenders, ING and Cerberus received
warrants to purchase a total of 204,824 shares of Series A Special Convertible
Preferred Stock ("Series A Preferred") which, in turn, are convertible into
4,096,480 shares of Common Stock. In addition, at September 30, 1996,
$29,000,000 of the outstanding debt under the Credit Agreement is convertible
into 241,667 shares of Series B Special Convertible Preferred Stock ("Series B
Preferred") which, in turn, is convertible into a total of 4,833,333 shares of
Common Stock. Prior to the consummation of the Offering, each of ING and
Cerberus intend to exercise warrants in an amount sufficient to purchase shares
of Series A Preferred that are convertible into an aggregate of 500,000 shares
of Common Stock, which shares will be sold in the Offering. Upon consummation of
the Offering, ING and Cerberus will still have the right to acquire 3,596,480
shares of Common Stock upon exercise of the remaining warrants and 4,833,333
shares of Common Stock assuming conversion of the outstanding debt under the
Credit Agreement, or ownership of 23.68% of the Company's Common Stock (based on
the amount outstanding as of September 30, 1996 after giving effect to the
Offering). Upon consummation of the Offering and the Company Debt Offering and
the repayment of all outstanding debt under the Credit Agreement, each of ING
and Cerberus will still have the right to acquire 1,798,240 shares of Common
Stock upon exercise of the remaining warrants, which would result in ownership
of 12.65% of the Company's Common Stock (based on the amount outstanding as of
September 30, 1996 after giving effect to the Offering).
    
 
ACTUAL RESULTS MAY DIFFER FROM FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
 
   
Statements in this Prospectus that reflect projections or expectations of future
financial or economic performance of the Company, and statements of the
Company's plans and objectives for future operations, including, without
limitation, those relating to the Company's services and ability to generate
additional revenues, are "forward looking" statements, within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act and Section 21E of the Exchange Act. Such
statements include, but are not limited to, the anticipated effects of Section
276 of the Telecommunications Act and the FCC's implementing regulations, the
achievement of cost savings from the acquisitions described herein and the
availability of capital resources.
    
 
   
No assurance can be given that actual results or events will not differ
materially from those projected, estimated, assumed or anticipated in any such
forward looking statements. Important factors that could result in such
differences, in addition to the risk factors identified above, include: general
economic conditions in the Company's markets, including recession, interest
rates and other economic factors, disruption of operations, and other factors
that generally affect businesses.
    
 
                                       16
<PAGE>   18
 
   
                            THE PENDING ACQUISITIONS
    
 
   
THE CHEROKEE ACQUISITION
    
 
   
The Company has entered into a letter of intent dated October 16, 1996 (the
"Cherokee Letter of Intent") to acquire all of the capital stock of Cherokee for
a purchase price of $54 million plus related fees and expenses, subject to
certain purchase price adjustments, which may include an increase of up to $6
million in cash or Common Stock payable in two equal installments due January
1998 and 1999 if the FCC fails to implement certain rate caps, rate guidelines
or third party preferences during 1997 or 1998, as the case may be. In addition,
the Company will pay $1.25 million in connection with certain non-competition
agreements. Cherokee, with corporate headquarters in Jacksonville, Texas, is the
fifth largest independent public pay telephone operator in the United States. At
September 30, 1996, Cherokee owned and operated 12,344 installed public pay
telephones in 14 states, of which approximately 85% were located in Texas, New
Mexico, Utah, Montana and Colorado. Upon consummation of the Cherokee
Acquisition, the Company expects to acquire approximately 14,000 public pay
telephones from Cherokee (of which 13,500 will be installed), which include 300
installed public pay telephones in Monterrey, Mexico which are owned by a joint
venture in which Cherokee has an approximate 50% interest. The Company will also
acquire Cherokee's public pay telephone enclosure refurbishing and manufacturing
facilities in Jacksonville. Upon consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition and
the Texas Coinphone Acquisition, the Company believes that it will be one of the
two largest independent public pay telephone operators in the United States.
After giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions, the Company will own and
operate 38,421 installed public pay telephones, approximately 44% of which will
be located in Texas, Florida and California.
    
 
   
The consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition is subject to certain closing
conditions, including the negotiation and execution of a purchase agreement by
November 30, 1996 and the receipt of approval from Cherokee's board of directors
and stockholders. The Cherokee Acquisition is currently expected to close in
January 1997; however, there can be no assurance that the closing conditions
will be satisfied or waived or that the Cherokee Acquisition will be consummated
or if consummated, as to the final terms thereof. However, the Company will be
required to make an offer to purchase approximately $35.0 million aggregate
principal amount of the Notes at the Special Offer Price on the Special Offer
Date if the Cherokee Acquisition is not consummated prior to             , 1997.
See "Risk Factors -- Possible Non-Consummation of the Pending Acquisitions and
the Company Debt Offering" and "Description of Certain Indebtedness -- The
Notes."
    
 
   
Pursuant to the Cherokee Letter of Intent, at the time of execution of the
purchase agreement, the Company will be required to deposit $520,000 in escrow
to be credited toward the purchase price for the Cherokee Acquisition, which
deposit will be forfeited by the Company if the Company breaches its obligations
under the purchase agreement or the Cherokee Acquisition otherwise fails to
close by January 31, 1997. The Cherokee Letter of Intent also provides that at
the closing the Company will deposit an additional $480,000 into an escrow
account, representing an aggregate of $1 million of the purchase price held in
escrow to fund certain indemnification arrangements and purchase price
adjustments. To the extent not utilized to fund such payments, the escrowed
funds would be released as follows: (i) $250,000 on the 90th day after closing,
(ii) $250,000 on the 180th day after closing and (iii) the balance on the 270th
day after closing. Pursuant to the Cherokee Letter of Intent, the sellers in the
Cherokee Acquisition have each agreed to be personally liable for any unrecorded
expenses and liabilities in excess of $100,000, up to a maximum of $2 million.
There can be no assurance, however, that the escrowed funds will be sufficient
to satisfy such unrecorded expenses and liabilities of Cherokee assumed by the
Company or that the sellers will satisfy their personal indemnification
obligations to the Company.
    
 
   
Pursuant to the Cherokee Letter of Intent, certain key employees of Cherokee
will enter into employment and/or non-competition agreements with the Company
upon consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition.
    
 
   
The Cherokee Letter of Intent requires that the purchase agreement to be entered
into by the Company and Cherokee include customary representations and
warranties with respect to the condition and operation of Cherokee's business.
    
 
   
The Indenture provides that the Trust Funds will be released to the Company to
be applied to concurrent consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition.
    
 
   
THE TEXAS COINPHONE ACQUISITION
    
 
   
The Company has entered into a letter of intent dated October 9, 1996 (the
"Texas Coinphone Letter of Intent") to acquire 1,200 installed public pay
telephones from Texas Coinphone for a purchase price of approximately $3.7
million, subject to certain purchase price adjustments. Texas Coinphone, with
corporate headquarters in Bryan, Texas, owns and operates 1,200 installed public
pay telephones in Texas, including Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and the
Bryan/College Station area. The Company expects to realize significant costs
savings in connection with the integration of the Texas Coinphone business
because all the public pay telephones being acquired are located in Texas.
    
 
                                       17
<PAGE>   19
 
   
The consummation of the Texas Coinphone Acquisition is subject to certain
closing conditions, including the negotiation and execution of a purchase
agreement by November 30, 1996. The Texas Coinphone Acquisition is currently
expected to close in January 1997; however, there can be no assurance that the
closing conditions will be satisfied or waived or that the Texas Coinphone
Acquisition will be consummated, or if consummated, as to the final terms
thereof.
    
 
   
Pursuant to the Texas Coinphone Letter of Intent, at the time of execution of
the purchase agreement the Company will be required to deposit $150,000 in
escrow to be credited toward the purchase price for the Texas Coinphone
Acquisition, which deposit will be forfeited by the Company if the Texas
Coinphone Acquisition is not consummated as a result of the Company's actions.
The Texas Coinphone Letter of Intent provides that at the closing the Company
will deposit an additional $180,000 into an escrow account, representing an
aggregate of $330,000 of the purchase price held in escrow to fund certain
indemnification arrangements and purchase price adjustments. To the extent not
utilized to fund such payments, the escrowed funds would be released as follows:
(i) $150,000 on the 90th day after closing and (ii) the balance on the first
anniversary date of the closing. There can be no assurance, however, that the
escrowed funds will be sufficient to satisfy such liabilities of Texas Coinphone
assumed by the Company.
    
 
   
Pursuant to the Texas Coinphone Letter of Intent, certain key employees of Texas
Coinphone will enter into non-competition agreements with the Company upon
consummation of the Texas Coinphone Acquisition.
    
 
   
The Texas Coinphone Letter of Intent requires that the purchase agreement to be
entered into by the Company and Texas Coinphone include customary
representations and warranties with respect to the condition and operation of
Texas Coinphone's business.
    
 
   
ACQUISITION FINANCING
    
 
   
The Company is seeking to amend the Credit Agreement, in part to obtain funds
for the deposits required in connection with the Pending Acquisitions. The
Company expects to use a portion of the net proceeds from the Company Debt
Offering to finance the Pending Acquisitions. If the Company Debt Offering is
not consummated and no alternative financing is arranged, the Company will be
unable to complete the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
   
The net proceeds to the Company from the Offering are estimated to be
approximately $22.5 million ($25.9 million if the Underwriters' overallotment
option is exercised in full). Of this amount, the Company intends to use
approximately $8.0 million to repay a portion of the outstanding debt under the
Company's Credit Agreement (of which $41.0 million was outstanding at September
30, 1996). The Company will use the balance of the net proceeds for working
capital and other general corporate purposes, including for acquisitions
(subject to obtaining the Lenders' approval pursuant to the Credit Agreement.) A
portion of the borrowings being repaid under the Credit Agreement matures on
April 30, 1997, while another portion matures on December 31, 1997 and the
remainder matures on June 30, 1999, and all borrowings thereunder bear interest
at the prime rate plus 5%. See "Description of Certain Indebtedness -- The
Credit Agreement" for a description of the Credit Agreement. The Company will
not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of Common Stock by the Selling
Shareholders. See "Pro Forma Financial Data."
    
 
                                       18
<PAGE>   20
 
   
                                 CAPITALIZATION
    
 
   
The following table sets forth the capitalization of the Company at September
30, 1996 (i) on an actual basis, (ii) on a pro forma basis to give effect to the
Offering as if such transaction had occurred on September 30, 1996, (iii) on a
pro forma basis to give effect to the Offering and the Company Debt Offering and
assuming $35.0 million is held in escrow for five months and is then utilized to
purchase Notes from the bondholders as if such transactions had occurred on
September 30, 1996 and (iv) on a pro forma basis as set forth in the preceding
clause (iii) (except for the repurchase by the Company of the $35.0 million of
Notes from the bondholders) and as adjusted to reflect the Pending Acquisitions,
as if such transactions had occurred on September 30, 1996. The following table
should be read in conjunction with "Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations," "Pro Forma Financial Data" and
the financial statements and notes thereto included elsewhere in this
Prospectus.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     -----------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                                                     PRO FORMA
                                                                                                        FOR
                                                                                     PRO FORMA        PENDING
                                                                                        FOR        ACQUISITIONS,
                                                                                      COMPANY         COMPANY
                                                                                       DEBT            DEBT
                                                                     PRO FORMA       OFFERING        OFFERING
                                                                        FOR             AND             AND
                                                        ACTUAL        OFFERING       OFFERING        OFFERING
                                                     ------------   ------------   -------------   -------------
<S>                                                  <C>            <C>            <C>             <C>
Total long-term debt (including current
  installments):
  Credit Agreement, net (1)........................  $ 35,771,044   $ 27,771,044              --              --
  New Credit Agreement (2).........................            --             --              --              --
    % Senior Notes due 2006........................                                $  75,000,000   $ 110,000,000
  Notes payable (including obligations under
     capital leases)...............................    13,749,758     13,749,758       2,677,337       3,238,904
                                                      -----------    -----------    ------------    ------------
     Total long-term debt (including current
       installments)...............................    49,520,802     41,520,802      77,677,337     113,238,904
Mandatorily Redeemable preferred stock:
  14% cumulative redeemable convertible preferred
     stock:
     $60 stated value; 200,000 shares authorized;
       107,918.19 shares issued and outstanding;
       8,397.83 shares reserved for issuance upon
       declaration
       of dividends (3)............................     6,539,053      6,539,053       6,539,053       6,539,053
Non-mandatorily redeemable preferred stock, common
  stock and other shareholders' equity:
  Series A special convertible preferred stock:
     $0.20 par value; 250,000 shares authorized; no
     shares issued.................................            --             --              --              --
  Series B special convertible preferred stock:
     $0.20 par value; 250,000 shares authorized; no
     shares issued.................................            --             --              --              --
  Common stock: $.01 par value; 50,000,000 shares
     authorized; 5,248,230 shares issued and
     outstanding, actual; 14,389,709 shares issued
     and outstanding, pro forma; 14,389,709 shares
     issued and outstanding, pro forma, as adjusted
     (4)...........................................        76,397        143,897         143,897         143,897
  Additional paid-in capital.......................    40,541,544     62,979,044      62,979,044      62,979,044
  Accumulated deficit (5)..........................   (28,973,186)   (28,973,186)    (38,778,467)    (38,778,467)
                                                      -----------    -----------    ------------    ------------
     Total non-mandatorily redeemable preferred
       stock, common stock and other shareholders'
       equity......................................    11,644,755     34,149,755      24,344,474      24,344,474
                                                      -----------    -----------    ------------    ------------
Total capitalization...............................  $ 67,704,610   $ 82,209,610   $ 108,560,864   $ 144,122,431
                                                      ===========    ===========    ============    ============
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       19
<PAGE>   21
 
- ---------------
 
   
(1) Excludes $5,228,956 constituting the unamortized portion of the debt
    discount, which arose from the original allocation of proceeds to warrants
    issued to the Lenders in connection with the Credit Agreement. The total
    face amount of the Credit Agreement outstanding as of September 30, 1996 was
    $41,000,000.
    
 
   
(2) Upon consummation of the Company Debt Offering and the Offering, the Company
    does not expect to have any borrowings under the New Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
(3) The redemption amount of $6,978,963 (plus accrued dividends) is due on June
    30, 2000. The Company may elect, at its option, to redeem approximately
    $5,500,000 of the 14% Preferred.
    
 
   
(4) Does not reflect the issuance of any Common Stock pursuant to options and
    warrants outstanding.
    
 
   
(5) Reflects a $2,002,386 reduction (of which $1,227,589 was a non-cash item)
    resulting from the redemption of the Company's 10% Cumulative Redeemable
    Preferred Stock (the "10% Preferred"), the 8% Cumulative Redeemable
    Preferred Stock (the "8% Preferred") and the 7% Cumulative Convertible
    Redeemable Preferred Stock (the "7% Preferred") on March 15, 1996. See Note
    15 to the audited consolidated financial statements of the Company included
    elsewhere in this Prospectus.
    
 
                                       20
<PAGE>   22
 
                          PRICE RANGE OF COMMON STOCK
 
   
Effective November 14, 1996, the Common Stock was listed on the American Stock
Exchange under the symbol "PHN." The Common Stock was formerly quoted on the
Nasdaq SmallCap Market under the symbol "PNTL." The following table sets forth
on a per share basis, for the periods indicated, the high and low sales prices
of the Common Stock as reported by Nasdaq.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             -----------------
                                                                                                 PRICE RANGE
                                                                                             HIGH          LOW    
                                                                                             ----          ---    
<S>                                                                                          <C>           <C>    
FISCAL 1996:                                                                                                      
  First Quarter                                                                              $ 7  7/8      $5     
  Second Quarter                                                                               6  1/2       2  3/4
  Third Quarter                                                                                5            2     
  Fourth Quarter (through November 13, 1996)                                                   4  3/8       2  3/4
FISCAL 1995:                                                                                                      
  First Quarter                                                                              $ 7  1/8      $4  7/8
  Second Quarter                                                                               8  1/4       4  7/8
  Third Quarter                                                                                8  1/4       5 7/16
  Fourth Quarter                                                                               8  5/8       5  1/4
FISCAL 1994:                                                                                                      
  First Quarter                                                                              $20  1/4      $14 1/4
  Second Quarter                                                                              15  3/4       8  5/8
  Third Quarter                                                                                9  3/8       6     
  Fourth Quarter                                                                              11  1/4       6  3/4
</TABLE>
    
 
   
On November 15, 1996, the closing price on the American Stock Exchange was $3.50
per share.
    
 
   
As of September 30, 1996, there were approximately 313 shareholders of record of
the Company's Common Stock. The number of record holders does not take into
account shares held in nominee or "street" name for the account of beneficial
owners.
    
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
   
The Company has never declared or paid any dividends on its Common Stock. The
Company currently intends to retain its earnings to finance the growth and
development of its business and does not anticipate paying cash dividends in the
foreseeable future. The payment of dividends by the Company is restricted by the
Credit Agreement and is expected to be restricted by the New Credit Agreement,
and the Company cannot pay any dividends on its Common Stock unless dividends
are paid to the holders of the Series A Preferred and Series B Preferred in an
amount equal to that which such holders would have been entitled to receive if
such holders had converted their shares of Series A Preferred or Series B
Preferred, as applicable, into Common Stock prior to the record date used by the
Board of Directors for determining the holders of Common Stock entitled to
receive such dividends. Any future declaration of dividends will be subject to
the discretion of the Board of Directors of the Company. The timing, amount and
form of dividends (other than with respect to the holders of the 14% Preferred
which are only entitled to receive dividends payable in additional shares of the
14% Preferred), if any, will depend, among other things, on the Company's
financial condition, capital requirements, cash flow, profitability, plans for
expansion, business outlook and other factors deemed relevant by the board of
directors of the Company.
    
 
                                       21
<PAGE>   23
 
   
                            SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
    
 
   
The following tables present selected historical financial data for the fiscal
years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995 derived from, and which should be
read in conjunction with, the audited consolidated financial statements of the
Company and related notes thereto, and "Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations" included elsewhere in this
Prospectus. The following tables also present selected historical financial data
for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 1996 derived from, and which
should be read in conjunction with, the unaudited consolidated financial
statements of the Company included elsewhere in this Prospectus which, in the
opinion of management, reflect all adjustments, consisting only of normal
recurring adjustments, necessary for a fair presentation of the interim period
financial data. The results for the nine months ended September 30, 1996 are not
necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the full year.
    
 
   
In addition, the following tables present unaudited pro forma selected financial
and operating data for the Company as of and for the the year ended December 31,
1995, and the nine months ended September 30, 1996 as adjusted to give pro forma
effect to (i) in the case of statement of operations data, (a) the 1995
Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions and the Offering as if such transactions had
been consummated at the beginning of the respective period, (b) the 1995
Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions, the Offering and the Company Debt Offering
as if such transactions had been consummated at the beginning of the respective
period and assuming $35 million is escrowed for five months and then utilized to
purchase Notes from the bondholders and (c) the Acquisitions, the Company Debt
Offering and the Offering as if such transactions had been consummated at the
beginning of the respective period and (ii) in the case of balance sheet data,
(a) the Offering as if such transaction had been consummated on September 30,
1996, (b) the Offering and the Company Debt Offering as if such transactions had
been consummated on September 30, 1996 and assuming $35 million is escrowed for
five months and then utilized to purchase Notes from bondholders and (c) the
Pending Acquisitions, the Company Debt Offering and the Offering as if such
transactions had been consummated on September 30, 1996. See "Pro Forma
Financial Data." The unaudited pro forma data give pro forma effect to the
Acquisitions under the purchase method of accounting and certain other operating
assumptions. See "Pro Forma Financial Data."
    
 
   
The unaudited pro forma financial data do not purport to represent what the
Company's results of operations or financial condition would have actually been
or operations of the Company in any future period would be if the transactions
that give rise to the pro forma adjustments had occurred on the dates assumed.
The following information is qualified by reference to and should be read in
conjunction with "Pro Forma Financial Data," "Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" and the financial
statements and related notes thereto included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
    
 
                                       22
<PAGE>   24
 
   
                     SELECTED FINANCIAL AND OPERATING DATA
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------
                                                                                                 PRO FORMA FOR
                                                                                                 1995 AND 1996     NINE
                                                                                 PRO FORMA FOR   ACQUISITIONS,    MONTHS
                                                                 PRO FORMA FOR   1995 AND 1996      PENDING        ENDED
                                                                 1995 AND 1996   ACQUISITIONS,   ACQUISITIONS,   SEPTEMBER
                                  YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,        ACQUISITIONS    OFFERING AND    OFFERING AND       30,
                             ---------------------------------        AND        COMPANY DEBT    COMPANY DEBT    ---------
                               1993        1994        1995      OFFERING (1)    OFFERING (2)    OFFERING (3)      1995
                             ---------   ---------   ---------   -------------   -------------   -------------   ---------
                                       Dollars in thousands, except per share data(unaudited)                    (unaudited)
<S>                          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
  DATA:
  Total revenues               $11,070     $15,866     $18,718        $59,610        $ 59,610        $ 91,496      $11,957
  Costs and expenses            11,683      17,180      24,007         68,734          68,734         101,106       15,203
  Loss from operations            (613)     (1,314)     (5,289)        (9,124)         (9,124)         (9,609)      (3,246)
  Interest expense                 175         388         837          8,771          12,070          14,520          304
  Loss before extraordinary
    item                          (779)     (1,695)     (6,110)       (18,055)        (20,479)        (24,505)      (3,538)
  Net loss                        (779)     (1,695)     (6,110)            --              --              --       (3,538)
  Net loss applicable to
    common shareholders (7)       (986)     (1,987)     (6,419)       (18,708)        (21,132)        (25,158)      (3,770)
  Net loss per common share
    (7)                          (0.96)      (1.35)      (3.29)         (1.54)          (1.74)          (2.08)       (2.22)
  Weighted average number
    of common shares         1,031,384   1,470,188   1,950,561     12,113,084      12,113,084      12,113,084    1,695,280
FINANCIAL RATIOS AND 
  OPERATING DATA:
  EBITDA (8)                      $283        $922      $1,264        $10,382         $10,382         $21,245         $337
  EBITDA margin (9)               2.56%       5.81%       6.75%         17.42%          17.42%          23.22%        2.82%
  Ratio of EBITDA to
    interest expense              1.62        2.38        1.51           1.16             .86            1.46         1.11
  Number of public pay
    telephones
    in service                   2,350       4,891       9,458         24,074          24,074          37,763        8,344
 
<CAPTION>                    
                             ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             NINE                    
                             MONTHS                  
                             ENDED                               
                             SEPTEMBER 30            NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                             ------------            ------------------------------------
                                                                         PRO FORMA     
                                                                         FOR 1996      
                                                         PRO FORMA       ACQUISITIONS, 
                                         PRO FORMA       FOR 1996        PENDING       
                                         FOR 1996        ACQUISTIONS,    ACQUISITIONS, 
                                         ACQUISITIONS    OFFERING AND    OFFERING AND  
                                         AND             COMPANY DEBT    COMPANY DEBT  
                               1996      OFFERING(4)     OFFERINGING(5)  OFFERING(6)  
                             ---------   ------------    --------------  ------------
 
<S>                          <C>         <C>            <C>            <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
  DATA:
  Total revenues               $28,315       $45,379        $45,379        $70,447
  Costs and expenses            37,156        54,354         54,354         81,389
  Loss from operations          (8,840)       (8,975)        (8,975)       (10,942)
  Interest expense               4,140         5,041          9,127         10,527
  Loss before extraordinary
    item                       (12,980)      (14,086)       (17,297)       (21,534)
  Net loss                     (13,247)           --             --             --
  Net loss applicable to
    common shareholders (7)    (15,519)      (14,356)       (17,567)       (21,803)
  Net loss per common share
    (7)                          (3.60)        (1.07)         (1.31)         (1.63)
  Weighted average number
    of common shares         4,305,130    13,376,413     13,376,413     13,376,413
FINANCIAL RATIOS AND 
  OPERATING DATA:
  EBITDA (8)                    $5,554        $9,766         $9,766        $16,055
  EBITDA margin (9)              19.62%        21.52%         21.52%         22.79%
  Ratio of EBITDA to
    interest expense              1.34          1.94           1.07           1.53
  Number of public pay
    telephones
    in service                  24,732        24,732         24,732         38,421
</TABLE>
    






























   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 ---------------------------------
                                                                                     AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                                                PRO FORMA FOR
                                                                                 ACTUAL         OFFERING (10)
                                                                                 -------    ----------------------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Total assets                                                                     $74,940           $ 89,445
Long-term debt and obligations under capital leases (including current
  installments)                                                                   49,521(13)         41,521
14% Mandatorily redeemable preferred stock                                         6,539              6,539
Non-mandatorily redeemable preferred stock, common stock and other
  shareholders' equity                                                            11,645             34,150
Working capital (deficit) (14)                                                   (11,319)             3,186
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 ---------------------------------
                                                                                     AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
                                                                                                    PRO FORMA FOR PENDING 
                                                                            PRO FORMA FOR           ACQUISITIONS, COMPANY 
                                                                            COMPANY DEBT OFFERING   DEBT OFFERING         
                                                                            AND OFFERING(11)        AND OFFERING(12)      
                                                                            ---------------------   ----------------------
<S>                                          <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Total assets                                                                   $ 115,797                $ 151,751
Long-term debt and obligations under capital leases (including current                                    
  installments)                                                                   77,677                  113,239
14% Mandatorily redeemable preferred stock                                         6,539                    6,539
Non-mandatorily redeemable preferred stock, common stock and other                                        
  shareholders' equity                                                            24,344                   24,344
Working capital (deficit) (14)                                                    32,889                    9,789
</TABLE>                                                                     
    
 
 
                                       23
<PAGE>   25
 
- ---------------
 
   
 (1) Gives effect to the 1995 Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions and the
     Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on January 1, 1995. Such
     unaudited pro forma financial data is not necessarily indicative of the
     results of operations that might have occurred if the transactions had
     taken place on such date or which might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (2) Gives effect to the 1995 Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions, the Offering
     and the Company Debt Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on
     January 1, 1995, and assuming $35 million is held in escrow for five months
     and is then utilized to purchase Notes from the bondholders. Such unaudited
     pro forma financial data is not necessarily indicative of the results of
     operations that might have occurred if the transactions had taken place on
     such date or which might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (3) Gives effect to the Acquisitions, the Offering and the Company Debt
     Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on January 1, 1995. Such
     unaudited pro forma financial data is not necessarily indicative of the
     results of operations that might have occurred if the transactions had
     taken place on such date or which might occur in any future period. Because
     Cherokee's fiscal year ends on September 30, the historical and pro forma
     information relating to Cherokee is for the nine months ended June 30,
     1996.
    
 
   
 (4) Gives effect to the 1996 Acquisitions and the Offering, as if such
     transactions had occurred on January 1, 1996. Such unaudited pro forma
     financial data is not necessarily indicative of the results of operations
     that might have occurred if the transactions had taken place on such date
     or which might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (5) Gives effect to the 1996 Acquisitions, the Offering and the Company Debt
     Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on January 1, 1996, and
     assuming $35 million is held in escrow for five months and is then utilized
     to purchase Notes from the bondholders. Such unaudited pro forma financial
     data is not necessarily indicative of the results of operations that might
     have occurred if the transactions had taken place on such date or which
     might occur in any future period.
    
 
   
 (6) Gives effect to the 1996 Acquisitions, the Pending Acquisitions, the
     Offering and the Company Debt Offering, as if such transactions had
     occurred on January 1, 1996. Such unaudited pro forma financial data is not
     necessarily indicative of the results of operations that might have
     occurred if the transactions had taken place on such date or which might
     occur in any future period. Because Cherokee's fiscal year ends on
     September 30, the historical and pro forma information relating to Cherokee
     is for the nine months ended June 30, 1996.
    
 
   
 (7) Pro forma net loss applicable to common shareholders excludes the
     extraordinary loss on debt restructuring and the loss on redemption of the
     10% Preferred (as defined herein), the 8% Preferred (as defined herein) and
     the 7% Preferred (as defined herein) realized in March 1996.
    
 
   
 (8) EBITDA represents earnings before interest income, interest expense, income
     taxes, depreciation, amortization and other unusual charges and settlements
     of employment contracts. EBITDA is not intended to represent an alternative
     to operating income (as determined in accordance with generally accepted
     accounting principles) as an indicator of the Company's operating
     performance, or as an alternative to cash flows from operating activities
     (as determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles)
     as a measure of liquidity. The Company believes that EBITDA is a meaningful
     measure of performance because it is commonly used in the public pay
     telephone industry to analyze comparable public pay telephone companies on
     the basis of operating performance, leverage and liquidity.
    
 
   
 (9) EBITDA margin is calculated by dividing (a) EBITDA by (b) total revenues.
     EBITDA margin is a measure commonly used in the Company's industry as an
     indicator of the efficiency of the Company's operations.
    
 
   
(10) Gives effect to the Offering as if such transaction had occurred on
     September 30, 1996. Because Cherokee's fiscal year ends on September 30,
     the historical and pro forma information relating to Cherokee is as of June
     30, 1996.
    
 
   
(11) Gives effect to the Company Debt Offering and the Offering, as if such
     transactions had occurred on September 30, 1996 and assuming the $35
     million is held in escrow for five months and is then utilized to purchase
     Notes from the bondholders.
    
 
   
(12) Gives effect to the Pending Acquisitions, the Company Debt Offering and the
     Offering, as if such transactions had occurred on September 30, 1996.
    
 
   
(13) Excludes $5,228,956 constituting the unamortized portion of long-term debt
     discount, which arose from the original allocation of proceeds to warrants
     issued to the Lenders (as defined herein) in connection with the Credit
     Agreement.
    
 
   
(14) Working capital (deficit) is calculated by subtracting the Company's
     current liabilities from its current assets.
    
 
                                       24
<PAGE>   26
 
   
                            PRO FORMA FINANCIAL DATA
    
 
   
The following unaudited pro forma combined, condensed financial statements
adjust the historical statements of operations data for the year ended December
31, 1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1996 to give effect to (i) the
acquisition of World on September 22, 1995, Public Telephone on October 15,
1995, IPP and Paramount on March 15, 1996, POA effective August 1, 1996 and
Amtel on September 13, 1996; (ii) the Pending Acquisitions; (iii) the funds
borrowed under the Credit Agreement; (iv) the sale by the Company of $25 million
of Common Stock pursuant to the Offering and the application of the estimated
net proceeds therefrom as set forth under "Prospectus Summary -- The Company
Debt Offering"; and (v) the sale by the Company of $110 million of Notes
pursuant to the Company Debt Offering and the application of the estimated net
proceeds therefrom as set forth under "Prospectus Summary -- The Company Debt
Offering." The following unaudited pro forma combined condensed balance sheet as
of September 30, 1996 adjusts the historical balance sheet to give effect to (i)
the Pending Acquisitions; (ii) the sale by the Company of $25 million of Common
Stock pursuant to the Offering; and (iii) the sale by the Company of $110
million of Notes pursuant to the Company Debt Offering and the application of
the estimated net proceeds therefrom as set forth under "Prospectus
Summary -- The Company Debt Offering." Because Cherokee's fiscal year ends on
September 30, the historical and pro forma information relating to Cherokee is
for the nine month period ended June 30, 1996 and as of June 30, 1996. All
purchase price allocations for the Acquisitions are preliminary in nature and
are subject to change within the twelve months following each acquisition based
on refinements as actual data becomes available. The pro forma adjustments are
included in the unaudited pro forma balance sheet as if the transactions had
occurred on September 30, 1996 and in the unaudited pro forma statements of
operations as if the transactions had occurred at the beginning of each period
presented. The unaudited pro forma combined condensed financial data should be
read in conjunction with the historical financial statements and notes thereto
included elsewhere in this Prospectus, and are not necessarily indicative of the
results of operations that might have occurred if the transactions had taken
place on the dates indicated or which might occur in any future period.
    
 
                                       25
<PAGE>   27
 
   
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    
 
   
         UNAUDITED PRO FORMA COMBINED CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
    
   
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  WORLD,                                          PRO FORMA
                                                                  PUBLIC                                         ADJUSTMENTS
                                                                TELEPHONE,                                         FOR 1995
                                                 PHONETEL         IPP AND                                          AND 1996
                                               TECHNOLOGIES     PARAMOUNT(A)       AMTEL             POA         ACQUISITIONS
                                               ------------     -----------     ------------     -----------     ------------
<S>                                            <C>              <C>             <C>              <C>             <C>
Revenues
 Coin calls                                    $12,130,189      $14,398,568     $  9,689,179     $ 3,747,247     $  (295,000)
 Non-coin                                        3,776,501       3,847,874         5,459,411       4,418,667        (964,000)
 Other                                           2,811,293         242,481         1,910,550          49,221      (1,612,000)
                                                18,717,983      18,488,923        17,059,140       8,215,135      (2,871,000)(b)
Operating expenses:
 Line and transmission charges                   5,475,699       6,377,191         6,862,015       3,599,271      (1,695,000)(c)
 Location commissions                            3,467,626       2,361,157         3,921,741       1,178,156      (1,067,000)(d)
 Other operating expenses                        5,310,262       1,847,352         2,719,090         289,036      (3,027,000)(e)
 Depreciation and amortization                   4,383,049       2,059,628         1,621,029       1,218,095       8,529,000(f)
 Selling, general and administrative             3,200,742       5,229,060        15,103,091       1,911,624     (14,310,000)(g)
 Other unusual charges and contractual
   settlements                                   2,169,503              --                --              --              --
                                                24,006,881      17,874,388        30,226,966       8,196,182     (11,570,000)
   Income (loss) from operations                (5,288,898 )       614,535       (13,167,826)         18,953       8,699,000
Other income (expense)
 Interest expense -- related parties                    --              --                --              --      (7,009,000)(h)
 Interest expense -- others                       (836,911 )    (1,109,102 )      (7,429,502)       (971,141)      7,525,000(i)
 Interest income                                    16,112          19,671                --             415              --
 Reorganization expenses                                --              --          (539,942)             --         539,942(j)
 Other                                                  --        (405,505 )        (429,967)        (68,517)        429,967(j)
   Total other income (expense)                   (820,799 )    (1,494,936 )      (8,399,411)     (1,039,243)      1,485,909
Income (loss) before income taxes and
 extraordinary item                             (6,109,697 )      (880,401 )     (21,567,237)     (1,020,290)     10,184,909
 Income taxes (benefit)                                 --          38,100             4,000        (277,720)        (42,100)(k)
Income (loss) before extraordinary item        $(6,109,697 )    $ (918,501 )    $(21,571,237)    $  (742,570)    $10,227,009
Earnings per share calculation:
 Preferred dividend requirements                  (309,668 )      (343,567 )              --              --              --
   Income (loss) before extraordinary item
     applicable to common shareholders         $(6,419,365 )    $(1,262,068)    $(21,571,237)    $  (742,570)    $10,227,009
Income (loss) per common share before
 extraordinary item                            $     (3.29 )
                                                 ---------
                                                 ---------
Weighted average number of shares                1,950,561       1,083,694         2,162,163         166,666
                                                 ---------       ---------          --------        --------
                                                 ---------       ---------          --------        --------
 
<CAPTION>
                                               ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                                              PRO FORMA FOR
                                                PRO FORMA     1995 AND 1996
                                                ADJUSTMENTS   ACQUISITIONS
                                                FOR OFFERING  AND OFFERING    
                                                -----------   ---------------
<S>                                            <C>               <C>
Revenues
 Coin calls                                             --       $ 39,670,183
 Non-coin                                               --         16,538,453
 Other                                                  --          3,401,545
                                                                    ---------
                                                        --         59,610,181
                                                                    ---------
Operating expenses:
 Line and transmission charges                          --         20,619,176
 Location commissions                                   --          9,861,680
 Other operating expenses                               --          7,138,740
 Depreciation and amortization                          --         17,810,801
 Selling, general and administrative                    --         11,134,517
 Other unusual charges and contractual
   settlements                                          --          2,169,503
                                                                    ---------
                                                        --         68,734,417
                                                                    ---------
   Income (loss) from operations                        --         (9,124,236)
                                                                    ---------
Other income (expense)
 Interest expense -- related parties            $1,060,000 (l)      (5,949,000)
 Interest expense -- others                             --         (2,821,656)
 Interest income                                        --             36,198
 Reorganization expenses                                --                 --
 Other                                                  --           (474,022)
                                                                    ---------
   Total other income (expense)                  1,060,000         (9,208,480)
                                                                    ---------
Income (loss) before income taxes and
 extraordinary item                              1,060,000        (18,332,716)
 Income taxes (benefit)                                 --           (277,720)
                                                                    ---------
Income (loss) before extraordinary item         $1,060,000       $(18,054,996)
                                                                    ---------
                                                                    ---------
Earnings per share calculation:
 Preferred dividend requirements                        --           (653,235)
                                                                    ---------
   Income (loss) before extraordinary item
     applicable to common shareholders          $1,060,000       $(18,708,231)(n)
                                                                    ---------
                                                                    ---------
Income (loss) per common share before
 extraordinary item                                                $    (1.54)
                                                                    ---------
                                                                    ---------
Weighted average number of shares                6,750,000 (m)      12,113,084(n)
                                                 ---------          ---------
                                                 ---------          ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The accompanying footnotes to the Unaudited Pro Forma Combined Condensed
                            Statement of Operations
    
   
               are an integral part of these financial statements
    
 
                                       26
<PAGE>   28
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          PRO FORMA FOR
         PRO FORMA        1995 AND 1996
        ADJUSTMENTS       ACQUISITIONS,                                                      PRO FORMA           PRO FORMA
        FOR COMPANY       OFFERING AND                                                    ADJUSTMENTS FOR     ADJUSTMENTS FOR
           DEBT           COMPANY DEBT                                    TEXAS               PENDING             COMPANY
         OFFERING           OFFERING              CHEROKEE              COINPHONE          ACQUISITIONS        DEBT OFFERING
        -----------     -----------------     -----------------         --------          ---------------     ---------------
<S>     <C>             <C>                   <C>                   <C>                   <C>                 <C>
                --        $  39,670,183         $    14,036,665        $      846,210                --                  --
                --           16,538,453              15,944,498               553,337                                    --
                --            3,401,545                 505,581                    --                --                  --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
                --           59,610,181              30,486,744             1,399,547                --                  --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
                             20,619,176               9,673,772               513,036                --                  --
                              9,861,680               4,909,445               135,746                --                  --
                              7,138,740               2,016,935               280,706       $  (128,000)(s)              --
                             17,810,801               4,298,090               151,926         5,772,000(t)               --
                             11,134,517               5,520,405               357,197        (1,130,000)(u)              --
                --            2,169,503                      --                    --                --                  --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
                --           68,734,417              26,418,647             1,438,611         4,514,000                  --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
                --           (9,124,236)              4,068,097               (39,064)       (4,514,000)                 --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
         5,949,000 (o)               --                      --                    --                --                  --
        (9,248,000 )(p)     (12,069,656)             (1,631,416)              (57,561)        1,689,000(v)      $(2,450,000)(y)
           875,000 (q)          911,198                  57,278                21,563           (21,563)(w)        (875,000)(z)
                --                   --                      --                    --                --                  --
                --             (474,022)              1,125,630               281,501          (281,501)(x)              --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
        (2,424,000 )        (11,632,480)               (448,508)              245,503         1,385,936          (3,325,000)
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
        (2,424,000 )        (20,756,716)              3,619,589               206,439        (3,128,064)         (3,325,000)
                --             (277,720)              1,399,140                    --                --                  --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
        $(2,424,000)      $ (20,478,996)        $     2,220,449        $      206,439       $(3,128,064)        $(3,325,000)
         ---------          -----------               ---------              --------        ----------          ----------
         ---------          -----------               ---------              --------        ----------          ----------
                --             (653,235)                     --                    --                --                  --
        ------------        -----------             -----------           -----------       -----------        ------------
        $(2,424,000)      $ (21,132,231)(r)     $     2,220,449        $      206,439       $(3,128,064)        $(3,325,000)
         ---------          -----------               ---------              --------        ----------          ----------
         ---------          -----------               ---------              --------        ----------          ----------
                          $       (1.74)(r)
                            -----------
                            -----------
                             12,113,084
                             ----------
                             ----------
 
<CAPTION>
 
       PRO FORMA FOR
       1995 AND 1996
       ACQUISITIONS,
          PENDING
       ACQUISITIONS,
       OFFERING AND
       COMPANY DEBT
         OFFERING
      ---------------
<S>     <C>
         $ 54,553,058
           33,036,288
            3,907,126
            ---------
           91,496,472
            ---------
           30,805,984
           14,906,871
            9,308,381
           28,032,817
           15,882,119
            2,169,503
            ---------
          101,105,675
            ---------
           (9,609,203)
            ---------
                   --
          (14,519,633)
               93,476
                   --
              651,608
            ---------
          (13,774,549)
            ---------
          (23,383,752)
            1,121,420
            ---------
         $(24,505,172)
            ---------
            ---------
             (653,235)
            ---------
         $(25,158,407)
            ---------
            ---------
               $(2.08)
            ---------
            ---------
           12,113,084
            ---------
            ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       27
<PAGE>   29
 
   
FOOTNOTES TO THE UNAUDITED PRO FORMA COMBINED CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
    
 
   
(a) Represents the operations of World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount for
    the period from January 1, 1995 through December 31, 1995, or the date of
    acquisition, as appropriate.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    ----------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      PUBLIC          IPP AND
                                                                      WORLD          TELEPHONE       PARAMOUNT
                                                                     JANUARY 1,      JANUARY 1,       JANUARY 1,
                                                                       1995 -          1995 -           1995 -
                                                                    SEPTEMBER 21,    OCTOBER 14,     DECEMBER 31,
                                                                       1995            1995             1995          COMBINED
                                                                   ------------     -----------     ------------     -----------
    <S>                                                            <C>              <C>             <C>              <C>
    Revenues:
      Coin calls                                                   $  2,791,016     $ 1,376,867     $ 10,230,685     $14,398,568
      Non-coin                                                        3,467,687         380,187               --       3,847,874
      Other                                                              58,345         184,136               --         242,481
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
                                                                      6,317,048       1,941,190       10,230,685      18,488,923
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
    Operating expenses:
      Line and transmission charges                                   2,706,199         535,771        3,135,221       6,377,191
      Location commissions                                              852,944         196,243        1,311,970       2,361,157
      Other operating expenses                                        1,026,000         112,071          709,281       1,847,352
      Depreciation and amortization                                     855,059         268,262          936,307       2,059,628
      Selling, general and administrative                             1,276,056         594,588        3,358,416       5,229,060
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
                                                                      6,716,258       1,706,935        9,451,195      17,874,388
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
    Income (loss) from operations                                      (399,210)        234,255          779,490         614,535
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
    Other income (expense):
      Interest expense                                                 (590,980)       (304,664)        (213,458)     (1,109,102)
      Interest income                                                       834           3,371           15,466          19,671
      Other                                                                  --        (321,923)         (83,582)       (405,505)
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
                                                                       (590,146)       (623,216)        (281,574)     (1,494,936)
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
    Income (loss) before income taxes                                  (989,356)       (388,961)         497,916        (880,401)
    Income taxes                                                             --              --           38,100          38,100
                                                                     ----------     -----------      -----------     -----------
    Net income (loss)                                              $   (989,356)    $  (388,961)    $    459,816     $  (918,501)
                                                                     ==========     ===========      ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(b) Represents the estimated reduction in revenues for assets not acquired.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    ---------
    <S>                                                                                                             <C>
    Amtel                                                                                                           $2,859,000
    POA                                                                                                                 12,000
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $2,871,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(c) Represents estimated reduction in line and transmission charges at Amtel to
    reflect lower volumes and better rates.
    
 
   
(d) Represents estimated lower location commissions due to assets not acquired.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    ---------
    <S>                                                                                                             <C>
    Amtel                                                                                                           $  800,000
    Public Telephone                                                                                                   267,000
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $1,067,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(e) Represents estimated reduction in other operating expenses primarily
    resulting from eliminating certain offices, redundant operating personnel,
    costs of operations not acquired (principally Amtel) and elimination of
    costs associated with the bankruptcy of Amtel.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    ---------
    <S>                                                                                                             <C>
    World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount                                                                      $  800,000
    Amtel                                                                                                            2,132,000
    POA                                                                                                                 95,000
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $3,027,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       28
<PAGE>   30
 
   
(f) Represents additional depreciation and amortization associated with the
    acquired tangible and intangible assets.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             -------------------------------
                                                                                                                    LIVES
                                                                                                           -----------------------
                                                                                               AMOUNT      TANGIBLE    INTANGIBLE
                                                                                             ----------    ---------   -----------
                                                                                                           (MONTHS)
                                                                                             -------------------------------------
    <S>                                                                                      <C>           <C>         <C>
    World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount                                               $6,117,000       60          24-60
    Amtel                                                                                     1,008,000       60           54
    POA                                                                                       1,404,000       60          60-72
                                                                                             ----------
                                                                                             $8,529,000
                                                                                             ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(g) Represents estimated reductions in selling, general and administrative
    expenses resulting primarily from eliminating certain offices, executives
    and administrative personnel, costs associated with operations not acquired
    (principally Amtel), and elimination of costs associated with the bankruptcy
    of Amtel.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                   ----------
    <S>                                                                                                            <C>
    World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount                                                                     $ 2,004,000
    Amtel                                                                                                           11,361,000
    POA                                                                                                                945,000
                                                                                                                   -----------
                                                                                                                   $14,310,000
                                                                                                                   ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(h) Represents additional interest expense for borrowings under the Credit
    Agreement.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               -------------------------------
                                                                                              AMOUNT       INTEREST    PRO FORMA
                                                                                             BORROWED        RATE       EXPENSES
                                                                                            -----------    --------    ----------
    <S>                                                                                     <C>            <C>         <C>
    To fund the acquisitions of World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount                  $32,223,484    13.25%      $4,270,000
    To fund the acquisitions of Amtel and POA and to pay related expenses and other
      obligations                                                                             8,776,516    13.25%       1,163,000
    Accretion of original issue debt discount                                                                           1,576,000
                                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                                       $7,009,000
                                                                                                                       ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(i) Represents reduction in interest expense to reflect elimination of separate
    company borrowings offset by interest expense on the POA Sellers' Notes
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    ---------
    <S>                                                                                                             <C>
    World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount                                                                      $  650,000
    Amtel                                                                                                            7,430,000
    POA                                                                                                               (555,000)
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $7,525,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(j)  Represents elimination of Amtel reorganization expenses subsequent to
     Amtel's filing of bankruptcy and elimination of non-recurring loss on
     disposal of assets at Amtel.
    
 
   
(k)  Represents elimination of income tax expense.
    
 
   
(l)  Represents elimination of interest expense on $8.0 million repaid under the
     Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
(m) Represents 6,250,000 shares of Common Stock which may be sold pursuant to
    the Offering, and the exercise of warrants to purchase, in the aggregate,
    25,000 shares of Series A Preferred and the immediate conversion of the
    Series A Preferred into 500,000 shares of Common Stock.
    
 
   
(n)  Loss per share excludes an increase of the loss to common shareholders of
     (i) $2,002,386 which was realized on redemption of the 10% Preferred, the
     8% Preferred, and the 7% Preferred; and (ii) an extraordinary loss of
     $267,281 realized on the restructuring of the Company's debt on March 15,
     1996.
    
 
   
(o)  Represents elimination of interest expense incurred under the Credit
     Agreement.
    
 
   
(p)  Represents additional interest expense.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               ----------------------------------------------
                                                                              AMOUNT       INTEREST      MONTHS        INTEREST
                                                                           OUTSTANDING       RATE      OUTSTANDING      EXPENSE
                                                                           ------------    --------    -----------    -----------
    <S>                                                                    <C>             <C>         <C>            <C>
    Debt pursuant to the Company Debt Offering (during the five months
      funds are held in escrow)                                            $110,000,000       12%           5         $ 5,500,000
    Debt pursuant to the Company Debt Offering assuming escrow amount is
      utilized to purchase Notes from bondholders.                           75,000,000       12%           7           5,250,000
    Interest savings on the POA Sellers' notes and repayment of capital
      leases.                                                                                                          (1,502,000)
                                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                                      $ 9,248,000
                                                                                                                       ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(q) Represents interest income estimated to be earned on the escrow balance of
    $35,000,000, assuming the balance is held in escrow for five months and
    earns interest income at 6%.
    
 
   
(r) Loss per share excludes an increase of the loss to common shareholders of an
    estimated extraordinary loss of $9,805,281 to be realized on the early
    retirement of the borrowings under the Credit Agreement.
    
 
                                       29
<PAGE>   31
  
   
(s) Represents the estimated reduction in other operating expenses primarily to
    eliminate redundant operations and operations personnel.

    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                      -------
    <S>                                                                                                               <C>
    Cherokee                                                                                                          $ 40,000
    Texas Coinphone                                                                                                     88,000
                                                                                                                      --------
                                                                                                                      $128,000
                                                                                                                      ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(t) Represents additional depreciation and amortization associated with the
    acquired tangible and intangible assets for the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               -------------------------------
                                                                                                                   LIVES
                                                                                                           ----------------------
                                                                                               AMOUNT      TANGIBLE    INTANGIBLE
                                                                                             ----------    --------    ----------
                                                                                                                  (MONTHS)
    <S>                                                                                      <C>           <C>         <C>
    Cherokee                                                                                 $5,243,000       60          60-82
    Texas Coinphone                                                                             529,000       60             72
                                                                                             ----------
                                                                                             $5,772,000
                                                                                             ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (u) Represents estimated reductions in selling, general and administrative
     expenses to reflect the elimination of certain offices, executives and
     administrative personnel.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    ---------
    <S>                                                                                                             <C>
    Cherokee                                                                                                        $1,000,000
    Texas Coinphone                                                                                                    130,000
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $1,130,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (v) Represents reduction in interest expense to reflect elimination of separate
     company borrowings.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    ---------
    <S>                                                                                                             <C>
    Cherokee                                                                                                        $1,631,000
    Texas Coinphone                                                                                                     58,000
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $1,689,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
(w) Represents reduction to reflect elimination of Texas Coinphone interest
    income.
    
 
   
 (x) Represents elimination of Texas Coinphone other income which relates to
assets not acquired.
    
 
   
 (y) Represents additional interest expense assuming consummation of the Pending
     Acquisitions and $110,000,000 is outstanding for a full year (additional
     $35,000,000 at 12% for seven months).
    
 
   
 (z) Represents elimination of interest income on escrow balance assuming
     consummation of the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
                                       30
 
<PAGE>   32
 
                      (This page intentionally left blank)
 
                                       31
<PAGE>   33
 
   
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    
 
   
         UNAUDITED PRO FORMA COMBINED CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                  FOR THE NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                         PRO FORMA
                                                                                                        ADJUSTMENTS
                                          PHONETEL        IPP AND                                         FOR 1996
                                        TECHNOLOGIES    PARAMOUNT(a)      AMTEL(b)         POA(c)       ACQUISITIONS
                                        ------------    ------------    ------------    ------------    ------------
<S>                                     <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>
Revenues
 Coin calls                            $ 16,988,697      $2,473,567      $ 6,653,874      $1,769,257             --
 Non-coin                                 9,308,538              --        3,464,990       1,795,827             --
 Other                                    2,018,191          15,113           87,968         831,179    $   (28,000)
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      ----------    -----------
                                         28,315,426       2,488,680       10,206,832       4,396,263        (28,000)(d)
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      ----------    -----------
Operating expenses:
 Line and transmission charges            6,800,782         585,463        3,440,664         814,759             --
 Location commissions                     4,101,195         376,269        2,322,097         509,461             --
 Other operating expenses                 8,102,314         356,816          456,092       1,237,567       (247,000)(e)
 Depreciation and amortization            8,876,238         183,931        1,101,916         695,490      2,442,000(f)
 Selling, general and administrative      3,757,559         492,244        3,161,957       1,149,506     (1,881,000)(g)
 Other unusual charges and
   contractual settlements                5,517,753              --               --              --             --
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      ----------    -----------
                                         37,155,841       1,994,723       10,482,726       4,406,783        314,000
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      ----------    -----------
 Income (loss) from operations           (8,840,415)        493,957         (275,894)        (10,520)      (342,000)
                                       ------------       ---------      --- ---------    ----------    -----------
Other income (expense):
 Interest expense -- related parties     (3,588,420)             --               --              --       (815,000)(h)
 Interest expense -- others                (551,243)        (30,881)          (8,508)       (388,768)      (453,000)(i)
 Interest income                                 --              --            2,248           4,111             --
 Reorganization expenses                         --              --       (1,105,843)             --      1,105,843(j)
 Other                                           --         (12,638)      (1,342,615)        (64,036)     1,342,615(j)
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      -----------   ------------
       Total other income (expense)      (4,139,663)        (43,519)      (2,454,718)       (448,693)     1,180,458
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      ----------    -----------
Income (loss) before income taxes
 and extraordinary item                 (12,980,078)        450,438       (2,730,612)       (459,213)       838,458
 Income taxes                                    --              --            5,667              --         (5,667)(k)
                                       ------------       ---------      -----------      ----------    -----------
Income (loss) before extraordinary
 item                                  $(12,980,078)    $   450,438      $(2,736,279)     $ (459,213)   $   844,125
                                       ============     ===========      ===========      ===========   ===========
Earnings per share calculation:
 Preferred divided requirement             (269,565)             --               --              --             --
                                       ------------     -----------      -----------        --------     ----------
   Income (loss) before extraordinary
     item applicable to
     common shareholders               $(13,249,643)    $  450,438       $(2,736,279)    $  (459,213)   $   844,125
                                       ============     ==========       ===========     ===========    =========== 
Loss per common share before
 extraordinary item                    $      (3.08)
                                       ============
Weighted average number of shares         4,305,130         154,330        2,037,324         129,629             --
                                       ============     ===========      ===========     ===========    ===========
 
<CAPTION>
                                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                                                               
                                          PRO FORMA             PRO FORMA FOR 1996
                                       ADJUSTMENTS FOR           ACQUISITIONS AND
                                          OFFERING                   OFFERING
                                        ------------               ------------  
 
<S>                                     <C>               <C>
Revenues
 Coin calls                                       --               $ 27,885,395
 Non-coin                                         --                 14,569,355
 Other                                            --                  2,924,451
                                          ----------                 ----------
                                                  --                 45,379,201
                                          ----------                 ----------
Operating expenses:
 Line and transmission charges                    --                 11,641,668
 Location commissions                             --                  7,309,022
 Other operating expenses                         --                  9,905,789
 Depreciation and amortization                    --                 13,299,575
 Selling, general and administrative              --                  6,680,266
 Other unusual charges and
   contractual settlements                        --                  5,517,753
                                          ----------                 ----------
                                                  --                 54,354,073
                                          ----------                 ----------
 Income (loss) from operations                    --                 (8,974,872)
                                          ----------                 ----------
Other income (expense):
 Interest expense -- related parties     $   795,000(l)              (3,608,420)
 Interest expense -- others                       --                 (1,432,400)
 Interest income                                  --                      6,359
 Reorganization expenses                          --                         --
 Other                                            --                    (76,674)
                                          ----------                 ----------
       Total other income (expense)          795,000                 (5,111,135)
                                          ----------                 ----------
Income (loss) before income taxes
 and extraordinary item                      795,000                (14,086,007)
 Income taxes                                     --                         --
                                          ----------                 ----------
Income (loss) before extraordinary
 item                                    $   795,000               $(14,086,007)
                                         ===========               =============
Earnings per share calculation:
 Preferred divided requirement                    --                   (269,565)
                                          ----------               ------------
   Income (loss) before extraordinary
     item applicable to
     common shareholders                 $   795,000               $(14,355,572)(n)
                                         ===========               ============
Loss per common share before
 extraordinary item                                                $      (1.07)(n)
                                                                   ============
Weighted average number of shares          6,750,000(m)              13,376,413
                                         ===========               ============
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    The accompanying footnotes to the Unaudited Pro Forma Combined Condensed
  Statement of Operations are an integral part of these financial statements.
    
 
                                       32
<PAGE>   34
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                       ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              PRO FORMA
                                               FOR 1996
                          PRO FORMA         ACQUISITIONS,                                        PRO FORMA          PRO FORMA
                       ADJUSTMENTS FOR       OFFERING AND                                       ADJUSTMENTS      ADJUSTMENTS FOR
                           COMPANY             COMPANY                             TEXAS        FOR PENDING        COMPANY DEBT
                        DEBT OFFERING       DEBT OFFERING         CHEROKEE       COINPHONE      ACQUISITIONS         OFFERING
                       ---------------     ----------------      -----------     ----------     ------------     ----------------
<S>                    <C>                 <C>                   <C>             <C>            <C>              <C>
                                  --         $ 27,885,395        $12,571,961     $ 910,263               --                  --
                                  --           14,569,355         10,325,599       403,573               --                  --
                                  --            2,924,451            817,273        39,485               --                  --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                                  --           45,379,201         23,714,833     1,353,321               --                  --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                                  --           11,641,668          6,451,165       459,477               --                  --
                                  --            7,309,022          3,885,956       153,801               --                  --
                                  --            9,905,789          3,371,481        85,843      $  (142,000 )(s)             --
                                  --           13,299,575          3,831,645        56,398        4,386,000 (t)              --
                                  --            6,680,266          4,909,963       432,635         (847,000 )(u)             --
                                  --                   --                 --            --               --                  --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                                  --           54,354,073         22,450,210     1,188,154        3,397,000                  --
                         -----------          -----------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                                  --           (8,974,872)         1,264,623       165,167       (3,397,000 )                --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                         $ 3,580,000(o)           (28,420)                --            --               --                  --
                          (7,666,000)(p)       (9,098,400)        (1,358,917)      (51,325 )      1,410,242 (v)    $ (1,400,000)(x)
                             875,000(q)           881,359              3,645            --               --            (875,000)(y)
                                  --                   --                 --            --               --                  --
                                  --              (76,674)           (17,365)      123,236         (123,236 )(w)             --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                          (3,211,000)          (8,322,135)       ((1,372,637)       71,911        1,287,006          (2,275,000)
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                          (3,211,000)         (17,297,007)          (108,014)      237,078       (2,109,994 )        (2,275,000)
                                  --                   --            (19,188)           --               --                  --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                         $(3,211,000)        $(17,297,007)       $   (88,826)    $ 237,078      $(2,109,994 )      $ (2,275,000)
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                                  --             (269,565)                --            --               --                  --
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                         $(3,211,000)        $(17,566,572)(r)    $   (88,826)    $ 237,078      $(2,109,994 )      $ (2,275,000)
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                         -----------         ------------          ---------     ---------       ----------         -----------
                                             $      (1.31)(r)
                                             ------------
                                             ------------
                                               13,376,413
                                             ------------
                                             ------------
 
<CAPTION>

                                     PRO FORMA
                                     FOR 1996
                                     ACQUISITIONS,
                                     PENDING ACQUISITIONS,
                                     OFFERING AND
                                     COMPANY
                                     DEBT OFFERING
                                   ------------------------  
<S>                               <C>
                                  $ 41,367,619
                                    25,298,527
                                     3,781,209
                                    ----------
                                    70,447,355
                                    ----------
                                    18,552,310
                                    11,348,779
                                    13,221,113
                                    21,573,618
                                    11,175,864
                                     5,517,753
                                    ----------
                                    81,389,437
                                    ----------
                                   (10,942,082)
                                    ----------
                                       (28,420)
                                   (10,498,400)
                                        10,004
                                            --
                                       (94,039)
                                    ----------
                                   (10,610,855)
                                    ----------
                                   (21,552,937)
                                       (19,188)
                                    ----------
                                  $(21,533,749)
                                    ----------
                                    ----------
                                      (269,565)
                                    ----------
                                  $(21,803,314)
                                    ----------
                                    ----------
                                   $     (1.63)
                                    ----------
                                    ----------
                                    13,376,413
                                    ----------
                                    ----------
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       33
<PAGE>   35
 
   
FOOTNOTES TO THE UNAUDITED PRO FORMA COMBINED CONDENSED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
    
   
                  FOR THE NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
    
 
   
 (a) Represents the operations of IPP and Paramount for the period from January
     1, 1996 through March 14, 1996.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            ----------------------------------
                                                                                             IPP        PARAMOUNT       COMBINED
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
    <S>                                                                                   <C>           <C>            <C>
    Revenues:
      Coin calls                                                                          $ 841,346     $1,632,221     $2,473,567
      Non-coin                                                                                   --            --              --
      Other                                                                                  15,113            --          15,113
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
                                                                                            856,459     1,632,221       2,488,680
    Operating expenses:
      Line and transmission charges                                                         309,582       275,881         585,463
      Location commissions                                                                  144,412       231,857         376,269
      Other operating expenses                                                               90,474       266,342         356,816
      Depreciation and amortization                                                         102,013        81,918         183,931
      Selling, general and administrative                                                   296,181       196,063         492,244
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
                                                                                            942,662     1,052,061       1,994,723
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
    Income (loss) from operations                                                           (86,203)      580,160         493,957
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
    Other income (expense):
      Interest expense                                                                      (19,511)      (11,370 )       (30,881)
      Other                                                                                      --       (12,638 )       (12,638)
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
            Total other income (expense)                                                    (19,511)      (24,008 )       (43,519)
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
    Income (loss) before income taxes                                                      (105,714)      556,152         450,438
      Income taxes                                                                               --            --              --
                                                                                          ---------     ----------     ----------
    Net income (loss)                                                                     ($105,714)    $ 556,152      $  450,438
                                                                                          =========     ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (b) Represents the operations of Amtel for the period January 1, 1996 through
     September 12, 1996.
    
 
   
 (c) Represents the operations of POA for the period January 1, 1996 through
     July 31, 1996.
    
 
   
 (d) Represents the estimated reduction in revenues previously generated from
     assets not acquired in the acquisition of POA.
    
 
   
 (e) Represents the estimated reduction in other operating expenses primarily
     resulting from eliminating certain offices, redundant personnel and costs
     of operations not acquired (principally Amtel).
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                   ---------
<S>   <C>                                                                                                          <C>
      Amtel                                                                                                        $   35,000
      POA                                                                                                             212,000
                                                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                                                   $  247,000
                                                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (f) Represents additional depreciation and amortization associated with the
     acquired tangible and intangible assets.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                 -----------------------------
                                                                                                                    LIVES
                                                                                                            ---------------------
                                                                                                 AMOUNT     TANGIBLE   INTANGIBLE
                                                                                               ----------   --------   ----------
                                                                                                                  (MONTHS)
<S>   <C>                                                                                      <C>          <C>        <C>
      IPP and Paramount                                                                        $  745,000      60            60
      Amtel                                                                                       761,000      60            54
      POA                                                                                         936,000      60         60-72
                                                                                                 --------
                                                                                               $2,442,000
                                                                                                 ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (g) Represents estimated reductions in selling, general and administrative
     expenses principally resulting from elimination of pre-petition expenses at
     Amtel and redundant personnel.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                   ---------
<S>   <C>                                                                                                          <C>
      IPP and Paramount                                                                                            $  239,000
      Amtel                                                                                                         1,153,000
      POA                                                                                                             489,000
                                                                                                                     --------
                                                                                                                   $1,881,000
                                                                                                                     ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (h) Represents additional interest expense for borrowings under the Credit
     Agreement to fund the acquisitions of Amtel and POA, net of $57,000
     recorded by the Company from the dates of acquisition through September 30,
     1996.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                -----------------------------------------------
                                                                                AMOUNT              INTEREST            PRO FORMA
                                                                               BORROWED               RATE               EXPENSE
                                                                              ----------            --------            ---------
    <S>                                                                       <C>                   <C>                 <C>
                                                                              $8,776,546              13.25%            $815,000
                                                                              ==========              =====             ========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       34
<PAGE>   36
 
   
 (i) Represents reduction in interest expense to reflect elimination of separate
     company borrowings, offset by interest expense on the POA Seller's Notes.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                     --------
      <S>                                                                                                            <C>
      Amtel                                                                                                          $   9,000
      POA                                                                                                             (462,000)
                                                                                                                     ----------
                                                                                                                     $(453,000)
                                                                                                                     ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (j) Represents elimination of Amtel reorganization expenses subsequent to
     Amtel's filing of bankruptcy and elimination of non-recurring loss on
     disposal of assets at Amtel.
    
 
   
 (k) Represents elimination of income tax expense.
    
 
   
 (l) Represents elimination of interest expense on $8,000,000 repaid under the
     Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
(m) Represents 6,250,000 shares of Common Stock (excluding the Underwriters'
    over-allotment) sold pursuant to the Offering, and, the exercise of warrants
    to purchase, in the aggregate, 25,000 shares of Series A Preferred by the
    Selling Shareholders and the immediate conversion by the Selling
    Shareholders of the shares of Series A Preferred into 500,000 shares of
    Common Stock.
    
 
   
 (n) Loss per share excludes an increase of the loss to common shareholders of
     (i) $2,002,386 which was realized on redemption of the 10% Preferred, the
     8% Preferred, and the 7% Preferred; and (ii) an extraordinary loss of
     $267,281 realized on the restructuring of the Company's debt on March 15,
     1996.
    
 
   
 (o)Represents interest expense incurred under the Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
 (p) Represents increase in interest expense.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            -------------------------------------------------
                                                                            AMOUNT        INTEREST       MONTHS         INTEREST
                                                                         OUTSTANDING        RATE       OUTSTANDING      EXPENSE
                                                                         ------------     --------     -----------     ----------
    <S>                                                                  <C>              <C>          <C>             <C>
    Debt pursuant to the Company Debt Offering (during the 5 months
      funds are held in escrow)                                          $110,000,000        12%            5          $5,500,000
    Debt pursuant to the Company Debt Offering assuming escrow amount
      is utilized to purchase Notes from bondholders                       75,000,000        12%            4           3,000,000
                                                                                                                       ----------
    Interest saved on the POA Sellers' Notes and capital leases.                                                         (834,000)
                                                                                                                       ----------
                                                                                                                       $7,666,000
                                                                                                                       ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (q) Represents interest income estimated to be earned on the escrow balance of
     $35,000,000, assuming the balance is held in escrow for five months and
     earns interest income at 6%.
    
 
   
 (r) Loss per share excludes an increase of the loss to common shareholders of
     an estimated extraordinary loss of $9,805,000 to be realized on the early
     retirement of the borrowings under the Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
 (s) Represents the estimated reduction in other operating expenses to eliminate
     redundant operations and duplicate operational personnel.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                      -------
      <S>                                                                                                             <C>
      Cherokee                                                                                                        $ 76,000
      Texas Coinphone                                                                                                   66,000
                                                                                                                      $142,000
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (t) Represents additional depreciation and amortization associated with the
     acquired tangible and intangible assets for the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                 -----------------------------
                                                                                                                    LIVES
                                                                                                            ---------------------
                                                                                                 AMOUNT     TANGIBLE   INTANGIBLE
                                                                                               ----------   --------   ----------
                                                                                                                  (MONTHS)
<S>   <C>                                                                                      <C>          <C>        <C>
Cherokee                                                                                       $3,932,000      60         60-82
Texas Coinphone                                                                                   454,000      60            72
                                                                                                 --------
                                                                                               $4,386,000
                                                                                                 ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (u) Represents estimated reductions in selling, general and administrative
     expenses to reflect the elimination of certain offices, executives and
     administrative personnel.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                    -------
<S>   <C>                                                                                                           <C>
Cherokee                                                                                                            $750,000
Texas Coinphone                                                                                                       97,000
                                                                                                                    ----------
                                                                                                                    $847,000
                                                                                                                    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (v) Represents reduction in interest expense to reflect elimination of separate
     company borrowings.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                   ---------
<S>   <C>                                                                                                          <C>
Cherokee                                                                                                           $1,358,917
Texas Coinphone                                                                                                        51,325
                                                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                                                   $1,410,242
                                                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 (w) Represents elimination of Texas Coinphone other income which relates to
     assets not acquired.
    
 
   
 (x) Represents additional interest assuming consummation of the Pending
     Acquisitions and $110,000,000 is outstanding for the full nine month period
     (additional $35,000,000 at 12% for four months).
    
 
   
 (y) Represents elimination of interest income on escrow balance assuming
     consummation of the Pending Acquisitions.
    
 
                                       35
<PAGE>   37
 
   
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
    
 
   
   UNAUDITED PRO FORMA COMBINED CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET AT SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                           -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           PRO FORMA       PRO FORMA
                                                                          ADJUSTMENTS     FOR OFFERING
                                            PRO FORMA                         FOR             AND
                             PHONETEL    ADJUSTMENTS FOR   PRO FORMA FOR  COMPANY DEBT    COMPANY DEBT                    TEXAS
                           TECHNOLOGIES     OFFERING         OFFERING       OFFERING        OFFERING      CHEROKEE      COINPHONE
                           ------------  ---------------   -------------  ------------    ------------   -----------   -----------
<S>                        <C>           <C>               <C>            <C>             <C>            <C>           <C>
Assets
  Current assets:
  Cash                     $   655,734     $14,505,000(a)   $15,160,734   $24,327,579 (c) $39,488,313    $   364,691   $    80,895
  Accounts receivable,
    net                      2,423,060              --        2,423,060            --       2,423,060      3,712,950        55,140
  Other current assets         247,426              --          247,426            --         247,426        210,439            --
                           ------------  ---------------   -------------  ------------    ------------   -----------   -----------
  Total current assets       3,326,220      14,505,000       17,831,220    24,327,579      42,158,799      4,288,080       136,035
  Property and equipment,
    net                     31,682,061              --       31,682,061            --      31,682,061     16,354,960     1,143,869
  Intangible assets, net    39,226,619              --       39,226,619     2,023,675 (d)  41,250,294      4,048,701            --
  Other assets                 705,473              --          705,473            --         705,473        665,044        35,420
                           ------------  ---------------   -------------  ------------    ------------   -----------   -----------
                           $74,940,373     $14,505,000      $89,445,373   $26,351,254     $115,796,627   $25,356,785   $ 1,315,324
                            ==========   =============     ============   ============    ============    ==========    ==========
Liabilities and Equity
  Current liabilities:
  Current long-term debt
    Payable to related
      parties              $ 5,234,953              --      $ 5,234,953   $(4,717,707)(e) $   517,246            --            --
    Payable to others        1,370,673              --        1,370,673            --       1,370,673    $ 2,982,325   $   183,300
  Current portion capital
    leases                     803,336              --          803,336      (656,947)(f)     146,389       977,433            --
  Accounts payable           2,969,681              --        2,969,681            --       2,969,681        754,048        39,472
  Accrued expenses           3,149,690              --        3,149,690            --       3,149,690      2,979,962        21,590
  Deferred revenues            600,000              --          600,000            --         600,000             --            --
  Other unusual items
    and contractual
    settlements                516,392              --          516,392            --         516,392             --            --
                           ------------  ---------------   -------------  ------------    ------------   -----------   -----------
  Total current
    liabilities             14,644,725              --       14,644,725    (5,374,654)      9,270,071      7,693,768       244,362
Long-term debt:
  Payable to related
    parties                 31,053,337     $(8,000,000)(a)   23,053,337   (23,053,337)(e)           --            --            --
  Payable to others          3,832,781              --        3,832,781    71,677,579 (g)  75,510,360     10,636,237       626,910
Capital leases               7,225,722              --        7,225,722    (7,093,053)(f)     132,669            --        40,578
Deferred taxes                      --              --               --            --              --        342,359            --
14% preferred mandatorily
  redeemable at $6,978,963   6,539,053              --        6,539,053            --       6,539,053             --            --
Other shareholders'
  equity:
  Preferred stock                   --              --               --            --              --      2,400,000            --
  Common stock                  76,397          67,500(b)       143,897            --         143,897        351,903       166,395
  Additional paid in
    capital                 40,541,544      22,437,500(b)    62,979,044            --      62,979,044      1,097,630            --
  Retained earnings
    (accumulated deficit)  (28,973,186)             --      (28,973,186)   (9,805,281)(h) (38,778,467)    2,834,888       237,079
                           ------------  ---------------   -------------  ------------    ------------   -----------   -----------
Total other equity          11,644,755      22,505,000       34,149,755    (9,805,281)     24,344,474      6,684,421       403,474
                           ------------  ---------------   -------------  ------------    ------------   -----------   -----------
                           $74,940,373     $14,505,000      $89,445,373   $26,351,254     $115,796,627   $25,356,785   $ 1,315,324
                            ==========   =============     ============   ============    ============    ==========    ==========
 
<CAPTION>
                                                             
                                                             PRO FORMA
                                             PRO FORMA       FOR PENDING
                             PRO FORMA       ADJUSTMENTS     ACQUISITIONS,
                             ADJUSTMENTS     FOR             OFFERING AND
                             FOR PENDING     COMPANY DEBT    COMPANY DEBT
                             ACQUISITIONS    OFFERING        OFFERING
                            -------------    ------------    ---------------------
<S>                        <<C>              <C>             <C>
Assets
  Current assets:
  Cash                      $ (59,488,227)(i) $35,000,000 (p) $15,445,672
  Accounts receivable,
    net                        (3,768,090)(j)          --      2,423,060
  Other current assets                 --             --         457,865
                            -------------    ------------    ------------
  Total current assets        (63,256,317)    35,000,000      18,326,597
  Property and equipment,
    net                         2,806,003(k)          --      51,986,893
  Intangible assets, net       35,101,273(k)                  80,400,268
  Other assets                   (369,142)(j)          --      1,036,795
                            -------------    ------------    ------------
                            $ (25,718,183)   $35,000,000     $151,750,553
                             ============    ============    ============
Liabilities and Equity
  Current liabilities:
  Current long-term debt
    Payable to related
      parties                          --             --              --
    Payable to others       $  (3,165,625)(l)          --    $   517,246
                                                               1,370,673
  Current portion capital
    leases                       (977,433)(m)          --        146,389
  Accounts payable               (793,520)(n)          --      2,969,681
  Accrued expenses             (2,951,552)(u)          --      3,199,690
  Deferred revenues                    --             --         600,000
  Other unusual items
    and contractual
    settlements                        --             --         516,392
                            -------------    ------------    ------------
  Total current
    liabilities                (7,888,130)            --       9,320,071
Long-term debt:
  Payable to related
    parties                            --             --              --
  Payable to others           (10,701,580)(l) $35,000,000 (p) 111,071,927
Capital leases                    (40,578)(m)          --        132,669
Deferred taxes                         --             --         342,359
14% preferred mandatorily
  redeemable at $6,978,963             --             --       6,539,053
Other shareholders'
  equity:
  Preferred stock              (2,400,000)(o)          --             --
  Common stock                   (518,298)(o)          --        143,897
  Additional paid in
    capital                    (1,097,630)(o)          --     62,979,044
  Retained earnings
    (accumulated deficit)      (3,071,967)(o)          --    (38,778,467)
                            -------------    ------------    ------------
Total other equity             (7,087,895)            --      24,344,474
                            -------------    ------------    ------------
                            $ (25,718,183)   $35,000,000     $151,750,553
                             ============    ============    ============
</TABLE>
    
 
   
The accompanying footnotes to the Unaudited Pro Forma Combined Condensed Balance
          Sheet are an integral part of these financial statements.
    
 
                                       36
<PAGE>   38
 
   
     FOOTNOTES TO THE UNAUDITED PRO FORMA COMBINED CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET
    
   
                             AT SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
    
 
   
<TABLE>
   <S>    <C>                                                                                            <C>
   (a)    Represents adjustments to cash.                                                                 ------------
          Offering proceeds, net of estimated expenses                                                   $  22,500,000
          Proceeds from exercise of Series A Preferred warrants                                                  5,000
          Repayment of borrowings under Credit Agreement                                                    (8,000,000)
                                                                                                         -------------
                                                                                                         $  14,505,000
                                                                                                          ============
   (b)    Represents adjustments to other equity.
                                                                                                          ------------
          Common Stock
          Issuance of 6,250,000 shares pursuant to the Offering                                          $      62,500
          Issuance of 500,000 shares pursuant to the exercise of
          Series A Preferred warrants and the assumed immediate exercise thereof into 500,000 shares
          of Common Stock                                                                                        5,000
                                                                                                         -------------
                                                                                                         $      67,500
                                                                                                          ============
          Additional paid in capital
          Proceeds from the sale of 6,250,000 shares of Common Stock at an offering price of $4.00 per
          share, net of estimated transaction fees of $2,500,000                                         $  22,437,500
                                                                                                          ============
   (c)    Represents adjustments to cash.
                                                                                                          ------------
          Company Debt Offering proceeds, net of expenses                                                $ 104,150,000
          Fees to obtain working capital line of credit                                                       (750,000)
          Repayment of borrowings under Credit Agreement                                                   (33,000,000)
          Repayment of POA Sellers' Notes                                                                   (3,322,421)
          Repayment of capital lease obligations                                                            (7,750,000)
          Escrow of offering proceeds for Cherokee Acquisition                                             (35,000,000)
                                                                                                         -------------
                                                                                                         $  24,327,579
                                                                                                          ============
   (d)    Represents adjustments to the intangible assets.
                                                                                                          ------------
          New Credit Agreement fees                                                                      $     750,000
          Fees and expenses relating to the Company Debt Offering                                            5,850,000
          Write-off unamortized fees pertaining to the
          Credit Agreement                                                                                  (4,576,325)
                                                                                                         -------------
                                                                                                         $   2,023,675
                                                                                                          ============
   (e)    Represents adjustments to current and long-term payable to related parties.
                                                                                                          ------------
          Repay current portion of borrowings under Credit Agreement                                     $  (4,717,707)
                                                                                                          ============
          Repay long-term portion of borrowings under Credit Agreement                                   $ (23,053,337)
                                                                                                          ============
   (f)    Represents adjustments to current and long-term obligations under capital leases.
                                                                                                          ------------
          Repay obligations under capital leases current portion                                         $    (656,947)
                                                                                                          ============
          Repay obligations under capital leases long-term obligations                                   $  (7,093,053)
                                                                                                          ============
   (g)    Represents adjustments to long-term debt payable to others.
                                                                                                          ------------
          Repayment of POA's Sellers' Notes                                                              $  (3,332,421)
          Gross proceeds from the Company Debt Offering                                                    110,000,000
          Funds placed in escrow for Cherokee Acquisition                                                  (35,000,000)
                                                                                                         -------------
                                                                                                         $  71,677,579
                                                                                                          ============
   (h)    Represents adjustments to other shareholders' equity.
         Accumulated deficit
                                                                                                          -----------
         Warrant accretion -- extraordinary loss on early retirement of
         borrowings under the Credit Agreement                                                           $ (5,228,956)
         Write-off of unamortized debt costs relating to the
         early retirement of borrowings under the Credit Agreement                                         (4,576,325)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $ (9,805,281)
                                                                                                          ===========
  (i)    Represents adjustments to cash.                                                                  -----------
         Purchase of Cherokee                                                                            $(55,725,000)
         Less: Deferred taxes assumed                                                                         342,359
         Cash not acquired in Cherokee Acquisition                                                           (364,691)
         Purchase of Texas Coinphone                                                                       (3,660,000)
         Cash not acquired in Texas Coinphone Acquisition                                                     (80,895)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $(59,488,227)
                                                                                                          ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       37
<PAGE>   39
 
   
<TABLE>
  <S>    <C>                                                                                             <C>
  (j)    Represents adjustments to accounts receivable, net and other assets to eliminate assets not
         acquired:                                                                                        -----------
         Accounts receivable, net
             Cherokee                                                                                    $ (3,712,950)
             Texas Coinphone                                                                                  (55,410)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $ (3,768,090)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Other assets
         Cherokee                                                                                        $   (336,159)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                      (32,983)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $   (369,142)
                                                                                                          ===========
  (k)    Represents adjustments to property and equipment, net and intangible assets, net to reflect
         purchase price allocations:
         Property and equipment
                                                                                                          -----------
         Cherokee                                                                                        $  2,266,478
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                      539,525
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $  2,806,003
                                                                                                          ===========
         Intangible assets
         Telephone location contracts -- Cherokee                                                        $ 31,108,036
         Non-competition agreements -- Cherokee                                                             1,969,068
         Telephone location contracts -- Texas Coinphone                                                    2,024,169
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $ 35,101,273
                                                                                                          ===========
  (l)    Represents adjustments to current long-term debt and long-term debt to others.                   -----------
         Current long-term debt not acquired
         Cherokee                                                                                        $ (2,982,325)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                     (183,300)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $ (3,165,625)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Long term-debt not acquired:
         Cherokee                                                                                        $(10,636,237)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                     (626,910)
         Present value of long-term portion of the non-compete liability for Cherokee                         561,567
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $(10,701,580)
                                                                                                          ===========
  (m)    Represents adjustments to current and long-term capital leases.
                                                                                                          -----------
         Current portion of capital leases of Cherokee not acquired                                      $   (977,433)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Long-term Cherokee capital leases of Texas Coinphone not acquired                               $    (40,578)
                                                                                                          ===========
  (n)    Adjustments to accounts payable and accrued expenses.
         Accounts payable not assumed
                                                                                                          -----------
         Cherokee                                                                                        $   (754,048)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                      (39,472)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $   (793,520)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Accrued expenses not assumed, net of acquisition expenses
         Cherokee                                                                                        $ (2,979,962)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                      (21,590)
         Acquisition expenses                                                                                  50,000
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $ (2,951,552)
                                                                                                          ===========
  (o)    Adjustments to the other shareholders' equity.
                                                                                                          -----------
         Preferred stock of Cherokee redeemed prior to
         acquisition completion date                                                                     $ (2,400,000)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Common stock eliminated
         Cherokee                                                                                        $   (351,903)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                     (166,395)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $   (518,298)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Paid-in capital of Cherokee eliminated                                                          $ (1,097,630)
                                                                                                          ===========
         Retained earnings eliminated
         Cherokee                                                                                        $ (2,834,888)
         Texas Coinphone                                                                                     (237,079)
                                                                                                         ------------
                                                                                                         $ (3,071,967)
                                                                                                          ===========
  (p)    The adjustments to cash and long-term debt payable to others represents the
         release of funds held in escrow, upon completion of the Cherokee
                                                                                                          -----------
         Acquisition (see (e) above)                                                                     $ 35,000,000
                                                                                                          ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       38
<PAGE>   40
 
               MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL
                      CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
   
The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the
consolidated financial statements of the Company and the notes thereto which
appear elsewhere in this Prospectus.
    
 
OVERVIEW
 
   
The Company derives substantially all of its revenues from coin calls and
non-coin calls placed from its public pay telephones. Coin revenue is generated
from local and direct-dial long-distance calls that are placed from the
Company's public pay telephones. Non-coin revenue is generated from calling
card, credit card, collect and third party billed calls. Typically, each public
pay telephone has a presubscribed (dedicated) provider of long distance and
operator services. The Company receives revenues for non-coin calls placed from
its public pay telephones in the form of commissions from its presubscribed long
distance service providers and OSPs based on the volume of calls made as well as
the amount generated per call. Pursuant to recently promulgated FCC regulations,
the Company is able to derive additional revenues from access it provides
callers to any carrier other than the presubscribed carrier. This practice is
commonly referred to as "dial-around" access. The Company believes that the
rules and regulations recently promulgated by the FCC under Section 276 of the
Telecommunications Act will result in additional revenues for the Company, net
of related expenses and processing fees, by (i) providing for dial-around
compensation of $45.85 per telephone per month from November 6, 1996 through
October 6, 1997 (as compared with the flat fee of $6.00 per telephone per month
in place prior to November 6, 1996), and for per-call compensation thereafter,
at a rate initially set at $0.35 per call from October 7, 1997 to October 6,
1998 (as compared with the flat fee of $45.85 per telephone per month) and
thereafter, at a per-call rate equal to the local coin call rate and (ii)
requiring states to deregulate the price of a local phone call, which the
Company believes, may result in an increase in the local coin call rate thereby
generating additional revenues. However, there can be no assurance as to the
ultimate effect that the rules and policies adopted by the FCC on its own or
after any judicial review will have on the Company's business, results of
operations or financial condition. See "Business -- Governmental Regulations."
    
 
   
The Company's principal operating expenses consist of (i) telephone line and
transmission charges, (ii) commissions paid to location providers which are
typically expressed as a percentage of revenues and are fixed for the term of
the agreements with the respective location providers, and (iii) field service
and collection costs which are principally comprised of personnel costs of
collecting coins from and maintaining the Company's public pay telephones. The
Company pays monthly line and usage charges to BOCs and other LECs for
interconnection to the local network for local calls, which are computed on a
flat monthly charge plus either a per message or per minute usage rate based on
the time and duration of the call. The Company also pays fees to BOCs and other
LECs and long distance carriers based on usage for local or long distance coin
calls. The Company believes that the rules and regulations recently promulgated
by the FCC under Section 276 of the Telecommunications Act may result in lower
tariffed rates charged by BOCs and other LECs, since the FCC rules would
restrict certain subsidies and discriminatory practices now engaged in by BOCs
and other LECs in favor of their own public pay telephone services. However,
there can be no assurance that the rules and policies ultimately adopted by the
FCC on its own or after judicial review will not have a material adverse effect
on the Company's business, results of operations or financial condition.
    
 
   
Notwithstanding the aforementioned anticipated benefits of Section 276 and the
implementing regulations, as a result of the provisions permitting BOCs and
other LECs to negotiate with location providers and select interLATA long
distance carriers for their public pay telephones, it is anticipated that
Section 276 and the implementing regulations may also result in increased
competition for public pay telephone locations and an accompanying increase in
the commissions payable to location providers. Moreover, revenues may be
diminished if the FCC prescribes lower benchmark rates for interstate operator
long distance calls. See "Business -- Governmental Regulations."
    
 
                                       39
<PAGE>   41
 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
   
The following table sets forth, for the periods indicated, certain information
from the Company's Consolidated Statements of Operations, included elsewhere in
this Prospectus, expressed as a percentage of total revenues. Certain of the
following information for the years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995 has
been reclassified to conform to the interim period presentation based on
management's belief that the revised presentation more accurately reflects the
Company's strategy of owning and managing public pay telephones versus providing
operator services. The reclassifications have no impact on total revenues or
total expenses as previously reported.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------
                                                                                                 NINE MONTHS
                                                                                                    ENDED 
                                                                  YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,        SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                 -------------------------     ---------------
                                                                 1993      1994      1995      1995      1996
                                                                 -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
<S>                                                              <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
Revenues:
  Coin calls                                                      38.3%     53.1%     64.8%     64.3%     60.0%
  Non-coin                                                        54.9      33.5      20.2      27.6      32.9
  Other                                                            6.8      13.4      15.0       8.1       7.1
                                                                 -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
                                                                 100.0     100.0     100.0     100.0     100.0
                                                                 -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Operating expenses:
  Line and transmission charges                                   25.1      28.1      29.3      27.9      24.0
  Location commissions                                            23.4      21.4      18.5      18.1      14.5
  Other operating expenses                                        27.2      26.9      28.4      34.6      28.6
  Depreciation and amortization                                    8.1      14.1      23.4      18.1      31.3
  Selling, general and administrative expenses                    21.7      17.9      17.1      16.6      13.3
  Other unusual charges and contractual settlements                 --        --      11.6      11.8      19.5
                                                                 -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
  Total operating expenses                                       105.5     108.4     128.3     127.1     131.2
Other expenses                                                     1.5       2.4       4.5       2.4      14.6
                                                                 -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Loss before extraordinary item                                    (7.0)    (10.8)    (32.8)    (29.5)    (45.8)
Extraordinary item                                                  --        --        --        --      (0.9)
                                                                 -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
Net loss                                                          (7.0)%   (10.8)%   (32.8)%   (29.5)%   (46.7)%
                                                                 =====     =====     =====     =====     =====
EBITDA                                                             2.6%      5.8%      6.8%      2.8%     19.6%
                                                                 =====     =====     =====     =====     =====
</TABLE>
    
 
   
Nine months ended September 30, 1996 compared to nine months ended September 30,
1995
    
 
   
Revenues.  Total revenues increased $16,358,523, or 136.8% from $11,956,903 for
the nine months ended September 30, 1995, to $28,315,426 for the nine months
ended September 30, 1996. This increase is attributable primarily to an increase
in the number of installed public pay telephones, which increased by 16,473, or
194.5%, from 8,470 at September 30, 1995 to approximately 24,943 at September
30, 1996, with the majority of the increase occurring in the third and fourth
quarters of 1995 and the first and third quarters of 1996 due to the Company's
recent acquisitions.
    
 
   
Revenues from coin calls increased $9,298,911, or 120.9%, from $7,689,786 for
the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $16,988,697 for the nine months
ended September 30, 1996. Non-coin revenues increased $6,006,569, or 181.9%,
from $3,301,969 for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $9,308,538 for
the nine months ended September 30, 1996. The increases were primarily due to
the acquisition and installation of public pay telephones producing additional
revenues and, to a lesser extent, to the increases in coin calls resulting from
the continuation of the 1994 program which offered customers a three minute long
distance call anywhere in the continental United States for $0.75 (the "$0.75
Long Distance Call Program" subsequently changed to $1.00 for the first three
minutes in some locations). However, the increase in non-coin revenue was offset
in part by a reduction in operator assisted calls as a result of aggressive
dial-around advertising by long distance carriers such as AT&T and MCI
Communications Corporation ("MCI").
    
 
   
Other revenues increased $1,053,043, or 109.1%, from $965,148 for the nine
months ended September 30, 1995 to $2,018,191 for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996. This increase was primarily the result of an increase in the
number of public pay telephones and increased revenues from dial-around calls.
    
 
                                       40
<PAGE>   42
 
   
Operating Expenses.  Total operating expenses increased $21,952,874, or 144.4%,
from $15,202,967 for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $37,155,841 for
the nine months ended September 30, 1996. Operating expenses represented 127.1%
of total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 131.2% of
total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1996. The percentage
increase was due to other unusual charges and contractual settlements and higher
depreciation and amortization as a result of recent acquisitions, offset in part
by lower operating expenses.
    
 
   
Line and transmission charges increased $3,459,970, or 103.6%, from $3,340,812
for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $6,800,782 for the nine months
ended September 30, 1996. Line and transmission charges represented 27.9% of
total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 24.0% of total
revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, a decrease of 3.9%. The
dollar increase in line and transmission charges was, in part, due to additional
public pay telephones acquired from Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount, the
increases in coin calls resulting from the $0.75 Long Distance Call Program, and
to a lesser extent, the acquisitions of POA (completed September 16, 1996 with
an effective purchase date of August 1, 1996) and Amtel (completed September 13,
1996), as well as increases in certain local telephone company line charges. The
percentage decrease was due to lower line charges for the acquired companies.
    
 
   
Location commissions increased $1,937,731, or 89.6%, from $2,163,464 for the
nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $4,101,195 for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996. Location commissions represented 18.1% of total revenues for
the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 14.5% of total revenues for the
nine months ended September 30, 1996, a decrease of 3.6%. The dollar increase is
due to location agreements from public pay telephones acquired in the
acquisitions of World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount, and to a lesser
extent the location agreements acquired in the acquisitions of POA and Amtel,
while the percentage decrease is due to such location agreements having lower
commission rates than those from the Company's existing public pay telephones.
    
 
   
Other operating expenses (consisting of personnel costs, rents, utilities,
repair and maintenance of the phones, operator services processing fees and
property and sales taxes), increased $3,969,464, or 96.0%, from $4,132,850 for
the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $8,102,314 for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996. Other operating expenses represented 34.6% of total revenues
for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 28.6% of total revenues for the
nine months ended September 30, 1996, a decrease of 6.0%. The dollar increase
was primarily the result of higher personnel costs, rent, utilities and service
related expenses attributable to the outsourcing of operator services and to the
acquisitions of World, Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount and, to a lesser
extent, the acquisitions of Amtel and POA, the increase in the Company's public
pay telephone base, and the additional field personnel to accommodate the
increased business. The percentage decrease reflects the economies of scale
resulting from those acquisitions that the Company has already realized. Such
economies of scale come primarily from the elimination of costs associated with
the closing of certain offices, the elimination of redundant executive and
administrative personnel in billing and other operations areas and leveraging
the Company's existing field technicians. Additional economies of scale are
expected to be realized from the Amtel and POA acquisitions made in September
1996, resulting in the further decrease of other operating expenses as a
percentage of total revenues for the full year 1996.
    
 
   
Depreciation and amortization increased $6,711,416, or 310.0%, from $2,164,822
for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $8,876,238 for the nine months
ended September 30, 1996. Depreciation and amortization represented 18.1% of
total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 31.3% of total
revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, an increase of 13.2%. The
dollar and percentage increases were primarily due to the Company's acquisitions
and expansion of its public pay telephone base and purchases of additional
computer equipment, service vehicles and software to accommodate the Company's
growth.
    
 
   
Selling, general and administrative ("SG&A") expenses increased $1,775,070, or
89.5%, from $1,982,489 for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to
$3,757,559 for the nine months ended September 30, 1996. SG&A represented 16.6%
of total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 13.3% of
total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, a decrease of 3.3%.
The dollar increase was primarily the result of the acquisitions of World,
Public Telephone, IPP and Paramount, and to a lesser extent, the acquisitions of
Amtel and POA. The percentage decrease reflects the economies of scale resulting
from those acquisitions that the Company has already realized.
    
 
   
Other unusual charges and contractual settlements increased $4,099,223, or
289.0% from $1,418,530 for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to
$5,517,753 for the nine months ended September 30, 1996. For the nine months
ended September 30, 1996, other unusual charges and contractual settlements
consists primarily of: (i) the settlement of contractual obligations under
certain employment contracts, $330,627; (ii) the settlement of other contractual
obligations, $210,599; (iii) the write-off of selected assets in connection with
the continued evaluation of the Company's operations and certain one-time
charges for changes to the operations of the Company, $459,743; (iv) losses
recognized on the early pay-off of obligations under capital leases and other
debt concurrent with the debt restructuring completed on March 15, 1996,
$630,645; and (v) the estimated fair market value of the Nominal Value Warrants
charged to operations on March 15, 1996, $3,886,139. Other unusual charges and
contractual
    
 
                                       41
<PAGE>   43
 
   
settlements represented 11.9% of total revenues for the nine months ended
September 30, 1995, and 19.5% of total revenues for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996, an increase of 7.6%.
    
 
   
Other income (expense).  Other income (expense) is comprised of interest
incurred on debt with related parties and others net of interest income. Total
other expense (net of interest income) increased $3,847,970, or 1,319.2%, from
$291,693 for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 to $4,139,663 for the nine
months ended September 30, 1996. Other expenses represented 2.4% of total
revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 14.6% of total
revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, an increase of 12.2%. The
dollar and percentage increases were due to the financing obtained for the
acquisitions completed in 1996. Related party interest expense was $3,588,420
for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, representing 12.7% of total
revenues. Included in related party interest expense was non-cash interest
expense of $1,182,544, or 4.2% of total revenues for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996, representing the accretion of the debt under the Credit
Agreement to its maturity amount.
    
 
   
Extraordinary item.  The Company recorded an extraordinary loss of $267,281,
representing 0.9% of total revenues for the nine months ended September 30,
1996. The extraordinary loss related to non-recurring costs that were incurred
in connection with the restructuring of the Company's long-term debt. Concurrent
with the restructuring of the Company's debt and the redemption of the 10%
Preferred, 8% Preferred, and 7% Preferred, the Company recorded the difference
between the carrying value of the 10% Preferred, 8% Preferred, and 7% Preferred
and the redemption price as an increase to the accumulated deficit of
$2,002,386.
    
 
   
EBITDA.  EBITDA (income before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization,
other unusual charges and contractual settlements, and the extraordinary loss on
debt restructuring) increased $5,216,288 or 1,546.5%, from $337,288 for the nine
months ended September 30, 1995 to $5,553,576 for the nine months ended
September 30, 1996. Based on the changes discussed above, EBITDA represented
2.8% of total revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 1995 and 19.6%
for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, an increase of 16.8%.
    
 
   
Year Ended December 31, 1995 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 1994
    
 
   
Revenues.  Total revenues increased $2,851,896, or 18.0%, from $15,866,087 for
the year ended December 31, 1994 to $18,717,983 for the year ended December 31,
1995. This increase was attributable primarily to an increase in the number of
installed public pay telephones. The total installed public pay telephones
increased by 4,979 public pay telephones, or 105.0%, with the majority of the
increase occurring late in the third quarter and in the fourth quarter of fiscal
1995 and attributable to the 1995 Acquisitions. In addition, revenues improved
as a result of the continuation of the $0.75 Long Distance Call Program.
    
 
   
Revenues from coin calls increased $3,708,952, or 44.0%, from $8,421,237 for the
year ended December 31, 1994 to $12,130,189 for the year ended December 31,
1995. The increase was due primarily to the 1995 Acquisitions. Non-coin revenues
decreased $1,542,637, or 29.0%, from $5,319,138 for the year ended December 31,
1994 to $3,776,501 for the year ended December 31, 1995. The decrease was
primarily the result of a decrease in the number of public pay telephones to
which the Company provided operator services through pre-subscription
arrangements and aggressive dial-around advertising by AT&T, MCI and Sprint
Communications Company ("Sprint"). In December 1995, the Company decided to
focus on the ownership and maintenance of its public pay telephone business and
outsourced its operator service center to Intellicall. A substantial portion of
the transfer of such service center was completed by March 31, 1996. The Company
wrote off the fixed assets of its operator service center in 1995 and recorded a
non-cash charge of $298,626.
    
 
   
Other revenues increased $685,581, or 32.3%, from $2,125,712 for the year ended
December 31, 1994 to $2,811,293 for the year ended December 31, 1995. This
increase was primarily the result of the 1995 Acquisitions.
    
 
   
Operating expenses.  Line and transmission charges increased $1,019,190, or
22.9%, from $4,456,509 for the year ended December 31, 1994 to $5,475,699 for
the year ended December 31, 1995. Line and transmission charges represented
28.1% of total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1994 and 29.3% of total
revenues for the year ended December 31, 1995. The increase resulted, in part,
from increased coin calls resulting from the $0.75 Long Distance Call Program as
well as increases in certain local telephone company line charges. However, this
program reduces billing, collection and operator service costs.
    
 
   
Location commissions increased $76,436, or 2.3%, from $3,391,190 for the year
ended December 31, 1994 to $3,467,626 for the year ended December 31, 1995.
Location commissions represented 21.4% of total revenues for the year ended
December 31, 1994 and 18.5% of total revenues for the year ended December 31,
1995. The decrease in location commissions as a percentage of total revenues is
due to lower location commissions for those public pay telephones acquired in
the 1995 Acquisitions.
    
 
   
Other operating expenses increased $1,045,590, or 24.5%, from $4,264,672 for the
year ended December 31, 1994 to $5,310,262 for the year ended December 31, 1995.
Other operating expenses represented 26.9% of total revenues for the year ended
December 31, 1994 and 28.4% of total revenues for the year ended December 31,
1995. The increase was the result of higher
    
 
                                       42
<PAGE>   44
 
   
personnel costs, rent, utilities and service related expenses attributable to
the 1995 Acquisitions, the increase in the Company's public pay telephone base,
and the additional personnel to accommodate the increased business.
    
 
   
Depreciation and amortization increased $2,146,780, or 96.0%, from $2,236,269
for the year ended December 31, 1994 to $4,383,049 for the year ended December
31, 1995. Depreciation and amortization represented 14.1% of total revenues for
the year ended December 31, 1994 and 23.4% of total revenues for the year ended
December 31, 1995. The increase was primarily due to the 1995 Acquisitions and
the resultant expansion of its public pay telephone base which included
purchases of additional computer equipment, service vehicles and software to
accommodate the Company's growth.
    
 
   
SG&A expenses increased $368,967, or 13.0%, from $2,831,775 for the year ended
December 31, 1994 to $3,200,742 for the year ended December 31, 1995. The
increase was due to increases in advertising, travel and entertainment, wages
and payroll related expenses and general office expenses as a result of hiring
additional personnel to conduct the Company's expanded selling and marketing
program and customer services. SG&A expenses represented 17.9% of total revenues
for the year ended December 31, 1994 and 17.1% of total revenues for the year
ended December 31, 1995. The Company expects that SG&A expenses will continue to
decrease as a percentage of total revenues as total revenues increase.
    
 
   
Other unusual charges and contractual settlements consist primarily of costs
associated with the settlement of contractual obligations to certain former
officers of the Company and related legal fees, the write-off of selected assets
in connection with the outsourcing of the operator service center and consulting
and legal fees incurred for changes to the operations of the Company.
Settlements of employment contracts and other unusual charges were $2,169,503,
and represented 11.6% of total revenues, for the year ended December 31, 1995.
There were no contractual settlements and other unusual charges for 1994.
    
 
   
Other income (expense).  Other income (expense) increased $448,696, or 115.6%,
from $388,215 for the year ended December 31, 1994 to $836,911 for the year
ended December 31, 1995. Interest expense, net of interest income, represented
2.4% of total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1994 and 4.5% of total
revenues for the year ended December 31, 1995. The increase was due to financing
obtained for acquisitions, additional service vehicles and switch operating
equipment. In addition, the Company entered into financing agreements with
certain manufacturers throughout the year for the purchase of phone equipment to
accommodate the expansion of its public pay telephone base.
    
 
   
EBITDA.  EBITDA increased $341,713, or 37.1%, from $921,941 for the year ended
December 31, 1994 to $1,263,654 for the year ended December 31, 1995. For the
reasons discussed above, EBITDA represented 5.8% of total revenues for the year
ended December 31, 1994 and 6.8% of total revenues for the year ended December
31, 1995.
    
 
   
Year Ended December 31, 1994 Compared to Year Ended December 31, 1993
    
 
   
Revenues.  Total revenues increased $4,796,570, or 43.3%, from $11,069,517 for
the year ended December 31, 1993 to $15,866,087 for the year ended December 31,
1994. This increase was attributable primarily to an increase in the number of
installed public pay telephones, which increased by 2,559 from 2,185 at December
31, 1993 to 4,744 at December 31, 1994, with the majority of the increase
relating to an acquisition in the first quarter of 1994.
    
 
   
Revenues from coin calls increased $4,183,389, or 98.7%, from $4,237,848 for the
year ended December 31, 1993 to $8,421,237 for the year ended December 31, 1994.
Non- coin revenue decreased $755,256, or 12.4%, from $6,074,394 for the year
ended December 31, 1993 to $5,319,138 for the year ended December 31, 1994. The
decrease was primarily the result of a reduction in the number of telephones to
which the Company provided operator services through pre-subscription
arrangements and aggressive dial-around advertising by AT&T, Sprint and MCI.
    
 
Other revenues increased $1,368,437, or 180.7%, from $757,275 for the year ended
December 31, 1993 to $2,125,712 for the year ended December 31, 1994. This
increase was primarily the result of an increase in the number of installed
telephones and dial-around compensation.
 
   
Operating expenses.  Line and transmission charges increased $1,680,061, or
60.5%, from $2,776,448 for the year ended December 31, 1993 to $4,456,509 for
the year ended December 31, 1994. Line and transmission charges represented
25.1% of total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1993 and 28.1% of total
revenues for the year ended December 31, 1994. The increase in line and
transmission charges was, in part, due to increased coin calls resulting from
the implementation of the $0.75 Long Distance Call Program, as well as increases
in certain local telephone company line charges.
    
 
   
Location commissions increased $791,860, or 30.5%, from $2,599,330 for the year
ended December 31, 1993 to $3,391,190 for the year ended December 31, 1994.
Location commissions represented 23.4% of total revenues for the year ended
December 31, 1993 and 21.4% of total revenues for the year ended December 31,
1994. The decrease as a percentage of total revenues resulted from the
renegotiation of location agreements acquired in the acquisition of Alpha Pay
Phones -- IV L.P. ("Alpha").
    
 
                                       43
<PAGE>   45
 
   
Other operating expenses increased $1,256,539, or 41.8%, from $3,008,133 for the
year ended December 31, 1993 to $4,264,672 for the year ended December 31, 1994.
The increase was primarily the result of higher personnel costs, rent, utilities
and service related expenses attributable to the addition of the Alpha assets,
new operations in Texas, the establishment of Florida and Nevada sales offices,
the increase in the Company's public pay telephone base and the additional field
personnel to accommodate the increased business. Other operating expenses
represented 27.2% of total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1993 and
26.9% of total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1994.
    
 
   
Depreciation and amortization increased $1,340,228, or 149.6%, from $896,041 for
the year ended December 31, 1993 to $2,236,269 for the year ended December 31,
1994. Depreciation and amortization represented 8.1% of total revenues for the
year ended December 31, 1993 and 14.1% of total revenues for the year ended
December 31, 1994. This increase was primarily due to the Company's acquisition
of the Alpha assets at the end of the first quarter of 1994 and expansion of the
public pay telephone base, purchases of additional computer equipment, service
vehicles and software to accommodate the Company's growth.
    
 
   
SG&A expenses increased $429,192, or 17.9%, from $2,402,583 for the year ended
December 31, 1993 to $2,831,775 for the year ended December 31, 1994. The
increase was primarily the result of the increases in advertising, travel and
entertainment, wages and payroll related expenses and general office expenses as
a result of hiring additional personnel to conduct the Company's expanded
selling and marketing program and customer services. SG&A represented 21.7% of
total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1993 and 17.9% of total revenues
for the year ended December 31, 1994.
    
 
   
Other income (expense).  Other income (expense) increased $213,221, or 121.8%,
from $174,994 for the year ended December 31, 1993 to $388,215 for the year
ended December 31, 1994. Interest expense, net of interest income, represented
1.5% of total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1993 and 2.4% of total
revenues for the year ended December 31, 1994. The increase was due to the
financing obtained for acquisitions, additional service vehicles and switch
operating equipment. In addition, the Company entered into financing agreements
with certain manufacturers throughout the year for the purchase of its telephone
base.
    
 
   
EBITDA.  EBITDA increased $638,918, or 225.7%, from $283,023 for the year ended
December 31, 1993 to $921,941 for the year ended December 31, 1994. For the
reasons discussed above, EBITDA represented 2.6% of total revenues for the year
ended December 31, 1993 and 5.8% of total revenues for the year ended December
31, 1994.
    
 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
   
Cash Flows.  Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities during the
fiscal years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995 and the nine months ended
September 30, 1996 were $11,208, $2,380,216, ($579,133) and ($646,880),
respectively. Net cash used in operating activities consisted primarily of the
funding of operating losses, increases in current assets (other than cash) and
repayment of significant current liabilities. Cash flows used in operating
activities increased $574,266 from $72,614 for the nine months ended September
30, 1995 to $646,880 for the nine months ended September 30, 1996, mostly due to
the larger loss in 1996 offset by the issuance of the Nominal Value Warrants (as
defined herein), depreciation and amortization and accretion of debt.
    
 
   
Cash used in investing activities during the fiscal years ended December 31,
1993, 1994 and 1995 and for the nine months ended September 30, 1996 were
$1,196,761, $3,214,302, $2,354,011 and $24,778,656, respectively. Cash used in
investing activities consisted primarily of payments to acquire companies and
capital expenditures primarily due to expansion of the pay telephone base.
    
 
   
Cash provided by financing activities during the fiscal years ended December 31,
1993, 1994 and 1995 and for the nine months ended September 30, 1996 were
$859,846, $1,229,287, $3,167,850 and $25,367,808, respectively, which consisted
primarily of proceeds from the issuance of debt and equity offset by redemptions
and repurchases of preferred and common stock and repayments of debt.
    
 
   
Credit Agreement.  On March 15, 1996, the Company entered into a Credit
Agreement (the "Credit Agreement") with ING and Cerberus, pursuant to which the
Lenders agreed to lend the Company up to $37,250,000. On March 15, 1996, the
Company borrowed $30,530,954 pursuant to the Credit Agreement. During the second
quarter of 1996, the Company borrowed an additional $1,692,500 pursuant to the
Credit Agreement. The initial borrowings under the Credit Agreement were used to
complete the Paramount and IPP acquisitions, to repay $8,503,405 of outstanding
debt and $3,173,931 of outstanding obligations under capital leases, to redeem
the 10% Preferred, 8% Preferred, and 7% Preferred, and to pay related
transaction fees. The additional borrowings of $1,692,500 were used for the
Amtel acquisition deposit of $1,300,000 and working capital.
    
 
   
On September 13, 1996, concurrent with the acquisition of Amtel, the Lenders
amended the Credit Agreement to increase the maximum borrowings available under
the Credit Agreement to $41,000,000. The Company then borrowed an additional
$8,776,546 and used $5,950,000 of the proceeds to complete the Amtel and POA
acquisitions and the remainder of the proceeds, $2,826,546, for working capital
and payment of certain related acquisition expenses. As of September 30, 1996,
borrowings of $41,000,000 were outstanding and there was no additional borrowing
availability under the Credit Agreement. The Company was not in
    
 
                                       44
<PAGE>   46
 
   
compliance with various financial covenants contained in the Credit Agreement at
June 30, 1996 and subsequently received a waiver of such non-compliance from the
Lenders. The Credit Agreement was amended on October 8, 1996 to make the
covenants less restrictive. At September 30, 1996, the Company was in compliance
with the covenants contained in the Credit Agreement. The Company is seeking an
amendment to the Credit Agreement to permit the incurrence of additional
borrowings of up to $2.0 million to fund the deposits required in connection
with the Pending Acquisitions and for working capital purposes. The Company
intends to use a portion of the net proceeds from the Company Debt Offering and
the Offering to repay the indebtedness under the Credit Agreement. Concurrently
with such repayment, the Company will terminate the Credit Agreement and expects
to enter into the New Credit Agreement, which is expected to provide for a
senior credit facility of $25 to $50 million. The Company does not expect that
there will be any borrowings outstanding under the New Credit Agreement
immediately after consummation of the Company Debt Offering and the Offering.
See "Description of Certain Indebtedness" for descriptions of the terms of the
Credit Agreement, the New Credit Agreement and the Indenture.
    
 
   
Of the term loans outstanding under the Credit Agreement, $29,000,000 can be
converted into Series B Preferred at the ratio of 833 shares for each $100,000
in outstanding debt and accrued interest. Additionally, in connection with the
execution of the original Credit Agreement on March 15, 1996, ING and Cerberus
each received 102,412 warrants (204,824 warrants in total and referred to herein
as the "Lenders' Warrants"), which would collectively allow them to purchase up
to 204,824 shares of Series A Preferred at an exercise price of $0.20 per share.
Each share of Series A Preferred and Series B Preferred is convertible into 20
shares of the Company's Common Stock. The debt under the Credit Agreement was
initially recorded net of an allocation of the fair value of the Lenders'
Warrants, such fair value being determined using the Black-Schules valuation
model. The Company recorded non-cash interest expense (accretion of debt) of
$621,536 for the three months ended September 30, 1996 and $1,182,544 for the
nine months ended September 30, 1996. See "Description of Capital Stock." ING
and Cerberus may separately exercise their warrants without any action of the
other party.
    
 
   
Other.  The redemption price for the 10% Preferred, 8% Preferred and 7%
Preferred consisted of cash payments aggregating $1,117,371 and 34,436.33 shares
of 14% Preferred. In the aggregate, $6,269,487 of the Company's outstanding
obligations, including portions of the purchase price for the IPP and Paramount
acquisitions, was liquidated by issuing 107,918.19 shares of 14% Preferred. The
$2,002,386 excess of the redemption price of the preferred issues redeemed over
their aggregate carrying value was recorded as a reduction of earnings available
to common shareholders on March 15, 1996. The Company may redeem approximately
$5.5 million stated value of 14% Preferred with a portion of the net proceeds of
the Company Debt Offering and the Offering.
    
 
   
At September 30, 1996, long-term debt, including the current portion and
obligations under capital leases and including the portion allocated to the
Lenders' Warrants, was $54,749,758 and consisted of: (i) related party debt
(payable to the Lenders and two directors of the Company), including the current
portion and including the portion allocated to the Lenders' Warrants, of
$41,517,246, an increase of $39,784,746 as compared to $1,732,500 at December
31, 1995; (ii) capital leases of $8,029,058, an increase of $4,496,121 as
compared to $3,532,937 at December 31, 1995; (iii) the POA Sellers' Notes in the
amount of $3,322,421 (pursuant to the purchase agreement relating to the POA
Acquisition, the POA Sellers' Notes were reduced at September 30, 1996 by the
excess of acquired current liabilities over acquired current assets, or
$311,693, from the original face amount of $3,634,114); and (iv) other long-term
debt, including the current portion, of $1,569,340, a decrease of $7,027,073 as
compared to $8,596,413 at December 31, 1995. The overall increase is primarily
attributable to debt incurred in connection with the acquisitions of IPP,
Paramount, POA and Amtel.
    
 
   
On March 15, 1996, warrants to purchase 2,018,942 shares of Common Stock at an
exercise price of $.01 per share ("Nominal Value Warrants") were issued in
conjunction with the acquisitions of IPP and Paramount, redemption of the 10%
Preferred, 8% Preferred and 7% Preferred, and conversion of certain related
party debt of the Company to the 14% Preferred. Certain holders of the 14%
Preferred are deemed related parties. The warrants expire on March 13, 2001. An
independent valuation company has estimated the fair value market value of the
Nominal Value Warrants to be $4,974,673, using the Black-Scholes valuation
model, of which $3,886,139 (the amount attributable to the warrants provided to
related parties in connection with the redemption of the preferred shares and
the conversion of certain debt) was recorded in the caption "other unusual
charges and contractual settlements" in the Company's statement of operations
for the nine months ended September 30, 1996.
    
 
   
In 1995, the Company sold, or issued in consideration for services rendered,
602,003 shares of its Common Stock to officers, directors, creditors and
affiliates of the Company and to others, including a predecessor of Southcoast
Capital Corporation, the Representative of the Underwriters in the Offering and
one of the underwriters in the Company Debt Offering, at values ranging from
$4.20 to $6.01 per share. See "Certain Transactions." Additionally, certain
warrants and options to purchase 660,506 shares of the Company's Common Stock at
prices ranging from $5.70 to $6.00 were granted in 1995.
    
 
                                       45
<PAGE>   47
 
   
On September 12, 1995, the Company borrowed $1,200,000 (which was recorded net
of the value of warrants issued of $349,000) from third party investors pursuant
to a 19 month credit agreement, bearing interest at 12.5%. The proceeds were
used for operating expenses and to make certain employee severance payments.
This debt was repaid on March 15, 1996 with borrowings under the Credit
Agreement.
    
 
   
SEASONALITY
    
 
   
The Company completed two acquisitions which added approximately 4,400 public
pay telephones in 1995 and four acquisitions which added approximately 14,600
telephones during the first nine months of 1996. The seasonality of the
Company's historical operating results has been affected by shifts in the
geographic concentrations of its telephones resulting from such acquisitions. In
recent years, the Company acquired a large number of telephones in the northern
and western states of the United States. As a result of such acquisitions, the
Company has more recently experienced lower operating results in the first
quarter due to the effect of the cold weather in the northern and western states
on outdoor public pay telephone usage. Revenues are typically highest in the
fourth quarter because of the increased volume of calls made during the holiday
season.
    
 
   
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
    
 
   
For the nine months ended September 30, 1996, the Company had capital
expenditures (exclusive of acquisitions) of $2,984,135, which were financed
through cash flow from operations and borrowings under the Credit Agreement.
    
 
   
Capital expenditures are principally for the expansion of the Company's
installed public pay telephone base, and include purchases of telephones,
related equipment, site contracts operating equipment and computer hardware.
    
 
   
The Company expects to make capital expenditures of approximately $225,000
during the three months ended December 31, 1996 and approximately $4,100,000
during the year ended December 31, 1997.
    
 
   
Management believes, but cannot assure, that cash flows from operations and the
proceeds to the Company from the Offering and the Company Debt Offering, will be
sufficient to meet the Company's cash requirements for working capital, capital
expenditures and debt service over the next twelve months.
    
 
                                       46
<PAGE>   48
 
                                    BUSINESS
 
GENERAL
 
   
The Company is currently the third largest independent public pay telephone
operator and the twelfth largest public pay telephone operator in the United
States. Upon consummation of the Pending Acquisitions, the Company believes that
it will be one of the two largest independent public pay telephone operators in
the United States. As of September 30, 1996, after giving effect to the Pending
Acquisitions, the Company would have owned and operated 38,421 installed public
pay telephones in 42 states, the District of Columbia and Mexico, of which
approximately 96% are located in 21 states. After giving effect to the Pending
Acquisitions, approximately 44% of the Company's public pay telephones will be
located in Florida, Texas and California, which are three of the four most
populous states. As of September 30, 1996, the Company owned and operated 24,732
installed public pay telephones, of which approximately 95% are located in 17
states and approximately 46% are located in Florida, Texas and California. Since
September 1, 1995, the Company has added 19,053 public pay telephones through a
series of acquisitions by the Company of six independent public pay telephone
companies. In addition, the Company maintains an active program of installing
public pay telephones.
    
 
   
The Company owns, operates, services and maintains a system of micro processor
controlled "smart" public pay telephones. The Company derives substantially all
of its revenues from coin and non-coin calls placed from its public pay
telephones. The Company obtains contracts with location providers to operate
public pay telephones at locations where significant demand exists for public
pay telephone services, such as shopping centers, convenience stores, service
stations, grocery stores, restaurants, truck stops and bus terminals. As of
September 30, 1996, the average remaining life of the Company's contracts with
its location providers was 40.1 months (excluding the contracts acquired in
connection with the acquisition of POA).
    
 
   
The following chart sets forth certain information with respect to the locations
of the Company's pay telephones as of September 30, 1996 on an actual basis and
a pro forma basis giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     -------------------------------------------------------
                                                              ACTUAL                       PRO FORMA
                                                     PUBLIC PAY     PERCENTAGE     PUBLIC PAY     PERCENTAGE
                       LOCATION                      TELEPHONES      OF TOTAL      TELEPHONES      OF TOTAL
    -----------------------------------------------  ----------     ----------     ----------     ----------
    <S>                                              <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>
    Florida                                               5,127           20.7%         5,127           13.3%
    California                                            3,705           15.0          3,705            9.6
    Missouri                                              2,912           11.8          2,912            7.6
    Texas                                                 2,533           10.2          8,064           21.0
    Ohio                                                  1,633            6.6          1,633            4.2
    Illinois                                              1,329            5.4          1,329            3.4
    South Carolina                                        1,249            5.1          1,249            3.3
    Virginia                                                975            3.9            975            2.5
    Colorado                                                764            3.1          1,442            3.8
    Tennessee                                               674            2.7            674            1.8
    Washington                                              616            2.5            616            1.6
    Arizona                                                 219              *            700            1.8
    Utah                                                     26              *          2,245            5.9
    Montana                                                  25              *          1,025            2.7
    New Mexico                                                4              *          2,409            6.3
    Other**                                               2,941           11.9          4,316           11.2
                                                     ----------     ----------     ----------     ----------
      Total                                              24,732          100.0%        38,421          100.0%
                                                      =========      =========      =========      =========
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
   
 * Under 1%.
    
 
   
** Includes all other states where the percentage of the total is less than 1%.
    
 
   
On an actual basis, the Company had revenues and EBITDA of $28.3 million and
$5.6 million, respectively, for the nine months ended September 30, 1996. On the
same basis, the Company's EBITDA margins have increased to 19.6% for the nine
months ended September 30, 1996 from 2.8% for the nine months ended September
30, 1995. The increase in EBITDA margin is primarily due to the significant
increase in the number of installed public pay telephones and the elimination of
costs associated with the closing of certain offices, elimination of redundant
executives and administrative personnel in billing and other operational areas
and leveraging the Company's existing field technicians.
    
 
   
After giving pro forma effect to the 1995 Acquisitions and 1996 Acquisitions,
the Company would have achieved revenues of $59.6 million and $45.4 million for
the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1996,
    
 
                                       47
<PAGE>   49
 
   
respectively, and EBITDA of $10.4 million and $9.8 million for the year ended
December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended September 30, 1996, respectively.
After giving pro forma effect to the 1995 Acquisitions, the 1996 Acquisitions
and the Pending Acquisitions, the Company would have achieved revenues of $91.5
million and $70.4 million for the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine
months ended September 30, 1996, respectively, and EBITDA of $21.2 million and
$16.1 million for the year ended December 31, 1995 and the nine months ended
September 30, 1996, respectively. See "Pro Forma Financial Data."
    
 
   
In June 1995, Peter Graf was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors and in
September 1995 was appointed Chief Executive Officer of the Company. In
September 1995, Stuart Hollander, Joseph Abrams, Aron Katzman and Steven Richman
were appointed to the board of directors of the Company, and the majority of the
existing board resigned at that time. The new board and management identified
and implemented the business strategy set forth below.
    
 
BUSINESS STRATEGY
 
   
The Company's objective is to grow through additional acquisitions and
internally, thereby achieving economies of scale while implementing cost
savings. The Company has implemented the following strategy to meet its
objective:
    
 
   
Grow through acquisitions.  The Company believes that there is a significant
opportunity to consolidate the highly fragmented independent segment of the
public pay telephone industry. Selective acquisitions enable the Company to
expand its geographic presence and further its strategy of clustering its public
pay telephones more rapidly than with new installations. Because smaller
companies typically are not able to achieve the economies of scale realized by
the Company, when acquisitions are integrated, the Company can operate the
public pay telephones at lower operating costs than the seller. Accordingly, the
Company maintains an active acquisition program to acquire public pay telephones
that are in, or contiguous to, its existing markets or that can form the basis
of a new cluster. Management believes that the Company's experience in
completing acquisitions of companies in the public pay telephone industry is
instrumental in identifying and negotiating additional acquisitions as well as
integrating such acquisitions. In addition, as the Company grows to become the
leading supplier of independent public pay telephone services in an area,
"fill-in" and contiguous acquisitions become less attractive to other potential
acquirors as their ability to create significant clusters is reduced. Moreover,
the Company believes that such growth will further enhance its ability to
negotiate favorable rates with long distance service providers and operator
service providers as well as suppliers of pay telephones and other related
equipment.
    
 
   
Facilitate internal growth.  The Company actively seeks to install new public
pay telephones and intends to enhance its sales and marketing efforts to obtain
additional contracts to own and operate public pay telephones with new and
existing national, regional and local accounts. In evaluating locations for the
installation of public pay telephones, the Company generally conducts a site
survey to examine various factors, including population density, traffic
patterns, historical usage information and other geographic factors. The
installation of public pay telephones is generally less expensive than acquiring
public pay telephones.
    
 
   
Reduce operating costs through geographically concentrated clusters.  The
Company believes that in addition to facilitating fill-in and contiguous
acquisitions, the clustering of public pay telephones creates an opportunity to
generate savings through reduced field service and collection expenses, the
closing of duplicate offices, reduction in staff and general corporate overhead
expenses and reduced line and transmission expenses associated with interLATA
and intraLATA traffic.
    
 
   
Form strong relationships with service providers and suppliers.  As part of its
strategy to continue to reduce operating costs, the Company outsources its long
distance and operator services to a number of subcontractors that are OSPs,
principally Intellicall. The Company intends to strengthen its relationships
with Intellicall, together with other OSPs, and the suppliers of its public pay
telephone equipment as its market presence increases. By achieving close working
relationships with its OSPs and suppliers, the Company believes that it will be
in a position to negotiate more favorable agreements.
    
 
   
Use of state-of-the-art technology.  The Company's public pay telephones are
"smart" telephones and are operated by means of advanced microprocessor
technology that enables the telephones to perform substantially all of the
necessary coin-driven and certain non coin-driven functions independent of the
Company's central office. Unlike "dumb" telephones used by most BOCs and other
LECs, smart telephones, in concert with the Company's management information
systems, enable the Company to determine each telephone's operability and need
for service as well as its readiness for collection of coin revenues. In
addition, rate changes and other software-dependent functions can also be
performed from the central office without dispatching service technicians to
individual public pay telephones of the Company.
    
 
   
Provide superior customer service.  The Company strives to maximize the number
of its telephones that are operational at any one time and thereby retain
existing customers and attract new ones. Accordingly, the Company employs both
advanced telecommunications technology and trained field technicians as part of
its commitment to provide superior customer service. The technology used by the
Company enables it to (i) maintain accurate records of telephone activity which
can be verified by customers and
    
 
                                       48
<PAGE>   50
 
   
(ii) respond quickly to equipment malfunctions. The Company's standard of
performance is to repair malfunctions within 24 hours of their occurrence.
    
 
   
Achieve market recognition.  With the greater financial resources available to
the Company following the Company Debt Offering and the Offering, the Company
intends to promote actively its brand and customer service capabilities. The
Company seeks to promote and achieve recognition of its products and services by
posting on all of its public pay telephones the "PhoneTel" label and through
advertisements in trade magazines. The Company believes that achieving market
recognition will facilitate its expansion strategy by enhancing its ability to
obtain additional accounts and encouraging the use of its public pay telephones
in locations where consumers have multiple pay telephone options.
    
 
INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
 
   
Public pay telephones are primarily owned and operated by BOCs and other LECs
and independent public pay telephone companies. Of the approximately 2.54
million public pay telephones operated in the United States in 1995, Multimedia
Telecommunications Association estimates that approximately 87% are operated by
BOCs and other LECs and approximately 13% are operated by independent public pay
telephone companies. Within the United States, Multimedia Telecommunications
Association estimates that there were approximately 342,000 public pay
telephones owned by independent public pay telephone companies in 1995. Today's
telecommunications marketplace was principally shaped by the 1984 court-directed
divestiture of the BOCs by AT&T. The AT&T divestiture and the many regulatory
changes adopted by the FCC and state regulatory authorities in response to the
AT&T divestiture, including the authorization of the connection of competitive
or independently-owned public pay telephones to the public switched network,
have resulted in the creation of new business segments in the telecommunications
industry. Prior to these developments, only BOCs or other LECs owned and
operated public pay telephones.
    
 
   
As part of the AT&T divestiture, the United States was divided into geographic
areas known as Local Access Transport Areas or "LATAs." BOCs and other LECs
provide telephone service that both originates and terminates within the same
LATA ("intraLATA") pursuant to tariffs filed with and approved by state
regulatory authorities. Until recently, BOCs were prohibited from offering or
deriving revenues or income from telecommunications services between LATAs
("interLATA"). Long distance companies, such as AT&T, MCI and Sprint, provide
interLATA services and, in some circumstances, may also provide long distance
service within LATAs. An interLATA long distance telephone call generally begins
with an originating LEC transmitting the call from the originating telephone to
a point of connection with a long distance carrier. The long distance carrier,
through its owned or leased switching and transmission facilities, transmits the
call across its long distance network to the LEC servicing the local area in
which the recipient of the call is located. This terminating LEC then delivers
the call to the recipient.
    
 
   
As a result of the February 8, 1996 enactment of the Telecommunications Act, the
BOCs may provide interLATA telecommunications services and may compete for the
provision of interLATA toll calls, upon receipt of all necessary regulatory
approvals and the satisfaction of applicable conditions. The Telecommunications
Act permits the BOCs to provide virtually all "out of region" long distance
telecommunications services immediately upon the receipt of any state and/or
federal regulatory approvals otherwise applicable to long distance service. For
the BOCs and other LECs to provide interLATA toll service within the same states
in which they also provide local exchange service ("in-region service"), prior
FCC approval must be obtained. The timing of such approval is unclear and may
depend on the outcome of litigation related to recent regulations promulgated by
the FCC relating to the duties of BOCs and other incumbent LECs under Section
251 of the Telecommunication Act. This FCC approval to provide "in-region"
service is conditioned upon, among other things, a showing by a BOC or other LEC
that, with certain limited exceptions, facilities-based local telephone
competition is present in its market, and that it has satisfied the 14-point
"competitive checklist" established by the Telecommunications Act which
includes, among other things, that the BOC or other LEC has entered into at
least one interconnection agreement. In addition, the Telecommunications Act is
designed to facilitate the entry of any entity (including cable television
companies and utilities) into both the competitive local exchange and long
distance telecommunications markets. As a result of the Telecommunications Act,
long distance companies (such as AT&T and MCI), cable television companies,
utilities and other new competitors will be able to provide local exchange
service in competition with the incumbent BOC or other LEC. This should
ultimately increase the number and variety of carriers that provide local access
line service to independent public pay telephone providers such as the Company.
    
 
Prior to 1987, coin calls were the sole source of revenues for independent
public pay telephone operators. Long distance calling card and collect calls
from these public pay telephones were handled exclusively by AT&T. Beginning in
1987, a competitive operator service system developed which allowed OSPs,
including long distance companies such as MCI and Sprint, to handle non-coin
calls and to offer independent public pay telephone companies commissions for
directing operator assisted or calling card calls to them.
 
   
Generally, public pay telephone revenues may be generated through: (i) coin
calls; (ii) operator service calls ("0+" i.e., credit card, collect and third
number billing calls, and "0-", i.e. calls transferred by the LECs to the OSPs
requested by the caller); and (iii) access code calls using carrier access
numbers (e.g., "10XXX" codes, "1-800" or "950"). Section 276 of the
Telecommunica-
    
 
                                       49
<PAGE>   51
 
   
tion Act and the FCC implementing rules (both of which were recently enacted)
will permit independent public pay telephone providers to generate additional
revenues from all of these three categories, each of which consists of local,
intraLATA toll, intrastate interLATA, interstate interLATA and international
call components.
    
 
ACQUISITION STRATEGY
 
   
The Company believes that the existence of many small independent public pay
telephone providers presents acquisition opportunities for the Company. The
Company believes that the acquisition of other independent public pay telephone
companies and management's experience in identifying and negotiating potential
acquisitions and integrating acquired companies into the Company's ongoing
operations may substantially accelerate its rate of growth, increase the
Company's concentration of public pay telephones through clustering and thereby
generate economies of scale. The Company intends to continue this acquisition
program upon the consummation of the Company Debt Offering and the Offering.
    
 
In reviewing potential acquisition candidates, the Company considers various
factors, including:
 
   
Historical and pro forma financial performance.  The Company reviews the
historical revenues, mix between coin and non-coin revenue and cash flows of the
public pay telephone providers to be acquired and analyzes their prospective
profitability based on pro forma considerations, such as lower service and
collection expenses, lower general and administrative expenses, and the more
favorable terms and conditions which the Company may be able to obtain from OSPs
and long distance carriers due to the increased level of calls on such pro forma
basis.
    
 
   
Location and economies of scale.  The Company considers the geographic proximity
of the public pay telephones to be acquired to the Company's existing clusters
or markets and the extent to which the acquisition would provide the Company
with economies of scale through more efficient operation and maintenance of a
larger number of public pay telephones within a geographic region or cluster. In
addition, the Company seeks to acquire independent public pay telephone
companies in new markets where the Company believes it can create a new cluster
and achieve internal growth through increases in the number of public pay
telephones as well as through additional acquisitions. The Company also assesses
the resources that would be necessary to integrate effectively and efficiently
the target company into the Company's existing operations, including the staff
required to service the new public pay telephones. To date, the Company has
targeted companies that operate primarily in the southeastern, midwestern and
western areas of the United States.
    
 
   
Location agreements and condition of equipment.  The Company reviews the
standard terms of location agreements including the revenue sharing terms and
commissions, term and transferability of related site location agreements with
location providers, the line charges required to be paid for the public pay
telephones and the type and condition of the proposed equipment to be acquired.
The Company also conducts a physical survey of a representative sample of the
public pay telephones proposed to be acquired.
    
 
   
Regulatory matters.  The Company reviews the applicable regulatory framework, as
well as proposed changes in regulatory matters, in states where the Company is
not currently operating and is considering the acquisition of a significant
number of public pay telephones.
    
 
                                       50
<PAGE>   52
 
   
The following table summarizes the Company's acquisitions completed by, or
pending at October 31, 1996:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             NUMBER OF
                                                             INSTALLED
                                                               PUBLIC
                                                                PAY
                                                             TELEPHONES
                                           DATE OF            EXPECTED
                                          EXPECTED             TO BE                  PRIMARY
     COMPANY TO BE ACQUIRED              ACQUISITION          ACQUIRED             AREAS SERVED
- ---------------------------------    -------------------    ------------     -------------------------
<S>                                  <C>                    <C>              <C>
Cherokee Communications, Inc. (1)    January 1997              13,500        Texas; New Mexico; Utah;
                                                                             Montana; Colorado
Texas Coinphone (2)                  January 1997               1,200        Texas
                                                             --------
  Total                                                        14,700
                                                             ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             NUMBER OF
                                                             INSTALLED
                                                               PUBLIC
                                                                PAY
                                           DATE OF           TELEPHONES               PRIMARY
        COMPANY ACQUIRED                 ACQUISITION          ACQUIRED             AREAS SERVED
- ---------------------------------    -------------------    ------------     -------------------------
<S>                                  <C>                    <C>              <C>
Amtel Communications
  Services (3)                       September 13, 1996            6,872     California; Washington;
                                                                             Oregon; Colorado
Payphones of America, Inc. (4)       August 1, 1996                3,115     Missouri; Illinois;
                                                                             Virginia; Florida
IPP (5)                              March 15, 1996                2,101     North Carolina; South
                                                                             Carolina; Tennessee
Paramount Communications Systems,
Inc. (6)                             March 15, 1996                2,528     Florida
Public Telephone Corporation (7)     October 15, 1995              1,200     Illinois; Michigan
World Communications, Inc. (8)       September 22, 1995            3,237     Missouri; Illinois;
                                                                             Florida
Alpha Pay Phones -- IV L.P. (9)      March 25, 1994                2,155     Texas
                                                                  ------
  Total                                                           21,208
                                                                  ======
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
   
(1) See "The Pending Acquisitions-- The Cherokee Acquisition."
    
 
   
(2) See "The Pending Acquisitions-- The Texas Coinphone Acquisition."
    
 
   
(3) The purchase price paid by the Company for Amtel consisted of $7.0 million
    in cash and 2,162,163 shares of Common Stock. The purchase price was in
    consideration of the installed phones acquired and approximately 728 public
    pay telephones and related parts in inventory.
    
 
   
(4) The purchase price paid by the Company for POA consisted of $.5 million in
    cash, 166,666 shares of Common Stock, assumption of $7.75 million of capital
    lease obligations, $3.6 million in notes payable to the sellers, the
    assumption of $0.2 million in liabilities, two five-year non-competition and
    consulting agreements with two of the sellers for an aggregate of
    approximately $0.3 million and approximately $166,748 in related acquisition
    expenses.
    
 
   
(5) The purchase price paid by the Company for IPP consisted of $3.5 million in
    cash, 555,589 shares of Common Stock, 5,453 shares of 14% Preferred, 117,785
    Nominal Value Warrants and the assumption of $1.8 million in liabilities, of
    which $1.6 million was repaid by the Company on March 15, 1996. The cash
    purchase price included three five year non-compete agreements, with an
    aggregate value of $60,000, with three of IPP's former officers.
    
 
   
(6) The purchase price paid by the Company for Paramount consisted of $9.6
    million in cash, 8,333 shares of 14% Preferred, 179,996 Nominal Value
    Warrants and the assumption of $0.7 million in liabilities which were paid
    by the Company on March 15, 1996. The purchase price included a five year
    consulting and non-compete agreement, valued at $50,000, with one of
    Paramount's former officers.
    
 
   
(7) The purchase price paid by the Company for Public Telephone consisted of
    224,879 shares of Common Stock and the assumption of $2.8 million in
    liabilities. In connection with the acquisition, the Company entered into
    five year non-compete agreements with two of Public's former shareholders
    which require cash payments and the issuance, in the aggregate, of 80,000
    shares of Common Stock.
    
 
   
(8) The purchase price paid by the Company for World consisted of 402,500 shares
    of Common Stock, 530,534 shares of 10% Non-Voting Preferred and the
    assumption of $6.9 million in liabilities. All shares of the 10% Non-Voting
    Preferred were converted into 884,214 shares of Common Stock on June 28,
    1996. In connection with the acquisition, the Company entered into two year
    non-compete and employment agreements with three of World's former officers,
    which require, in the aggregate, payment of $625,000 over a two year period.
    
 
   
(9) The purchase price paid by the Company for Alpha consisted of $2.3 million
    in cash, a $1.1 million note payable to the sellers and the assumption of
    $2.2 million in liabilities.
    
 
                                       51
<PAGE>   53
 
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
 
   
Installation of public pay telephones.  The Company's primary business is to
obtain contracts, either through acquisitions or internal growth, from location
providers to install and operate public pay telephones on a revenue sharing
basis. The Company installs public pay telephones in properties owned or
controlled by others where significant demand exists for public pay telephone
services, such as shopping malls, convenience stores, service stations, grocery
stores, restaurants, truck stops and bus terminals, at no cost to the location
provider. The Company then services and collects money from these public pay
telephones and pays the location provider a share of the public pay telephone's
revenues. As of September 30, 1996, the Company owned and operated 24,732
installed public pay telephones and after giving pro forma effect to the Pending
Acquisitions would have had owned and operated 38,421 installed public pay
telephones.
    
 
   
The percentage of revenues paid by the Company to the location provider is
generally fixed for the term of the agreement and generally ranges from 15% to
40% if based on gross revenues per pay telephone or from 10% to 40% if based on
net revenues per public pay telephone. The term of a location agreement
generally ranges from three to ten years and provides for the automatic renewal
of the contract for the same period as the original term of the contract if it
is not cancelled by the location provider under the terms of the location
agreement. The Company can generally terminate a location agreement on 30-days'
prior notice to the location provider if the public pay telephone does not
generate sufficient total revenues for two consecutive months. Under certain of
the Company's location agreements, the failure of the Company to remedy a
default within a specified period after notice may give the location provider
the right to terminate such location agreement. The duration of the contract and
the commission arrangement depends on the location, number of telephones and
revenue potential of the account.
    
 
   
The Company's average cost of installing a public pay telephone in 1996 has
ranged from $2,000 to $2,500, which costs include site surveys, telephones,
enclosures and related hardware, commissions and all other costs incurred in
connection with installation.
    
 
   
Local Service.  Substantially all of the Company's public pay telephones accept
coins as well as other forms of payment for local or long-distance calls. The
Company's public pay telephones generate coin revenues primarily from local
calls. State regulatory authorities typically set the maximum rate for local
coin calls that may be charged by BOCs and other LECs and independent public pay
telephone companies, although this will change as states follow the FCC's
mandate and deregulate the price of a local coin call. See "-- Governmental
Regulations." The Company charges the same rate as the BOCs and the other LECs
for local calls in substantially all of the territories in which the Company's
public pay telephones are located. In most territories that charge is $0.25,
although in some jurisdictions the charge is less than $0.25 per local call and
in a limited number of other jurisdictions, which have already deregulated local
calls, the charge is $0.35. Whereas local coin calls have traditionally been
provided for an unlimited call duration, some jurisdictions in which the
Company's public pay telephones are located have begun to allow call timing,
which requires the deposit of an additional amount after a specified period. The
Company pays monthly line and usage charges to LECs for all of its installed
public pay telephones. These charges cover basic telephone service as well as
the transport of local coin calls.
    
 
   
Operator Assisted Long Distance Services.  The Company outsources its long
distance and operator service operations to a number of OSPs, including
Intellicall, which is the Company's primary provider of such services, AT&T,
BellSouth, Opticom and Conquest. The Company receives commissions from these
services based on the volume of calls made as well as on the amount of revenues
generated per call. In certain regions the Company may also install a
microprocessor-based automated operator system for select pay telephones that
allows the telephones to collect and store billing information and forward calls
to the called party, i.e. "store and forward" calls. The Company also receives
additional revenues from long distance carriers for dial-around calls made from
its public pay telephones whereby the consumer gains access to an OSP or a long
distance company other than one designated by the Company. In May 1992, the FCC
ruled that independent public pay telephone providers are entitled to dial-
around compensation on an interim basis at a fixed rate of $6.00 per telephone
per month for interstate dial-around calls. Similarly state regulatory
authorities, including Illinois, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina, have
implemented intrastate dial-around compensation programs for independent public
pay telephones. Other states are currently considering intrastate dial-around
compensation programs for independent public pay telephones. The recently
enacted Section 276 of the Telecommunications Act requires the FCC to establish
a per-call compensation plan to ensure that public pay telephone service
providers are fairly compensated for all calls made from their telephones
commencing November 6, 1996. In an order released on September 20, 1996, the FCC
implemented new rules that replace the current $6.00 flat fee per telephone per
month with an interim $45.85 flat fee per telephone per month from November 6,
1996 to October 1997. In October 1997, the flat fee will be replaced by a
per-call compensation mechanism. See "-- Governmental Regulations." Management
believes that both the interim plan and the per-call compensation plan will
generate significant additional revenues for the Company, net of related
expenses and processing fees, commencing November 6, 1996. However, there can be
no assurance that the rules and policies adopted by the FCC on its own or after
judicial review will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's
business, results of operations or financial condition.
    
 
                                       52
<PAGE>   54
 
   
TELEPHONE EQUIPMENT
    
 
   
The Company purchases its pay telephones from two of the three largest
independent manufacturers of public pay telephones, Intellicall and Protel Inc.
The Company has also acquired telephones manufactured by the third of the three
largest manufacturers of public pay telephones, Elcotel Inc. Although all three
manufacturers use similar technology, the Company seeks to purchase primarily a
single brand of telephone within a geographic area. This maximizes the
efficiency of the Company's field technicians and makes it easier to stock
appropriate spare parts. It is the Company's policy to place the PhoneTel name
on telephones that it acquires or installs.
    
 
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
 
   
The Company's management information systems have enabled the Company to enhance
customer service and to achieve strong operational and financial controls by
enabling management to react quickly and efficiently to critical information
collected from the Company's public pay telephones. The custom operational
software used to manage the Company's public pay telephone business is an
internally developed application named Prophecy. Prophecy is a comprehensive
system of data collection and analysis that supports daily operations in the
field and provides the Company with management data. The Prophecy software
allows the Company's management information systems to accept direct output from
the polling operations of the individual public pay telephones, analyze the data
and produce daily operational reports for the Company's field offices. In
addition, Prophecy develops summaries of management information.
    
 
   
The Prophecy software is scalable and is able to support the varying proprietary
protocols of the individual manufacturers of its public pay telephones. The
Company's polling operations are supported by the software provided by the
manufacturers of the public pay telephones owned by the Company. The Company
believes that its Prophecy management information systems supports its
acquisition strategy by enabling the Company to integrate efficiently and
effectively newly acquired companies.
    
 
   
The Company's public pay telephones are "smart" telephones and are operated by
means of advanced microprocessor technology that enables the telephones to
perform substantially all the necessary coin-driven and certain non coin-driven
functions independent of the Company's central office. Unlike the "dumb"
telephones used by most BOCs and other LECs, the Company's public pay telephones
are equipped with an audit feature which is linked by modem to the Company's
central computer. Substantially all of the Company's public pay telephones are
called daily by the Company's central office to determine their operability or
need for service as well as their readiness for collection of coin revenues.
Rate changes and other software-dependent functions can also be performed from
the central office without dispatching service technicians to individual public
pay telephones. These polling processes are accomplished on computers that are
dedicated to the nightly processing of public pay telephone information. This
information is used to plan collection and servicing routes on a daily basis by
the Company's service technicians. This allows the Company to minimize the
number of service technicians required to service its telephones while
maintaining a high level of operability of its public pay telephones.
    
 
SALES AND MARKETING
 
   
The Company relies on its internal sales force and independent sales
representatives to market its products and services. The internal sales force
receives salaries plus commissions for each public pay telephone installed and
the sales representatives are paid on a commission-only basis for each public
pay telephone installed. In addition, the Company pays its technicians a finders
fee for certain phones installed. The Company has nine sales persons who report
to the Vice President of Sales and Marketing. The Company also markets its
products and services through advertising in trade publications, booths at trade
shows and referrals from existing accounts.
    
 
   
The Company directs a major portion of its marketing efforts for public pay
telephones to multi-station accounts, such as shopping centers, convenience
stores, service stations, grocery stores, restaurants, truck stops and bus
terminals. These multi-station accounts have the advantages of greater
efficiency in collection and maintenance. The Company also solicits single
station accounts, where there is a demonstrated high demand for public pay
telephone service. In evaluating locations for the installation of public pay
telephones, the Company generally conducts a site survey to examine various
factors, including population density, traffic patterns, historical usage
information and other geographical factors. The Company generally will not
install a public pay telephone unless it believes based on the site survey that
the site will generate a minimum level of revenues.
    
 
CUSTOMERS
 
   
The Company's public pay telephone operations are diversified on both a
geographical and customer account basis. Currently, the Company owns and
operates public pay telephones in 40 states and the District of Columbia through
agreements with both multi-station customers such as shopping centers,
convenience stores, service stations, grocery stores, restaurants, truck stops
and bus
    
 
                                       53
<PAGE>   55
 
   
terminals as well as with single station customers. After giving effect to the
consummation of the Pending Acquisitions, the Company will own and operate
public pay telephones in 42 states, the District of Columbia and Mexico
(approximately 96% of which public pay telephones are located in 21 states).
    
 
   
The Company owns and operates the public pay telephones for certain properties
owned by Simon DeBartolo. The Company derived approximately 15% and 7% of its
total revenues for the year ended December 31, 1995 and for the nine months
ended September 30, 1996, respectively, from the operation of these public pay
telephones. As the Company expands its installed public pay telephone base
through additional acquisitions, it expects that the percentage of total
revenues derived from Simon DeBartolo will continue to decline. Other than Simon
DeBartolo, no single customer generated more than 5% of the Company's total
revenues for the year ended December 31, 1995 or the nine months ended September
30, 1996. See "Risk Factors -- Dependence on Significant Customer." On a pro
forma basis after giving effect to the Pending Acquisitions, no single customer
would have accounted for more than 5% of the Company's total revenues for the
year ended December 31, 1995 or the nine months ended September 30, 1996.
    
 
GOVERNMENTAL REGULATIONS
 
   
The operations of the public pay telephone industry are regulated primarily by
the public service or utility commissions of the various states and by the FCC.
In particular, the Company must obtain approvals to operate public pay
telephones from the public utility commissions of most states in which the
Company operates. In addition, from time to time, legislation is enacted by
Congress or the various state legislatures that affects the telecommunications
industry generally and the public pay telephone industry specifically. Court
decisions interpreting laws applicable to the telecommunications industry may
also have a significant effect on the public pay telephone industry. Changes in
existing laws and regulations as well as the creation of new ones, applicable to
the activities of the Company or other telecommunications businesses (including
the extent of competition, the charges of providers of interexchange and
operator services and the implementation of new technologies), may have a
material adverse effect on the Company's business, results of operations or
financial condition.
    
 
   
State.  Since the AT&T break-up, state regulatory authorities have primarily
been responsible for regulating intrastate public pay telephone services. Public
utility commissions in most states have established rules and regulations that
govern the provision of public pay telephone services, including certification
or registration, notice to end users of the identity of the service provider in
the form of postings or verbal announcements, requirements for rate quotes upon
request, call routing restrictions, and maximum price limitations. While not
necessarily uniform, these rules and regulations generally establish minimum
technical and operational characteristics to assure that public interest
considerations are met. To date, each state has had the right to regulate
pricing and other aspects of the operations of independently-owned public pay
telephones and all intrastate telephone service. In some jurisdictions, in order
for the Company to operate its public pay telephones, it is to become
certificated and have tariffs filed. The procedure and length of time for the
process varies from state to state. Until recently, in many states only local
telephone companies were permitted to process local and/or intraLATA operator
assisted calls. The Company has obtained the requisite regulatory approvals to
provide public pay telephone service in all states in which it provides such
services and complies with applicable state regulations governing such services.
    
 
   
The recently enacted Section 276 of the Telecommunications Act gives the FCC
authority to adopt rules affecting intrastate telephone services and to preempt
state rules and regulations inconsistent with those adopted by the FCC. As
discussed in more detail below under "-- Federal," the FCC adopted rules on
September 20, 1996 that preempt certain existing state regulations and limit the
scope of future state regulation of pricing and other aspects of public pay
telephone operation. In particular, states are required to:
    
 
(a) deregulate the price of a local phone call;
 
(b) eliminate all intrastate subsidies for BOC and LEC pay phone services;
 
(c) enact rules governing the provision of "public interest pay phones;" and
 
(d) conduct a thorough review of all existing state pay phone rules to ensure
    that those rules do not conflict with the intent of Section 276 and the FCC
    implementing rules.
 
   
Federal.  Until recently, the FCC has not actively regulated the provision of
intrastate public pay telephone services by independent public pay telephone
companies. However, the Company believes that the recent enactment of Section
276 of the Telecommunications Act will have a significant impact on the FCC's
role in governing and regulating the provision of intrastate public pay
telephone services. In addition, the FCC actively regulates the interstate and
foreign telecommunications market, which affects the Company's operations in
numerous ways.
    
 
                                       54
<PAGE>   56
 
   
Until the enactment of Section 276, the FCC had regulated public pay telephones
primarily in the context of its regulation of OSPs, and in particular, through
its implementation of the Telephone Operator Consumer Services Improvement Act
(the "Operator Services Act"). The Operator Services Act was enacted in October
1990 and established various requirements for companies that provide operator
services and call aggregators (which send calls to these OSPs). The requirements
of the Operators Services Act include call branding, information posting, rate
quoting and the filing of informational tariffs. The Company must comply or
ensure compliance with certain billing and consumer information requirements.
For example, the Company is not permitted to or to allow its OSP to bill
consumers for unanswered calls, bill for calls that do not reflect the location
or the origination of the call, or bill the call from any location other than
from where the call is made, unless the consumer's consent is explicitly
obtained. Furthermore, the Company and its OSP must identify the OSP
presubscribed to the public pay telephone to end users in the form of postings
at or near the telephone or verbal announcements in accordance with the FCC's
requirements. The Company also must allow consumers to access the interexchange
carrier of their choice by entering a specific code number, i.e., a "10XXX,"
"800" or a "950" number. The Company believes that it complies with the
provisions of the Operator Services Act as a call aggregator (i.e., one who
makes telephones available to the public for long distance calls using an OSP).
The Operator Services Act also requires the FCC to take action to limit the
exposure of public pay telephone companies to undue risk of fraud.
    
 
   
The Operator Services Act also directed the FCC to consider the need to
prescribe compensation to owners of independent public pay telephones for
dial-around access to a long distance company other than the one selected by the
independent public pay telephone company. In May 1992, the FCC ruled that
independent public pay telephone companies are entitled to compensation for
these calls. Due to the complexity of establishing an accounting system for
determining compensation for these calls, the FCC temporarily set compensation
at $6.00 per public pay telephone per month, to be allocated among long distance
companies earning annual toll revenues for interstate calls in excess of $100
million per year in accordance with their market share. Similarly, state
regulatory authorities, including, for example, Illinois, Florida, Georgia and
South Carolina, implemented intrastate dial-around compensation programs for
independent public pay telephone providers and other states are considering such
programs. In 1995, Section 276 of the Telecommunications Act was enacted, which
required the FCC to establish a per-call compensation plan to ensure that all
public pay telephone service providers are fairly compensated for all calls,
both intrastate and interstate. See "-- Compensation."
    
 
   
In 1992, the FCC initiated a rulemaking in which it proposed to implement the
"billed party preference" system ("BPP") for 0+ interLATA traffic from public
pay telephones and other aggregator locations such as hotels and motels. Under
BPP, operator-assisted long distance traffic would be carried automatically by
the OSP preselected by the party being billed for the call. Under the current
presubscription system, unless an access code is dialed, 0+ calls from public
pay telephones are routed to the OSP presubscribed to the public pay telephones.
Under BPP as proposed, 0+ calls would be completed by an OSP with no
relationship to the public pay telephone provider, and thus would eliminate
commissions paid by the presubscribed OSP to the public pay telephone provider
on 0+ calls.
    
 
   
In June 1996, the FCC issued a Second Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in
CC Docket No. 92-77 in which it tentatively concluded that the costs of BPP
outweigh the benefits, and proposed to not implement BPP. Instead, the FCC
proposed to (i) establish benchmarks for OSP rates based upon a composite of the
rates charged by the three largest interexchange carriers (AT&T, MCI, and
Sprint), which composite is intended to reflect rates in line with what
consumers expect to pay, and (ii) require OSP's that charge rates and/or fees
imposed by location providers whose total is greater than a given percentage
above the benchmarks, to disclose the applicable charges for the call to
consumers orally before connecting a call. Alternatively, the FCC proposed to
require all OSP's to disclose their rates on all operator assisted calls. The
effect of the rules, if any, ultimately adopted by the FCC, on the Company's
business, results of operations or financial condition can not be determined at
this time.
    
 
   
In September 1996, the FCC adopted rules which implement the public pay
telephone provisions of Section 276 of the Telecommunications Act. Key elements
of the rulemaking include:
    
 
   
(a) Compensation.  Currently, independent public pay telephone providers are not
    compensated on a per-call basis for toll-free calls, such as "800" calls and
    debit card calls, both domestic and international. The new FCC rules
    establish a threephase compensation plan to ensure that public pay telephone
    providers are fairly compensated for all calls originating from public pay
    telephones, with the exception of emergency calls and telecommunications
    relay service calls for hearing-disabled individuals. For the period from
    November 6, 1996 through October 6, 1997, the $6.00 flat fee per telephone
    per month will be replaced by an interim $45.85 flat fee per telephone per
    month (which was established by the FCC by multiplying $0.35 per call by the
    estimated industry average of 131 access code calls and "800" calls per pay
    telephone per month). In October 1997, the flat fee will be replaced by a
    per-call compensation mechanism. From October 1997 to October 1998, the
    per-call payment shall be $0.35; thereafter, the per-call rate shall be
    equal to the local coin call rate for each location, which rate will be
    determined by the marketplace, not by regulation. Obtaining fair
    compensation for these dial-around calls is particularly important since the
    use of access codes to reach a preferred long distance carrier has recently
    gained significant exposure and customer acceptance, because of marketing
    campaigns of the larger interexchange carriers, such as AT&T's "1-
    
 
                                       55
<PAGE>   57
 
   
800-CALLATT" and MCI's "1-800-COLLECT." BOCs are not permitted to receive
compensation for dial-around calls until they have complied with the Computer
III non-structural safeguards and have ceased subsidizing their public pay
telephone operations (see below).
    
 
   
    The Section 276 requirement that public pay telephone operators receive
    fair compensation for all public pay telephone calls also applies to
    local coin drop calls. To implement the requirement, the new FCC rules
    mandate a two phase transition to market-based rates for local coin drop
    calls. During the first year-long phase, states may continue to set the
    local coin rate in the same manner as they currently do, but they are also
    free to adopt market-based rates at any time during this one-year period.
    In addition, states are required during this period to review and remove,
    if necessary, those state regulations, such as entry and exit restrictions,
    that affect public pay telephone competition and are inconsistent with the  
    Telecommunications Act and the new FCC rules. In the second phase, which
    will begin in October 1997, the market will be allowed to set the rate for
    local coin calls in each state, unless the state can demonstrate to the
    satisfaction of the FCC that there are market failures within the state
    that would not allow market-based rates.  
    
 
   
(b) BOC subsidization.  BOCs and other LECs have traditionally included a public
    pay telephone cost element in determining the access charges imposed upon
    carriers to terminate long distance calls. Section 276 and the new FCC rules
    require LECs to eliminate these and other subsidies, to reduce their
    interstate access charges, to operate their public pay telephones as
    detariffed customer premises equipment and to provide independent public pay
    telephone providers all functionalities used by the LEC in its own delivery
    of public pay telephone service. In contrast to the past, when the LEC
    imposed a subscriber line charge on public pay telephone providers but not
    on its own public pay telephones, the FCC now requires that any subscriber
    line charge and tariffed network services charges apply equally to both LEC
    and independent public pay telephones.
    
 
   
(c) Non-structural safeguards.  The FCC adopted certain non-structural
    safeguards in its Computer III inquiry which were designed to prevent BOCs
    from using their incumbent market power in an anti-competitive manner. These
    safeguards generally allow the BOCs to provide certain services on an
    integrated basis (i.e., directly rather than through a separate subsidiary)
    provided that BOCs (i) allow nondiscriminatory access to their network
    features and functionalities; (ii) restrict use of customer proprietary
    network information; (iii) subscribe to certain network information
    disclosure rules; (iv) do not discriminate in the provision, installation,
    and maintenance of services and reporting and (v) adopt certain cost
    accounting safeguards. In its rulemaking, the FCC applied these safeguards
    to the provision of public pay telephone services by the BOCs, and found
    that further non-structural safeguards were unnecessary. The FCC also
    decided to reclassify BOC public pay telephone service as a "nonregulated
    activity" so that costs from public pay telephone activities would be
    separated from regulated non-public pay telephone accounts. Consistent with
    this approach, in a rulemaking initiated in July 1996 to implement certain
    accounting safeguards under the Telecommunications Act, the FCC proposed to
    apply accounting safeguards identical to those adopted in Computer III to
    prevent the subsidization of BOC public pay telephone services by non-public
    pay telephone revenues.
    
 
   
(d) InterLATA presubscription.  In the past BOCs were not permitted to compete
    in the interLATA marketplace. Section 276 permits BOCs to negotiate with
    location providers and select interLATA long distance service providers for
    their public pay telephones, unless the FCC determines that it is not in the
    public's interest. In its rulemaking, the FCC concluded that a BOC should be
    permitted to negotiate for the right to select the interLATA carrier serving
    its public pay telephones, but not until its plan to comply with the
    Computer III non-structural safeguards has been approved by the FCC.
    
 
   
(e) IntraLATA presubscription.  Until recently, in almost every state only the
    LEC has been able to be "presubscribed" to a telephone for local and
    intraLATA toll calls, including at a public pay telephone. "Presubscription"
    refers to an arrangement whereby a call is automatically connected to a
    pre-selected carrier, unless another carrier's access code is dialed.
    According to the FCC, intraLATA presubscription has been ordered to become
    available in eighteen states. Section 276 provides that all public pay
    telephone service providers have the right to "negotiate with the location
    provider on the location provider's selecting and contracting with, and
    subject to the terms of any agreement with the location provider, to select
    and contract with, the carriers that carry intraLATA calls from their
    payphones." The FCC's new rules give all public pay telephone service
    providers (including BOCs and independent providers such as the Company) the
    right to negotiate with location providers concerning the intraLATA carrier.
    
 
   
(f) Public interest public pay telephones.  Section 276 requires the FCC to
    ensure that public pay telephones provided in the interest of public health,
    safety, and welfare are maintained and supported equitably. The new FCC
    rules adopt a narrow definition of "public interest payphone," and leave to
    the discretion of the states how to fund their respective public interest
    public pay telephone programs, so long as the funding mechanism (i) "fairly
    and equitably" distributes the costs of such program, and (ii) does not
    involve the use of subsidies prohibited by Section 276(b)(1)(B) of the
    Telecommunications Act. Each state's funding review must be completed by
    October 1998.
    
 
                                       56
<PAGE>   58
 
   
The Company believes that Section 276 and the implementing regulations adopted
by the FCC will likely have an overall positive effect on the public pay
telephone industry in general and the Company in particular. However, the final
rules adopted by the FCC and Section 276 have not yet been interpreted by the
courts, and there can be no assurance regarding the effect that the rules and
policies ultimately adopted thereunder will have on the Company.
    
 
SERVICEMARK
   
The Company uses the servicemark "PhoneTel" on its telephones, letterhead and in
various other manners. On November 22, 1988, the United States Patent and
Trademark Office granted the Company a Certificate of Registration for the
servicemark "PhoneTel" for providing telecommunications services for a period of
twenty years.
    
 
COMPETITION
   
The public pay telephone industry is, and can be expected to remain, highly
competitive. While the Company's principal competition comes from BOCs and other
LECs, the Company also competes with other independent providers of public pay
telephone services, major OSPs and interexchange carriers. In addition, the
Company competes with providers of cellular communications services and personal
communications services (wireless), which provide an alternative to the use of
public pay telephones. Furthermore, pursuant to the recently enacted Section 276
of the Telecommunications Act and the FCC's implementing regulations, BOCs are
permitted to negotiate with location providers and select interLATA long
distance service providers for their public pay telephones. See "-- Governmental
Regulations." This will enable BOCs to generate revenues from a new service, as
well as to compete with independent public pay telephone providers for locations
to install their public pay telephones by offering location providers higher
commissions for long distance calls than those currently offered by independent
public pay telephone providers. This competition for locations may have a
material adverse effect on the Company's business, results of operations and
financial condition.
    
   
Some of the other public pay telephone companies have pursued an acquisition
strategy similar to the Company's and frequently compete with the Company for
the most favorable public pay telephone contracts and sites. Although the
Company is one of the largest independent public pay telephone service
providers, most BOCs and other LECs and interexchange carriers have, and some
independent public pay telephone companies with which the Company competes may
have, substantially greater financial, marketing and other resources than the
Company. In addition, in response to competition from public pay telephone
companies, many BOCs and other LECs have increased their compensation
arrangement with location providers by offering higher commissions.
    
   
The Company believes the principal competitive factors in the public pay
telephone industry are (i) commission payments to location providers, (ii) the
ability to serve accounts with locations in several LATAs or states and (iii)
the quality of service provided to location owners and public pay telephone
users. The Company believes that it is well-positioned to compete effectively in
the public pay telephone industry.
    
 
EMPLOYEES
   
The Company had 168 employees at September 30, 1996, of whom 124 were employed
to perform or support field operations. The Company considers its relations with
its employees to be satisfactory. None of the employees of the Company are a
party to agreements with any unions.
    
 
PROPERTIES
   
The Company's principal office is located at 1127 Euclid Avenue, Suite 650,
Cleveland, Ohio, where the Company leases approximately 15,200 square feet of
space at a monthly rental of $12,728. The lease is scheduled to terminate in
December 1997. The monthly rent will increase to $15,200 in 1997. The lease also
gives the Company five, one year renewal options. As of September 30, 1996, the
Company also maintains service and sales offices in leased premises in Fort
Lauderdale, Orlando, Ocala, and Tampa, Florida; Las Vegas, Nevada; Farmers
Branch, Texas; Springfield, St. Louis, and Kansas City, Missouri; Chicago,
Illinois; Livonia, Michigan; Hilton Head, South Carolina; Knoxville, Tennessee;
San Diego, Hayward and Santa Fe Springs, California; Kent, Washington; Denver,
Colorado; Cicero, Indiana; Lincolnton, North Carolina; Portland, Oregon; and
Newport News, Virginia, at an aggregate monthly rental of $39,958. The Company
believes that it would be able to replace any leases that are not renewed upon
expiration with leases having comparable terms.
    
   
The Company expects that upon consummation of the Pending Acquisitions it will
acquire and maintain service and sales offices in owned or leased premises in
Houston, Lubbock, McAllen, El Paso and Corpus Christi, Texas; Albuquerque,
Farmington and Gallup, New Mexico; Billings and Missoula, Montana; Salt Lake
City and Cedar City, Utah; Bismarck, North Dakota; Flagstaff, Arizona; and Grand
Junction, Colorado.
    
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
   
The Company is not a party to any legal proceedings which individually or in the
aggregate, would have a material adverse effect on the Company's business,
results of operations or financial condition.
    
 
                                       57
<PAGE>   59
 
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
   
The following table sets forth the names and ages (as of September 30, 1996) and
positions of each of the directors and executive officers of the Company.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
             NAME               AGE                                 POSITION
- ------------------------------  ---   --------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>   <C>
Peter G. Graf                   59    Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director
Tammy L. Martin                 32    Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer, General
                                      Counsel and Secretary
Nickey B. Maxey                 40    Chief Operating Officer and Director
Gary Pace                       45    Senior Vice President, Acquisitions and Regulatory Matters
Richard P. Kebert               50    Chief Financial Officer
Joseph Abrams                   60    Director
George H. Henry                 43    Director
Stuart Hollander                66    Director
Aron Katzman                    58    Director
Steven Richman                  53    Director
</TABLE>
    
 
PETER G. GRAF has been Chairman and a Director of the Company since July 1, 1995
and was elected Chief Executive Officer of the Company in September 1995 and
spends a substantial portion of his time fulfilling such duties. Mr. Graf is
licensed as an attorney and as a certified public accountant and serves as an
officer and/or director of various privately-held companies and the managing
partner of an accounting firm. From 1991 to September 1995, Mr. Graf served as
Vice Chairman of USA Mobile Communications Holdings, Inc.
 
   
TAMMY L. MARTIN was elected Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative
Officer of the Company in April 1996 and has been General Counsel and Secretary
of the Company since September 1995. Prior to that, Ms. Martin served as
associate legal counsel for the Company during 1993 and 1994. Prior to joining
the Company, Ms. Martin was in private legal practice from 1992 to 1993 and was
self-employed as an accountant from 1990 to 1992.
    
 
   
NICKEY B. MAXEY has served as Chief Operating Officer and a Director of the
Company since April 1996. Mr. Maxey was the founder and for more than five years
prior to the acquisition of IPP by the Company in March 1996, served as
President of each of International Pay Phones, Inc., a Tennessee company and
International Pay Phones, Inc., a South Carolina company. Since 1990, Mr. Maxey
has owned and operated Resort Hospitality Services of South Carolina, Resort
Hospitality Services of Tennessee and Resort Hospitality Services International,
a group of affiliated companies which are resellers of long distance services.
    
 
GARY PACE has been Senior Vice President of the Company since its merger with
World in September 1995. Prior to such merger, Mr. Pace was President of World
since 1989.
 
   
RICHARD P. KEBERT has served as Chief Financial Officer of the Company since
September 1996. Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Kebert was an independent
consultant. From 1994 to 1996, he was Vice President -- Finance and
Administration of Acordia of Cleveland, Inc. For 12 years prior thereto, Mr.
Kebert held several senior management positions with Mr. Coffee, inc., including
Vice President -- Administration and Secretary. Mr. Kebert is licensed as a
certified public accountant.
    
 
   
JOSEPH ABRAMS has been a Director since September 1995. Mr. Abrams is also a
director of Merisel, Inc. a public company that distributes micro computer
hardware and software, and Spectrum Signal Processing, Inc., a public company
that specializes in digital signal solutions. Mr. Abrams was a co-founder of and
served as the President of AGS Computers from 1967 to 1991. From 1991 to 1996,
Mr. Abrams has been a private investor.
    
 
   
GEORGE H. HENRY has been a Director since April 1990. Mr. Henry has been the
President of G. Howard Associates, Inc., a private investment firm, since 1986.
Mr. Henry is also on the Board of Directors of Biovail International Corporation
and a trustee of Mitchell College.
    
 
   
STUART HOLLANDER has been a Director since September 1995. Mr. Hollander was
founder, principal owner and Chairman of the Board of World from 1986 until it
was merged into the Company in 1995. Prior to that he was Executive Vice
President of Hollander & Company, Inc., one of the largest distributors of
consumer electronics in the U.S., representing Zenith Radio Corporation; the
founder and an officer of Lesley Acceptance Corporation; Chairman and a Member
of the Board of Jaeger of Canada, Inc.; and a member of the Board of Pioneer
Bank and Trust Company.
    
 
                                       58
<PAGE>   60
 
ARON KATZMAN has been a Director since September 1995. Mr. Katzman is President
of New Legends, Inc., a country club/residential community in the St. Louis,
Missouri area, and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Decorating Den of
Missouri, a company engaged in the selling of decorating franchises in Missouri.
Previously, Mr. Katzman was founder and a former Director of Medicine Shoppe,
Inc., a franchisor of pharmacies, and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
Roman Company, a manufacturer and distributor of fashion costume jewelry, from
1984 until it was sold in 1994. Mr. Katzman was formerly a director and officer
of World, which was merged into the Company in September 1995.
 
   
STEVEN RICHMAN has been a Director since September 1995. Mr. Richman is the
principal owner of, and has served as the Chief Executive Officer of, Fabric
Resources International for more than the past five years. Mr. Richman was the
co-founder and an officer of Cable Systems USA, an officer at Cellular Systems
USA and a director of USA Mobile Communications Holdings, Inc. Mr. Richman has
been a director of Cable Systems USA II since 1989.
    
 
COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
The Board of Directors of the Company has a Compensation Committee and an Audit
Committee. Although neither committee had held any meetings in 1995, both
committees are scheduled to meet in the fourth quarter of 1996. The Audit
Committee is expected to meet on a quarterly basis in 1997.
 
   
The Compensation Committee has the authority to make decisions with respect to
executive compensation matters. Joseph Abrams (Chairman of the Compensation
Committee), George Henry and Peter Graf are the members of the Compensation
Committee.
    
 
   
The Audit Committee has the authority to recommend to the Board of Directors the
independent accountants to audit the Company's financial statements, to meet
with the independent accountants and to review the Company's financial
statements, results of audits and fees charged. Aron Katzman (Chairman of the
Audit Committee) and Steven Richman are the members of the Audit Committee.
    
 
COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS
 
   
The Company compensates non-employee directors for serving on the Board and
reimburses them for any expenses incurred as a result of Board of Directors
meetings. The Board of Directors had approved an annual fee of $5,000 for
non-employee directors in cash, or at the director's election, shares of Common
Stock. During 1995, Mr. Henry received a fee of $5,000 which was paid in 1,111
shares of Common Stock of the Company.
    
 
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
On September 22, 1995, the Company entered into a consulting agreement with
Stuart Hollander, World's former Chairman, pursuant to the terms of the
acquisition of World. The agreement with Mr. Hollander entitles him to annual
salaries of $125,000 and $135,000 during the two year term of the agreement.
 
On September 22, 1995 the Company also entered into an employment agreement with
the Company's Senior Vice President, Gary Pace, pursuant to the terms of the
acquisition of World. The agreement with Mr. Pace entitles him to annual
salaries of $110,000 and $120,000, as well as certain bonuses, during the two
year term of the agreement.
 
On September 1, 1996, the Company also entered into an employment agreement with
the Company's Chief Financial Officer, Richard Kebert. The agreement with Mr.
Kebert entitles him to an annual salary of $120,000, as well as a guaranteed
minimum bonus of $15,000 during the eighteen-month term of the agreement.
 
   
The Company has not entered into employment agreements with Peter Graf or Nickey
Maxey, the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Operating Officer,
respectively. Mr. Graf and Mr. Maxey provide their executive services to the
Company without any compensation. The Company does, however, reimburse such
officers for their business expenses.
    
 
The following table sets forth a summary of all compensation of the Company's
Chief Executive Officer and all other executive officers whose total
compensation exceeded $100,000 per year for any year in the three year period
ended December 31, 1995 (the "named executive officers").
 
                                       59
<PAGE>   61
 
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                                      ANNUAL COMPENSATION                                          PAYOUTS
                                                 ------------------------------           AWARDS            ---------------------
                                                                        OTHER     ----------------------      LONG-
                                                                       ANNUAL     RESTRICTED                  TERM      ALL OTHER
                NAME AND                                               COMPEN-      STOCK      OPTIONS/     INCENTIVE    COMPEN-
           PRINCIPAL POSITION             YEAR    SALARY     BONUS     SATION      AWARD(S)      SARs        PAYOUTS     SATION
- ----------------------------------------  ----   --------   -------   ---------   ----------   ---------    ---------   ---------
<S>                                       <C>    <C>        <C>       <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>
Peter G. Graf                             1995         --        --   $ 5,000(1)         --       47,583          --          --
  Chairman, Chief                         1994         --        --          --          --       24,705          --          --
  Executive Officer
  and Director
Jerry H. Burger                           1995   $ 74,293   $13,600   $13,600(2)         --       62,500          --    $212,000(3)
  Former Chief                            1994   $ 40,000        --          --          --           --          --          --
  Executive Officer                       1993   $ 42,000   $75,000   $ 5,917(4)         --       43,333(5)
Bernard Mandel                            1995   $147,544   $ 9,760   $ 9,760(6)         --       41,666          --    $146,500(7)
  Former President,                       1994   $ 88,894        --   $ 4,154(4)         --           --          --          --
  Chief Operating                         1993   $ 83,269   $25,000   $ 3,698(4)         --       10,000(8)       --          --
  Officer and Secretary
Daniel J. Moos                            1995   $ 95,000   $ 1,442   $12,800(9)         --       54,999(10)       --         --(11)
  Former Executive
  Vice President,
  Chief Financial Officer,
  and Treasurer
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
   
 (1) Represents fees payable to Mr. Graf as a non-employee director during 1995,
     which fees have not been paid by the Company.
    
 
   
 (2) Represents the value of 2,833 shares paid to Mr. Burger for services
     provided.
    
 
   
 (3) On September 15, 1995, the Company and Mr. Burger entered into a separation
     agreement which provided for the termination of the employment agreement
     and the resignation of Mr. Burger as a director, officer and employee of
     the Company. Pursuant to the separation agreement, the Company agreed to
     pay Mr. Burger $650,000 in installments, with the final amount paid March
     15, 1996. All other compensation represents payment under the separation
     agreement with Mr. Burger and related expenses excluding payment of
     $445,000, plus accrued interest of $4,291, paid on March 15, 1996.
    
 
   
 (4) Value of non-business use of Company automobile.
    
 
   
 (5) 26,000 options expired in 1995.
    
 
   
 (6) Represents the value of 2,033 shares paid to Mr. Mandel for services
     provided.
    
 
   
 (7) On September 15, 1995, the Company and Mr. Mandel entered into a separation
     agreement which provided for the termination of the employment agreement
     and the resignation of Mr. Mandel as a director, officer and employee of
     the Company. Pursuant to the separation agreement, the Company agreed to
     pay Mr. Mandel the amount of $450,000 in installments, with the final
     amount paid March 15, 1996. All other compensation represents payment under
     the separation agreement with Mr. Mandel, excluding payment of $308,500,
     plus accrued interest of $2,976, paid on March 15, 1996.
    
 
   
 (8) Expired in 1995.
    
 
   
 (9) Represents the value of 2,666 shares paid to Mr. Moos for services
     provided.
    
 
   
(10) 33,000 options not vested at December 31, 1995.
    
 
   
(11) On July 29, 1996, the Company and Mr. Moos entered into a separation
     agreement which provided for the termination of his employment agreement
     and the resignation of Mr. Moos as an executive vice president, chief
     financial officer and treasurer of the Company, effective August 2, 1996.
     Pursuant to the separation agreement, the Company agreed to pay Mr. Moos
     the amount of $325,000 in installments, of which $25,000 has been paid,
     with the final amount to be paid on the earlier to occur of (i) December
     31, 1996 or (ii) the consummation of a debt or equity offering by the
     Company in an amount equal to or greater than $10 million.
    
 
                                       60
<PAGE>   62
 
   
The following table sets forth certain information concerning individual grants
of stock options made during the year ended December 31, 1995 to each of the
named executive officers.
    
 
                     OPTIONS/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                              (INDIVIDUAL GRANTS)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             -------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              PERCENT OF
                                             NUMBER OF          TOTAL
                                             SECURITIES        OPTIONS/
                                             UNDERLYING       WARRANTS/
                                              OPTIONS/           SARs          EXERCISE
                                                SARs          GRANTED TO       OR BASE
                                              GRANTED        EMPLOYEES IN       PRICE
       NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION              (#)          FISCAL YEAR        ($/SH)         EXPIRATION DATE
- ------------------------------------------   ----------      ------------      --------      -------------------
<S>                                          <C>             <C>               <C>           <C>
Peter G. Graf                                    41,833              6.3%      $   5.70      December 31, 1997
  Chairman, Chief                                 5,750              0.9%      $   6.00      August 15, 2000
  Executive Officer and Director
Jerry H. Burger                                  62,500(1)           9.5%      $   6.00(2)   August 31, 1997
  Former Chief Executive Officer
Bernard Mandel                                   41,666(3)           6.3%      $   6.00(2)   August 31, 1997
  Former President, Chief Operating
     Officer and Secretary
Daniel J. Moos                                   54,999(4)           8.3%      $   6.00(2)   August 2, 1998
  Former Executive Vice President, Chief
  Financial Officer and Treasurer
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
(1) Excludes 38,306 additional options issued pursuant to anti-dilution
    provisions.
 
(2) Does not reflect anti-dilutive repricing of options on June 4, 1996, which
    lowered the exercise price to $3.72 per share.
 
(3) Excludes 25,537 additional options issued pursuant to anti-dilution 
    provisions.
 
(4) Excludes 33,709 additional options issued pursuant to anti-dilution
    provisions.
 
   
The following table sets forth certain information about unexercised stock
options held by the named executive officers at December 31, 1995. No stock
options were exercised by such persons during 1995.
    
 
              AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                          AND FY-END OPTION/SAR VALUES
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         -------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     NUMBER OF
                                                                                     SECURITIES       VALUE OF
                                                                                     UNDERLYING     UNEXERCISED
                                                                                    UNEXERCISED     IN-THE-MONEY
                                                                                    OPTIONS/SARs    OPTIONS/SARs
                                                                                     AT FY-END       AT FY-END
                                                           SHARES                       (#)             ($)
                                                          ACQUIRED       VALUE      EXERCISABLE/    EXERCISABLE/
             NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION                 ON EXERCISE    REALIZED    UNEXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
- ------------------------------------------------------   -----------    --------    ------------    ------------
<S>                                                      <C>            <C>         <C>             <C>
Peter G. Graf                                                   --            --        75,064        $ 31,316
  Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director
Jerry H. Burger                                                 --            --       127,361        $ 31,840
  Former Chief Executive Officer
Bernard Mandel                                                  --            --        66,666        $ 91,667
  Former President, Chief Operating Officer and
  Secretary
Daniel J. Moos                                                  --            --        54,999        $ 13,750
  Former Executive Vice President, Chief Financial
  Officer and Treasurer
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       61
<PAGE>   63
 
                       PRINCIPAL AND SELLING SHAREHOLDERS
 
   
The following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial
ownership of the Common Stock owned by each Director of the Company, each person
known by the Company to own beneficially more than 5% of the outstanding Common
Stock, the named executive officers, all directors and officers as a group and
the Selling Shareholders as of September 30, 1996 and as adjusted to reflect the
sale of the shares in the Offering. Unless otherwise indicated, the number of
shares of Common Stock owned by the named shareholders assumes the exercise of
the warrants or options that are exercisable within 60 days, the number of which
is separately referred to in a footnote, and the percentage shown assumes the
exercise of such warrants or options and assumes that no warrants or options
held by others are exercised. This information is based upon information
furnished by such persons and statements filed with the Commission and other
information known by the Company.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        ---------------------------------------------------------
                                                         BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP               BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP
                                                        PRIOR TO THE OFFERING    SHARES      AFTER THE OFFERING
                                                          SHARE                    TO        SHARE
         NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER            NUMBER     PERCENTAGE   BE SOLD    NUMBER     PERCENTAGE
- ------------------------------------------------------  ---------   ----------   -------   ---------   ----------
<S>                                                     <C>         <C>          <C>       <C>         <C>
DIRECTORS
Peter G. Graf (1)(16)                                   1,029,376     12.89%         --    1,029,376       6.99%
Chairman, Chief Executive Officer
and Director
1127 Euclid Avenue, Suite 650
Cleveland, OH 44115-1601

Nickey B. Maxey (2)(16)                                   406,184      5.30%         --      406,184       2.82%
Chief Operating Officer and Director
1127 Euclid Avenue, Suite 650
Cleveland, OH 44115-1601

George H. Henry (3)                                       360,376      4.70%         --      360,376       2.50%
Director
6860 Sunrise Court
Coral Gables, FL 33133

Stuart Hollander (4)                                      323,559      4.24%         --      323,559       2.25%
Director
32 Lake Forest
St. Louis, MO 63124

Steven Richman (5)(16)                                    258,535      3.31%         --      258,535       1.78%
Director
9 Beech Lane
Kings Point, NY 11024

Aron Katzman (6)(16)                                      244,664      3.14%         --      244,664       1.68%
Director
10 Layton Terrace
St. Louis, MO 63124

Joseph Abrams (7)(16)                                     195,536      2.50%         --      195,536       1.34%
Director
85 Old Farm Road
Bedminister, NJ 07921
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       62
<PAGE>   64
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        ---------------------------------------------------------
                                                         BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP               BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP
                                                        PRIOR TO THE OFFERING    SHARES      AFTER THE OFFERING
                                                          SHARE                    TO        SHARE
         NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER            NUMBER     PERCENTAGE   BE SOLD    NUMBER     PERCENTAGE
- ------------------------------------------------------  ---------     ------      ----     ---------      ----
<S>                                                     <C>         <C>          <C>       <C>         <C>
NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

Jerry H. Burger (8)                                       239,930      3.06%         --      239,930       1.64%
Former Chief Executive Officer
27040 Cedar Road
Beachwood, OH 44122

Bernard Mandel (9)                                        100,824      1.31%         --      100,824        .70%
Former President,
Chief Operating Officer & Secretary
8233 Whispering Pines Drive
Russell, OH 44072

Daniel J. Moos (10)                                       100,707      1.30%         --      100,707        .70%
Former Executive Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
7399 Stow Road
Hudson, OH 44236

Executive Officers and Directors
  as a group (10 persons) (11)(17)                      2,961,473     34.62%         --    2,961,473      19.35%

SELLING SHAREHOLDERS
Internationale Nederlanden
(U.S.) Capital Corporation (12)(18)                     4,464,907     36.89%     250,000   4,214,907      23.68%
135 East 57th Street
New York, NY 10022

Cerberus Partners, L.P. (13)(18)                        4,464,907     36.89%     250,000   4,214,907      23.68%
950 Third Avenue, 20th floor
New York, NY 10022

OTHER 5% BENEFICIAL OWNERS
ACI -- HDT Supply Company, et al.,
  as Debtors-in-Possession (14)                         2,162,163      28.3%         --    2,162,163      15.03%
5452 Oberlin Drive, Suite B
San Diego, CA 92121

J&C Resources (15)(17)                                    486,860      6.25%         --      486,860       3.35%
216 Daniel Webster Highway
S. Nashua, NH 03060

Southcoast Capital Corporation (16)(17)                   475,108      5.90%         --      475,108       3.21%
277 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10172
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
 
 (1) Includes warrants to purchase 75,064 shares of Common Stock through March
     13, 2001, and 14% Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into
     269,454 shares of Common Stock.
 
 (2) Includes 14% Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into
     31,262 shares of Common Stock.
 
   
 (3) Includes options to purchase 35,000 shares of Common Stock through October
     9, 1998.
    
 
   
 (4) Includes 148,864 shares of Common Stock held by his spouse and 6,266 shares
     of Common Stock held by other family members.
    
 
   
 (5) Includes warrants to purchase 126,830 shares of Common Stock through March
     13, 2001, 4,444 shares of Common Stock held by his spouse, and 14%
     Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into 44,909 shares of
     Common Stock.
    
 
                                       63
<PAGE>   65
 
   
 (6) Includes warrants to purchase 95,128 shares of Common Stock through March
     13, 2001, and 14% Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into
     47,469 shares of Common Stock.
    
 
   
 (7) Includes warrants to purchase 125,997 shares of Common Stock through March
     13, 2001, and 14% Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into
     62,873 shares of Common Stock.
    
 
   
 (8) Includes options to purchase 210,430 shares of Common Stock through August
     31, 1997. Beneficial owner has anti-dilution rights pursuant to stock
     option agreements or other rights which will require adjustments to the
     number of shares beneficially owned as a result of certain transactions
     which occurred during the period from July 1, 1996 to September 30, 1996.
    
 
 (9) Includes options to purchase 97,541 shares of Common Stock through August
     31, 1997 and 1,250 shares of Common Stock held by his spouse. Beneficial
     owner has anti-dilution rights pursuant to stock option agreements or other
     rights which will require adjustments to the number of shares beneficially
     owned as a result of certain transactions which occurred during the period
     from July 1, 1996 to September 30, 1996.
 
(10) Includes options to purchase 88,708 shares of Common Stock which expire
     August 2, 2000. Beneficial owner has anti-dilution rights pursuant to stock
     option agreements or other rights which will require adjustments to the
     number of shares beneficially owned as a result of certain transactions
     which occurred during the period from July 1, 1996 to September 30, 1996.
 
(11) Includes beneficial ownership of Common Stock described above with respect
     to Messrs. Graf, Maxey, Richman, Abrams, Katzman, Hollander, Henry, and
     beneficial ownership of Common Stock of Mr. Pace and Ms. Martin.
 
   
(12) Includes Lenders' Warrants to purchase the Series A Preferred, which is
     immediately convertible into 2,048,240 shares of Common Stock and certain
     debt under the Credit Agreement which is convertible into Series B
     Preferred, which is immediately convertible into 2,416,667 shares of Common
     Stock. ING may exercise a portion of its Lender Warrants in order to sell
     Shares of Common Stock in the Offering. Assuming ING sells 250,000 shares
     of Common Stock in the Offering and all of the indebtedness under the
     Credit Agreement is repaid with a portion of the net proceeds of the
     Company Debt Offering, ING will beneficially own 1,798,240 shares of Common
     Stock, which would represent 23.68% of the Common Stock outstanding after
     consummation of the Offering.
    
 
   
(13) Includes Lenders' Warrants to purchase the Series A Preferred, which is
     immediately convertible into 2,048,240 shares of Common Stock and certain
     debt under the Credit Agreement which is convertible into Series B
     Preferred, which is immediately convertible into 2,416,667 shares of Common
     Stock. Cerberus may exercise a portion of its Lender Warrants in order to
     sell shares of Common Stock in the Offering. Assuming Cerberus sells
     250,000 shares of Common Stock in the Offering and all of the indebtedness
     under the Credit Agreement is repaid with a portion of the net proceeds of
     the Company Debt Offering, Cerberus will beneficially own 1,798,240 shares
     of Common Stock, which would represent 23.68% of the Common Stock
     outstanding after consummation of the Offering. See note (18) below.
    
 
(14) Represents the shares of Common Stock given by the Company to ACI-HDT
     Supply Company and its affiliates (collectively referred to herein as
     Amtel) as consideration in the Amtel acquisition. Each of the Amtel
     entities is a Debtor-In-Possession in separate Chapter 11 reorganization
     proceedings pending before the Untied States Bankruptcy Court for the
     Southern District of California (the "Bankruptcy Court") identified as Case
     Nos. 95-08253-All. Pursuant to the Asset Purchase Agreement dated as of
     June 26, 1996, as amended, between the Company and Amtel, Amtel has agreed
     to distribute the shares of Common Stock to its creditors after a final
     plan of reorganization is confirmed by order of the Bankruptcy Court.
 
   
(15) Represents 14% Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into
     148,200 shares of Common Stock.
    
 
   
(16) See "Certain Transactions" for information with respect to the 14%
     Preferred and the Nominal Value Warrants.
    
 
   
(17) Includes warrants to purchase 310,660 shares of Common Stock through March
     13, 2001, and 14% Preferred which is convertible through June 30, 2000 into
     107,782 shares of Common Stock.
    
 
   
(18) Cerberus and ING may each sell up to 250,000 shares of Common Stock in the
     Offering. Notwithstanding the lock-up agreement entered into with the
     underwriters in the Offering, in such event, Cerberus or ING will be
     permitted to sell after 45 days following the effective date of the
     registration statement relating to the Offering up to that number of shares
     equal to the difference between 250,000 and the number of shares of Common
     Stock actually sold by Cerberus or ING in the Offering. See "Underwriting."
    
 
                                       64
<PAGE>   66
 
                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
   
On March 15, 1996, Nominal Value Warrants to purchase 2,018,942 shares of Common
Stock expiring March 13, 2001 were issued in conjunction with the acquisitions
of IPP and Paramount, redemption of the 10% Preferred, 8% Preferred, and 7%
Preferred, and conversion of certain debt of the Company into the 14% Preferred.
See "Description of Capital Stock -- Preferred Stock -- 14% Preferred" for a
description of the terms of the 14% Preferred. Concurrently with their exchange
of debt and preferred stock for the 14% Preferred, the following directors,
executive officers and security holders of 5% or more of the Common Stock
received the amount of 14% Preferred and Nominal Value Warrants shown below. The
Company may use a portion of the net proceeds of the Company Debt Offering and
the Offering to redeem all of the 14% Preferred other than the shares of 14%
Preferred beneficially owned by Peter G. Graf.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             ---------------------------------
                                                                                VALUE OF
                                                                             DEBT/PREFERRED
                                                                              SURRENDERED
                                                                               AND STATED
                                                                              VALUE OF 14%         NUMBER OF
                                                                               PREFERRED         NOMINAL VALUE
                         NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                ISSUED         WARRANTS ISSUED
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------------     ---------------
<S>                                                                          <C>                <C>
Peter G. Graf                                                                  $1,500,000           539,989
  Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director
Joseph Abrams                                                                     350,000           125,997
  Director
Aron Katzman                                                                      264,250            95,128
  Director
Steven Richman                                                                    250,000            89,998
  Director
Nickey B. Maxey                                                                   174,032            62,650
  Chief Operating Officer and Director
J&C Resources                                                                     825,000           296,994
  5% Owner
Southcoast Capital Corporation                                                    600,000           143,994
  5% Owner
</TABLE>
    
 
   
In December, 1995, Mr. Graf loaned $325,000 to the Company. Such amount is
subordinated to the Company's other indebtedness and accrues interest at the
rate of prime plus 5%. No interest was paid in connection with this loan during
1996. In October 1996, Mr. Graf loaned the Company an additional $267,000 under
similar terms.
    
 
   
In March 1995, a predecessor of Southcoast Capital Corporation ("Southcoast"),
which is a 5% or more stockholder and one of the underwriters in the Company
Debt Offering and the Offering, was paid fees consisting of (i) $600,000 in
cash, (ii) $600,000 of 14% Preferred and (iii) Nominal Value Warrants to
purchase 143,944 shares of Common Stock of the Company at the price of $.01 per
share for providing financial advisory services to the Company in connection
with the Credit Agreement. In addition, in December 1995, a predecessor of
Southcoast received 56,666 shares of Common Stock and warrants to purchase
166,666 shares of the Company's Common Stock at an exercise price of $6.00 per
share for services rendered in connection with the acquisition of World and a
working capital loan. Southcoast will receive approximately $810,000 in
customary fees for providing financial advisory services to the Company in
connection with the Cherokee Acquisition as well as an investment banking fee
for acting as an underwriter in connection with the Company Debt Offering. See
"Underwriting."
    
 
   
ING, which is a 5% or more stockholder and one of the Lenders under the Credit
Agreement, received customary fees during 1995 and 1996 pursuant to the terms of
the Credit Agreement.
    
 
                                       65
<PAGE>   67
 
                          DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK
 
GENERAL
 
   
The authorized capital stock of the Company consists of 50,000,000 shares of
Common Stock, $.01 par value per share, and 10,000,000 shares of Preferred
Stock, without par value, except as further designated by the Board of Directors
(the "Preferred Stock"). As of September 30, 1996, there was outstanding (i)
7,639,709 shares of Common Stock, (ii) 116,316.05 shares of 14% Cumulative
Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock, $60 stated value per share (the "14%
Preferred"), (iii) Lenders' Warrants to purchase 204,824 shares of Series A
Preferred, which are then immediately convertible into 4,096,480 shares of
Common Stock, (iv) 983,805 Nominal Value Warrants, which are exercisable into
the same number of shares of Common Stock, (v) 830,351 additional warrants which
are exercisable into the same number of shares of Common Stock and (vi) 650,746
stock options for Common Stock, all of which are immediately exercisable. In
addition, at September 30, 1996, $29,000,000 of indebtedness outstanding under
the Credit Agreement was convertible at the Lenders' option into approximately
241,667 shares of Series B Preferred, which are then immediately convertible
into 4,833,333 shares of Common Stock. Upon completion of the Company Debt
Offering and the Offering, there will be outstanding (i) 14,389,709 shares of
Common Stock, (ii) 116,316.05 shares of 14% Preferred, (iii) Lenders' Warrants
to purchase 179,824 shares of Series A Preferred, (iv) 983,805 Nominal Value
Warrants, (v) 830,351 additional warrants and (vi) 650,746 stock options for
Common Stock. After the Company Debt Offering and the Offering and the
application of the net proceeds therefrom, there would be no debt outstanding
under the Credit Agreement or the New Credit Agreement that was convertible into
Series B Preferred or Common Stock.
    
 
The following summary is qualified in its entirety by the provisions of the
Company's Articles of Incorporation, as amended (the "Articles of
Incorporation"), a copy of which has been incorporated by reference as an
exhibit to the Registration Statement of which this Prospectus is a part.
 
COMMON STOCK
 
Holders of Common Stock are entitled to one vote for each share held on all
matters submitted to a vote of shareholders and they do not have any cumulative
voting rights except as permitted by Ohio law. Accordingly, holders of a
majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock entitled to vote in any
election of directors may elect all of the directors standing for election.
Holders of Common Stock are entitled to receive ratably such dividends, if any,
as may be declared by the Board of Directors out of funds legally available
therefore, subject to preferential dividend rights of any outstanding series of
Preferred Stock. Upon the liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Company,
holders of Common Stock are entitled to receive ratably the net assets of the
Company available for distribution after the payment of all debts and
liabilities of the Company and the liquidation preferences which may be granted
to holders of the Preferred Stock. Holders of Common Stock have no preemptive,
subscription, redemption or conversion rights. The outstanding shares of Common
Stock are, and the shares offered hereby will be, when issued and paid for,
fully paid and nonassessable. The rights, preferences and privileges of holders
of Common Stock are subject to, and may be adversely affected by, the rights of
holders of shares of the 14% Preferred, the Series A Preferred, the Series B
Preferred and any other series of Preferred Stock that the Company may designate
and issue in the future.
 
PREFERRED STOCK
 
   
The Board of Directors is authorized to issue from time to time up to an
aggregate of 10,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock, in one or more series,
without any further shareholder approval. Each such series of Preferred Stock
shall have such number of shares, designations, preferences, voting powers,
qualifications and special or relative rights or privileges as shall be
determined by the Board of Directors, which may include, among others, dividend
rights, voting rights, redemption and sinking fund provisions, liquidation
preferences, conversion rights and preemptive rights.
    
 
The authority of the Board to create and issue at its discretion any series of
Preferred Stock without shareholder approval could adversely affect the voting
power and other rights of the holders of Common Stock. The ability of the Board
to issue Preferred Stock, while providing flexibility in connection with
financings, acquisitions and other corporate purposes, could have the effect of
discouraging an attempt by another person or entity to acquire control of the
Company through a merger, sale of the Company's assets or similar transaction,
since the issuance of Preferred Stock could be used to dilute the share
ownership of a person or entity seeking to obtain control of the Company.
Additionally, future issuances of any series of Preferred Stock could result in
additional classes of shares with conversion features and preferences over the
Common Stock with respect to dividends and distributions in liquidation and
could also result in the dilution of net income and book value per share of the
Company.
 
The Board of Directors has designated the following outstanding series of
Preferred Stock pursuant to its authority under the Articles of Incorporation:
 
                                       66
<PAGE>   68
 
Series A Preferred
 
The Company has 250,000 shares of Series A Preferred authorized, none of which
have been issued. Lenders' Warrants for the purchase of 204,824 shares of Series
A Preferred at an exercise price of $0.20 per share were issued by the Company
in connection with the Credit Agreement. See "Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations -- Liquidity and
Capital Resources."
 
The Series A Preferred shares are pari passu with the Common Stock with respect
to the payment of dividends. If a dividend or other distribution is declared by
the Board of Directors to be paid to holders of the Common Stock, then
simultaneously with the payment of such dividend or making of such distribution,
and as a condition precedent to its right to do so, the Board of Directors will
pay or distribute to the holders of the Series A Preferred the same dividends or
distributions as such holders would have been entitled to receive if such
holders had converted their shares of Series A Preferred into Common Stock prior
to the record date used by the Board of Directors for determining the holders of
Common Stock entitled to receive such dividend or distribution.
 
With respect to liquidation preferences, the Series A Preferred is pari passu
with the Series B Preferred and senior to the Common Stock and any other series
of Preferred Stock. Accordingly, upon the liquidation, dissolution or winding up
of the Company, holders of the Series A Preferred will be entitled to receive,
on a ratable and pari passu basis with the holders of the Series B Preferred,
out of the assets of the Company legally available for distribution to its
stockholders before making any payment to holders of Common Stock or any other
series of Preferred Stock, a liquidation preference of $0.20 per share plus
accrued and unpaid dividends to the date of payment.
 
Holders of the Series A Preferred have the right, at any time, to convert each
share of Series A Preferred into 20 shares of fully paid and nonassessable
Common Stock, subject to certain antidilution adjustments and regulatory
restrictions applicable to bank holding companies.
 
Except as provided by law, the holders of Series A Preferred have no voting
rights.
 
Series B Preferred
 
   
The Company has 250,000 shares of Series B Preferred authorized, none of which
have been issued. Term Loans of $29,000,000 outstanding under the Credit
Agreement, which may be converted into Series B Preferred at the ratio of
approximately 833 shares of Series B Preferred for each $100,000 of outstanding
debt and accrued interest, will be repaid with a portion of the net proceeds
from the Company Debt Offering and the Offering. See "Prospectus Summary -- The
Company Debt Offering."
    
 
The Series B Preferred shares are pari passu with the Common Stock with respect
to the payment of dividends. If a dividend or other distribution is declared by
the Board of Directors to be paid to holders of the Common Stock, then
simultaneously with the payment of such dividend or making of such distribution,
and as a condition precedent to its right to do so, the Board of Directors will
pay or distribute to the holders of the Series B Preferred the same dividends or
distributions as such holders would have been entitled to receive if such
holders had converted their shares of Series B Preferred into Common Stock prior
to the record date used by the Board of Directors for determining the holders of
Common Stock entitled to receive such dividend or distribution.
 
With respect to liquidation preferences, the Series B Preferred is pari passu
with the Series A Preferred and senior to the Common Stock and any other series
of Preferred Stock. Accordingly, upon the liquidation, dissolution or winding up
of the Company, holders of the Series B Preferred will be entitled to receive,
on a ratable and pari passu basis with the holders of the Series A Preferred,
out of the assets of the Company legally available for distribution to its
stockholders before making any payment to holders of Common Stock or any other
series of Preferred Stock, a liquidation preference of $120 per share plus
accrued and unpaid dividends to the date of payment.
 
Holders of the Series B Preferred have the right, at any time, to convert each
share of Series B Preferred into 20 shares of fully paid and nonassessable
Common Stock, subject to certain antidilution adjustments and regulatory
restrictions applicable to bank holding companies.
 
Except as provided by law, the holders of Series B Preferred have no voting
rights.
 
14% Preferred
 
The Company has 200,000 shares of 14% Preferred authorized of which 116,316.05
shares were issued at September 30, 1996. Holders of the 14% Preferred are
entitled to receive dividends payable in additional shares of 14% Preferred at a
quarterly rate of 0.035 shares per share of 14% Preferred outstanding, on the
first business day of each April, July, October and January, commencing April 1,
1996. Dividends on the outstanding shares of 14% Preferred accrue, whether or
not declared. Unless full cumulative dividends on all shares of 14% Preferred
outstanding have been paid, no redemption or fund for such redemption may
 
                                       67
<PAGE>   69
 
be authorized, no dividend (other than a dividend payable in Common Stock or any
other class of stock ranking junior to the 14% Preferred as to dividends and
upon liquidation) or other distribution may be declared or paid on any class of
the Company's stock ranking junior to the 14% Preferred as to dividends or as to
liquidation preferences. However, the holders of at least 50% of the outstanding
shares of 14% Preferred may vote to approve a redemption.
 
With respect to liquidation preferences, the 14% Preferred is junior to the
Series A Preferred and the Series B Preferred and is senior to the Common Stock
and any other series of Preferred Stock. Accordingly, upon the liquidation,
dissolution or winding up of the Company, holders of the 14% Preferred will be
entitled to receive out of the assets of the Company legally available for
distribution to its stockholders after making payment to the holders of the
Series A Preferred and the Series B Preferred and before making any payment to
holders of Common Stock or any other series of Preferred Stock, a liquidation
preference of $60.00 per share.
 
Holders of the 14% Preferred have the right, at any time, to convert each share
of 14% Preferred, including any accrued and unpaid dividend shares, into 10
shares of fully paid and nonassessable Common Stock, subject to certain
antidilution adjustments.
 
   
The 14% Preferred is mandatorily redeemable by the Company on June 30, 2000, and
is redeemable at any time prior thereto at the Company's option, in each case,
at a redemption price of $60 per share plus accrued and unpaid dividends.
Holders of the 14% Preferred have 20 days from receipt of notice of a redemption
by the Company to convert their 14% Preferred shares into Common Stock. The
Company may use a portion of the net proceeds of the Company Debt Offering and
the Offering to redeem shares of 14% Preferred having a liquidation preference
of approximately $5.5 million. See "Prospectus Summary -- The Company Debt
Offering."
    
 
Except as provided by law, the holders of the 14% Preferred have no voting
rights.
 
From time to time, the Board of Directors has designated other series of
Preferred Stock, none of which are currently outstanding.
 
EQUITY SECURITIES RESERVED FOR ISSUANCE
 
   
As of September 30, 1996, the Company has reserved 12,551,876 shares of Common
Stock for issuance under the following circumstances: (i) exercise of warrants
to purchase 204,824 shares of Series A Preferred at $0.20 per share, immediately
convertible into 4,096,480 shares of Common Stock; (ii) conversion of 116,316.05
shares of 14% Preferred into 1,163,161 shares of Common Stock; (iii) exercise of
983,805 Nominal Value Warrants at an exercise price of $.01 per share; (iv)
exercise of 830,351 warrants at prices ranging from $5.70 to $15.75 per share;
(v) exercise of 650,746 stock options at prices ranging from $2.63 to $19.50 per
share; and (vi) conversion of $29,000,000 of outstanding debt under the Credit
Agreement and accrued interest into 241,667 shares of Series B Preferred that
are immediately convertible into 4,833,333 shares of Common Stock.
    
 
REGISTRATION RIGHTS
 
Holders of the 14% Preferred, the Lenders' Warrants, the Nominal Value Warrants
and other warrants and options exercisable for shares of Common Stock and
certain existing holders of Common Stock who in the aggregate own or have the
right to acquire an aggregate of approximately 13,005,110 shares of Common Stock
(the "Registrable Securities"), have entered into registration rights agreements
with the Company. These registration rights agreements provide that when the
Company proposes to register the sale of shares of Common Stock under the
Securities Act for its own account or otherwise, holders of Registrable
Securities are entitled to include their shares in such registration, subject to
the right of any managing underwriter of any such offering to exclude some or
all of the Registrable Securities from such registration and to certain other
conditions. In addition to such incidental registration rights, certain holders
of Registrable Securities have the right to demand registration under the
Securities Act of their Registrable Securities. The Company has agreed that in
the event of any registration of Registrable Securities that it will bear all
registration expenses, other than those which certain registration rights
agreements had assigned to the shareholders, and will indemnify the holder
thereof against certain liabilities incurred in connection with such
registration, including liabilities arising under the Securities Act.
 
   
The Company has obtained waivers of the foregoing registration rights in
connection with the Offering from the holders of approximately 92% of the
Registrable Securities having such piggyback registration rights as a result of
the filing of the Registration Statement of which this Prospectus forms a part
(including the Selling Shareholders). However, in order to satisfy its
obligations under the registration rights agreements, the Company has filed the
Shelf Registration Statement to register under the Securities Act the sale of
all of the Registrable Securities. Notwithstanding the filing of the Shelf
Registration Statement, the Selling Shareholders and certain other holders of
Registrable Securities have agreed not to transfer, sell or otherwise dispose of
such shares, without the consent of Southcoast, for the periods described under
the caption "Shares Eligible for Future Sale."
    
 
                                       68
<PAGE>   70
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
   
The Transfer Agent and Registrar for the Common Stock is American Securities
Transfer & Trust, Inc.
    
 
                        SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
   
Upon completion of this Offering, the Company will have outstanding 14,389,709
shares of Common Stock, of which the 6,750,000 shares sold in this Offering, the
13,304,263 shares registered pursuant to the Shelf Registration Statement and
the 1,222,226 shares which were either registered or "restricted securities" (as
discussed below) and sold pursuant to the exemption from registration provided
by Rule 144 under the Securities Act, will be freely tradeable without
restrictions or further registration under the Securities Act, except for shares
held by "affiliates" of the Company, which will be subject to the resale
limitations of Rule 144 under the Securities Act. As defined in Rule 144, an
affiliate of an issuer is a person who directly or indirectly, through one or
more intermediaries, controls, is controlled by or is under common control with,
such issuer, and generally includes members of the Board of Directors and senior
management.
    
 
   
As of September 30, 1996 and prior to the effectiveness of the Shelf
Registration Statement, 6,417,483 shares (the "Restricted Shares") were deemed
"restricted securities" under Rule 144 in that they were originally issued and
sold by the Company in private transactions in reliance upon exemptions under
the Securities Act. The Restricted Shares may not be sold except in compliance
with the registration requirements of the Securities Act or pursuant to an
exemption from registration, such as the exemption provided by Rule 144 under
the Securities Act.
    
 
   
In general, Rule 144 as currently in effect allows a shareholder who has
beneficially owned Restricted Shares for at least two years (including persons
who may be deemed "affiliates" of the Company under Rule 144) to sell a number
of shares within any three-month period that does not exceed the greater of (i)
1% of the then outstanding shares of Common Stock (approximately 143,897 shares
after giving effect to this Offering) or (ii) the average weekly trading volume
in the Common Stock during the four calendar weeks immediately preceding such
sale. Sales under Rule 144 are also subject to certain requirements as to the
manner and notice of sale and the availability of public information about the
Company. A shareholder (or shareholder whose shares are aggregated) who is not
an "affiliate" of the Company at any time during the 90 days immediately
preceding a sale, and who has beneficially owned his shares for at least three
years (as computed under Rule 144), is entitled to sell such shares under Rule
144 without regard to the volume and manner of sale limitations described above.
    
 
The Company and its directors and executive officers have agreed not to offer,
sell, contract to sell, grant any option or other right for the sale of, or
otherwise dispose of any shares of Common Stock in any manner prior to the
expiration of 180 days after the date of this Prospectus without the prior
written consent of Southcoast Capital Corporation.
 
   
As of September 30, 1996, options and warrants to purchase 2,439,902 shares of
Common Stock were issued and outstanding, all of which were immediately
exercisable on such date. In addition, at September 30, 1996, an aggregate of
10,092,974 shares of Common Stock have been reserved for issuance pursuant to
the conversion of shares of the Company's Series A Preferred, Series B Preferred
and 14% Preferred. Holders of the Company's options, warrants and convertible
preferred stock and certain holders of the Company's Common Stock have entered
into registration rights agreements with the Company and have demand and
piggyback registration rights necessary under certain circumstances. The Company
has obtained waivers of such registration rights in connection with the Offering
from the holders of approximately 92% of the Registrable Securities that had
piggyback registration rights as a result of the filing of the Registration
Statement of which this Prospectus forms a part. However, in order to satisfy
its obligations under such registration rights agreements, the Company has filed
a Shelf Registration Statement to register under the Securities Act 13,304,263
shares of Common Stock including the shares issuable upon the exercise or
conversion of such options, warrants and convertible preferred stock. The
Company expects that the Shelf Registration Statement will be declared effective
concurrently with the Registration Statement of which this Prospectus forms a
part. Upon effectiveness of the Shelf Registration Statement, all of such shares
of Common Stock, when issued, will be eligible for sale without restriction
under the Securities Act. However, each of the Selling Shareholders (who hold
approximately 69% of the Registrable Securities) and other shareholders of the
Company who hold approximately 25% of the Registrable Securities have entered
into lock-up agreements with the representative of the Underwriters. See
"Underwriting."
    
 
No prediction can be made of the effect, if any, that sales of shares under Rule
144 or the availability of shares for sale will have on the market price of the
Common Stock prevailing from time to time after the Offering. The Company is
unable to estimate the number of shares that may be sold in the public market
under Rule 144, because such amount will depend on the trading volume in, and
market price for, the Common Stock and other factors. Nevertheless, sales of
substantial amounts of shares in the public market, or the perception that such
sales could occur, could adversely affect the market price of the Common Stock.
See "Underwriting."
 
                                       69
<PAGE>   71
 
   
                      DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN INDEBTEDNESS
    
 
   
THE CREDIT AGREEMENT
    
 
   
The Credit Agreement consists of (i) the Revolving A Loans (as defined therein)
in the aggregate principal amount of $7,250,000, (ii) the Revolving B Loans (as
defined therein) in the aggregate principal amount of $4,750,000 and (iii) the
Term Loans (as defined therein) in the aggregate principal amount of
$29,000,000. The obligations under the Credit Agreement are secured by a first
priority lien on all of the Company's installed telephones and other assets
(other than the telephones acquired in the POA acquisition).
    
 
   
The Credit Agreement requires monthly interest payments at the ING Alternate
Base Rate (as defined therein) plus 5% (13.25% at September 30, 1996). The
Credit Agreement contains certain representations and warranties, certain
negative and affirmative financial covenants and certain conditions and events
of default which are customarily required for similar financings. Such covenants
include, among other things, restrictions on the Company's ability to pay
dividends, incur or permit to exist debt, liens or lease obligations, make
investments and capital expenditures, dispose of assets and also include
restrictions on the activities of subsidiaries. Such financial covenants also
require the Company to maintain certain financial ratios including, among other
things, minimum net worth, working capital and EBITDA (as defined therein). The
Credit Agreement also contains a subjective acceleration clause which states
that in the event of a material adverse change in the business, as determined by
the Lenders, the Lenders can require prepayment of the debt at their discretion.
The Lenders have agreed to waive their right to exercise this subjective
acceleration clause through December 31, 1997.
    
 
   
Principal payments under the Credit Agreement commence April 1997, and continue
monthly and/or quarterly through June 1999 at which time the remaining principal
balance is due. The amount of the principal payment is contingent upon numerous
factors, including the borrowing base and cash flow of the Company.
    
 
   
As of September 30, 1996, approximately $41.0 million of indebtedness (excluding
accrued interest) was outstanding under the Credit Agreement. The Company
expects that up to $43.0 million of indebtedness will be outstanding under the
Credit Agreement as of the date of this Prospectus. Simultaneously with the
closing of the Company Debt Offering, the Company will retire all of the
outstanding indebtedness under the Credit Agreement and expects to enter into
the New Credit Agreement. The Credit Agreement provides for a 1% prepayment fee
in the event of prepayment prior to March 1997.
    
 
   
THE NEW CREDIT AGREEMENT
    
 
   
The Company is negotiating with several lenders to enter into the New Credit
Agreement. However, there can be no assurance that the Company will be able to
enter into the New Credit Agreement on the terms described herein or at all.
    
 
   
The New Credit Agreement is expected to provide for borrowings of $25.0 million
to $50.0 million in the form of a senior secured credit facility. Funds
available under the New Credit Agreement are expected to be available to retire
indebtedness under the Credit Agreement, to finance certain acquisitions, to
fund the optional redemption of the Notes and for capital expenditures and
working capital needs.
    
 
   
The Company expects that the New Credit Agreement will contain restrictions on
the Company's ability to pay dividends, incur or permit to exist debt, liens or
lease obligations, make investments and capital expenditures, dispose of assets
and also include restrictions on the activities of the Subsidiary Guarantors.
The New Credit Agreement is also expected to contain provisions requiring the
Company to maintain certain financial ratios.
    
 
   
THE NOTES
    
 
   
The Notes that are being offered in the Company Debt Offering will be issued
under an Indenture (the "Indenture") to be dated as of             , 1996, by
and among the Company, each subsidiary of the Company (the "Subsidiary
Guarantors") and      , as trustee (the "Trustee"). The following summary of the
terms of the Notes and the Indenture does not purport to be complete, and is
subject to the detailed provisions of, and is qualified in its entirety by
reference to, the Notes and the Indenture. A copy of the form of the Indenture,
which includes the form of Note, has been filed as an exhibit to the
Registration Statement of which this Prospectus forms a part.
    
 
   
The Notes will be general unsecured obligations of the Company limited in
aggregate principal amount to $110.0 million and will mature on             ,
2006. Interest on the Notes will accrue at the rate of      % per annum and will
be payable semi-annually in arrears on             and             in each year,
commencing             , 1997. The Notes will rank senior in right of payment to
all indebtedness of the Company that is expressly subordinated and will be pari
passu in right of payment with all other
    
 
                                       70
<PAGE>   72
 
   
existing and future senior indebtedness of the Company. The Notes will be
guaranteed jointly and severally and fully and unconditionally on a senior
unsecured basis by the Subsidiary Guarantors, including any and all future
subsidiaries of the Company.
    
 
   
The Notes will be redeemable, in whole or in part, at the option of the Company
at any time on or after           , 2001, at the redemption prices set forth in
the Indenture, plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of redemption. In
addition, at any time or from time to time prior to           , 1999, the
Company may redeem up to     % of the aggregate principal amount of the Notes
originally issued with the net cash proceeds to the Company of one or more
public equity offerings or equity private placements (other than the Company
Equity Offering) at a redemption price equal to     % of the principal amount
thereof, plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of redemption, provided
that at least $75.0 million principal amount of the Notes remains outstanding
immediately after any such redemption.
    
 
   
If the Cherokee Acquisition is not consummated prior to           , 1997, the
Company will be required to offer to purchase (the "Special Offer") $35.0
million principal amount of the Notes at a price equal to 101% of the principal
amount of the Notes plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of purchase. If
the Cherokee Acquisition shall not have been consummated on or prior to the date
of issue of the Notes, on such date the Company will deposit with the Trustee,
in the form of cash or cash equivalents, $35 million of the net proceeds from
the sale of the Notes plus an additional amount sufficient to consummate the
Special Offer at the Special Offer Price in accordance with the Indenture. All
amounts so deposited with the Trustee will be pledged to and held by the Trustee
pursuant to the Indenture as security for the Notes.
    
 
   
The Indenture will impose certain limitations on the ability of the Company and
the Subsidiary Guarantors to, among other things, incur additional indebtedness,
pay dividends or make certain other restricted payments, consummate certain
asset sales, enter into certain transactions with interested persons, incur
liens, impose restrictions on the ability of a Subsidiary Guarantor to pay
dividends or make certain payments to the Company, conduct business other than
the pay telephone and ancillary businesses, merge or consolidate with any other
person or sell, assign, transfer, lease, convey or otherwise dispose of all or
substantially all of the assets of the Company.
    
 
   
The Indenture will contain customary events of default, including, without
limitation, the following: (i) the failure to pay principal or interest when due
on the Notes; (ii) certain defaults under agreements relating to other
indebtedness; (iii) the breach of any covenant in the Indenture; (iv) the levy
of certain judgments; and (v) certain bankruptcy, reorganization and insolvency
events. The occurrence of an event of default under the Indenture will permit
the holders of the Notes to accelerate the Notes and to pursue other remedies.
    
 
   
In addition, upon a "change of control" (as defined in the Indenture), the
Company will have the obligation to offer to repurchase all outstanding Notes
from the holders thereof at a price equal to 101% of the principal amount
thereof, plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of repurchase.
    
 
                                       71
<PAGE>   73
 
                                  UNDERWRITING
 
   
The Underwriters named below, for whom Southcoast Capital Corporation is acting
as the representative (the "Representative"), have severally agreed, subject to
the terms and conditions of the Underwriting Agreement (the "Underwriting
Agreement"), to purchase 6,250,000 shares of Common Stock from the Company and
500,000 shares of Common Stock from the Selling Shareholders. The number of
shares of Common Stock that each Underwriter has agreed to purchase is set forth
opposite their names below. The nature of the obligations of the Underwriters is
such that, if any of such shares are purchased, all must be purchased.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                NUMBER OF
                                         UNDERWRITERS                                            SHARES
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------
<S>                                                                                             <C>
Southcoast Capital Corporation................................................................
                                                                                                ---------
          Total...............................................................................  6,750,000
                                                                                                =========
</TABLE>
    
 
The Underwriters propose initially to offer the shares of Common Stock offered
hereby to the public at the price to public set forth on the cover page of this
Prospectus. The Underwriters may allow a concession to selected dealers who are
members of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD") not in
excess of $          per share, and the Underwriters may allow, and such dealers
may reallow, to members of the NASD a concession not in excess of $          per
share. After this Offering, the price to public, the concession and the
reallowance may be changed by the Underwriters.
 
   
The Company has granted an option to the Underwriters, exercisable within 45
days after the date of this Prospectus, to purchase up to an aggregate of
937,500 additional shares of Common Stock at the price to public, less
underwriting discount, set forth on the cover page of this Prospectus. The
Underwriters may exercise such option only for the purpose of covering any
over-allotments. To the extent that the Underwriters exercise such option, each
Underwriter will be committed, subject to certain conditions, to purchase that
number of additional shares of Common Stock which is proportionate to such
Underwriter's initial commitment.
    
 
The Company and the Selling Shareholders have agreed to indemnify the
Underwriters against certain civil liabilities, including liabilities under the
Securities Act.
 
The Underwriting Agreement provides for payment by the Company to the
Representative of a non-accountable expense allowance of $100,000 for due
diligence and other out-of pocket expenses.
 
   
The Company and its executive officers and directors have agreed that for a
period of 180 days after the date of this Prospectus, they will not offer, sell
or otherwise dispose any Shares of Common Stock beneficially owned or controlled
by them (including subsequently acquired shares) without the prior written
consent of Southcoast, except that the Company may issue shares of Common Stock
upon the exercise of options or in connection with acquisitions. Notwithstanding
the filing of the Shelf Registration Statement, ING and Cerberus (who hold
approximately 69% of the shares of Registrable Securities) may each sell 250,000
shares as part of the Offering or otherwise following 45 days after the
effective date of the registration statement relating to the Concurrent Offering
(the "Effective Date"). ING and Cerberus have agreed not to transfer, sell or
otherwise dispose of any other shares of Common Stock without the consent of
Southcoast, except as follows: (i) up to 900,000 shares in the aggregate may be
transferred, sold or otherwise disposed of by each of ING and Cerberus during
the period commencing on the 181st day following the Effective Date and ending
on the 270th day following the Effective Date and (ii) up to 1,150,000 shares in
the aggregate (including any shares sold pursuant to clause (i)) may be
transferred, sold or otherwise disposed of by each of ING and Cerberus during
the period commencing on the 271st day following the Effective Date and ending
on the 360th day following the Effective Date. Thereafter, ING and Cerberus may
transfer, sell or otherwise dispose of any of their shares of Common Stock in
accordance with applicable securities laws. In addition, other shareholders of
the Company who hold approximately 25% of the Registrable Securities have agreed
not to transfer, sell or otherwise dispose of such shares for a period of 180
days commencing on the date of the consummation of the Offering without the
consent of Southcoast.
    
 
   
Southcoast will also receive customary fees for acting as an underwriter in
connection with the Company Debt Offering and for providing financial advisory
services to the Company in connection with the Cherokee Acquisition. In
addition, a predecessor of Southcoast provided investment banking and financial
advisory services to the Company in the past for which it received customary
fees. See "Certain Transactions."
    
 
                                       72
<PAGE>   74
 
   
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
    
 
   
The legality of the shares of Common Stock offered hereby will be passed upon
for the Company by Tammy L. Martin, Esq., General Counsel of the Company, and
certain other legal matters relating to the Offering will be passed upon for the
Company by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, New York, New York. Certain
legal matters will be passed upon for the Underwriters by Wolin, Fuller, Ridley
& Miller LLP, Dallas, Texas.
    
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
The consolidated financial statements of the Company as of December 31, 1994 and
1995 and for the three years ended December 31, 1995 included in this Prospectus
have been so included in reliance on the report of Price Waterhouse LLP,
independent accountants, given on the authority of said firm as experts in
auditing and accounting.
 
The financial statements of Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. as of
December 31, 1995 and for the year then ended included in this Prospectus have
been so included in reliance on the report of Price Waterhouse LLP, independent
accountants, given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and
accounting.
 
The financial statements of Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. as of
December 31, 1994 and for the year then ended included in this Prospectus have
been so included in reliance on the report of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP, independent
accountants given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and
accounting.
 
   
The financial statements of International Pay Phones, Inc. (South Carolina) as
of December 31, 1994 and 1995 and for each of the two years ended December 31,
1994 and 1995 included in this Prospectus have been so included in reliance on
the report of Miller Sherrill Blake, CPA, PA, independent accountants, given on
the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
    
 
   
The financial statements of International Pay Phones, Inc. (Tennessee) as of
December 31, 1994 and 1995 and for each of the two years ended December 31, 1994
and 1995 included in this Prospectus have been so included in reliance on the
report of Ernest M. Sewell, CPA, independent accountant, given on the authority
of said person as an expert in auditing and accounting.
    
 
The financial statements of Payphones of America, Inc. as of December 31, 1994
and 1995 and for each of the two years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 included
in this Prospectus have been so included in reliance on the report of Kerber,
Eck & Braeckel LLP, independent accountants, given on the authority of said firm
as experts in auditing and accounting.
 
The consolidated financial statements of Amtel Communications, Inc. and combined
companies as of December 31, 1995 and for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and
the combined statement of revenue and direct operating expenses for three months
ended December 31, 1994 included in this Prospectus have been so included in
reliance on the report of Harlan & Boettger, CPAs, independent accountants,
given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
 
   
The financial statements of Cherokee Communications, Inc. as of September 30,
1995 and 1994 and for each of the three years in the period ended September 30,
1995 included in this prospectus have been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP,
independent auditors, as stated in their report appearing herein, and have been
so included in reliance upon the report of such firm given upon their authority
as experts in accounting and auditing.
    
 
                                       73
<PAGE>   75
 
                                    GLOSSARY
 
The following is a description of certain terms used in this Prospectus.
 
ACCESS CHARGES -- The fees paid by long distance companies to LECs for
originating and terminating long distance calls on LECs' networks.
 
   
BPP (Billed-Party Preference) -- Billing system proposed by the FCC and not
adopted in which the party being billed preselects the service provider of his
or her choice to carry long distance traffic (as opposed to the provider
presubscribed by the public pay telephone provider).
    
 
BOCS (Bell Operating Companies) -- The seven regional holding companies and
their respective local telephone operating companies established by the MFJ.
Under the MFJ, the BOCs were prohibited from providing interLATA
telecommunications services and from manufacturing telecommunications equipment.
 
CALL AGGREGATOR -- Person that, in the ordinary course of its operations, makes
telephones available to the public or to transient users for interstate
telephone calls using an OSP.
 
COMPUTER III -- FCC rulemaking proceeding that established certain
non-structural safeguards designed to prevent BOCs from using their incumbent
market power in an anti-competitive manner.
 
CUSTOMER PROPRIETARY NETWORK INFORMATION -- Information that relates to the
quantity, technical configuration, type, destination, and amount of use of a
telecommunications service subscribed to by any customer of a telecommunications
carrier, and that is made available to the carrier by the customer solely by
virtue of the carrier-customer relationship.
 
   
DIAL-AROUND CALLS -- Telephone calls placed from public pay telephones using a
long distance or operator service provider other than the one selected by the
independent public pay telephone company.
    
 
   
FCC -- Federal Communications Commission.
    
 
IN-REGION SERVICE -- InterLATA toll service provided by the BOCs within the same
states in which they also provide local exchange service.
 
INTEREXCHANGE CARRIER -- See Long Distance Company.
 
INTERLATA PRESUBSCRIPTION -- Ability of a customer to presubscribe to a carrier
of its choice for interLATA calls.
 
INTRALATA PRESUBSCRIPTION -- Ability of a customer to presubscribe to a carrier
of its choice for local and intraLATA calls.
 
   
LOCATION PROVIDER -- The property owner or occupant that supplies the site on
which public pay telephones are placed in operation by the telephone provider.
    
 
LATA (Local Access and Transport Area) -- The geographically defined areas in
which BOCs were authorized by the MFJ to provide local exchange service.
 
   
LONG DISTANCE COMPANY OR INTEREXCHANGE CARRIER -- Company providing transmission
services between local exchanges on either an intrastate or interstate basis. A
long distance company may offer services by using its own or by reselling
another carrier's facilities.
    
 
LECS (Local Exchange Carrier) -- Companies providing local exchange telephone
service (including, but not limited to, BOCs).
 
MFJ (Modification of Final Judgment) -- Court order that divested the seven BOCs
from AT&T and imposed various line of business restrictions on the BOCs and
AT&T.
 
OPERATOR SERVICES ACT -- The Telephone Operator Consumer Services Improvement
Act of 1990, which imposed various requirements for OSPs and call aggregators.
 
   
OSP (Operator Service Provider) -- Provider of operator assistance in the
billing or completion (or both) of an interstate telephone call.
    
 
   
POLLING -- Process in which the Company's management information system calls
the public pay telephone and collects certain data.
    
 
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACT -- The Telecommunications Act of 1996, which amended the
Communications Act of 1934.
 
                                       A-1
<PAGE>   76
 
                          PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
 
                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       PAGE
                                                                                       -----
<S>                                                                                    <C>
PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
Audited Financial Statements:
     Report of Independent Accountants...............................................    F-3
     Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1994 and December 31, 1995.......    F-4
     Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 1993,
      1994 and 1995..................................................................    F-5
     Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity for the years ended December 31,
      1993, 1994 and 1995............................................................    F-6
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 1993,
      1994 and 1995..................................................................    F-8
     Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements......................................   F-10
Unaudited Financial Statements:
     Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996......   F-26
     Consolidated Statements of Operations for the nine and three months ended
      September 30, 1995 and 1996....................................................   F-27
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the nine months ended September 30,
      1995 and 1996..................................................................   F-28
     Consolidated Statements of Changes in Mandatorily Redeemable Preferred Stock and
      Non-Mandatorily Redeemable Preferred Stock, Common Stock and Other
      Shareholders' Equity as of December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996............   F-29
     Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements......................................   F-31
PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
Audited Financial Statements -- 1995:
     Report of Independent Accountants...............................................   F-39
     Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1995...........................................   F-40
     Statement of Income for the year ended December 31, 1995........................   F-41
     Statement of Cash Flows for the year ended December 31, 1995....................   F-42
     Statement of Changes in Shareholders' Equity for the year ended December 31,
      1995...........................................................................   F-43
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................   F-44
Audited Financial Statements -- 1994:
     Report of Independent Certified Public Accountants..............................   F-47
     Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1994...........................................   F-48
     Statement of Income for the year ended December 31, 1994........................   F-49
     Statement of Shareholders' Equity for the year ended December 31, 1994..........   F-50
     Statement of Cash Flows for the year ended December 31, 1994....................   F-51
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................   F-52
INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC. (SOUTH CAROLINA)
Audited Financial Statements -- 1995:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................   F-55
     Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1995...........................................   F-56
     Statement of Income and Retained Earnings for the year ended December 31,
      1995...........................................................................   F-57
     Statement of Cash Flows for the year ended December 31, 1995....................   F-58
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................   F-59
Audited Financial Statements -- 1994:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................   F-64
     Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1994...........................................   F-65
     Statement of Income and Retained Earnings for the year ended December 31,
      1994...........................................................................   F-66
     Statement of Cash Flows for the year ended December 31, 1994....................   F-67
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................   F-68
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       F-1
<PAGE>   77
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>



                                                                                       PAGE
                                                                                       -----


<S>                                                                                    <C>
INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC. (TENNESSEE)
Audited Financial Statements:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................   F-72
     Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1995 and 1994.................................   F-73
     Statements of Earnings and Retained Earnings for the years ended December 31,
      1995 and 1994..................................................................   F-74
     Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994.........   F-75
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................   F-76
PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC.
Audited Financial Statements:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................   F-79
     Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1995 and 1994....................   F-80
     Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 1995 and
      1994...........................................................................   F-81
     Consolidated Statement of Stockholders' Equity (Deficit) for the years ended
      December 31, 1995 and 1994.....................................................   F-82
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 1995 and
      1994...........................................................................   F-83
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................   F-84
Unaudited Financial Statements:
     Independent Accountants' Report.................................................   F-91
     Consolidated Balance Sheets as of June 30, 1996 and 1995........................   F-92
     Consolidated Statements of Operations for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and
      1995...........................................................................   F-93
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and
      1995...........................................................................   F-94
     Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements......................................   F-95
AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS INC. AND COMBINED COMPANIES (DEBTOR-IN POSSESSION)
Audited Financial Statements:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................  F-100
     Combined Balance Sheets as of June 30, 1996 and December 31, 1995...............  F-101
     Combined Statements of Operations for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and the
      year ended December 31, 1995...................................................  F-102
     Combined Statements of Changes in Stockholder's Deficit for the six months ended
      June 30, 1996 and the year ended December 31, 1995.............................  F-103
     Combined Statements of Cash Flows for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and the
      year ended December 31, 1995...................................................  F-104
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................  F-105
Audited Statement of Revenues and Direct Operating Expenses:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................  F-109
     Combined Statement of Revenues and Direct Operating Expenses for the three
      months ended December 31, 1994.................................................  F-110
     Notes to Combined Statement of Revenues and Direct Operating Expenses...........  F-111
CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
Audited Financial Statements:
     Independent Auditors' Report....................................................  F-113
     Balance Sheets as of September 30, 1995 and 1994................................  F-114
     Statements of Income for the years ended September 30, 1995, 1994 and 1993......  F-115
     Statement of Shareholders' Equity for the years ended September 30, 1995, 1994
      and 1993.......................................................................  F-116
     Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended September 30, 1995, 1994 and
      1993...........................................................................  F-117
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................  F-118
Unaudited Financial Statements:
     Condensed Balance Sheets as of September 30, 1995 and June 30, 1996.............  F-126
     Condensed Income Statements for the three and nine months ended June 30, 1996
      and 1995.......................................................................  F-127
     Condensed Statements of Cash Flows for the nine months ended June 30, 1996 and
      1995...........................................................................  F-128
     Notes to Financial Statements...................................................  F-129
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       F-2
<PAGE>   78
 
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
March 29, 1996
 
To the Board of Directors
and Shareholders of
PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
 
     In our opinion, the accompanying consolidated balance sheets and related
consolidated statements of operations and shareholders' equity and of cash flows
present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of PhoneTel
Technologies, Inc. and its subsidiaries at December 31, 1994 and 1995, and the
results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in
the period ended December 31, 1995, in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles. These financial statements are the responsibility of the
Company's management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these
statements in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards which
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about
whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles
used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for the opinion expressed above.
 
/s/  Price Waterhouse LLP
Cleveland, Ohio
 
                                       F-3
<PAGE>   79
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            DECEMBER 31,
                                                                     --------------------------
                                                                        1994           1995
                                                                     -----------    -----------
<S>                                                                  <C>            <C>
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash.............................................................  $   478,756    $   713,462
  Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful
     accounts of $44,000 and $40,000, respectively.................      562,147        901,508
  Other current assets.............................................      164,331        185,634
                                                                     -----------    -----------
     Total current assets..........................................    1,205,234      1,800,604
Property and equipment, net........................................    5,294,839     14,099,111
Intangible assets, net.............................................    3,429,121     11,592,157
Other assets.......................................................      228,707      1,425,384
                                                                     -----------    -----------
                                                                     $10,157,901    $28,917,256
                                                                     ===========    ===========
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Current portion of long-term debt................................  $ 1,814,760    $ 1,010,412
  Current portion of obligation under capital leases...............       94,343        288,972
  Accounts payable.................................................    2,514,110      2,772,306
  Accrued expenses.................................................      814,656      1,610,100
  Obligations relating to contractual settlements and restructuring
     charges.......................................................           --        962,338
                                                                     -----------    -----------
     Total current liabilities.....................................    5,237,869      6,644,128
Long-term debt.....................................................    2,063,896      9,318,501
Obligations under capital leases...................................      208,269      3,243,965
Commitments and contingencies......................................           --             --
Total shareholders' equity.........................................    2,647,867      9,710,662
                                                                     -----------    -----------
                                                                     $10,157,901    $28,917,256
                                                                     ===========    ===========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       F-4
<PAGE>   80
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       -----------------------------------------
                                                          1993           1994           1995
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
<S>                                                    <C>            <C>            <C>
REVENUES:
  Coin calls.........................................  $ 4,237,848    $ 8,421,237    $12,130,189
  Operator services..................................    6,074,394      5,319,138      3,776,501
  Commissions........................................      667,976      1,856,482      2,681,172
  Other..............................................       89,299        269,230        130,121
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
                                                        11,069,517     15,866,087     18,717,983
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
COSTS AND EXPENSES:
  Line and transmission charges......................    2,776,448      4,456,509      5,475,699
  Location commissions...............................    2,599,330      3,391,190      3,467,626
  Other operating expenses...........................    1,891,984      3,238,252      4,452,032
  Depreciation and amortization......................      896,041      2,236,269      4,383,049
  Selling, general and administrative................    2,402,583      2,831,775      3,200,742
  Billing and collection.............................    1,116,149      1,026,420        858,230
  Other unusual charges and contractual
     settlements.....................................           --             --      2,169,503
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
                                                        11,682,535     17,180,415     24,006,881
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
     Loss from operations............................     (613,018)    (1,314,328)    (5,288,898)
Interest expense.....................................     (174,994)      (388,215)      (836,911)
Interest income......................................        9,137          7,421         16,112
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
NET LOSS.............................................  $  (778,875)   $(1,695,122)   $(6,109,697)
                                                       ===========    ===========    ===========
Less: Preferred stock dividend requirement...........     (207,623)      (291,980)      (309,668)
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
Net loss applicable to common shareholders...........  $  (986,498)   $(1,987,102)   $(6,419,365)
                                                       ===========    ===========    ===========
Net loss per common share............................  $     (0.96)   $     (1.35)   $     (3.29)
                                                       ===========    ===========    ===========
Weighted average number of shares....................    1,031,384      1,470,188      1,950,561
                                                       ===========    ===========    ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       F-5
<PAGE>   81
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                               ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         1993                        1994                         1995
                               ------------------------    -------------------------    -------------------------
                                SHARES        AMOUNT        SHARES         AMOUNT        SHARES         AMOUNT
                               ---------    -----------    ---------    ------------    ---------    ------------
<S>                            <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>             <C>          <C>
7% CUMULATIVE CONVERTIBLE
  REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................         --             --        2,500    $    200,000        2,500    $    200,000
  Issuance of 7% preferred...      2,500    $   200,000           --              --           --              --
                               ---------        -------    ---------         -------    ---------         -------
  Balance at end of year.....      2,500    $   200,000        2,500    $    200,000        2,500    $    200,000
                               =========        -------    =========         -------    =========         -------
8% CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE
  PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................         --             --       12,200    $    981,084       12,200    $    981,084
  Issuance of 8% preferred...     12,200    $   981,084           --              --           --              --
                               ---------        -------    ---------         -------    ---------         -------
  Balance at end of year.....     12,200    $   981,084       12,200    $    981,084       12,200    $    981,084
                               =========        -------    =========         -------    =========         -------
10% CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE
  PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................      1,496    $         1        1,496    $          1        1,496    $          1
                               ---------        -------    ---------         -------    ---------         -------
  Balance at end of year.....      1,496    $         1        1,496    $          1        1,496    $          1
                               =========        -------    =========         -------    =========         -------
10% CUMULATIVE NON-VOTING
  REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................         --             --           --              --           --              --
  Acquisition of World
    Communications, Inc......         --             --           --              --      530,534    $  5,305,340
                               ---------        -------    ---------         -------    ---------       ---------
  Balance at end of year.....         --             --           --              --      530,534    $  5,305,340
                               =========        -------    =========         -------    =========       ---------
12% CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED
  STOCK
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................      6,500    $   650,000           --              --           --              --
  Conversion to Common
    Stock....................     (6,500)      (650,000)          --              --           --              --
                               ---------        -------    ---------         -------    ---------       ---------
  Balance at end of year.....         --             --           --              --           --              --
                               =========        -------    =========         -------    =========       ---------
COMMON STOCK
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................    724,092    $     7,241    1,284,449    $     12,845    1,522,158    $     15,222
  Employee stock grants......      1,533             15           --              --           --              --
  Issuance of stock..........     25,270            253        8,389              84       91,383             914
  Private sales of stock.....         --             --      136,111           1,361      472,056           4,720
  Exercise of warrants and
    options..................    331,796          3,318       87,931             879        8,333              83
  Zandec interest and
    commitment fee
    conversion...............     76,164            762           --              --           --              --
  Conversion of 12% Preferred
    to Common Stock..........    123,764          1,238           --              --           --              --
  Financing costs............      1,830             18        5,278              53           --              --
  Acquisition of World
    Communications, Inc......         --             --           --              --      402,500           4,025
  Conversion of debt to
    equity...................         --             --           --              --       30,231             303
  Acquisition of Public
    Telephone Corporation....         --             --           --              --      304,879           3,049
  Acquisition escrow
    deposits.................         --             --           --              --       23,810             238
                               ---------        -------    ---------         -------    ---------         -------
  Balance at end of year.....  1,284,449    $    12,845    1,522,158    $     15,222    2,855,350    $     28,554
                               =========        -------    =========         -------    =========         -------
</TABLE>
 
                                       F-6
<PAGE>   82
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
   
          CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY -- CONTINUED
    
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                               ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         1993                        1994                         1995
                               ------------------------    -------------------------    -------------------------
                                SHARES        AMOUNT        SHARES         AMOUNT        SHARES         AMOUNT
                               ---------      -------      ---------      -------       ---------      -------
<S>                           <C>          <C>             <C>          <C>             <C>         <C>
ADDITIONAL PAID-IN CAPITAL
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................               $ 3,482,110                 $  6,552,473                 $  8,755,364
  Employee stock grants......                    10,335                           --                           --
  Issuance of stock..........                   222,917                      276,414                      528,532
  Private sales of stock.....                        --                    1,473,638                    2,010,067
  Exercise of warrants and
    options..................                 1,335,876                      552,581                       34,917
  JTMFC settlement...........                   537,500                           --                           --
  Zandec interest and
    commitment fee
    conversion...............                   220,195                           --                           --
  Options issued below fair
    value....................                    24,785                           --                           --
  Conversion of 12% Preferred
    to Common Stock..........                   741,346                           --                           --
  Financing costs............                   (22,591)                     (99,742)                     (83,212)
  Acquisition of World
    Communications, Inc......                        --                           --                    2,712,852
  Conversion of debt to
    equity...................                        --                           --                      137,375
  Acquisition of Public
    Telephone Corporation....                        --                           --                    2,054,902
  Acquisition escrow
    deposits.................                        --                           --                      149,762
  Warrants issued with
    debt.....................                        --                           --                      349,000
                                                -------                      -------                      -------
  Balance at end of year.....               $ 6,552,473                 $  8,755,364                 $ 16,649,559
                                                -------                      -------                      -------
ACCUMULATED DEFICIT
  Balance at beginning of
    year.....................               $(4,658,009)                $ (5,556,807)                $ (7,303,804)
  Net loss for the year......                  (778,875)                  (1,695,122)                  (6,109,697)
  Conversion of 12% Preferred
    to Common Stock..........                   (92,584)                          --                           --
  Dividends paid on 12% and
    8% Preferred Stock.......                   (27,339)                          --                           --
  Dividends paid on 7% and 8%
    Preferred Stock..........                        --                      (51,875)                     (40,375)
                                                -------                      -------                      -------
  Balance at end of year.....               $(5,556,807)                $ (7,303,804)                $(13,453,876)
                                                -------                      -------                      -------
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY...               $ 2,189,596                 $  2,647,867                 $  9,710,662
                                                =======                      =======                      =======
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       F-7
<PAGE>   83
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       -----------------------------------------
                                                          1993           1994           1995
                                                       -----------    -----------    -----------
<S>                                                    <C>            <C>            <C>
CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) OPERATING
  ACTIVITIES:
  Net loss...........................................  $  (778,875)   $(1,695,122)   $(6,109,697)
  Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash flow
     from operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization...................      896,041      2,236,269      4,383,049
     Stock and stock awards issued...................       10,350         76,498        529,449
     Accretion of debt...............................           --             --         55,103
     Loss on disposal of assets......................           --             --        298,626
     Changes in assets and liabilities:
       Accounts receivable...........................     (132,885)        32,355        (64,873)
       Other current assets..........................      (71,841)      (116,591)       (47,121)
       Accounts payable..............................     (174,731)     1,975,628       (151,008)
       Accrued expenses..............................      263,149       (128,821)      (434,999)
       Other unusual charges and contractual
          settlements................................           --             --        962,338
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
                                                            11,208      2,380,216       (579,133)
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
CASH FLOWS USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
  Acquisition of Alpha Pay Phones-IV.................           --     (2,334,215)            --
  Acquisition of World Communications................           --             --       (696,006)
  Acquisition of Public Telephone....................           --             --         24,191
  Cash acquisition deposits..........................           --             --       (950,000)
  Purchases of intangible assets.....................           --       (363,853)      (427,409)
  Purchases of other assets..........................     (288,924)      (215,382)       (67,559)
  Purchases of property and equipment................     (907,837)      (300,852)      (237,228)
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
                                                        (1,196,761)    (3,214,302)    (2,354,011)
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Proceeds from debt issuances.......................           --      1,400,000      3,132,500
  Principal payments on borrowings...................   (1,637,957)    (2,202,608)    (1,890,850)
  Proceeds from issuance of preferred and common
     stock and other.................................    1,245,000      1,674,999      2,014,787
  Dividends paid.....................................      (27,339)       (21,875)       (40,375)
  Debt financing costs...............................           --        (75,000)            --
  Equity financing costs.............................      (26,552)       (99,689)       (83,212)
  Proceeds from warrant/option exercises.............    1,339,194        553,460         35,000
  Proceeds from JTMFC settlement.....................       87,500             --             --
  Repayment of advance from shareholder..............     (120,000)            --             --
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
                                                           859,846      1,229,287      3,167,850
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
(Decrease) increase in cash..........................     (325,707)       395,201        234,706
Cash at beginning of period..........................      409,262         83,555        478,756
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
Cash at end of period................................  $    83,555    $   478,756    $   713,462
                                                         =========      =========      =========
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE:
  Interest paid during the year......................  $   174,995    $   385,311    $   673,906
                                                         =========      =========      =========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                       F-8
<PAGE>   84
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
               CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS -- CONTINUED
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                       -----------------------------------------
                                                          1993           1994           1995
                                                        ---------      ---------      ---------
<S>                                                     <C>           <C>           <C>  
NON-CASH TRANSACTIONS:
  Common stock (402,500 shares) and preferred stock
     (530,534 shares) issued for acquisition of World
     Communications, Inc.............................           --             --    $ 8,022,217
                                                         =========      =========      =========
  Common stock (304,879 shares) issued for
     acquisition of Public Telephone Corporation.....           --             --    $ 2,057,951
                                                         =========      =========      =========
  Common stock issued for services (1,830 shares in
     1993, 8,389 shares in 1994, and 91,383 shares in
     1995)...........................................   $   22,573    $    76,498    $   529,446
                                                         =========      =========      =========
  Common stock issued in payment of debt and interest
     (30,231 shares in 1995).........................           --             --    $   137,678
                                                         ---------      ---------      ---------
  Common stock issued for acquisition deposit (23,809
     shares in 1995).................................           --             --    $   150,000
                                                         =========      =========      =========
  Common stock (5,278 shares) issued for financing
     costs in 1994...................................           --    $    99,689             --
                                                         =========      =========      =========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       F-9
<PAGE>   85
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1993, 1994 AND 1995
 
1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
  NATURE OF OPERATIONS
 
   
     PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and subsidiaries (the "Company") operates in
the telecommunications industry specializing in the business segment that
encompasses the installation of private pay telephones on a revenue sharing
basis, offering operator assisted long distance services, and national and
regional account management. The Company was incorporated on December 24, 1984,
and began its private pay telephone operations in August 1985. In April 1988,
the Company commenced reselling operator assisted long distance services. The
Company's operations are regulated by the Public Service or Utility Commissions
of the various States and the Federal Trade Commission.
    
 
  USE OF ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
  PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION
 
     The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts of
the Company and its wholly owned subsidiaries. Intercompany transactions and
balances have been eliminated in consolidation.
 
  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment are recorded at cost. The Company capitalizes all
labor and overhead costs related to installing telephones and depreciates those
costs over the life of the telephone or the length of the location contract,
whichever is shorter. Depreciation for financial reporting and tax purposes is
computed using the straight-line method and accelerated methods, respectively,
over the estimated useful lives of the assets commencing when the equipment is
installed or placed in service.
 
  INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
   
     Intangible assets include location contracts, non-compete agreements, costs
associated with obtaining operating certification in various states and
capitalized location contract fees. Intangible assets are amortized over the
life of the respective location contract, non-compete and sales commission
agreements, and five years for state operating certifications.
    
 
  IMPAIRMENT OF LONG-LIVED ASSETS
 
     The Company periodically evaluates potential impairment of long-lived
assets. A loss relating to an impairment of assets occurs when the aggregate of
the estimated undiscounted future cash inflows, (including any salvage values,
less estimated cash outflows) to be generated by an asset is less than the
asset's carrying value. Impairment is measured based on the difference between
the present value of the discounted expected future cash flows and the asset's
carrying value. No impairment was recorded in 1995 or 1994.
 
     In March 1995, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 121, " Accounting for
the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to be Disposed of"
which establishes criterion for when impairment should be evaluated, how an
asset is determined to be impaired and the method of calculating the impairment
loss. The methods
 
                                      F-10
<PAGE>   86
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
required by SFAS No. 121 are consistent with the methods currently being used by
the Company to review assets for impairment. Accordingly, the adoption of the
Statement, which is required for the Company in 1996, is not expected to have a
significant impact on the Company.
 
  REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
     Revenues from coin calls, reselling operator assisted long distance
services, and national and regional account management are recognized in the
period in which the customer places the related call.
 
  EARNINGS PER SHARE
 
     Earnings per share amounts are computed based on the weighted average
number of shares actually outstanding plus shares that would be outstanding
assuming exercise of dilutive stock options and warrants. The number of shares
that would be issued from the exercise of stock options and warrants would be
reduced by the number of shares that could have been purchased from the proceeds
at the average market price of the Company's stock.
 
     Fully diluted earnings per share amounts would be determined in the same
manner as primary earnings per share except that the period-end stock price was
used and the number of shares was increased assuming conversion of the 7%
Cumulative Convertible Redeemable Preferred. (The 7% Cumulative Convertible
Redeemable Preferred was redeemed on March 15, 1996.) Due to the Company's net
loss, the impact of the assumed exercise of the stock options and warrants and
the assumed conversion of the 7% Cumulative Convertible Redeemable Preferred was
anti-dilutive and therefore were not included in the determination of the
weighted average shares outstanding.
 
     The weighted average number of common shares outstanding has been adjusted
to reflect the one for six (1:6) reverse stock split which was effective
December 26, 1995.
 
  CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
 
     The Company considers all highly liquid investments with original
maturities of three months or less to be cash equivalents for purposes of the
statement of cash flows.
 
  INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company utilizes the asset and liability method to account for income
taxes whereby deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized to reflect the
future tax consequences attributable to temporary differences between the
financial reporting basis of the existing assets and liabilities and their
respective tax basis. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using
enacted tax rates expected to be recovered and settled. The effect of a change
in tax rates on deferred tax assets and liabilities is recognized in the period
in which the change is enacted.
 
   
  OTHER UNUSUAL CHARGES AND CONTRACTUAL SETTLEMENTS
    
 
   
     Other unusual charges and contractual settlements consist primarily of
costs associated with the settlement of contractual obligations to certain
former officers of the Company and related legal fees, and the write-off of
selected assets in connection with the outsourcing of the operator service
center, and consulting and legal fees incurred for changes to the operations of
the Company.
    
 
                                      F-11
<PAGE>   87
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
  RECLASSIFICATIONS
 
     Certain amounts relating to 1993 and 1994 have been reclassified to conform
to the current year presentation. The reclassifications have had no impact on
total assets, shareholders' equity or net loss as previously reported.
 
2.  FINANCIAL CONDITION
 
     In a transaction consummated on March 15, 1996, the Company borrowed
$30,530,954 (out of a total credit facility commitment of $37,250,000) from
Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and one other lender
(collectively know as "ING") to meet its anticipated working capital
obligations, consolidate debt, redeem preferred stock, and complete the
acquisitions of two pay phone companies, IPP and Paramount. The Company has
available under the credit facility $6,700,000 to fund future acquisitions and
for general working capital purposes. (See Note 3 and Note 15.)
 
     Management believes, but cannot assure, that cash flow from operations, the
proceeds from the financing discussed above and other financial alternatives
will be sufficient to allow the Company to sustain its operations, meet its
current obligations and maintain some modest sales growth.
 
3.  ACQUISITIONS AND MERGERS
 
     On October 16, 1995, the Company consummated its acquisition of the
outstanding common stock of Public Telephone Corporation (an Indiana
corporation) ("Public") in a transaction accounted for as a purchase. The
Company acquired current assets of $54,742, approximately 1,200 installed
telephones, assumed approximately $2,800,000 in debt and outstanding liabilities
of Public and issued 224,879 unregistered shares of the Company's Common Stock
to the shareholders of Public. In connection with the acquisition, the Company
entered into five year non-compete agreements with two of Public's former owners
which require both cash payments and the issuance, in the aggregate, of 80,000
shares of the Company's Common Stock.
 
     On September 22, 1995, the Company consummated its merger with World
Communications, Inc. (a Missouri corporation) ("World") in a transaction
accounted for as a purchase. The Company acquired current assets of $256,571,
3,237 installed telephones, assumed approximately $6,900,000 in debt and
outstanding liabilities of World and issued 402,500 unregistered shares of the
Company's Common Stock and 530,534 shares of the Company's 10% Non-Voting
Redeemable Preferred Stock. In connection with the acquisition, the Company
entered into two year non-compete and employment agreements with three of
World's former officers. These non-compete and employment agreements require, in
the aggregate, payment of $625,000 over a two year period.
 
     On March 25, 1994, the Company acquired substantially all of the assets of
Alpha Pay Phones-IV L.P. ("Alpha"). The acquired assets included 2,155 installed
telephones for a cash purchase price of $2,334,215, a note payable to sellers of
$1,100,620 and assumption by the Company of outstanding Alpha liabilities of
$2,164,038.
 
                                      F-12
<PAGE>   88
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
3.  ACQUISITIONS AND MERGERS (CONTINUED)
     Set forth below is the Company's unaudited pro forma condensed statement of
operations data as though the Public and World acquisitions had occurred at the
beginning of 1994 and 1995 and as though the Alpha acquisition had occurred at
the beginning of 1994.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1994              1995
                                                                  -----------      ------------
    <S>                                                           <C>              <C>
    Total revenues..............................................  $27,138,550      $ 26,976,221
    Net loss....................................................   (4,771,759)      (10,516,464)
    Net loss applicable to common shareholders..................   (5,594,273)      (11,356,666)
    Net loss per common share...................................  $     (2.57)     $      (5.82)
</TABLE>
 
     The unaudited pro forma results above are not necessarily indicative of
either actual results of operations that would have occurred had the
acquisitions been made at the beginning of 1994 or 1995, or of future results.
The pro forma statement of operations data includes adjustments related to
amortization of intangible assets, interest expense on borrowings used to
finance the acquisition and the weighted average number of common shares
outstanding after giving effect to the acquisitions.
 
  ACQUISITIONS PENDING AT DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND COMPLETED ON MARCH 15, 1996
 
     On March 15, 1996, the Company completed the acquisition of the outstanding
common stock of International Pay Phones, Inc. (a South Carolina company) and
International Pay Phones, Inc. (a Tennessee company) (collectively "IPP"),
companies affiliated through common ownership and management. The Company
acquired 2,101 installed phones for a purchase price of $3,496,487 in cash,
555,589 unregistered shares of the Company's Common Stock, 5,453 shares of 14%
Preferred Stock (immediately convertible into 54,530 shares of Common Stock),
and warrants to purchase 117,785 shares of the Company's Common Stock at a
nominal exercise price per share. Additionally, the Company assumed
approximately $1,757,000 in liabilities, of which $1,551,796 was repaid by the
Company on March 15, 1996. The cash purchase price included three five year
non-compete agreements, with an aggregate value of $60,000, with three of IPP's
former officers. The acquisition will be recorded as a purchase and the
difference between the fair value of the tangible assets acquired and the total
purchase price will be recorded as an increase to intangibles and amortized over
the life of the acquired location contracts which is estimated to be 36 to 60
months.
 
     On March 15, 1996, the Company completed a Share Purchase Agreement with
Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. (a Florida corporation) ("Paramount").
Under the terms of the Agreement, the Company acquired 2,528 installed phones
for a cash purchase price of $9,618,553, 8,333 shares of 14% Preferred Stock
(immediately convertible into 83,330 shares of Common Stock), warrants to
purchase 179,996 shares of the Company's Common Stock at a nominal exercise
price per share, and the Company assumed outstanding liabilities of
approximately $733,000, of which $693,446 was repaid on March 15, 1996. The
purchase price included a five year consulting and non-compete agreement, valued
at $50,000, with one of Paramount's former officers. The acquisition will be
recorded as a purchase and the difference between the fair value of the tangible
assets acquired and the total purchase price will be recorded as an increase to
intangibles and amortized over the life of the acquired location contracts which
is estimated to be 36 to 60 months.
 
4.  ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
 
     The Company has billing, collection and advance payment agreements with
Zero Plus Dialing, Inc. ("ZPDI") which provide for, among other things, the sale
of certain eligible accounts to ZPDI. These receivables result from the Company
reselling operator assisted long distance services. Included in accounts
receivable at December 31, 1994 and 1995 is approximately $160,496 and $78,007,
respectively, due from ZPDI. Approximately $5,300,000 and $3,800,000 of
receivables were sold pursuant to these agreements
 
                                      F-13
<PAGE>   89
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
4.  ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE (CONTINUED)
during 1994 and 1995, respectively, of which approximately $676,755 and $594,076
have not been collected by ZPDI at December 31, 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
5.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     As of December 31, property and equipment consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    ESTIMATED                DECEMBER 31,
                                                   USEFUL LIVES      ----------------------------
                                                    (IN YEARS)          1994             1995
                                                   ------------      -----------      -----------
    <S>                                            <C>               <C>              <C>
    Telephone boards, enclosures and cases.......       3-7          $ 6,155,690      $16,386,987
    Operator service equipment...................         5            1,065,389               --
    Furniture, fixtures and other equipment......       3-5            1,329,155          989,300
    Leasehold improvements.......................       2-5              413,177          231,466
                                                                      ----------       ----------
                                                                       8,963,411       17,607,753
      Less -- accumulated depreciation...........                     (3,668,572)      (3,508,642)
                                                                      ----------       ----------
                                                                     $ 5,294,839      $14,099,111
                                                                      ==========       ==========
</TABLE>
 
     Depreciation expense, including amortization of assets under capital
leases, was $668,415, $1,179,137 and $1,846,453 for the years ended December 31,
1993, 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
6.  INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
     As of December 31, intangible assets consisted of the following:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 AMORTIZATION
                                                    PERIOD           1994           1995
                                                 -------------    -----------    -----------
    <S>                                          <C>              <C>            <C>
    Costs incurred in the acquisition of
      installed phones (See Note 3)............   36-60 months    $ 3,026,387    $12,362,884
    Non-compete agreements.....................   24-60 months        400,000      1,513,765
    State operating certifications.............      60 months        260,113        466,796
    Capitalized location contract fees.........  96-120 months        997,574      1,040,242
                                                                  -----------    -----------
                                                                    4,684,074     15,383,687
    Less: accumulated amortization.............                    (1,254,953)    (3,791,530)
                                                                  -----------    -----------
                                                                  $ 3,429,121    $11,592,157
                                                                   ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
     Amortization of intangible assets amounted to $227,629, $1,057,132 and
$2,536,596 for the years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
7.  LONG-TERM DEBT
 
     As of December 31, long-term debt consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    1994           1995
                                                                 -----------    -----------
    <S>                                                          <C>            <C>
    Note payable to two third party investors repaid on March
      15, 1996. The principal due at the contractual maturity
      of April 1997 was $1,200,000.............................           --    $   906,105
    Notes payable to bank repaid on March 15, 1996.............           --      2,340,000
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-14
<PAGE>   90
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    1994           1995
                                                                 -----------    -----------
<S>                                                            <C>            <C> 
7.  LONG-TERM DEBT (CONTINUED)
    Notes payable due on demand to five former World
      stockholders repaid on March 15, 1996....................           --        625,000
    Notes payable to former stockholders of Public due on April
      16, 1996 with interest at 9%. On March 15, 1996 $211,285
      was repaid...............................................           --        293,226
    Non-compete notes payable to two former officers of Public
      repaid on March 15, 1996.................................           --        203,480
    Two notes payable to a service provider repaid on March 15,
      1996.....................................................  $ 1,852,628      1,401,872
    Term notes payable to a vendor in monthly installments
      ranging from $31,107 to $47,330 including interest at
      rates varying from 10% to 13.75%. The vendor has a
      security interest in the underlying phones. On March 15,
      1996, the Company repaid $225,000, refinanced the
      remaining balance owed at 15% interest and the vendor
      released its security interest in the goods sold.........      694,611      1,066,428
    Promissory notes payable to Alpha repaid on March 15,
      1996.....................................................      751,848        500,756
    Promissory notes payable to a group of five investors
      repaid in 1995...........................................      300,000             --
    Promissory note payable to a vendor in monthly installments
      of $318 through $535 at an interest rate of 8.75%........           --        120,617
    Promissory note payable in monthly installments of $12,500
      through January 1996 at an interest rate of 8%...........      147,721        124,614
    Notes payable to directors and shareholders at an imputed
      interest rate of prime plus 5%, repaid on March 15,
      1996.....................................................           --      1,732,500
    Notes payable to two investors repaid on March 15, 1996....           --        200,000
    Note payable to a vendor repaid on March 15, 1996..........           --        201,101
    Note payable to a consultant. On March 15, 1996, the
      consultant accepted 12,500 shares of the Company's Common
      Stock and $50,000 in full settlement of the debt.........           --        125,000
    Non-compete obligation to a former owner of World payable
      in bi-weekly installments of $6,000 at an imputed
      interest at 9%...........................................           --        288,844
    Various notes payable to vendors in monthly installments
      ranging from $283 to $3,538 with interest rates ranging
      from 6.9% to 10.4%.......................................      131,848        199,370
                                                                 -----------    -----------
                                                                   3,878,656     10,328,913
    Less current maturities....................................   (1,814,760)    (1,010,412)
                                                                 -----------    -----------
                                                                 $ 2,063,896    $ 9,318,501
                                                                  ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-15
<PAGE>   91
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
7.  LONG-TERM DEBT (CONTINUED)
     Following are maturities of long-term debt for each of the next five years
based on the terms of the ING credit facility (See Note 15):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        AMOUNT
                                                                      -----------
            <S>                                                       <C>
            1996....................................................  $ 1,010,412
            1997....................................................      640,913
            1998....................................................    1,001,576
            1999....................................................    7,674,596
            2000....................................................        1,416
                                                                      -----------
                                                                      $10,328,913
                                                                       ==========
</TABLE>
 
     On March 15, 1996, $9,214,468 of outstanding debt was repaid.
 
8.  LEASES
 
  OPERATING LEASES
 
     The Company leases its corporate offices and other locations, office
equipment and vehicles under noncancellable operating leases expiring at various
times through 1999.
 
     Future minimum noncancellable payments under operating leases are as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                         <C>
            1996......................................................  $329,352
            1997......................................................   303,658
            1998......................................................    96,721
            1999......................................................    54,473
            2000......................................................        --
</TABLE>
 
     Rent expense under all operating leases was $264,369, $334,984 and $363,929
for the years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
  CAPITAL LEASES
 
     During 1995, as part of the acquisition of World and Public, the Company
assumed capital leases between various lessors and World and Public. World and
Public leased their installed phones. The allocation of the purchase price
increased the historical book value of the phones to their current fair value.
On March 15, 1996, the Company paid off these leases with the proceeds received
in the refinancing of its debt.
 
     During 1994, the Company entered into lease financing agreements for the
acquisition of computer equipment. Each agreement has a term of 36 months with
interest ranging from 8.6% to 9.7% per year.
 
     Assets recorded under capital leases at December 31 were as follows:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1994           1995
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    <S>                                                           <C>            <C>
    Telephone boards, enclosures and cases......................  $  111,349     $9,429,049
    Operator service equipment..................................     405,570             --
    Office equipment............................................     110,442        170,058
                                                                  ----------     ----------
                                                                     627,361      9,599,107
    Less accumulated amortization...............................    (246,198)      (616,778)
                                                                  ----------     ----------
                                                                  $  381,163     $8,982,329
                                                                   =========      =========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-16
<PAGE>   92
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
8.  LEASES (CONTINUED)
     On March 15, 1996, the Company repaid $3,243,965 of the outstanding
obligations under capital leases. The following are maturities of long-term debt
(which replaced obligations under capital leases) based on the terms of the ING
credit facility (See Note 15):
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                   <C>            
            1996................................................  $  288,972
            1997................................................     112,545
            1998................................................     357,371
            1999................................................   2,774,049
            2000................................................          --
                                                                  ----------
                                                                  $3,532,937
                                                                   =========
</TABLE>
 
9.  INCOME TAXES
 
No provisions for income tax were required and no income taxes were paid for the
years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 or 1995 because of operating losses
generated by the Company. Deferred tax assets and (liabilities) at December 31
were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   1994            1995
                                                                -----------     -----------
    <S>                                                         <C>             <C>
    Federal net operating loss carryforward...................  $ 1,863,867     $ 5,342,374
    Depreciation and amortization.............................      273,287       1,017,406
    Bad debts.................................................       17,160          13,600
    Other.....................................................        5,538              --
                                                                -----------     -----------
    Gross deferred tax assets.................................    2,159,852       6,373,380
    Accruals..................................................     (117,000)             --
    Deferred sales commissions................................     (130,217)       (125,066)
    Valuation allowance on deferred tax assets................   (1,912,635)     (6,248,314)
                                                                -----------     -----------
    Net deferred tax assets...................................  $        --     $        --
                                                                 ==========      ==========
</TABLE>
 
     A valuation allowance has been provided against the net deferred tax assets
since management cannot predict, based on the weight of available evidence, that
it is more likely than not that such assets will be ultimately realized. The net
operating loss carryforwards, if not utilized, will expire between the years
2002-2010. Internal Revenue Code Section 382 provides for the limitation on the
use of net operating loss carryforwards in years subsequent to significant
changes in ownership. As a result of the Company's Initial Public Offering in
1988 and certain other transactions, including acquisitions, changes in
ownership have occurred resulting in significant limitations on the use of net
operating loss carryforwards. The extent of limitations as a result of
significant changes in ownership has not been determined by the Company.
 
10.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
As of December 31, shareholders' equity consisted of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  1994             1995
                                                              ------------     ------------
    <S>                                                       <C>              <C>
    10% Cumulative Nonvoting Redeemable Preferred Stock
      ($10 stated value -- 550,000 shares authorized;
      530,534 shares issued and outstanding at December 31,
      1995).................................................            --     $  5,305,340
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-17
<PAGE>   93
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  1994             1995
                                                              ------------     ------------
<S>                                                          <C>              <C> 
10.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)
    10% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ($1,000 stated
      value -- 3,880 shares authorized; 1,496 shares issued
      and outstanding at December 31, 1994 and 1995,
      redeemed on March 15, 1996)...........................  $          1                1
    8% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ($100 stated
      value -- 16,000 shares authorized; 12,200 shares
      issued and outstanding at December 31, 1994 and 1995,
      redeemed on March 15, 1996)...........................       981,084          981,084
    7% Cumulative Convertible Redeemable Preferred Stock
      ($100 stated value -- 2,500 shares authorized, issued
      and outstanding at December 31, 1994 and 1995,
      redeemed on March 15, 1996)...........................       200,000          200,000
    Common Stock ($0.01 par value -- 22,500,000 shares
      authorized; 1,522,158 and 2,855,350 shares issued and
      outstanding at December 31, 1994 and 1995)............        15,222           28,554
    Additional paid-in capital..............................     8,755,364       16,649,559
    Accumulated deficit.....................................    (7,303,804)     (13,453,876)
                                                              ------------     ------------
                                                              $  2,647,867     $  9,710,662
                                                               ===========      ===========
</TABLE>
 
  PREFERRED STOCK
 
   
     The Company's 10% Cumulative Non-Voting Redeemable Preferred Stock ("10%
Non-Voting Preferred") has a liquidation preference of $10 per share. Under the
terms of the 10% Non-Voting Preferred, which was issued in connection with the
acquisition of World Communications, Inc. by the Company, from December 1996
through November 1997, the Company can be required by each holder of the 10%
Non-Voting Preferred to repurchase their shares for $30 per share. At the time
of the World acquisition, the Company entered into a Voting and Proxy Agreement
("the Agreement") with certain common stockholders of the Company ("Holders")
representing, in the aggregate, over 50% of the then outstanding Common Stock of
the Company. The Agreement has also been signed by the holders of the Nominal
Value Warrants and Series A Preferred such that common shareholders representing
over 50% of the Common Stock have signed the Agreement. Under the terms of the
Agreement, the Holders agreed to call a special meeting of the shareholders by
June 1996 at which time the Holders will propose that each share of the 10%
Non-Voting Preferred be made convertible into 1.67 shares of the Company's
Common Stock (a total of 885,992 shares). Such number of shares had a fair value
at the date of acquisition approximately equal to the stated value of the 10%
Non-Voting Preferred. Under the terms of the Agreement, the Holders have agreed
to vote in favor of the proposal. Once the 10% Non-Voting Preferred is
convertible, the Company cannot be required to redeem the 10% Non-Voting
Preferred. No dividends were paid on the 10% Non-Voting Preferred in 1995 and no
dividends are payable or accrue for nine months from date of issuance or if the
stock is converted to Common Stock. In addition, certain holders of the 10%
Non-Voting Preferred and the Company entered into a separate Voting and Proxy
Agreement which provides that such holders shall vote the shares of 10%
Non-Voting Preferred held by them to approve the foregoing grant of conversion
rights.
    
 
     The Company's 10% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ("10% Cumulative
Preferred") was issued to a significant customer in 1992 (see Note 12). No
dividends were paid on the 10% Cumulative Preferred in 1993, 1994 or 1995 and
all outstanding shares of the 10% Cumulative Preferred were redeemed on March
15, 1996.
 
                                      F-18
<PAGE>   94
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
10.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)
     All outstanding shares of the Company's 8% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred
Stock ("8% Preferred") were redeemed on March 15, 1996. Dividends paid on the 8%
Preferred were $24,400, $30,000 and $36,000 in 1993, 1994 and 1995,
respectively, and are reflected in the accumulated deficit.
 
     All outstanding shares of the Company's 7% Cumulative Convertible
Redeemable Preferred Stock ("7% Preferred") were redeemed on March 15, 1996.
Dividends paid on the 7% Preferred were $21,875 and $4,375 in 1994 and 1995,
respectively, and are reflected in the accumulated deficit.
 
  PREFERRED DIVIDENDS
 
     On December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995, the Company had dividends in arrears
payable to preferred shareholders in the aggregate amount of $305,950, $546,055
and $826,548, respectively. On March 15, 1996, the 10% Cumulative Preferred, 8%
Preferred and the 7% Preferred Stock and dividends in arrears were either paid
or converted to a new class of preferred stock (See Note 15).
 
  SALES AND ISSUANCE OF UNREGISTERED COMMON STOCK
 
     Sales and issuances of the Company's unregistered Common Stock during 1995
were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   NUMBER OF       AVERAGE PRICE
                                                                 SHARES ISSUED       PER SHARE
                                                                 -------------     -------------
    <S>                                                          <C>               <C>
    Private sales to officers and directors....................      286,643           $4.77
    Private sales to creditors of the Company..................      133,332            4.50
    Private sales to affiliates of the Company.................       38,888            4.63
    Issued in connection with acquisitions.....................      731,189            6.74
    Issued to third parties for services.......................       69,895            6.01
    Issued to directors for services...........................       21,488            5.09
    Issued to directors upon conversion of debt and accrued
      interest.................................................       26,065            4.51
    Issued to third party creditors upon conversion of debt and
      accrued interest.........................................        4,166            4.80
    Issued for exercising stock options........................        8,333            4.20
    Other issuances............................................       13,193            5.20
                                                                 -------------
                                                                   1,333,192
                                                                  ==========
</TABLE>
 
     Sales to directors, creditors and affiliates of the Company were made at
prices per share below the quoted market values (based on prices calculated by
the Company's investment advisor) of the Company's Common Stock on the dates of
the transactions. No expense was recognized by the Company as the Company
believes that the discount associated with these sales reflects the impact on
quoted market value of issuing unregistered shares.
 
                                      F-19
<PAGE>   95
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
10.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)
  STOCK WARRANT ACTIVITY
 
     Stock warrant activity during 1993, 1994 and 1995 was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  NUMBER         EXERCISE
                                                                 OF SHARES         PRICE
                                                                 ---------     -------------
    <S>                                                          <C>           <C>
    Balance, December 31, 1992.................................    350,887     $3.00- $ 6.00
    Granted....................................................     28,519      6.00-   8.70
    Exercised..................................................   (310,962)     3.00-   6.00
    Cancelled..................................................     (9,411)     4.50-   9.90
                                                                 ---------
    Balance, December 31, 1993.................................     59,033      6.00-   9.90
    Granted....................................................     88,236      7.50-  15.75
    Exercised..................................................    (35,000)     6.00-   8.70
    Cancelled..................................................         --
                                                                 ---------
    Balance, December 31, 1994.................................    112,269      7.50-  15.75
    Granted:
      To the Company's investment advisor......................    166,666              6.00
      To officers of the Company...............................     47,583      5.70-   6.00
      To lenders...............................................    277,884      5.70-   6.00
                                                                 ---------
    Total Granted..............................................    492,133      5.70-   6.00
    Exercised..................................................         --
    Cancelled..................................................    (24,051)             9.90
                                                                 ---------
    Balance, December 31, 1995.................................    580,351     $5.70- $15.75
                                                                  ========
</TABLE>
 
     The estimated fair value of the warrants on the date of the grant for the
warrants issued to the investment advisor has been included in the determination
of World's purchase price. The fair value of warrants issued to lenders has been
recorded as an adjustment to interest expense. The difference between the
intrinsic value and the exercise price of the warrants issued to officers of the
Company was not material. All warrants outstanding at each period end are
exercisable.
 
  STOCK OPTION ACTIVITY
 
   
     Options are granted by the Company at the discretion of the Board of
Directors to key employees, officers and directors, and generally are
exercisable immediately upon issuance, have terms of three to five years and are
issued with exercise prices at or slightly below quoted market value of the
Company's Common Stock on the date of grant. The amount of compensation expense
recorded by the Company during 1994 and 1995 relating to stock option activity
was not material.
    
 
     In October 1995, the FASB issued SFAS No. 123, "Accounting for Stock Based
Compensation." The Statement, which is effective for the Company beginning in
1996, encourages companies to record stock options issued to both employees and
nonemployees at the fair value on the date of grant. As an alternative to fair
value recording, the Statement permits companies to continue to use the methods
outlined in Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25, "Accounting for Stock
Issued to Employees" but requires that options issued to non-employees be
recorded at the fair value on the date of grant and requires pro forma
disclosure of the impact on the company as if the suggested method had been
used. The Company has not yet determined how it will adopt the Statement.
 
                                      F-20
<PAGE>   96
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
10.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)
     Information relating to stock option activity during 1993, 1994 and 1995
was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  NUMBER
                                                                 OF SHARES     OPTION PRICE
                                                                 ---------     -------------
    <S>                                                          <C>           <C>  
    Balance, December 31, 1992.................................    249,637     $3.00- $12.60
    Granted....................................................    187,500      3.00-  15.78
    Exercised..................................................    (20,833)     3.18-   3.18
    Cancelled..................................................         --
                                                                 ---------
    Balance, December 31, 1993.................................    416,304      3.00-  15.78
    Granted....................................................     97,758      4.50-  19.50
    Exercised..................................................    (52,930)     4.50-   6.00
    Cancelled..................................................    (25,000)     5.22-   9.00
                                                                 ---------
    Balance, December 31, 1994.................................    436,132      3.00-  19.50
    Granted....................................................    168,373      6.00-   6.00
    Exercised..................................................     (8,333)     3.00-   6.00
    Cancelled..................................................   (124,427)     6.00-  18.78
                                                                 ---------
    Balance, December 31, 1995.................................    471,745     $3.00- $19.50
                                                                  ========
    Exercisable, December 31, 1995.............................    435,243     $3.00- $19.50
                                                                  ========
</TABLE>
 
11.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
 
  EMPLOYMENT AND SEVERANCE AGREEMENTS
 
     On March 15, 1996, the Company settled the amounts owed under the September
15, 1995 Separation Agreements with two of its former officers. Under the terms
of the Separation Agreements, the Company was obligated to pay the former
officers the remainder of their employment agreements and the Company agreed to
accelerate the vesting of options for 194,027 shares of the Company's Common
Stock at $6.00 per share.
 
     As part of the merger with World, the Company executed employment
agreements with three former employees of World. The former Chairman of World
will remain as an advisor to the Company for 24 months and receive $125,000 in
year one and $135,000 in year two plus certain benefits. The former President of
World has become an officer of the Company and will receive $110,000 for the
first year of his contract and $120,000 in the second year, plus other customary
benefits. The former Vice President and Secretary of World has become an officer
of the Company and will receive a base salary of $65,000 for the first year of
her contract and $70,000 for the second year, plus other customary benefits.
 
   
     On May 1, 1995, the Company entered into a three year employment agreement
with two one year renewal options with an officer of the Company, whereby he
will receive compensation of $95,000, $105,000 and $120,000 during the terms of
the agreement and $130,000 and $140,000 during the option periods of employment,
plus other customary benefits. This agreement provides for early contract
termination and a "change in control" provision which requires severance pay
equal to 150% of the normal salary which would have been payable over the next
three years.
    
 
  CONTINGENCIES
 
     The Company, in the course of its normal operations, is subject to
regulatory matters, disputes, claims and lawsuits. In management's opinion, any
such outstanding matters, of which the Company has knowledge,
 
                                      F-21
<PAGE>   97
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
11.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONTINUED)
have been reflected in the financial statements and are covered by insurance or
would have no material adverse effect on the Company's financial position,
results of operations or cash flows.
 
12.  MAJOR CUSTOMER
 
     The Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation and its affiliates (collectively
"DeBartolo"), accounted for 25%, 18% and 15% of the Company's total revenues for
the years ended December 31, 1993, 1994 and 1995, respectively. The 10%
Cumulative Preferred, which was issued in connection with the DeBartolo
management agreements, was recorded at $1 based on the Company's determination
that the benefits associated with the agreements should be recorded in the
statement of operations as earned. On March 15, 1996, all of the outstanding
shares of the 10% Cumulative Preferred were redeemed by the Company.
 
13.  POSTRETIREMENT AND POSTEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS
 
     Effective January 1, 1993, the Company adopted SFAS No. 106, "Employers'
Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions" and effective
January 1, 1994, the Company adopted SFAS No. 112, "Employers' Accounting for
Postemployment Benefits" (collectively "the Statements"). The Statements
establish accounting standards for employers who offer postretirement or
postemployment benefits and require that the estimated cost of these benefits be
accrued over the service lives of the covered employers. The Company does not
offer postretirement or postemployment benefits to its employees and, therefore,
the adoption of the Statements did not have a material impact on the Company's
financial statements.
 
14.  FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
     The following methods and assumptions were used by the Company in
estimating fair value disclosures for financial instruments:
 
     Cash and cash equivalents. The carrying amount reported in the balance
sheet approximates fair value.
 
     Long-term debt. The estimated fair value of long-term debt is determined
using interest rates that could be available to the Company for similar
instruments with similar terms.
 
     Estimated fair values of the Company's financial instruments at December
31, 1995 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         CARRYING
                                                          AMOUNT        FAIR VALUE
                                                        -----------     -----------
            <S>                                         <C>             <C>
            Cash and cash equivalents.................  $   713,462     $   713,462
            Long-term debt............................   10,328,913      10,803,472
            Obligations under capital leases..........    3,532,937       3,741,869
</TABLE>
 
15.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
  CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY, DEBT REFINANCING AND COMPLETION OF
ACQUISITIONS
 
     On February 23, 1996, the Company created three new classes of preferred
stock: (i) Series A Special Convertible Preferred Stock, $0.20 par value, $0.20
Stated Value, 250,000 authorized shares, with each share immediately convertible
into 20 shares of Common Stock, and non-voting, ("Series A Preferred"); (ii)
Series B Special Convertible Preferred Stock, $0.20 par value, $120 Stated
Value, 250,000 authorized shares, with each share immediately convertible into
20 shares of Common Stock, and non-voting ("Series B Preferred"); and (iii) 14%
Convertible Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock, without par value, $60 Stated
Value, non-voting, 200,000 authorized shares, and with each share immediately
convertible into
 
                                      F-22
<PAGE>   98
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
15.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS (CONTINUED)
10 shares of Common Stock ("14% Preferred"). Each share of the 14% Preferred is
entitled to receive a quarterly dividend of 0.035 shares of 14% Preferred.
 
     In a transaction consummated on March 15, 1996, the Company borrowed
$30,530,954 (out of a total credit facility ("Credit Facility") commitment of
$37,250,000) from Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and one
other lender (collectively known as the "Lenders"). The Company has available
under the Credit Facility $6,700,000 to fund future acquisitions and for general
working capital purposes. The Company used the funds to complete the Paramount
and IPP acquisitions, to repay all outstanding long-term debt and capital lease
obligations which had a secured interest in the Company's installed phones, to
redeem the 10% Cumulative Preferred, 7% Preferred and 8% Preferred and to pay
related transaction fees. The Credit Facility requires monthly interest payments
at prime plus 5% and contains various covenants restricting the Company's
ability to pay dividends or incur additional debt, among other conditions, and
also contains financial covenants requiring minimum net worth, working capital
and earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization among other
covenants. The Credit Facility also contains a subjective acceleration clause
which states that in the event of a material adverse change in the business, as
determined by the Lenders, the Lenders can call the debt at its discretion. The
Lenders have waived their right to exercise this subjective acceleration clause
through April 1, 1997, (subsequently amended -- see note 16).
 
     Principal payments related to the original facility were to commence
September 1997 and continue quarterly through June 1999 at which time the
remaining principal balance is due. The amount of principal payments is
contingent upon numerous factors, including the borrowing base and cash flow of
the Company. Based on amounts borrowed at March 15, 1996, the estimated
principal payment in September 1997 would be $534,000, increasing to $884,000
quarterly for 1998. All of the Company's installed phones are pledged as
collateral to the Credit Facility.
 
   
     The majority of the Credit Facility ($29,000,000) can be converted into
Series B Preferred at the ratio of 833 shares for each $100,000 in outstanding
debt and interest. Additionally, the Lenders received warrants to purchase
204,824 shares of Series A Preferred at an exercise price of $0.20 per share.
Each share of Series A Preferred and Series B Preferred is convertible into 20
shares of Common Stock. The estimated fair value of the warrants on the date of
grant will be recorded as interest expense over the term of the Credit Facility.
The Company has estimated the annual non-cash interest expense to be in excess
of $1,900,000.
    
 
     On March 15, 1996, concurrent with the consummation of the Credit Facility,
the Company redeemed the 10% Cumulative Preferred, the 8% Preferred, and the 7%
Preferred. The redemption price was $1,117,371 and 34,434 shares of 14%
Preferred. In the aggregate, $6,475,011 of the Company's outstanding
obligations, including portions of the purchase price for the pending
acquisitions, was liquidated by issuing 107,918 shares of 14% Preferred. The
approximately $2,000,000 excess of the redemption price of the preferred issues
redeemed over their aggregate carrying value will be recorded as a reduction of
earnings available to common shareholders during the first quarter of 1996.
 
     On March 15, 1996, warrants to purchase 2,018,946 shares of Common Stock at
a nominal exercise price per share ("Nominal Value Warrants") were issued in
conjunction with the IPP and Paramount acquisitions, redemption of the 10%
Cumulative Preferred, 8% Preferred, and the 7% Preferred, and conversion of
certain debt of the Company to the 14% Preferred. The warrants expire on March
13, 2001. The Company has utilized an independent appraiser who has estimated
the fair value of the Nominal Value Warrants to be $4,974,673, using the
Black-Scholes valuation method, of which $3,886,139 (the amount attributable to
the warrants provided to related parties in connection with the redemption of
the 10% Cumulative Preferred, 8% Preferred, and 7% Preferred shares and
conversion of certain debt) was recorded as an unusual charge in the Company's
statement of operations for the three months ended March 31, 1996.
 
                                      F-23
<PAGE>   99
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
15.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS (CONTINUED)
     As of March 15, 1996, the Company has reserved 14,366,022 shares of Common
Stock for issuance under the following scenarios: (1) conversion of $29,000,000
of the debt under the Credit Facility into 241,667 shares of Series B Preferred
Stock which is then immediately convertible into 4,833,333 shares of Common
Stock; (2) exercise of warrants to purchase 204,824 shares of Series A Preferred
Stock at $0.20 per share, immediately convertible into 4,096,480 shares of
Common Stock; (3) conversion of 107,918 shares of 14% Preferred into 1,079,179
shares of Common Stock; (4) conversion, upon Shareholder approval, of 530,534
shares of 10% Non-Voting Preferred into 885,992 shares of Common Stock; (5)
exercise of 2,018,942 Nominal Value Warrants; (6) exercise of 980,351 warrants
at prices ranging from $5.70 to $15.75 per share; and (7) exercise of 471,745
stock options at prices ranging from $3.00 to $19.50 per share.
 
16.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS -- UNAUDITED
 
  PENDING ACQUISITIONS AND CHANGES TO SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
     During the April and May 1996, warrants representing 972,487 shares of
Common Stock were exercised, and total proceeds to the Company were $9,725. Of
the total warrants exercised, 539,989 shares of Common Stock were issued to an
officer of the Company. On July 22, 1996, Nominal Value Warrants representing
62,650 shares of Common Stock were exercised by an officer of the Company, and
total proceeds to the Company were $627.
 
     On June 27, 1996, the shareholders of the Company approved an amendment to
the Articles of Incorporation which authorizes the Company to have outstanding
60,000,000 shares; of which 50,000,000 shares are to be classified as Common
Stock and 10,000,000 shares as Preferred Stock. The shareholders also approved
conversion rights to the 10% Preferred. Each share of 10% Preferred is
convertible into 1.6667 shares of Common Stock at any time by the shareholder or
the Company. On June 28, 1996, the Company converted the outstanding 10%
Preferred into 884,214 shares of Common Stock.
 
   
  PENDING ACQUISITIONS (COMPLETED IN SEPTEMBER 1996)
    
 
     On June 26, 1996, the Company entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement with
ACI-HDT Supply Company, Amtel Communications Services, Amtel Communications
Correctional Facilities, Amtel Communications, Inc. and Amtel Communications
Payphones, Inc. (all California corporations and Debtors-in-Possession)
collectively referred to as "Amtel" for the purchase of approximately 8,435
telephones, of which 7,335 are considered revenue producing telephones, for a
purchase price consisting of: (i) $7,000,000 in cash; (ii) 2,162,163 shares of
the Company's Common Stock, valued at the average of the BID and ASK (as
reported by The NASDAQ Stock Market ("NASDAQ") on September 13, 1996, less an
unregistered and block discount of 20.19% as determined by Key Trust Company of
Ohio, N.A. ("Key Trust")) $4,637,840, or $2.15 per share; and (iii)
approximately $675,122 in related acquisition expenses. The Amtel acquisition
closed on September 13, 1996.
 
   
     On September 16, 1996, the Company completed the acquisition of Payphones
of America, Inc. ("POA"), pursuant to which the Company acquired approximately
3,115 installed pay telephones for a purchase price, consisting of: (i) $500,000
in cash; (ii) 166,666 unregistered shares of the Company's Common Stock, valued
at the average of the BID and ASK (as reported by NASDAQ on September 16, 1996,
less an unregistered and block discount of 30.42% as determined by Key Trust)
$311,665, or $1.87 per share; (iii) assumption of capital lease obligations of
$7,750,000; (iv) notes payable to the selling shareholders of POA, $3,634,114;
(v) assumption of other debt, $234,890; (vi) two five year non-competition and
consulting agreements with two of the selling shareholders, $307,264; and (vii)
approximately $166,748 in related acquisition expenses.
    
 
                                      F-24
<PAGE>   100
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
16.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS -- UNAUDITED (CONTINUED)
     The Amtel and POA acquisitions will be recorded as purchases and the
differences between the fair values of the tangibles assets acquired and the
total purchase price, $15,865,835, will be recorded as intangibles and will be
amortized over the life of the acquired location contracts (54 months for
Amtel's contracts and 72 months for POA contracts).
 
   
     On September 13, 1996, concurrent with the acquisitions of Amtel and POA,
the Lenders amended the Credit Facility, increasing the maximum borrowings
available under the Credit Facility to $41,000,000. The Company then borrowed an
additional $8,776,546 and used $5,950,000 of the proceeds to complete the Amtel
and POA acquisitions and the remaining portion of the proceeds of $2,826,546 was
used for working capital and payment of certain related acquisition expenses.
    
 
   
     Based on amounts borrowed under the Credit Facility as of September 13,
1996, the estimated principal payment due April 30, 1997 would be $2,972,222,
with monthly principal payments of $222,222 thereafter till December 31, 1997,
and quarterly principal payments of $634,375 commencing September 30, 1997,
increasing to $1,087,500 quarterly for 1998 and $1,268,750 at March 31, 1999.
All of the Company's installed telephones are pledged as collateral to the
Credit Facility. On June 30, 1996, and September 30, 1996 the Company did not
meet certain financial loan covenants. The Lenders have amended the credit
agreement to enable compliance with these loan covenants and have waived their
right to exercise the subjective acceleration clause through December 31, 1997.
    
 
   
  PENDING ACQUISITIONS -- COMPLETION CONTINGENT ON OBTAINING FINANCING
    
 
   
     On October 16, 1996, the Company executed a Letter of Intent with Cherokee
Communications, Inc. ("Cherokee") for the acquisition of 14,000 public pay
telephones for a purchase price consisting of (i) $54,000,000 in cash; (ii)
three five year non-compete and consulting agreements with the selling
shareholders, $1,250,000, of which $625,000 is payable at closing; (iii) three
two year employment agreements with the selling shareholders and former officers
of Cherokee requiring 24 monthly payments aggregating $739,640; (iv) additional
consideration of $6,000,000 in cash or Common Stock payable in two equal
installments due January 10, 1998 and 1999 only if the Federal Communications
Commission fails to implement Rate Caps, Rate Guidelines, and/or Billed Party
Preferences during the calendar years of 1997 and 1998; (v) $3,103,933 for
$3,655,761 in current receivables net of assumed income tax liabilities of
$551,828; and (vi) approximately $317,500 in related acquisition expenses.
    
 
   
     On October 9, 1996, the Company executed a Letter of Intent with Texas
Coinphone for the acquisition of 1,200 installed pay telephones for a purchase
price of $3,660,000 and $50,000 in related acquisition expenses. Both of these
transactions are subject to financing.
    
 
                                      F-25
<PAGE>   101
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    (UNAUDITED)
                                                                     DECEMBER 31,   SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                        1995            1996
                                                                     -----------    -------------
<S>                                                                  <C>            <C>
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash.............................................................  $   713,462     $    655,734
  Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful accounts
     of $40,000 and $100,961, respectively.........................      901,508        2,423,060
  Other current assets.............................................      185,634          247,426
                                                                     -----------      -----------
     Total current assets..........................................    1,800,604        3,326,220
Property and equipment, net........................................   14,099,111       31,682,061
Intangible assets, net.............................................   11,592,157       39,226,619
Other assets.......................................................    1,425,384          705,473
                                                                     -----------      -----------
                                                                     $28,917,256     $ 74,940,373
                                                                     ===========      ===========
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Current portion of long-term debt -- related parties.............           --     $  5,234,953
  Current portion of long-term debt -- others......................  $ 1,010,412        1,370,673
  Current portion of obligations under capital leases..............      288,972          803,336
  Accounts payable.................................................    2,772,306        2,969,681
  Accrued expenses.................................................    1,610,100        3,149,690
  Deferred revenues................................................           --          600,000
  Other unusual charges and contractual settlements................      962,338          516,392
                                                                     -----------      -----------
     Total current liabilities.....................................    6,644,128       14,644,725
Long-term debt -- related parties (amounts due at
  maturity $1,732,500 and $29,000,000, respectively)...............    1,732,500       31,053,337
Long-term debt -- others...........................................    7,586,001        3,832,781
Obligations under capital leases...................................    3,243,965        7,225,722
14% cumulative preferred stock mandatorily redeemable
  (redemption amount $6,742,960, due June 30, 2000)................           --        6,539,053
Non-mandatorily redeemable preferred stock,
  common stock and other shareholders' equity......................    9,710,662       11,644,755
                                                                     -----------      -----------
                                                                     $28,917,256     $ 74,940,373
                                                                     ===========      ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-26
<PAGE>   102
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                     STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED OPERATIONS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 (UNAUDITED)                    (UNAUDITED)
                                              NINE MONTHS ENDED             THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                SEPTEMBER 30,                   SEPTEMBER 30,
                                         ---------------------------     --------------------------
                                            1995            1996            1995           1996
                                         -----------    ------------     -----------    -----------
<S>                                      <C>            <C>              <C>            <C>
REVENUES:
  Coin calls..........................   $ 7,689,786    $ 16,988,697     $ 2,694,457    $ 6,577,353
  Non-coin............................     3,301,969       9,308,538         996,474      4,016,008
  Other...............................       965,148       2,018,191         387,910        916,555
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
                                          11,956,903      28,315,426       4,078,841     11,509,916
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
OPERATING EXPENSES:
  Line and transmission charges.......     3,340,812       6,800,782       1,240,385      2,934,575
  Location commissions................     2,163,464       4,101,195         647,099      1,564,465
  Other operating expenses............     4,132,850       8,102,314       1,450,140      3,054,863
  Depreciation and amortization.......     2,164,822       8,876,238         732,331      3,563,353
  Selling, general & administrative...     1,982,489       3,757,559         637,062      1,358,835
  Other unusual charges and
     contractual settlements..........     1,418,530       5,517,753       1,418,530        183,239
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
                                          15,202,967      37,155,841       6,125,547     12,659,330
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
Loss from operations..................    (3,246,064)     (8,840,415)     (2,046,706)    (1,149,414)
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE):
  Interest expense -- related
     parties..........................            --      (3,588,420)             --     (1,771,530)
  Interest expense -- others..........      (340,105)       (551,243)        (83,875)      (278,998)
  Interest income.....................        12,412              --           5,824             --
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
                                            (291,693)     (4,139,663)        (78,051)    (2,050,528)
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
Loss before extraordinary item........    (3,537,757)    (12,980,078)     (2,124,757)    (3,199,942)
Extraordinary item:
  Loss on debt restructuring..........            --        (267,281)             --             --
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
NET LOSS..............................   $(3,537,757)   $(13,247,359)    $(2,124,757)   $(3,199,942)
                                         ===========    ============       =========    ===========
Earnings per share calculation:
  Preferred dividend payable in
     cash.............................      (232,251)             --         (77,417)            --
  Preferred dividend payable in
     kind.............................            --        (211,293)             --       (100,671)
  Accretion of 14% Preferred to its
     redemption value.................            --         (58,272)             --        (34,153)
  Premium on redemption of 10%
     Preferred, 8% Preferred and
     7% Preferred.....................            --      (2,002,386)             --             --
                                         -----------    ------------       ---------    -----------
Net loss applicable to
  common shareholders.................   $(3,770,008)   $(15,519,310)    $(2,202,174)   $(3,334,766)
                                         ===========    ============       =========    ===========
Net loss per common share before
  extraordinary item..................   $     (2.22)   $      (3.54)    $     (1.15)   $     (0.58)
                                         ===========    ============       =========    ===========
Net loss per common share.............   $     (2.22)   $      (3.60)    $     (1.15)   $     (0.58)
                                         ===========    ============       =========    ===========
Weighted average number of shares.....     1,695,280       4,305,130       1,909,997      5,746,785
                                         ===========    ============       =========    ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-27
<PAGE>   103
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                     STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOWS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           (UNAUDITED)
                                                                   NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                   -------------------------------
                                                                      1995               1996
                                                                   -----------       ------------
<S>                                                                <C>               <C>
CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net loss.......................................................  $(3,537,757)      $(13,247,359)
  Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash flow from
     operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization...............................    2,164,822          8,876,238
     Issuance of Nominal Value Warrants..........................           --          3,886,140
     Stock issued in lieu of cash payments.......................       90,552             20,619
     Accretion of related parties debt...........................           --          1,182,544
     Accretion of other debt.....................................           --             45,921
     Non-cash interest expense...................................           --              7,012
     Loss on debt restructuring..................................           --            338,546
     Loss on disposal of assets..................................           --              2,544
     Increase in allowance for doubtful accounts.................        4,000             60,961
     Amortization of deferred revenues...........................           --           (600,000)
     Changes in assets and liabilities net of effects of
       acquisitions:
       Accounts receivable.......................................     (453,438)        (1,063,630)
       Other current assets......................................      114,207            (61,792)
       Accounts payable..........................................      564,682           (500,520)
       Accrued expenses..........................................     (209,515)           851,842
       Other unusual charges and contractual settlements.........    1,189,833           (445,946)
                                                                   -----------       ------------
                                                                       (72,614)          (646,880)
                                                                   -----------       ------------
CASH FLOWS USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES: 
  Acquisition of International Pay Phones, Inc...................           --         (4,827,480)
  Acquisition of Paramount Communications Systems................           --         (9,780,644)
  Acquisition of Pay Phones of America, Inc......................           --           (200,000)
  Acquisition of Amtel Communications............................           --         (7,222,496)
  Acquisition of World and Public Telephone......................      (50,828)          (350,568)
  Deferred charges on pending acquisitions.......................     (868,496)           (73,226)
  Deferred charges on pending stock and debt offerings...........           --           (114,235)
  Deferred revenues -- signing bonus.............................           --          1,200,000
  Purchases of intangible assets.................................     (206,683)          (625,153)
  Change in other assets.........................................      (82,051)          (426,372)
  Proceeds from sale of assets...................................           --                500
  Purchases of property and equipment............................     (120,703)        (2,358,982)
                                                                   -----------       ------------
                                                                    (1,328,761)       (24,778,656)
                                                                   -----------       ------------
CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Proceeds from debt issuances...................................    1,400,000                 --
  Proceeds from related party debt...............................           --         41,000,000
  Proceeds from shareholder debt.................................           --            575,000
  Principal payments on borrowings...............................   (1,313,060)       (10,539,531)
  Proceeds from issuance of preferred and common stock and
     other.......................................................    1,850,412                 --
  Dividends paid.................................................      (40,375)                --
  Debt financing costs...........................................           --         (4,473,107)
  Redemption of 10% Preferred and 8% Preferred...................           --         (1,117,371)
  Equity financing costs.........................................      (83,212)           (87,535)
  Proceeds from warrant and option exercises.....................       35,000             10,352
                                                                   -----------       ------------
                                                                     1,848,765         25,367,808
                                                                   -----------       ------------
(Decrease) increase in cash......................................      447,390            (57,728)
Cash at beginning of period......................................      478,756            713,462
                                                                   -----------       ------------
Cash at end of period............................................  $   926,146       $    655,734
                                                                   ===========       ============
</TABLE>
    
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-28
<PAGE>   104
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK AND
          NON-MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK, COMMON STOCK AND
                           OTHER SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                (UNAUDITED)
                                                      YEAR ENDED             NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                      DECEMBER 31,              SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                         1995                       1996
                                                 --------------------     ------------------------
                                                 SHARES      AMOUNT         SHARES       AMOUNT
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
<S>                                              <C>       <C>            <C>          <C>
MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK
14% CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE
  CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year.................       --           --             --            --
  Redemption of 7% Preferred...................       --           --       3,625.00   $   217,500
  Redemption of 8% Preferred...................       --           --      14,143.33       848,600
  Redemption of 10% Preferred..................       --           --      16,668.00     1,000,000
  Conversion of debt...........................       --           --      59,695.39     3,581,723
  Acquisition of Paramount Communications......       --           --       8,333.33       375,768
  Acquisition of International Payphones.......       --           --       5,453.14       245,896
  Dividends payable-in-kind....................       --           --       8,397.86       211,294
  Accretion of carrying value to amount
     payable at redemption, June 30, 2000......       --           --             --        58,272
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
TOTAL MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE
  PREFERRED STOCK..............................       --           --     116,316.05   $ 6,539,053
                                                 =======   ==========     ==========   ===========
NON-MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK,
  COMMON STOCK AND OTHER SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
7% CUMULATIVE CONVERTIBLE
  REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year.................    2,500   $  200,000          2,500   $   200,000
  Redemption of 7% Preferred...................       --           --         (2,500)     (200,000)
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
  Balance at end of period.....................    2,500   $  200,000             --
                                                 =======   ----------     ==========   -----------
8% CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE
  PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year.................   12,200   $  981,084         12,200   $   981,084
  Redemption of 8% Preferred...................       --           --        (12,200)     (981,084)
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
  Balance at end of period.....................   12,200   $  981,084             --            --
                                                 =======   ----------     ==========   -----------
10% CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE
  PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year.................    1,496   $        1          1,496   $         1
  Redemption of 10% Preferred..................       --           --         (1,496)           (1)
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
  Balance at end of period.....................    1,496   $        1             --            --
                                                 =======   ----------     ==========   -----------
10% CUMULATIVE NON-VOTING
  REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year.................       --           --        530,534   $ 5,305,340
  Acquisition of World Communications, Inc.....  530,534   $5,305,340             --            --
  Redemption of 10% Preferred..................       --           --       (530,534)   (5,305,340)
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
  Balance at end of period.....................  530,534   $5,305,340             --            --
                                                 =======   ==========     ==========   ===========
SERIES A SPECIAL CONVERTIBLE
  PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year.................       --           --             --            --
                                                 -------   ----------     ----------   -----------
  Balance at end of period.....................       --           --             --            --
                                                 =======   ----------     ==========   -----------
</TABLE>
    
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-29
<PAGE>   105
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK AND
          NON-MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK, COMMON STOCK AND
                    OTHER SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY -- CONTINUED
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 (UNAUDITED)
                                                                              NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                              YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,           SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                        1995                         1996
                                              ------------------------     ------------------------
                                               SHARES        AMOUNT         SHARES        AMOUNT
                                              ---------   ------------     ---------   ------------
<S>                                           <C>         <C>              <C>         <C>
SERIES B SPECIAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year..............         --             --            --             --
                                              ---------   ------------     ---------   ------------
  Balance at end of period..................         --             --            --             --
                                              =========   ------------     =========   ------------ 
COMMON STOCK
  Balance at beginning of year..............  1,522,158   $     15,222     2,855,350   $     28,554
  Issuance of stock for services............     91,383            914         4,400             44
  Private sales of stock....................    472,056          4,720            --             --
  Exercise of warrants and options..........      8,333             83     1,035,137         10,351
  Conversion of debt to equity..............     30,231            303            --             --
  Acquisition of World Communications,
     Inc....................................    402,500          4,025            --             --
  Acquisition of Public Telephone
     Corporation............................    304,879          3,049            --             --
  Acquisition of International Payphones....         --             --       555,589          5,555
  Acquisition of Payphones of America.......         --             --       166,666          1,667
  Acquisition of Amtel Communications.......         --             --     2,162,163         21,622
  Acquisition escrow deposits...............     23,810            238       (23,810)          (238)
  Redemption of 10% Non-Voting Preferred....         --             --       884,214          8,842
                                              ---------   ------------     ---------   ------------
  Balance at end of period..................  2,855,350   $     28,554     7,639,709   $     76,397
                                              =========   ------------     =========   ------------ 
ADDITIONAL PAID-IN CAPITAL
  Balance at beginning of year..............              $  8,755,364                 $ 16,649,559
  Issuance of stock for services............                   528,532                       20,574
  Private sales of stock....................                 2,010,067                           --
  Exercise of warrants and options..........                    34,917                           --
  Acquisition of World Communications,
     Inc....................................                 2,712,852                           --
  Conversion of debt to equity..............                   137,375                           --
  Acquisition of Public Telephone
     Corporation............................                 2,054,902                           --
  Acquisition escrow deposits...............                   149,762                     (149,762)
  Financing costs...........................                   (83,212)                     (87,535)
  Acquisition of International Payphones....                        --                    2,790,042
  Acquisition of Paramount Communications...                        --                      443,510
  Acquisition of Payphones of America.......                        --                      309,999
  Acquisition of Amtel Communications.......                        --                    4,616,218
  Warrants issued with debt.................                   349,000                    6,411,500
  Issuance of Nominal Value Warrants........                        --                    4,240,941
  Redemption of 10% Non-voting Preferred....                        --                    5,296,498
                                                          ------------                 ------------
  Balance at end of period..................              $ 16,649,559                 $ 40,541,544
                                                          ------------                 ------------
ACCUMULATED DEFICIT
  Balance at beginning of year..............              $ (7,303,804)                $(13,453,876)
  Net loss for the period...................                (6,109,697)                 (13,247,359)
  Dividends paid on 7% and 8% Preferred.....                   (40,375)                          --
  14% Preferred dividend payable-in-kind....                        --                     (211,293)
  Accretion of 14% Preferred carrying
     value..................................                        --                      (58,272)
  Redemption of 7% Preferred................                        --                      (17,500)
  Redemption of 8% Preferred................                        --                     (293,516)
  Redemption of 10% Preferred...............                        --                   (1,691,370)
                                                          ------------                 ------------
  Balance at end of period..................              $(13,453,876)                $(28,973,186)
                                                          ------------                 ------------
TOTAL NON-MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED
  STOCK, COMMON STOCK AND OTHER
  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY......................              $  9,710,662                 $ 11,644,755
                                                          ============                 ============
</TABLE>
    
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-30
<PAGE>   106
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
   
            FOR THE QUARTER AND NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1996
    
 
   
1.  BASIS OF PRESENTATION
    
 
   
     The accompanying unaudited consolidated financial statements have been
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles for interim
financial information and with the instructions to Form 10-QSB and Item 310(b)
of Regulation S-B. Accordingly, they do not include all the information and
footnotes required by generally accepted accounting principles for complete
financial statements. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting
of normal recurring adjustments) considered necessary for a fair presentation
have been included. Operating results for the three and nine months ended
September 30, 1996 are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be
expected for the year ended December 31, 1996. For further information, refer to
the consolidated financial statements and footnotes thereto included in the
Company's annual report on Form 10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 1995.
    
 
   
     Certain amounts relating to the three and nine months ended September 30,
1995 have been reclassified to conform to the current quarter presentation. The
reclassifications have no impact on total assets, shareholders' equity or net
loss as previously reported.
    
 
   
2.  ACQUISITIONS AND MERGERS
    
 
   
     On September 16, 1996, the Company completed the acquisition of the
outstanding stock of Payphones of America, Inc. ("POA"), pursuant to which the
Company acquired 3,115 installed public pay telephones, $373,283 in current
assets and $727,323 in current liabilities for a purchase price, consisting of:
(i) $500,000 in cash; (ii) 166,666 unregistered shares of the Company's Common
Stock, par value $0.01 ("Common Stock"), with a value of $311,665, or $1.87 per
share; (iii) assumption of capital lease obligations of $7,750,000; (iv) notes
payable to the selling shareholders in the face amount of $3,634,114 (pursuant
to the purchase agreement, the notes payable are to be reduced for the excess of
acquired current liabilities over acquired current assets, or $311,693,
resulting in a net amount due of $3,322,421); (v) assumption of other debt,
$234,890; (vi) two five year non-competition and consulting agreements with two
of the selling shareholders, valued at $307,264; and (vii) $166,748 in related
acquisition expenses.
    
 
   
     On September 13, 1996, the Company completed the acquisition of certain
assets from ACI-HDT Supply Company, Amtel Communications Services, Amtel
Communications Correctional Facilities, Amtel Communications, Inc. and Amtel
Communications Payphones, Inc. (all California corporations and Debtors-
in-Possession) collectively referred to as "Amtel". The acquired assets included
6,872 installed public pay telephones and inventory of an additional 728 public
pay telephones and related parts inventory for a purchase price consisting of:
(i) $7,000,000 in cash; (ii) 2,162,163 shares of the Company's Common Stock,
with a value of $4,637,840, or $2.15 per share; and (iii) approximately $675,122
in related acquisition expenses.
    
 
   
     The Amtel and POA acquisitions were recorded as purchases and the
differences between the aggregate fair values of the tangibles assets acquired
and the total purchase price, $13,546,504, (an intangible) was recorded as
acquired public pay telephone location contracts and non-competition agreements
($307,264 was assigned to the POA non-competition agreements) and will be
amortized over the estimated average remaining life of the acquired location
contracts (54 months for Amtel's contracts, 72 months for POA's contracts, and
60 months for POA's non-competition agreements). The results of operations of
POA and Amtel are included in the results of operations of the Company from
August 1, 1996 (the effective date of the POA acquisition) and September 13,
1996, respectively.
    
 
   
     On March 15, 1996, the Company completed the acquisition of the outstanding
common stock of International Pay Phones, Inc. (a South Carolina company) and
International Pay Phones, Inc. (a Tennessee company) (collectively "IPP"),
companies affiliated through common ownership and management. In connection with
the acquisition of IPP, the Company acquired 2,101 installed public pay
telephones for a purchase price consisting of: (i) $3,496,487 in cash; (ii)
555,589 unregistered shares of the Company's
    
 
                                      F-31
<PAGE>   107
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
2.  ACQUISITIONS AND MERGERS (CONTINUED)
    
   
Common Stock; (iii) 5,453.14 unregistered shares of 14% Convertible Cumulative
Redeemable Preferred Stock ("14% Preferred"); and (iv) warrants to purchase
117,785 shares of the Company's Common Stock at a nominal exercise price per
share ("Nominal Value Warrants"). Additionally, the Company assumed
approximately $1,757,000 in liabilities, of which $1,551,796 was repaid by the
Company on March 15, 1996. The cash purchase price included three five year
non-competition agreements, with an aggregate value of $60,000, with three of
IPP's former officers.
    
 
   
     On March 15, 1996, the Company completed a Share Purchase Agreement with
Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. (a Florida corporation) ("Paramount").
Under the terms of the Agreement, the Company acquired 2,528 installed public
pay telephones for a purchase price consisting of: (i) $9,618,553 in cash; (ii)
8,333.33 shares of 14% Preferred; and (iii) Nominal Value Warrants to purchase
179,996 shares of the Company's Common Stock. In addition, the Company assumed
outstanding liabilities of approximately $733,000, of which $697,947 was repaid
on March 15, 1996. The purchase price included a five year consulting and
non-compete agreement, valued at $50,000, with one of Paramount's former
officers.
    
 
   
     The IPP and Paramount acquisitions were recorded as purchases and the
differences between the aggregate fair values of the tangibles assets acquired
and the total purchase price, $9,531,404, (an intangible) was recorded as
acquired public pay telephone location contracts and non-competition agreements
($110,000 was assigned to the IPP and Paramount non-competition agreements) and
will be amortized over the estimated average remaining life of the acquired
location contracts (60 months for IPP and Paramount's contracts and 60 months
for IPP and Paramount's non-competition agreements). The results of operations
of IPP and Paramount are included in the results of operations of the Company
from March 15, 1996.
    
 
     On October 16, 1995, the Company consummated its acquisition of the
outstanding common stock of Public Telephone Corporation (an Indiana
corporation) ("Public Telephone") in a transaction accounted for as a purchase.
The Company acquired current assets of $54,742, approximately 1,200 installed
public pay telephones, assumed approximately $2,800,000 in debt and outstanding
liabilities of Public Telephone and issued 224,879 unregistered shares of the
Company's Common Stock to the shareholders of Public Telephone. In connection
with the acquisition, the Company entered into five year non-competition
agreements with two of Public Telephone's former owners which require both cash
payments and the issuance, in the aggregate, of 80,000 unregistered shares of
the Company's Common Stock.
 
     On September 22, 1995, the Company consummated its merger with World
Communications, Inc. (a Missouri corporation) ("World") in a transaction
accounted for as a purchase. The Company acquired current assets of $256,571 and
3,237 installed public pay telephones, assumed approximately $6,900,000 in debt
and outstanding liabilities of World and issued 402,500 unregistered shares of
the Company's Common Stock and 530,534 shares of the Company's 10% Non-Voting
Redeemable Preferred Stock, which was subsequently converted to 884,214
unregistered shares of Common Stock on June 28, 1996.
 
     The Public Telephone and World acquisitions were recorded as purchases and
the differences between the aggregate fair values of the tangibles assets
acquired and the total purchase price, $9,305,168, (an intangible) was recorded
as acquired public pay telephone location contracts and non-competition
agreements ($798,479 was assigned to the Public Telephone non-competition
agreements and $315,286 was assigned to the World non-competition agreements)
and will be amortized over the estimated average remaining life of the acquired
location contracts (36 months for Public Telephone and World's contracts, 60
months for Public Telephone's non-competition agreements and 24 months for
World's non-competition agreements). The results of operations of Public
Telephone and World are included in the results of operations of the Company
from October 16, 1995 and September 22, 1995, respectively.
 
                                      F-32
<PAGE>   108
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
2.  ACQUISITIONS AND MERGERS (CONTINUED)
    
   
     Set forth below is the Company's unaudited pro forma condensed statement of
operations data as though the World, Public Telephone, IPP, Paramount, Amtel and
POA acquisitions had occurred at the beginning of 1995 and as though the IPP,
Paramount, Amtel and POA acquisitions had occurred at the beginning of 1996.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              PRO FORMA SELECTED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS DATA
                                       ------------------------------------------------------------
                                       NINE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30     THREE MONTHS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30     
                                       ------------------------------     -------------------------------
                                           1995            1996              1995            1996
                                       ------------    ------------      ------------    ------------
<S>                                    <C>             <C>               <C>             <C>
Total revenues.......................  $ 44,595,053    $ 45,308,800      $ 15,006,667    $ 15,069,188
Net loss before extraordinary item...   (13,871,600)    (16,083,544)       (5,643,428)     (4,790,789)
Net loss applicable to common
  shareholders.......................   (14,501,750)    (16,325,859)       (5,853,478)     (4,925,603)
Net loss per common share............         (2.74)          (2.46)            (1.07)          (0.65)
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     The unaudited pro forma results above are not necessarily indicative of
either actual results of operations that would have occurred had the
acquisitions been made at the beginning of 1995 or 1996, or of future results.
The pro forma statement of operations data includes adjustments related to the
depreciation and amortization of tangible and intangible assets, reductions in
certain operating, other, and selling, general, and administrative expenses,
interest expense on borrowings used to finance the acquisitions and the weighted
average number of common shares outstanding after giving effect to the
acquisitions.
    
 
   
  PENDING ACQUISITIONS
    
 
   
     The Company has entered into a letter of intent dated October 16, 1996, to
acquire all of the capital stock of Cherokee Communications, Inc. ("Cherokee")
for a purchase price of $54,000,000 plus related fees and expenses, subject to
certain purchase price adjustments, which may include an increase of up to
$6,000,000 in cash or Common Stock payable in two equal installments due January
1998 and 1999, if the FCC fails to implement certain rate caps, rate guidelines
or third party preferences during 1997 or 1998, as the case may be. In addition,
the Company will pay $1,250,000 in connection with certain non-competition
agreements. Cherokee, headquartered in Jacksonville, Texas, is the fifth largest
independent public pay telephone operator in the United States. At September 30,
1996, Cherokee owned and operated 12,344 public pay telephones in 14 states, of
which approximately 85% were located in Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and
Montana.
    
 
     The Company has entered into a letter of intent dated October 9, 1996 to
acquire 1,200 installed public pay telephones from Texas Coinphone (collectively
with Cherokee the "Pending Acquisitions") for a purchase price of approximately
$3,700,000, subject to certain purchase price adjustments. Texas Coinphone owns
and operates approximately 1,200 public pay telephones in Dallas, Houston, and
San Antonio, Texas.
 
     The Company expects to fund the acquisitions of Cherokee and Texas
Coinphone with the proceeds from a contemplated debt offering expected to be
completed in the fourth quarter of 1996.
 
                                      F-33
<PAGE>   109
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
3.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
    
 
   
     As of December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996, property and equipment
consisted of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      ESTIMATED
                                                    USEFUL LIVES     DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                     (IN YEARS)          1995            1996
                                                    -------------    ------------    -------------
    <S>                                             <C>              <C>             <C>
    Telephones, boards, enclosures and cases......       3-7         $ 16,386,987     $ 36,992,307
    Furniture, fixtures and other equipment.......       3-5              989,300        1,752,387
    Leasehold improvements........................       2-5              231,466          246,609
                                                                     ------------    -------------
                                                                       17,607,753       38,991,303
      Less: accumulated depreciation..............                     (3,508,642)      (7,309,242)
                                                                     ------------    -------------
                                                                     $ 14,099,111     $ 31,682,061
                                                                       ==========       ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
4.  INTANGIBLE ASSETS
    
 
   
     As of December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996, intangible assets consisted
of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     AMORTIZATION
                                                        PERIOD       DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                     (IN MONTHS)         1995            1996
                                                     ------------    ------------    -------------
    <S>                                              <C>             <C>             <C>
    Value assigned to location contracts acquired
      and installation of public pay telephones....     36-120       $ 13,403,126     $ 39,627,197
    Debt restructuring costs.......................         40                 --        5,802,908
    Non-competition agreements.....................      24-60          1,513,765        2,090,690
    State operating certifications.................         60            466,796          498,470
                                                                     ------------    -------------
                                                                       15,383,687       48,019,265
    Less: accumulated amortization.................                    (3,791,530)      (8,792,646)
                                                                     ------------    -------------
                                                                     $ 11,592,157     $ 39,226,619
                                                                       ==========       ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
5.  LONG-TERM DEBT -- RELATED PARTIES
    
 
     On March 15, 1996, the Company entered into a Credit Agreement (the "Credit
Agreement") with Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation ("ING")
and Cerberus Partners, L.P. ("Cerberus" and, together with ING, the "Lenders"),
pursuant to which the Lenders agreed to lend the Company up to $37,250,000. On
March 15, 1996, the Company borrowed $30,530,954 pursuant to the Credit
Agreement. During the second quarter of 1996, the Company borrowed an additional
$1,692,500 under the Credit Agreement. The initial borrowings under the Credit
Agreement were used to complete the Paramount and IPP acquisitions, to repay
$8,503,405 of outstanding debt and $3,173,931 of outstanding obligations under
capital leases, to redeem the 10% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ("10%
Preferred"), 8% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ("8% Preferred"), and 7%
Cumulative Convertible Redeemable Preferred Stock ("7% Preferred"), and to pay
related transaction fees. The additional borrowings of $1,692,500 were used for
the Amtel acquisition deposit ($1,300,000) and working capital.
 
   
     On September 13, 1996, concurrent with the acquisition of Amtel, the
Lenders amended the Credit Agreement to increase the maximum borrowings
available under the Credit Agreement to $41,000,000. The Company then borrowed
an additional $8,776,546 and used $5,950,000 of the proceeds to complete the
Amtel and POA acquisitions and the remainder of the proceeds, $2,826,546, for
working capital and payment of certain related acquisition expenses. As of
September 30, 1996, borrowings of $41,000,000 were outstanding and there was no
additional borrowing availability under the Credit Agreement.
    
 
                                      F-34
<PAGE>   110
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
5.  LONG-TERM DEBT -- RELATED PARTIES (CONTINUED)
    
     The Credit Agreement requires monthly interest payments at the Alternate
Base Rate (as defined therein) plus 5% and contains various covenants
restricting the Company's ability to pay dividends or incur additional debt,
among other conditions, and also contains financial covenants requiring minimum
net worth, working capital and earnings before interest, depreciation and
amortization among other covenants. The Credit Agreement also contains a
subjective acceleration clause which states that in the event of a material
adverse change in the business, as determined by the Lenders, the Lenders can
call the debt at their discretion. The Lenders have waived their right to
exercise this subjective acceleration clause through December 31, 1997.
 
     Pursuant to the Credit Agreement amendments dated September 13, 1996,
principal payments commence in April 1997, and continue monthly and/or quarterly
through June 1999 at which time the remaining principal balance is due. The
amount of the principal payment is contingent upon numerous factors, including
the borrowing base and cash flow of the Company. Based on amounts borrowed under
the Credit Agreement at September 30, 1996, the estimated principal payment due
April 30, 1997 would be $2,972,222, with monthly principal payments of $222,222
thereafter until December 31, 1997, and quarterly principal payments of $634,375
commencing September 30, 1997, increasing to $1,087,500 quarterly for 1998 and
$1,268,750 at March 31, 1999.
 
   
     All of the Company's installed public pay telephones, excluding those
acquired from POA which are pledged to another creditor, are pledged as
collateral to the Credit Agreement.
    
 
     The Company was not in compliance with various financial covenants
contained in the Credit Agreement at June 30, 1996 and subsequently received a
waiver of such non-compliance from the Lenders. The Credit Agreement was amended
on October 8, 1996 to make the covenants less restrictive. At September 30, 1996
the Company was in compliance with the covenants.
 
     A portion of the borrowings under the Credit Agreement (currently
$29,000,000) can be converted into Series B Special Convertible Preferred Stock
("Series B Preferred"), at the ratio of 833 shares for each $100,000 in
outstanding debt and accrued interest. Additionally, in connection with the
execution of the original Credit Agreement on March 15, 1996, ING and Cerberus
each received 102,412 warrants (204,824 warrants in the aggregate and referred
to herein as the "Lenders' Warrants"), which would collectively allow them to
purchase up to 204,824 shares of Series A Special Convertible Preferred Stock
("Series A Preferred"), at an exercise price of $0.20 per share. Each share of
Series A Preferred and Series B Preferred is convertible into 20 shares of
Common Stock. The debt under the Credit Agreement was initially recorded net of
an allocation of the fair value of the Lenders' Warrants, such fair value being
determined using the Black-Scholes valuation model. The Company recorded
non-cash interest expense (accretion of debt) of $621,536 for the three months
ended September 30, 1996 and $1,182,544 for the nine months ended September 30,
1996.
 
                                      F-35
<PAGE>   111
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
6.  PREFERRED STOCK MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE
    
 
     As of December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996, preferred stock mandatorily
redeemable consisted of the following:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                     1995            1996
                                                                 ------------    -------------
    <S>                                                          <C>             <C>
    14% Cumulative Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock ($60   
      stated value -- 200,000 shares authorized; 107,918.19
      shares issued and outstanding at September 30, 1996;
      cumulative dividends issuable of 8,397.86 shares, valued
      at $211,294; mandatory redemption amount of $6,978,963
      due June 30, 2000)......................................             --     $  6,539,053
</TABLE>
    
 
     The Company records dividends, declared and undeclared, at their fair
market value and recognizes the difference between the carrying value of the 14%
Preferred and the mandatory redemption amount, through monthly accretions, using
the interest method. For the three and nine months ended September 30, 1996, the
carrying value of the 14% Preferred was increased by $34,153 and $58,272,
respectively, through accretions. Each share of 14% Preferred is entitled to
receive a quarterly dividend of 0.035 shares of 14% Preferred. Each share of 14%
Preferred is convertible into 10 shares of Common Stock.
 
   
7.  NON-MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK, COMMON STOCK AND OTHER
    SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
    
 
     As of December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996, non-mandatorily redeemable
preferred stock, common stock, and other shareholders' equity consisted of the
following:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                     1995            1996
                                                                 ------------    -------------
    <S>                                                          <C>             <C>
    10% Cumulative Nonvoting Redeemable Preferred Stock ($10     
      stated value -- 550,000 shares authorized; 530,534
      shares issued and outstanding at December 31, 1995,
      redeemed on June 28, 1996)..............................    $  5,305,340               --
    Series A Special Convertible Preferred Stock ($0.20 par       
      value, $0.20 stated value -- 250,000 shares authorized;
      no shares issued).......................................              --               --
    Series B Special Convertible Preferred Stock ($0.20 par       
      value, $120 stated value -- 250,000 shares authorized;
      no shares issued).......................................              --               --
    10% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ($1,000 stated      
      value -- 3,880 shares authorized; 1,496 shares issued
      and outstanding at December 31, 1995, redeemed on March
      15, 1996)...............................................               1               --
    8% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ($100 stated             
      value -- 16,000 shares authorized; 12,200 shares issued
      and outstanding at December 31, 1995, redeemed on March
      15, 1996)...............................................         981,084               --
    7% Cumulative Convertible Redeemable Preferred Stock ($100        
      stated value -- 2,500 shares authorized, issued and
      outstanding at December 31, 1995, redeemed on March 15,
      1996)...................................................         200,000               --
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-36
<PAGE>   112
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 DECEMBER 31,    SEPTEMBER 30,
                                                                     1995            1996
                                                                 ------------    -------------
    <S>                                                          <C>             <C>
    Common Stock                                                       28,554           76,397
      ($0.01 par value -- 50,000,000 shares authorized;
      2,855,350 and 7,639,709 shares issued and outstanding at
      December 31, 1995 and September 30, 1996)...............
    Additional paid-in capital................................     16,649,559       40,541,544
    Accumulated deficit.......................................    (13,453,876)     (28,973,186)
                                                                 ------------    -------------
                                                                 $  9,710,662     $ 11,644,755
                                                                   ==========       ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
     On February 23, 1996, the Company created three new classes of preferred
stock: (i) Series A Preferred; (ii) Series B Preferred; and (iii) 14% Preferred.
 
     On March 15, 1996, concurrent with the Credit Agreement, the Company
redeemed the 10% Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock ("10% Preferred"), 8%
Preferred, and 7% Preferred. The redemption price was comprised of cash payments
aggregating $1,117,371 and 34,436.33 shares of 14% Preferred. In the aggregate,
$6,269,487 of the Company's outstanding obligations, including portions of the
purchase price for the IPP and Paramount acquisitions, was liquidated by issuing
107,918.19 shares of 14% Preferred.
 
     The $2,002,386 excess of the redemption price of the preferred issues
redeemed over their aggregate carrying value was recorded as a reduction of
earnings available to common shareholders as of March 31, 1996.
 
     On March 15, 1996, Nominal Value Warrants to purchase 2,018,942 shares of
Common Stock were issued in conjunction with the IPP and Paramount acquisitions,
redemption of the 10% Preferred, 8% Preferred and 7% Preferred, and conversion
of certain related party debt of the Company to the 14% Preferred. Certain
holders of the 14% Preferred are deemed related parties. The warrants expire on
March 13, 2001. An independent valuation company estimated the fair market value
of the Nominal Value Warrants to be $4,974,673, using the Black-Scholes
valuation model, of which $3,886,139 (the amount attributable to the warrants
provided to related parties in connection with the redemption of the 10%
Preferred, 8% Preferred, and 7% Preferred shares and conversion of certain debt)
was recorded as an unusual charge in the Company's statement of operations for
the three months ended March 31, 1996.
 
     During April and May 1996, warrants representing 972,487 shares of Common
Stock were exercised, and total proceeds to the Company were $9,725. Of the
total warrants exercised, 539,989 shares of Common Stock were issued to an
officer of the Company. On July 22, 1996, Nominal Value Warrants representing
62,650 shares of Common Stock were exercised by an officer of the Company, and
total proceeds to the Company were $627.
 
     On June 27, 1996, the shareholders of the Company approved an amendment to
the Articles of Incorporation which authorizes the Company to have outstanding
60,000,000 shares; of which 50,000,000 shares are to be classified as Common
Stock and 10,000,000 shares as Preferred Stock. The shareholders also approved
conversion rights to the 10% Cumulative Non-voting Redeemable Preferred Stock
("10% Redeemable Preferred"). Each share of 10% Redeemable Preferred is
convertible into 1.6667 shares of Common Stock at any time by the shareholder or
the Company. On June 28, 1996, the Company converted the outstanding 10%
Redeemable Preferred into 884,214 shares of Common Stock.
 
   
8.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
    
 
     On October 9, 1996, the Company filed a Registration Statement on Form SB-2
with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") relating to the proposed
offering of approximately $25,000,000 of Common Stock by the Company. On October
31, 1996, the Company filed a Registration Statement on Form SB-2 with
 
                                      F-37
<PAGE>   113
 
                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
      NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
 
   
8.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS (CONTINUED)
    
the SEC relating to the proposed offering of approximately $110,000,000 of
senior unsecured notes. The Company anticipates completing both offerings during
the fourth quarter of 1996. There can be no assurances, however that either
offering will be completed or that the terms will remain the same.
 
     The registration statements relating to these offerings filed with the SEC
have not yet become effective, and the securities may not be sold nor may offers
to buy be accepted prior to the time the applicable registration statements
become effective. This Form 10-QSB shall not constitute an offer to sell or the
solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of these securities
in any state in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior
to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state.
 
                                      F-38
<PAGE>   114
 
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
May 17, 1996
 
The Board of Directors of
Paramount Communications Systems, Inc.
 
In our opinion, the accompanying balance sheet and the related statements of
income, of changes in shareholders' equity and of cash flows present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of Paramount Communications
Systems, Inc. at December 31, 1995 and the results of its operations, its
changes in shareholders' equity and its cash flows for the year then ended in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. These financial
statements are the responsibility of the Company's management; our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on
our audit. We conducted our audit of these statements in accordance with
generally accepted auditing standards which require that we plan and perform the
audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are
free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis,
evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements,
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We
believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for the opinion expressed
above.
 
As discussed in Note 6, on March 15, 1996, the Company's net assets were sold to
an unrelated party.
 
/s/ Price Waterhouse LLP
Cleveland, Ohio
 
                                      F-39
<PAGE>   115
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                                 BALANCE SHEET
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents......................................................  $  479,984
  Receivables:
     Trade.......................................................................     237,455
     Shareholder.................................................................      38,168
                                                                                   ----------
          Total current assets...................................................     755,607
Property and equipment, net......................................................     788,582
Intangible assets, net...........................................................     146,029
Other assets.....................................................................      15,098
                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                   $1,705,316
                                                                                   ==========
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Accounts payable and accrued expenses..........................................     373,866
  Location commissions payable...................................................      65,958
  Shareholder distributions payable..............................................     155,532
  Notes payable to affiliates....................................................     483,246
                                                                                   ----------
          Total current liabilities..............................................   1,078,602
                                                                                   ----------
Commitments and contingencies....................................................          --
                                                                                   ----------
Shareholders' equity:
  Common stock, $1 par value; 100 shares authorized, issued and outstanding......         100
  Additional paid-in capital.....................................................      19,900
  Retained earnings..............................................................     606,714
                                                                                   ----------
     Total shareholders' equity..................................................     626,714
                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                   $1,705,316
                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-40
<PAGE>   116
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                              STATEMENT OF INCOME
 
                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
Revenues:
  Coin calls.....................................................................  $3,751,744
  Non-coin calls.................................................................   1,923,724
                                                                                   ----------
     Total revenues..............................................................   5,675,468
                                                                                   ----------
Operating costs and expenses:
  Telephone charges..............................................................   1,543,956
  Commissions....................................................................     696,443
  Selling, general and administrative............................................   2,407,479
  Depreciation and amortization..................................................     393,204
                                                                                   ----------
     Total operating costs and expenses..........................................   5,041,082
                                                                                   ----------
     Operating income............................................................     634,386
                                                                                   ----------
Other income (expenses):
  Interest and other income......................................................      14,800
  Interest expense...............................................................     (64,210)
  Other..........................................................................     (85,231)
                                                                                   ----------
     Total other expenses........................................................    (134,641)
                                                                                   ----------
     Net income..................................................................  $  499,745
                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-41
<PAGE>   117
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net income.....................................................................  $  499,745
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating
     activities:
     Depreciation and amortization...............................................     393,204
     Changes in assets and liabilities:
       Decrease in receivables...................................................       2,392
       Decrease in other current assets..........................................      11,190
       Decrease in other assets..................................................       9,632
       Increase in other accounts payable and accrued expenses...................     179,706
       Increase in location commissions payable..................................      10,915
                                                                                   ----------
          Net cash provided by operating activities..............................   1,106,784
                                                                                   ----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Purchases of equipment.........................................................    (356,791)
                                                                                   ----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
  Proceeds from issuance of notes payable to related party.......................     200,000
  Distributions to shareholders..................................................    (229,088)
  Repayments of notes payable to related parties.................................    (439,470)
                                                                                   ----------
          Net cash used in financing activities..................................    (468,558)
                                                                                   ----------
          Net increase in cash and cash equivalents..............................     281,435
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year.....................................     198,549
                                                                                   ----------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of year...........................................  $  479,984
                                                                                   ==========
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
Cash paid during the year for interest...........................................  $   64,210
                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-42
<PAGE>   118
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                  STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     COMMON STOCK     ADDITIONAL
                                                    ---------------    PAID-IN     RETAINED
                                                    SHARES   AMOUNT    CAPITAL     EARNINGS    TOTAL
                                                    ------   ------   ----------   --------   --------
<S>                                                 <C>      <C>      <C>          <C>        <C>
Balance
  December 31, 1994...............................    100     $100     $ 19,900    $106,969   $126,969
Net income........................................     --       --           --     499,745    499,745
Distributions.....................................     --       --           --          --         --
                                                     ----     ----      -------    --------   --------
Balance
  December 31, 1995...............................    100     $100     $ 19,900    $606,714   $626,714
                                                     ====     ====      =======    ========   ========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-43
<PAGE>   119
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
1.  ORGANIZATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
  ORGANIZATION
 
     Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. (the "Company"), a Florida
corporation, was formed in March 1987 as a result of the deregulation of the
telephone industry. The Company is in the business of installing, maintaining
and operating pay telephones throughout South Florida.
 
  CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
 
     The Company considers all highly liquid instruments with an original
maturity of three months or less to be cash equivalents.
 
  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment is stated at cost and depreciated on a straight-line
basis over five years, the estimated useful lives of the respective assets.
Maintenance, repairs and minor replacements of these items are charged to
expense as incurred.
 
  INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
     Intangible assets consist of non-compete agreements and location contracts.
The non-compete agreements are being amortized on a straight-line basis over
their duration (five years) and expire through July 1998. Also, in connection
with certain equipment acquisitions, the Company entered into location contracts
for two and one-half years terms. These contracts expired in June 1995.
 
  REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
     Revenues from coin calls and non-coin calls are recognized as calls are
made. When revenue on a telephone call is recorded, an expense is also recorded
for fees associated with the call. Revenue from the telephone service agreement
is recognized in the month of service.
 
  INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company is a Subchapter S corporation. As such, no provision is made
for income taxes as income or loss is included in the tax returns of the
shareholders.
 
  CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT AND BUSINESS RISK
 
     Receivables have a significant concentration of credit risk in the
telecommunications industry. In addition, receivables are generated by the
Company's pay telephones located in the state of Florida.
 
  SHAREHOLDERS DISTRIBUTIONS
 
     The Company generally distributes 100 percent of tax-basis profits to its
shareholders annually.
 
  FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
     During 1995, the Company adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 107, "Disclosures About Fair Value of Financial
Instruments", which requires the disclosure of fair value of financial
instruments. The Company's financial instruments consist of cash and cash
equivalents, trade receivables and notes payable to affiliates. The carrying
amount of these instruments at December 31, 1995 approximates their fair value.
 
                                      F-44
<PAGE>   120
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
1.  ORGANIZATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
  USE OF ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
2.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment consists of the following:
 
<TABLE>
          <S>                                                           <C>
          Installed pay telephones and related equipment..............  $ 3,259,133
          Furniture, fixtures and office equipment....................       40,125
          Automobiles.................................................       31,943
          Leasehold improvements......................................        4,025
          Warehouse equipment.........................................        1,772
                                                                        -----------
                                                                          3,336,998
          Accumulated depreciation....................................   (2,548,416)
                                                                        -----------
          Property and equipment, net.................................  $   788,582
                                                                        ===========
</TABLE>
 
     Depreciation expense amounted to $282,902 for the year ended December 31,
1995.
 
3.  INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
     Intangible assets consist of the following:
 
<TABLE>
          <S>                                                           <C>
          Non-compete agreements......................................  $   533,135
          Location contracts..........................................      194,240
                                                                        -----------
                                                                            727,375
          Accumulated amortization....................................     (581,346)
                                                                        -----------
          Intangible assets, net......................................  $   146,029
                                                                        ===========
</TABLE>
 
     Amortization expense related to intangible assets amounted to $110,302 for
the year ended December 31, 1995.
 
4.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
  NOTES PAYABLE
 
     The Company has notes payable to related parties, with principal and
interest payable monthly at an annual rate of 10% and due in 1996. These notes
are collateralized by installed pay telephones and related equipment. The notes
were assumed and subsequently paid-off by the acquiring company (Note 6).
 
     Interest expense paid to related parties relating on these notes amounted
to $64,210 in 1995.
 
                                      F-45
<PAGE>   121
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
4.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS (CONTINUED)
  PAYROLL ALLOCATION
 
     Included in selling, general and administrative expenses is an allocation
of payroll for certain service personnel working for various related party
companies under common ownership. The allocation is based on management's
estimate of the amount of time each employee provides each related company.
 
  OPERATING LEASE
 
     The Company occupies a facility under a lease with a related party which
expired on May 31, 1993. Under the terms of the lease, the Company has the right
to renew the lease for a five-year period which began immediately after the end
of the initial term. The Company has not renewed the lease and currently leases
the facility on a month-to-month basis. The lease provides that the Company pay
its proportional share of the building's taxes, maintenance, insurance and other
related occupancy expenses.
 
     Rent expense for the year ended December 31, 1995 amounted to $22,812.
 
  VEHICLE LEASES
 
     The Company leases various vehicles from a related party. Total lease
payments made in connection with these leases amounted to $46,866 during 1995.
 
5.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
 
     The Company is involved in litigation from time to time in the ordinary
course of business. In the opinion of management, the ultimate resolution of
these matters will not have a material effect on the Company's financial
position or results of operations.
 
6.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
  ACQUISITION
 
     On March 15, 1996, the Company completed an Asset Purchase Agreement with
an unrelated party. Under the terms of the Agreement, the Company sold its
assets, including 2,528 installed telephones and related equipment, for a cash
price of approximately $9.6 million, warrants to purchase shares of stock of the
acquiring company, and the assumption, by the acquiring company, of
approximately $733,000 of outstanding Company liabilities. The purchase price
also included a five year consulting agreement with one of the Company's former
officers valued at $50,000.
 
  TELECOMMUNICATIONS REFORM
 
     On February 8, 1996, the President of the United States signed into law the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the "Act"). The Act changes many provisions of
the Communications Act of 1934 and requires the Federal Communications
Commission (the "FCC") to change its existing rules and adopt new rules in
several areas affecting broadcasting. This Act is one of the most significant
changes to the Communications Act since its adoption in 1934. Since the Act
recently was passed and became law, the FCC has only begun the proceedings that
the Act requires and it remains to be seen how the FCC will interpret certain of
its provisions. Congress and the FCC currently have under consideration and may
in the future adopt new laws and regulations and policies regarding a wide
variety of matters which could, directly or indirectly, adversely affect the
operation of the Company as well as its business strategies.
 
                                      F-46
<PAGE>   122
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
The Board of Directors
Paramount Communications Systems, Inc.:
 
     We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Paramount Communications
Systems, Inc. as of December 31, 1994, and the related statement of income,
shareholders' equity, and cash flows for the year then ended. These financial
statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on
our audit.
 
     We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the financial position of Paramount Communications
Systems, Inc. at December 31, 1994 and the results of its operations and its
cash flows for the year then ended in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.
 
                                          /s/ KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
                                          Fort Lauderdale, Florida
 
March 10, 1995
 
                                      F-47
<PAGE>   123
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                                 BALANCE SHEET
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      1994
                                                                                   ----------
<S>                                                                                <C>
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents......................................................  $  198,549
  Accounts receivable............................................................     258,931
  Other current assets...........................................................      30,274
                                                                                   ----------
          Total current assets...................................................     487,754
Property and equipment, net (note 2).............................................     714,693
Intangible assets, less accumulated amortization of $471,044.....................     256,331
Other assets.....................................................................      15,188
                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                   $1,473,966
                                                                                   ==========
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Accounts payable and accrued expenses..........................................     177,908
  Location commissions payable...................................................      55,043
  Accrued interest payable.......................................................          --
  Sales tax payable..............................................................      16,252
  Shareholder distributions payable..............................................     384,620
  Current maturities of notes payable -- related parties (note 3)................     436,619
                                                                                   ----------
          Total current liabilities..............................................   1,070,442
Long-term portion of notes payable -- related parties (note 3)...................     276,555
                                                                                   ----------
          Total liabilities......................................................   1,346,997
                                                                                   ----------
Shareholders' equity:
  Common stock, $1 par value; 100 shares authorized, issued and outstanding......         100
  Additional paid-in capital.....................................................      19,900
  Retained earnings..............................................................     106,969
                                                                                   ----------
          Total shareholders' equity.............................................     126,969
Commitments and contingencies (note 4)...........................................          --
                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                   $1,473,966
                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-48
<PAGE>   124
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                              STATEMENT OF INCOME
 
                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     1994
                                                                                  ----------
<S>                                                                               <C>
Revenues:
  Coin calls....................................................................  $3,685,295
  Non-coin calls................................................................   2,030,194
                                                                                  ----------
          Total revenues........................................................   5,715,489
                                                                                  ----------
Operating costs and expenses:
  Telephone charges.............................................................   1,748,270
  Commissions...................................................................     676,304
  Selling, general and administrative...........................................   2,099,203
  Depreciation and amortization.................................................     770,429
                                                                                  ----------
          Total operating costs and expenses....................................   5,294,206
                                                                                  ----------
          Operating income......................................................     421,283
                                                                                  ----------
Other expense:
  Interest and other expense....................................................      (4,686)
  Interest expense..............................................................     (72,902)
                                                                                  ----------
          Total other expenses..................................................     (77,588)
                                                                                  ----------
          Net income............................................................  $  343,695
                                                                                  ==========
</TABLE>
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-49
<PAGE>   125
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                       STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          COMMON STOCK      ADDITIONAL
                                        ----------------     PAID-IN      RETAINED
                                        SHARES    AMOUNT     CAPITAL      EARNINGS       TOTAL
                                        ------    ------    ----------    ---------    ---------
<S>                                     <C>       <C>       <C>           <C>          <C>
Balances at December 31, 1993.........    100       100      $ 19,900     $ 397,894    $ 417,894
Net income............................     --        --            --       343,695      343,695
Distributions.........................     --        --            --      (634,620)    (634,620)
                                          ---      ----        ------       -------      -------
Balances at December 31, 1994.........    100      $100      $ 19,900     $ 106,969    $ 126,969
                                          ===      ====        ======       =======      =======
</TABLE>
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-50
<PAGE>   126
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     1994
                                                                                  -----------
<S>                                                                               <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net income....................................................................  $   343,695
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating
     activities:
     Depreciation and amortization of plant and equipment.......................      582,753
     Amortization of intangible assets..........................................      129,726
     Amortization of deferred asset.............................................       57,950
     Loss on write-off of property and equipment................................       14,980
     Changes in assets and liabilities:
       Decrease in accounts receivable..........................................        6,814
       Increase in other current assets.........................................       (5,841)
       Increase in other assets.................................................         (270)
       Decrease in other current liabilities....................................       (5,131)
                                                                                  -----------
          Net cash provided by operating activities.............................    1,124,676
                                                                                  -----------
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Purchases of equipment........................................................      (59,625)
  Proceeds from sale of equipment...............................................        3,578
  Purchase of investments.......................................................      (11,715)
  Purchase of intangible assets.................................................           --
                                                                                  -----------
          Net cash used in investing activities.................................      (67,762)
                                                                                  -----------
Cash flows from financing activities:
  Increase in notes payable -- related party....................................      200,000
  Distributions to shareholders.................................................     (626,989)
  Repayments of notes payable -- related parties................................     (591,366)
                                                                                  -----------
          Net cash used in financing activities.................................   (1,018,355)
                                                                                  -----------
          Net increase in cash and cash equivalents.............................       38,559
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year..................................      159,990
                                                                                  -----------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year........................................  $   198,549
                                                                                  ===========
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
  Cash paid during the year for interest........................................  $    74,570
                                                                                  ===========
</TABLE>
 
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-51
<PAGE>   127
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
(1)  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
  (a) THE COMPANY
 
     Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. (the "Company"), a Florida
corporation, was formed in March, 1987 as a result of the deregulation of the
telephone industry. The Company is a Subchapter S corporation in the business of
installing, maintaining and operating pay telephones throughout South Florida.
 
  (b) CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
 
     The Company considers all highly liquid investments with an original
maturity of three months or less to be cash equivalents.
 
  (c) PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment are stated at cost. Depreciation and amortization on
property and equipment are calculated on a straight-line basis over five years,
the estimated useful lives of the assets.
 
  (d) INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
     Intangible assets consist of non-compete agreements and location contracts.
The non-compete agreements are being amortized on a straight-line basis over
their duration (five years) and expire through July, 1998. The location
contracts are amortized over two and one-half years and expire through June,
1995.
 
  (e) RECOGNITION OF REVENUE
 
     Revenues from coin calls and non-coin calls are recognized as calls are
made. When revenue on a telephone call is recorded, an expense is also recorded
for fees associated with the call. Revenue from the telephone service agreement
is recognized in the month of service.
 
  (f) INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company is a Subchapter S corporation. As such, no provision is made
for income taxes as income or loss is included in the tax returns of the
shareholders.
 
  (g) CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT AND BUSINESS RISK
 
     Receivables have a significant concentration of credit risk in the
telecommunications industry. In addition, receivables are generated by the
Company's pay telephones located in the state of Florida. No single customer
accounted for more than 5% of the Company's sales.
 
  (h) DISTRIBUTIONS
 
     The Company generally distributes 100 percent of tax-basis profits to its
shareholders annually.
 
                                      F-52
<PAGE>   128
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
(2)  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT, NET
 
     Property and equipment consist of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            1994
                                                                         ----------
          <S>                                                            <C>
          Installed pay telephones and related equipment...............  $2,845,325
          Furniture, fixtures and office equipment.....................      35,525
          Automobiles..................................................      26,328
          Leasehold improvements.......................................       4,025
          Warehouse equipment..........................................       1,772
                                                                         ----------
                                                                          2,912,975
          Less accumulated depreciation and amortization...............   2,198,282
                                                                         ----------
                                                                         $  714,693
                                                                         ==========
</TABLE>
 
     Depreciation and amortization of property and equipment was $582,753.
 
(3)  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
  (a) NOTES PAYABLE -- RELATED PARTIES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            1994
                                                                         ----------
          <S>                                                            <C>
          Notes payable to various related parties, principal and
            interest payable monthly at rates ranging from 8% to 10%,
            due from March, 1993 to April, 1997, collateralized by
            installed pay telephones and related equipment.............  $  713,174
          Less current maturities of notes payable -- related
            parties....................................................     436,619
                                                                         ----------
                    Long-term portion of notes payable -- related
                      parties..........................................  $  276,555
                                                                         ==========
</TABLE>
 
     Interest expense paid to related parties relating to the above amounted to
$72,902.
 
     Aggregate maturities of notes payable -- related parties subsequent to
December 31, 1994 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>      <C>
1995..   $436,619
1996..    276,555
         --------
         $713,174
         ========
</TABLE>
 
  (b) PAYROLL ALLOCATION -- RELATED PARTY
 
     Included in selling, general and administrative expenses is an allocation
of payroll for certain service personnel working for various related party
companies under common ownership. The allocation is based on management's
estimate of the amount of time each employee provides each related company.
 
  (c) COMMISSION REVENUE -- RELATED PARTY
 
     Operator assisted service commissions received from a company under common
ownership which are included in non-coin call revenue amounted to $-0- in 1994.
 
(4)  OPERATING LEASE -- RELATED PARTY
 
     The Company occupies a facility under a lease with a related party which
expired on May 31, 1993. Under the terms of the lease, the Company has the right
to renew the lease for a five-year period which began immediately after the end
of the initial term. The Company has not renewed the lease and currently leases
the
 
                                      F-53
<PAGE>   129
 
                     PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
(4)  OPERATING LEASE -- RELATED PARTY (CONTINUED)
facility on a month-to-month basis. The lease provides that the Company pay its
proportional share of the building's taxes, maintenance, insurance and other
related occupancy expenses.
 
     Rent expense for the year ended December 31, 1994 was $23,373.
 
                                      F-54
<PAGE>   130
 
May 21, 1996
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
Board of Directors
International Pay Phones, Inc.
107 Dave Warlick Dr.
Lincolnton, North Carolina 28092
 
We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of International Pay Phones, Inc.
(a South Carolina corporation) as of December 31, 1995, and the related
statement of income and retained earnings, and cash flows for the year then
ended. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audit.
 
We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of International Pay Phones, Inc.
as of December 31, 1995, and the results of its operations and its cash flows
for the year then ended in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
 
MILLER SHERRILL BLAKE CPA PA
 
/s/ Miller Sherrill Blake CPA
 
Lincolnton, North Carolina
 
                                      F-55
<PAGE>   131
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                                 BALANCE SHEET
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                               <C>
ASSETS
Current Assets
  Cash and Cash Equivalents.....................................................  $    11,336
  Accounts Receivable...........................................................      142,801
                                                                                  -----------
     Total Current Assets.......................................................      154,137
                                                                                  -----------
Property and Equipment
  Leasehold Improvements........................................................       16,000
  Office Furniture and Equipment................................................       28,441
  Vehicles......................................................................      236,393
  Telephone Equipment...........................................................    2,304,632
  Accumulated Depreciation......................................................   (1,563,039)
                                                                                  -----------
     Total Property and Equipment...............................................    1,022,427
                                                                                  -----------
Other Assets
  Covenants Not to Compete -- Net of Amortization...............................      105,528
  Goodwill -- Net of Amortization...............................................       21,282
                                                                                  -----------
     Total Other Assets.........................................................      126,810
                                                                                  -----------
Total Assets....................................................................  $ 1,303,374
                                                                                  ===========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities
  Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses.........................................  $   151,539
  Notes Payable.................................................................      107,125
  Notes Payable -- Related Party................................................       25,000
  Current Portion of Long-Term Debt.............................................      343,763
                                                                                  -----------
     Total Current Liabilities..................................................      627,427
                                                                                  -----------
Long-Term Liabilities
  Notes Payable -- Less Current Portion.........................................      643,935
  Obligations under Capital Leases -- Less Current Portion......................       95,895
                                                                                  -----------
     Total Long-Term Liabilities................................................      739,830
                                                                                  -----------
          Total Liabilities.....................................................    1,367,257
                                                                                  -----------
Stockholders' Equity
  Common Stock..................................................................       10,000
  Additional Paid-In-Capital....................................................       57,224
  Retained Earnings.............................................................     (131,107)
                                                                                  -----------
     Total Stockholders' Equity.................................................      (63,883)
                                                                                  -----------
Total Liabilities And Stockholders' Equity......................................  $ 1,303,374
                                                                                  ===========
</TABLE>
 
       See Independent Auditors' Report and Notes to Financial Statement.
 
                                      F-56
<PAGE>   132
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   STATEMENT OF INCOME AND RETAINED EARNINGS
 
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
Sales............................................................................  $3,360,596
Cost of Goods Sold...............................................................   2,308,012
                                                                                   ----------
          Gross Profit...........................................................   1,052,584
OPERATING EXPENSES
  General And Administrative Expenses............................................     517,868
  Depreciation Expense...........................................................     413,144
  Interest Expense...............................................................     149,248
                                                                                   ----------
          Total Operating Expenses...............................................   1,080,260
                                                                                   ----------
Income From Operations...........................................................     (27,676)
OTHER (INCOME) EXPENSE
  (Gain) Loss on Sale of Assets..................................................        (733)
                                                                                   ----------
          Total Other (Income) Expense...........................................        (733)
          Income Before Corporate Taxes..........................................     (26,943)
Deferred Tax Expense.............................................................      35,800
                                                                                   ----------
          Net Income.............................................................     (62,743)
Beginning Retained Earnings......................................................     (68,364)
                                                                                   ----------
Ending Retained Earnings.........................................................  $ (131,107)
                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
 
       See Independent Auditors' Report and Notes to Financial Statement.
 
                                      F-57
<PAGE>   133
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
  Net Income.....................................................................  $ (62,743)
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided (used) by operating
     activities:
     Depreciation and Amortization...............................................    451,929
     Net (increase) decrease in receivables......................................    (61,817)
     Net increase (decrease) in accounts payable and accrued expenses............     40,406
     Net change in deferred tax asset/liability..................................     35,800
     Gain on sale of property and equipment......................................       (733)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Cash Provided (Used) by Operating Activities.................................    402,842
                                                                                   ---------
CASH FLOW FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
  Purchase of equipment..........................................................    (66,943)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Cash Provided (Used) by Investing Activities.................................    (66,943)
                                                                                   ---------
CASH FLOW FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
  Payments to settle short-term debt.............................................   (148,738)
  Payments to settle long-term debt..............................................   (187,055)
  Proceeds from short-term debt..................................................     52,315
  Proceeds from long-term debt...................................................     50,000
  Payments under capital lease obligations.......................................   (105,024)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Cash Provided (Used) by Financing Activities.................................   (338,502)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Increase (Decrease) In Cash and Cash Equivalents.............................     (2,603)
  Cash and Cash Equivalents at beginning of year.................................     13,939
                                                                                   ---------
Cash and Cash Equivalents at end of year.........................................  $  11,336
                                                                                   =========
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES
  Interest Paid..................................................................  $ 149,248
                                                                                   =========
  Income Taxes Paid..............................................................  $       0
                                                                                   =========
</TABLE>
 
       See Independent Auditors' Report and Notes to Financial Statement.
 
                                      F-58
<PAGE>   134
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
NOTE A -- SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
  BUSINESS ACTIVITY
 
     International Pay Phones, Inc. was incorporated under the laws of the State
of South Carolina on May 29, 1990. The Company purchases or leases pay phones
from suppliers and installs them in various locations throughout the
southeastern United States. Revenue is generated through contracts established
with the property owners regarding the use of the phones.
 
  CASH
 
     Cash includes cash in bank and instruments with maturities of 30 days or
less.
 
  DEPRECIATION
 
     Depreciation is computed using the straight-line and the accelerated cost
recovery methods.
 
NOTE B -- RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
     The Company has the following notes payable due to related parties as of
December 31, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                         <C>
     Amounts payable to shareholders due on demand.............................  $25,000
     Amounts payable to corporations related through common ownership due on
       demand..................................................................   14,800
                                                                                 -------
                                                                                 $39,800
                                                                                 =======
</TABLE>
 
     The Company rents its operating facility from a partnership related through
common ownership. The rent expense totaled $19,508 for the year ended December
31, 1995.
 
NOTE C -- RETIREMENT PLAN
 
     The Company sponsors a 401(k) plan covering all of the eligible employees
who elect to participate. The Company matches 50% of each employees deferred
salary up to a maximum to 2% of compensation. The contribution was $3,115 for
the year ended December 31, 1995.
 
NOTE D -- NOTES PAYABLE
 
     Short-term notes payable consist of the following at December 31, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
                   <S>                  <C>       <C>       <C>
                   Lincoln Bank.......  $ 50,000  10.25%     Personal Guarantees
                   Olen Beal..........    50,000  12.00%     Personal Guarantees
                   Conquest...........     7,125  10.00%     Personal Guarantees
                                        --------
                                        $107,125
                                        ========
</TABLE>
 
   
                       See Independent Auditors' Report.
    
 
                                      F-59
<PAGE>   135
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
NOTE E -- LONG-TERM DEBT
 
     Long-term debt consists of the following notes:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     1995
                                                                                   ---------
<S>                                                                                <C>
Note Payable -- NationsBank......................................................  $  10,261
  Due in monthly installments of $327.26 which includes interest calculated at
  7.5%. Matures in November of 1998. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- NationsBank......................................................     10,264
  Due in monthly installments of $327.26 which includes interest calculated at
  7.5%. Matures in November of 1998. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank........................................      8,827
  Due in monthly installments of $292.10 which includes interest calculated at
  6.25%. Matures in September of 1998. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank........................................      8,827
  Due in monthly installments of $292.10 which includes interest calculated at
  6.25%. Matures in September of 1998. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank........................................      9,616
  Due in monthly installments of $327.49 which includes interest calculated at
  7.5%. Matures in October of 1998. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- Ford Motor Credit................................................     13,576
  Due in monthly installments of $395.81 which includes interest calculated at
  11.75%. Matures in June of 1999. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank........................................     12,285
  Due in monthly installments of $357.26 which includes interest calculated at
  7.75%. Matures in March of 1999. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- GMAC.............................................................     16,105
  Due in monthly installments of $362.68 which includes interest calculated at
  10.0%. Matures in August of 2000. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- NationsBank......................................................     21,478
  Due in monthly installments of $485.00 which includes interest calculated at
  8.99%. Matures in June of 2000. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- NationsBank......................................................     29,398
  Due in monthly installments of $550.46 which includes interest calculated at
  9.99%. Matures in December of 2001. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- First Union National.............................................     32,958
  Due in monthly installments of $694.24 which includes interest calculated at
  9.06%. Matures in December of 2000. Secured by vehicle.
Note Payable -- Olen Beal........................................................     41,627
  Due in monthly installments of $1,660.72 which includes interest calculated at
  12.0%. Matures in April of 1998. Guaranteed by officers.
Note Payable -- First National Bank..............................................    437,098
  Due in monthly installments of $11,686.55 which includes interest calculated at
  prime plus 2%. Matures in September of 1999. Secured by phone equipment,
  guarantees by officers, and assignment of life insurance.
</TABLE>
 
   
                       See Independent Auditors' Report.
    
 
                                      F-60
<PAGE>   136
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     1995
                                                                                   ---------
<S>                                                                                <C> 
NOTE E -- LONG-TERM DEBT (CONTINUED)
NotePayable -- Karl Baker.......................................................    191,741
  Due in monthly installments of $5,219.19 which includes interest calculated at
  8.0%. Matures in April of 1999. Secured by phone equipment.
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank........................................      2,000
  Due in monthly installments of $666.67 principle plus interest calculated at
  10.0%. Matures in April of 1996. Secured by assets of the company.
Note Payable -- Elcotel..........................................................     11,300
  Due in monthly installments of $1,341 which includes interest calculated at
  16.049%. Matures in September of 1996. Secured by phone equipment and
  guaranteed by officers.
                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                     857,361
  Less: Current Maturities.......................................................   (213,426)
                                                                                   ---------
          Total Long-Term Debt...................................................  $ 643,935
                                                                                   =========
</TABLE>
 
     Maturities of long-term debt in each of the next five years are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                  <C>
                              1996     $213,426
                              1997      221,139
                              1998      228,947
                              1999      169,611
                              2000       24,238
                                       --------
                                       $857,361
                                       ========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE F -- INCOME TAXES
 
     Under Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 109, deferred tax
assets and liabilities are determined based on the differences between the
financial statement and tax basis of assets and liabilities and are measured
using enacted tax rates.
 
     Net deferred tax assets in the accompanying balance sheet include the
following components:
 
<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                        <C>
     Deferred tax asset arising from:
       Net operating loss carryforward........................................  $ 38,350
       Valuation Allowance....................................................   (38,350)
                                                                                --------
     Net deferred tax asset...................................................  $      0
                                                                                ========
</TABLE>
 
     The Company has unused net operating losses available for carryforward to
offset future taxable income. The net operating loss carryforward was
approximately $250,000 at December 31, 1995 and will expire in the year 2010.
 
NOTE G -- LEASES
 
     The company is the lessee of telephone equipment under capital leases
expiring in various years through 1998. The assets and liabilities under capital
leases are recorded at the lower of the present value of the minimum lease
payments or the fair value of the asset. The assets are depreciated over the
lower of their related lease terms or their estimated productive lives.
Depreciation of assets under capital leases is included
 
   
                       See Independent Auditors' Report.
    
 
                                      F-61
<PAGE>   137
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
NOTE G -- LEASES (CONTINUED)
in depreciation expense for the year ended December 31, 1995. The following is a
summary of property held under capital leases:
 
<TABLE>
                           <S>                          <C>
                           Telephone Equipment........  $ 416,160
                           Accumulated Depreciation...   (113,159)
                                                        ---------
                                                        $ 303,001
                                                        =========
</TABLE>
 
     Minimum future lease payments under capital leases as of December 31, 1995
for each of the next five years are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                 <C>
                             1996     $130,337
                             1997       84,811
                             1998       11,084
                             1999            0
                             2000            0
                                      --------
                                      $226,232
                                      ========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE H -- RENTALS UNDER OPERATING LEASES
 
     The Company leased various vehicles under operating leases. Several of
those leases were terminated during the year ended December 31, 1995. The
remaining operating leases will expire in 1998.
 
     Future minimum rental payments required under operating leases that have
remaining terms in excess of one year as of December 31, 1995 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                  <C>
                               1996     $ 5,016
                               1997       5,016
                               1998       2,508
                                        -------
                                        $12,540
                                         =======
</TABLE>
 
     Rental expense was approximately $19,577.
 
NOTE I -- CONTINGENCIES
 
     The Company is a party to a contingent payment contract with Karl Baker for
$25,000. The agreement states that if contracts purchased from Mr. Baker remain
in effect for a specified time period, the payment will be made. However, if
contracts are lost, the $25,000 is reduced by $1,000 per occurrence.
 
NOTE J -- SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
     The shareholders of International Pay Phones, Inc. have negotiated to sell
all outstanding shares of stock to PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. The transaction
was finalized on March 15, 1996. Also, an additional loan was secured from
NationsBank on January 3, 1996 in the amount of $50,000. Interest is calculated
at 10%, and the note matures March 3, 1996.
 
   
                       See Independent Auditors' Report.
    
 
                                      F-62
<PAGE>   138
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
NOTE K -- USE OF ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect certain reported amounts and disclosures. Accordingly,
actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
NOTE L -- STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
     The company has 100,000 shares of $1 par common stock authorized and 10,000
outstanding at December 31, 1995.
 
   
                       See Independent Auditors' Report.
    
 
                                      F-63
<PAGE>   139
 
January 17, 1996
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
Board of Directors
International Pay Phones, Inc.
107 Dave Warlick Dr.
Lincolnton, North Carolina 28092
 
     We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of International Pay Phones,
Inc. (a South Carolina corporation) as of December 31, 1994, and the related
statements of income and retained earnings, and cash flows for the year then
ended. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on this financial
statement based on our audit.
 
     We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the balance sheet. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the financial position of International Pay Phones,
Inc. as of December 31, 1994, and the results of its operations and its cash
flows for the year then ended in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
 
MILLER SHERRILL BLAKE CPA PA
 
/s/  TERRI A. BLAKE, CPA
- ------------------------------------------------------
For the Firm
 
                                      F-64
<PAGE>   140
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                                 BALANCE SHEET
 
                               DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                               <C>
                                     ASSETS
CURRENT ASSETS
  Cash and Cash Equivalents.....................................................  $    13,939
  Accounts Receivable...........................................................       80,984
                                                                                  -----------
          TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS..................................................       94,923
                                                                                  -----------
PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
  Leasehold Improvements........................................................       16,000
  Office Furniture and Equipment................................................       27,441
  Vehicles......................................................................      146,295
  Telephone Equipment...........................................................    2,134,307
  Accumulated Depreciation......................................................   (1,155,533)
                                                                                  -----------
          TOTAL PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT..........................................    1,168,510
                                                                                  -----------
OTHER ASSETS
  Covenants Not to Compete -- Net of Amortization...............................      143,695
  Goodwill -- Net of Amortization...............................................       21,900
  Deferred Tax Asset............................................................       35,800
                                                                                  -----------
          TOTAL OTHER ASSETS....................................................      201,395
                                                                                  -----------
TOTAL ASSETS....................................................................  $ 1,464,828
                                                                                  ===========
                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
CURRENT LIABILITIES
  Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses.........................................  $    93,151
  Bank Overdraft................................................................       17,982
  Notes Payable.................................................................      166,645
  Notes Payable -- Related Party................................................       61,903
  Current Portion of Long-Term Debt.............................................      264,089
                                                                                  -----------
          TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES.............................................      603,770
                                                                                  -----------
LONG-TERM LIABILITIES
  Notes Payable -- Less Current Portion.........................................      724,379
  Obligations under Capital Leases -- Less Current Portion......................      137,819
                                                                                  -----------
          TOTAL LONG-TERM LIABILITIES...........................................      862,198
                                                                                  -----------
            TOTAL LIABILITIES...................................................    1,465,968
                                                                                  -----------
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
  Common Stock..................................................................       10,000
  Additional Paid-In-Capital....................................................       57,224
  Retained Earnings.............................................................      (68,364)
                                                                                  -----------
          TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY............................................       (1,140)
                                                                                  -----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY......................................  $ 1,464,828
                                                                                  ===========
</TABLE>
 
       See Independent Auditors' Report and Notes to Financial Statement
 
                                      F-65
<PAGE>   141
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   STATEMENT OF INCOME AND RETAINED EARNINGS
 
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
Sales............................................................................  $2,631,627
Cost of Goods Sold...............................................................   1,950,062
                                                                                   ----------
  GROSS PROFIT...................................................................     681,565
OPERATING EXPENSES
  General And Administrative Expenses............................................     435,365
  Depreciation Expense...........................................................     389,201
  Interest Expense...............................................................     103,697
                                                                                   ----------
          TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES...............................................     928,263
                                                                                   ----------
               INCOME FROM OPERATIONS............................................    (246,698)
OTHER (INCOME) EXPENSE
  Miscellaneous Income...........................................................      (2,076)
  (Gain) Loss on Sale of Assets..................................................      28,571
                                                                                   ----------
          Total Other (Income) Expense...........................................      26,495
          Income Before Corporate Taxes..........................................    (273,193)
Deferred Tax Benefit Provision...................................................     (35,800)
                                                                                   ----------
               NET INCOME........................................................    (237,393)
BEGINNING RETAINED EARNINGS......................................................     169,029
                                                                                   ----------
          ENDING RETAINED EARNINGS...............................................  $  (68,364)
                                                                                   ==========
</TABLE>
 
       See Independent Auditors' Report and Notes to Financial Statement
 
                                      F-66
<PAGE>   142
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
Net Cash Flow From Operating Activities:
  Net Income.....................................................................  $(237,393)
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided (used) by operating
     activities:
     Depreciation................................................................    389,201
     Net (increase) decrease in receivables......................................    (24,429)
     Net increase (decrease) in accounts payable and accrued expenses............     50,764
     Net increase (decrease) in accrued taxes....................................     (3,791)
     Net change in deferred tax asset/liability..................................     35,800
     Gain on sale of property and equipment......................................     28,571
                                                                                   ---------
Net Cash Provided (Used) by Operating Activities.................................    238,723
                                                                                   ---------
Cash Flow From Investing Activities:
     Purchase of equipment.......................................................   (186,716)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Cash Provided (Used) by Investing Activities.................................   (186,716)
                                                                                   ---------
Cash Flow From Financing Activities:
     Payments to settle short-term debt..........................................   (133,405)
     Payments to settle long-term debt...........................................   (352,114)
     Proceeds from short-term debt...............................................    206,903
     Proceeds from long-term debt................................................    260,736
     Payments under capital lease obligations....................................    (43,290)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Cash Provided (Used) by Financing Activities.................................    (61,170)
                                                                                   ---------
Net Increase (Decrease) In Cash and Cash Equivalents.............................     (9,163)
  Cash and Cash Equivalents at beginning of year.................................     23,102
                                                                                   ---------
Cash and Cash Equivalents at end of year.........................................  $  13,939
                                                                                   =========
Supplemental Disclosures
  Interest Paid..................................................................  $ 103,697
                                                                                   =========
  Income Taxes Paid..............................................................  $   3,587
                                                                                   =========
</TABLE>
 
       See Independent Auditors' Report and Notes to Financial Statement
 
                                      F-67
<PAGE>   143
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
NOTE A -- SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
  BUSINESS ACTIVITY
 
     International Pay Phones, Inc. was incorporated under the laws of the State
of South Carolina on May 29, 1990. The Company purchases or leases pay phones
from suppliers and installs them in various locations throughout the
southeastern United States. Revenue is generated through contracts established
with the property owners regarding the use of the phones.
 
  CASH
 
     Cash includes cash in bank and instruments with maturities of 30 days or
less.
 
  DEPRECIATION
 
     Depreciation is computed using the straight-line and the accelerated cost
recovery methods.
 
NOTE B -- RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
     The Company has the following notes payable due to related parties as of
December 31, 1994:
 
<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                         <C>
     Amounts payable to officers due on demand.................................  $ 5,000
     Amounts payable to shareholders due on demand.............................   50,000
     Amounts payable to corporations related through common ownership due on
       demand..................................................................    6,903
                                                                                 -------
                                                                                 $61,903
                                                                                 =======
</TABLE>
 
     The Company rents its operating facility from a partnership related through
common ownership. The rent expense totaled $14,934 for the year ended December
31, 1994.
 
NOTE C -- RETIREMENT PLAN
 
     The Company sponsors a 401(k) plan covering all of the eligible employees
who elect to participate. The Company matches 50% of each employee's deferred
salary up to a maximum of 2% of compensation. The contribution was $5,847 for
1994.
 
                        See Independent Auditors' Report
 
                                      F-68
<PAGE>   144
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE D -- LONG-TERM DEBT
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                 <C>
Long-term debt consists of the following notes:
Note Payable -- NationsBank.......................................................  $ 13,293
  Due in monthly installments of $327.26 which includes interest calculated at
  7.5%. Matures in November of 1998. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- NationsBank.......................................................    13,295
  Due in monthly installments of $327.26 which includes interest calculated at
  7.5%. Matures in November of 1998. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank.........................................    11,677
  Due in monthly installments of $292.10 which includes interest calculated at
  6.25%. Matures in September of 1998. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank.........................................    11,677
  Due in monthly installments of $292.10 which includes interest calculated at
  6.25%. Matures in September of 1998. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank.........................................    12,702
  Due in monthly installments of $327.49 which includes interest calculated at
  7.5%. Matures in October of 1998. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- Ford Motor Credit.................................................    16,539
  Due in monthly installments of $395.81 which includes interest calculated at
  11.75%. Matures in June of 1999. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank.........................................    15,486
  Due in monthly installments of $357.26 which includes interest calculated at
  7.75%. Matures in March of 1999. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- Ford Motor Credit.................................................    16,802
  Due in monthly installments of $401.09 which includes interest calculated at
  7.75%. Matures in January of 1999. Secured by vehicle
Note Payable -- First National Bank...............................................   528,493
  Due in monthly installments of $11,686.55 which includes interest calculated at
  prime plus 2%. Matures in September of 1999. Secured by phone equipment,
  guarantees by officers, and assignment of life insurance
Note Payable -- Karl Baker........................................................   231,643
  Due in monthly installments of $5,219.19 which includes interest calculated at
  8.0%. Matures in April of 1999. Secured by phone equipment
Note Payable -- First Union National Bank.........................................     9,998
  Due in monthly installments of $666.67 principal plus interest calculated at
  10.0%. Matures in April of 1996. Secured by assets of the company
Note Payable -- Elcotel...........................................................    24,411
  Due in monthly installments of $1,341 which includes interest calculated at
  16.049%. Matures in September of 1996. Secured by phone equipment and guarantees
  of officers.....................................................................   906,016
                                                                                    --------
Less: Current Maturities..........................................................  (181,637)
                                                                                    --------
          Total Long-Term Debt....................................................  $724,379
                                                                                    ========
</TABLE>
    
 
                        See Independent Auditors' Report
 
                                      F-69
<PAGE>   145
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE D -- LONG-TERM DEBT (CONTINUED)

     Maturities of long-term debt in each of the next five years are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
                    <S>                                           <C>
                    1995........................................  $181,637
                    1996........................................   193,141
                    1997........................................   194,620
                    1998........................................   209,562
                    1999........................................   127,056
                                                                  --------
                                                                  $906,016
                                                                  ========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE E -- INCOME TAXES
 
     Under Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 109, deferred tax
assets and liabilities are determined based on the differences between the
financial statement and tax basis of assets and liabilities and are measured
using enacted tax rates.
 
     Net deferred tax assets in the accompanying balance sheet include the
following components:
 
<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                         <C>
     Deferred tax asset arising from:
       Net operating loss carry forward........................................  $34,300
       Temporary differences -- Principally depreciation methods...............    1,500
                                                                                 -------
     Total deferred tax asset..................................................  $35,800
                                                                                 =======
</TABLE>
 
     The Company has unused net operating losses available for carryforward to
offset future taxable income. The net operating loss carryforward was $228,776
at December 31, 1994 and will expire in the year 2009.
 
NOTE F -- LEASES
 
     The company is the lessee of telephone equipment under capital leases
expiring in various years through 1997. The assets and liabilities under capital
leases are recorded at the lower of the present value of the minimum lease
payments or the fair value of the asset. The assets are depreciated over the
lower of their related lease terms or their estimated productive lives.
Depreciation of assets under capital leases is included in depreciation expense
for the year ended December 31, 1994.
 
     The following is a summary of property held under capital leases:
 
<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                        <C>
     Telephone Equipment......................................................  $292,845
     Accumulated Depreciation.................................................   (35,686)
                                                                                --------
                                                                                $257,159
                                                                                ========
</TABLE>
 
                        See Independent Auditors' Report
 
                                      F-70
<PAGE>   146
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAY PHONES, INC.
 
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE F -- LEASES (CONTINUED)

     Minimum future lease payments under capital leases as of December 31, 1994
for each of the next five years are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
                    <S>                                           <C>
                    1995........................................  $ 82,452
                    1996........................................    94,760
                    1997........................................    43,059
                    1998........................................         0
                    1999........................................         0
                                                                  --------
                                                                  $220,271
                                                                  ========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE G -- CONTINGENCIES
 
     The Company is party to a contingent payment contract with Karl Baker for
$25,000. The agreement states that if contracts purchased from Mr. Baker remain
in effect for a specified time period the payment will be made. However, if
contracts are lost, the $25,000 is reduced by $1,000 per occurrence.
 
NOTE H -- SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
     The shareholders of International Pay Phones, Inc. are negotiating to sell
all outstanding shares of stock to PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. The transaction
has not been finalized as of the date this statement was issued.
 
NOTE I -- LINE OF CREDIT
 
     The Company has a line of credit for $150,000 that expires in March of
1995. At December 31, 1994 the company has outstanding $100,000 on the line of
credit. Interest is calculated at 10.50%. Loan is guaranteed by officers and
their spouses.
 
NOTE J -- STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
 
     The company has 100,000 shares of $1 par common stock authorized and 10,000
shares outstanding at December 31, 1994.
 
                        See Independent Auditors' Report
 
                                      F-71
<PAGE>   147
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT
 
To The Stockholders
International Payphones, Inc.
Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
 
We have audited the accompanying Balance Sheets of International Payphones, Inc.
(a Tennessee corporation) as of December 31, 1995 and December 31, 1994, and the
related Statements of Earnings and Retained Earnings and Cash Flows for years
then ended. These financial statements are the responsibility of the management.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based
on our audit.
 
We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of International Payphones, Inc.
and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the years ended
December 31, 1995 and 1994 in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
 
                                          /s/ ERNEST M. SEWELL, CPA
 
April 24, 1996
 
                                      F-72
<PAGE>   148
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAYPHONES, INC.
 
                                 BALANCE SHEETS
 
                        AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      1995             1994
                                                                  ------------     ------------
<S>                                                               <C>              <C>
ASSETS
Current Assets
  Cash..........................................................  $  17,321.08     $  25,530.67
  Accounts receivable - trade...................................     48,996.42        35,913.21
  Other amounts receivable (Note D).............................      5,600.00        25,574.54
  Parts and supplies inventory..................................      9,420.00        11,625.00
                                                                  ------------     ------------
  Total Current Assets..........................................     81,337.50        98,643.42
Property and Equipment
  Property and equipment (Note B and F).........................    816,148.89       720,142.61
  Accumulated depreciation......................................   (539,338.28)     (455,592.94)
                                                                  ------------     ------------
  Net Property and Equipment....................................    276,810.61       264,549.67
                                                                  ------------     ------------
          TOTAL ASSETS..........................................  $ 358,148.11     $ 363,193.09
                                                                  ============     ============
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current Liabilities
  Current portion of long-term debt (Note F)....................  $  73,978.08     $  48,761.05
  Accounts payable - trade......................................      2,717.23         7,822.66
  Accrued payroll and payroll taxes.............................            --        10,265.07
  Other accrued liabilities (Note E)............................     18,391.81        24,220.91
  Deferred income taxes (Note C)................................      6,000.00         5,100.00
                                                                  ------------     ------------
  Total Current Liabilities.....................................    101,087.12        96,169.69
Long-term debt - net of current portion (Note F)................    118,654.10        81,515.83
                                                                  ------------     ------------
          TOTAL LIABILITIES.....................................    219,741.22       177,685.52
Shareholders' Equity
  Common stock..................................................      3,321.00         3,321.00
  Additional paid-in capital....................................    106,000.00       106,000.00
  Retained earnings.............................................     29,085.89        76,186.57
                                                                  ------------     ------------
  Total Shareholders' Equity....................................    138,406.89       185,507.57
                                                                  ------------     ------------
          TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY..........................  $ 358,148.11     $ 363,193.09
                                                                  ============     ============
</TABLE>
    
 
         The accompanying notes are an integral part of this statement.
 
                                      F-73
<PAGE>   149
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAYPHONES, INC.
 
                  STATEMENTS OF EARNINGS AND RETAINED EARNINGS
 
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       1995            1994
                                                                   -------------   -------------
<S>                                                                <C>             <C>
Revenue..........................................................  $1,194,620.91   $1,135,734.73
Direct costs.....................................................     608,061.14      553,336.70
                                                                   -------------   -------------
  Gross Profit...................................................     586,559.77      582,398.03
General and Administrative Expenses..............................     563,028.15      546,365.04
                                                                   -------------   -------------
  Earnings from operations.......................................      23,531.62       36,032.99
Other income (expense):
  Interest income................................................         665.84              --
  Gain (loss) on asset sale......................................         916.16       (2,731.45)
                                                                   -------------   -------------
  Earnings before taxes..........................................      25,113.62       33,301.54
Provision for income tax expense (Note C)........................       2,300.00        2,535.00
                                                                   -------------   -------------
          Net earnings...........................................      22,813.62       30,766.54
          BEGINNING RETAINED EARNINGS............................      76,186.57       88,677.65
                                                                   -------------   -------------
                                                                       99,000.19      119,444.19
Less dividend distributions......................................     (69,914.30)     (43,257.62)
                                                                   -------------   -------------
          ENDING RETAINED EARNINGS...............................  $   29,085.89   $   76,186.57
                                                                   =============   =============
</TABLE>
    
 
         The accompanying notes are an integral part of this statement.
 
                                      F-74
<PAGE>   150
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAYPHONES, INC.
 
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      1995             1994
                                                                   -----------     ------------
<S>                                                                <C>             <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
  Net income (loss)..............................................  $ 22,813.62     $  30,766.54
  Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash provided
     (used) by operating activities
     Depreciation................................................    91,174.16        96,689.77
     (Gain) loss on disposal of property.........................      (916.16)        2,731.45
     (Increase) decrease in accounts receivable..................   (13,083.21)       (4,610.68)
     (Increase) decrease in inventories..........................     2,205.00        32,152.00
     Increase (decrease) in accounts payable.....................    (5,105.43)      (16,981.09)
     Increase (decrease) in income taxes payable.................     3,000.00        (5,280.00)
     Increase (decrease) in other accrued expenses...............    (5,829.10)        3,112.86
     Increase (decrease) in payroll taxes........................   (10,265.07)        9,691.53
                                                                   -----------     ------------
     Total adjustments...........................................    61,180.19       117,505.84
                                                                   -----------     ------------
  Net Cash Provided (Used) by Operating Activities...............    83,993.81       148,272.38
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Proceeds from disposal of property.............................    18,250.06         5,312.20
  Purchases of fixed assets......................................   (71,329.00)      (18,225.16)
  Leasehold improvements.........................................           --       (10,274.42)
                                                                   -----------     ------------
  Net Cash Provided (Used) by Investing Activities...............   (53,078.94)      (23,187.38)
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Proceeds from long-term debt...................................    96,329.00        30,893.30
  Decrease in other accounts receivable..........................    19,974.54        29,012.38
  Repayment of long-term debt....................................   (49,068.19)      (52,552.75)
  Repayment of capital lease obligations.........................   (34,345.51)      (59,869.12)
  Repayment of stockholder loans.................................           --       (22,575.20)
  Dividends paid.................................................   (72,014.30)      (43,257.62)
                                                                   -----------     ------------
  Net Cash Provided (Used) by Financing Activities...............   (39,124.46)     (118,349.01)
                                                                   -----------     ------------
     NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH.............................    (8,209.59)        6,735.99
     CASH AT BEGINNING OF YEAR...................................    25,530.67        18,794.68
                                                                   -----------     ------------
     CASH AT END OF YEAR.........................................  $ 17,321.08     $  25,530.67
                                                                   ===========     ============
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES
Noncash Investing and Financing Activities:
  Assets acquired through capital lease..........................  $(49,440.00)    $ (66,598.00)
  Capital lease used to acquire assets...........................    49,440.00        66,598.00
Cash Paid During the Year for:
  Interest.......................................................  $ 13,489.00     $  20,919.00
  Income taxes...................................................     2,300.00         2,535.00
</TABLE>
 
         The accompanying notes are an integral part of this statement.
 
                                      F-75
<PAGE>   151
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAYPHONES, INC.
 
                       NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                    DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND DECEMBER 31, 1994
 
NOTE A -- GENERAL
 
     International Payphones, Inc. is a Tennessee corporation formed in 1985 to
sell, install, lease and maintain pay telephone equipment. The majority of the
Company's operations are in the eastern region of the the state of Tennessee
where it owns approximately 500 telephones and receives pay telephone coin
income and long distance commissions. Under agreements with pay phone site
location owners the Company collects the pay phone coin revenue and the long,
terms run distance commission income and pays a percentage of this revenue to
the site location owner each month. These agreements cover periods ranging from
five to twenty years.
 
NOTE B -- PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment is stated at cost and is depreciated using the
straight-line method over useful lives ranging from 5 to 7 years for equipment
and vehicles and 31.5 years for leasehold improvements. Repairs and maintenance
are charged to expense when incurred and improvements which substantially
prolong the useful lives of the assets involved are capitalized and depreciated.
The cost of assets classified by major categories is as follows:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  1995            1994
                                                               -----------     -----------
     <S>                                                       <C>             <C>
     Furniture & fixtures....................................  $ 58,120.58     $ 58,120.58
     Office equipment........................................    35,998.97       35,998.97
     Telephone equipment.....................................   515,563.78      466,123.78
     Leasehold improvements..................................    74,802.66       74,802.66
     Vehicles................................................   131,662.90       85,096.62
                                                               -----------     -----------
               Total cost....................................  $816,148.89     $720,142.61
                                                               ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
NOTE C -- INCOME TAXES
 
   
     The Company is an S corporation for Federal income tax purposes. As a
result, no provision for Federal income taxes is made by the Company because the
individual shareholders' report and pay Federal income tax on their allocated
percentage of the corporation's net earnings. The Company does pay Tennessee
state excise tax on its net earnings at a 6% tax rate. There are timing
differences in how items of income and expense are reported on the tax return
and in the financial statements. These differences involve trade receivables for
long distance commission income which is reported as income when earned in the
financial statements but is reported as received for tax purposes. In addition,
depreciation expense is claimed under IRS Code Section 179 and using accelerated
writeoff methods for tax purposes while the straight-line writeoff method is
used for financial reporting. State excise tax is provided for in the financial
statements as the items of income and deduction are recognized therein
regardless of when they are reported on the income tax return. As a result of
these timing differences, deferred tax liabilities of $ 6,000 and $ 3,000,
respectively, have been accrued at December 31, 1995 and December 31, 1994.
    
 
NOTE D -- OTHER AMOUNTS RECEIVABLE:
 
     The Company is affiliated through common stock ownership and control with
other companies involved in the telecommunications industry. Loans to these
affiliates on open account totaled $19,886 at December 31, 1994. Loans to
employees at December 31, 1994 totaled $7,937.
 
                                      F-76
<PAGE>   152
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAYPHONES, INC.
 
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE E -- OTHER ACCRUED LIABILITIES:
 
     Other accrued liabilities include the Company's estimate of accrued site
commissions due as of December 31, 1995 and December 31, 1994. Under the terms
of the Company's royalty agreements with its customers, site commissions are
payable after the end of the month in which the net coin and long distance
revenue is received. As of December 31, 1995 and December 31, 1994, the Company
has accrued approximately two months, respectively, of unpaid site commissions.
 
NOTE F -- LONG-TERM DEBT:
 
     Long-term debt at December 31, 1995 and December 31, 1994 includes the
following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1995          1994
                                                                      -----------   -----------
<S>                                                                   <C>           <C>
  Note payable to First National Bank of Gatlinburg dated November
2, 1994 in the face amount of $17,000 payable in 18 monthly
installments of $1,000 including interest at prime plus 1.5%........  $  4,377.89   $ 15,269.36
  Note payable to Conquest Communications dated in December, 1993 in
the face amount of $25,000 payable in monthly installments with
interest............................................................           --      5,117.01
  Note payable to First Union Bank of Georgia dated October 11, 1993
in the face amount of $24,763 payable in 60 monthly installments of
$487 including interest at 6.75%. This note is collateralized by a
1994 Ford Explorer..................................................           --     19,773.54
  Notes payable (two) to First Union Bank of South Carolina dated
September 17, 1993 in the face amounts of $15,022 each, both payable
in 60 monthly installments of $292 including interest at 6.25%.
These notes are collateralized by two 1993 Ford cargo vans..........    18,219.80     23,457.12
  Note payable to First Tennessee Bank dated January 31, 1994 in the
face amount of $13,893 payable in 60 monthly installments of $289
including interest at 9.00%. This note is collateralized by a 1994
Toyota Corolla......................................................     9,422.68     11,681.97
  Note payable to Nationsbank of South Carolina dated December 14,
1993 in the face amount of $15,596 payable in 60 monthly
installments of $309 including interest at 7.00%. This note is
collateralized by a 1994 Ford Econoline.............................    10,187.33     12,867.48
  Note payable to First National Bank of Gatlinburg dated August 28,
1995 in the face amount of $25,000 payable in 23 monthly
installments of $1,000 including interest at prime plus 2.362%. This
note is collateralized by pay phones and royalty contracts..........    21,890.59            --
  Capitalized lease purchase agreement dated January 26, 1994 in the
original sum of $66,370, due in monthly installments of $2,139
through December, 1996, decreasing to $1,123 through March, 1997,
including sales tax and finance charges at 14%......................    21,412.70     42,110.40
  Capitalized lease purchase agreement dated May 5, 1995 in the
original sum of $49,440, due in monthly installments of $1,842
through March, 1998, including sales tax and finance charges at
19%.................................................................    36,981.01            --
  Note payable to Nationsbank of South Carolina dated November 4,
1995 in the face amount of $71,329 payable in 60 monthly
installments of $1,484 including interest at 8.95%. This note is
collateralized by a 1995 Mercedes...................................    70,140.18            --
                                                                      -----------   -----------
                                                                       192,632.18    130,276.88
Less current portion................................................   (73,978.08)   (48,761.05)
                                                                      -----------   -----------
                                                                      $118,654.10   $ 81,515.83
                                                                      ===========   ===========
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-77
<PAGE>   153
 
                         INTERNATIONAL PAYPHONES, INC.
 
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE G -- OPERATING LEASES
 
     The Company leases its office space from one of the stockholders under an
oral agreement at a monthly rate of $1,000 plus utilities, taxes, repairs,
maintenance and leasehold improvements. The Company also leases three vehicles
under separate noncancelable operating lease agreements dated March 25, 1993,
January 22, 1994 and April 21, 1995. These agreements call for monthly lease
payments of $509, $1,006, and $444, respectively, including sales tax. Each
agreement allows for additional charges for excess milage upon expiration of the
lease. Future minimum annual lease payments under the vehicle leases are as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
Year ended December 31, 1995.....................................................  $22,183.00
Year ended December 31, 1996.....................................................   18,936.00
Year ended December 31, 1997.....................................................   11,371.00
Year ended December 31, 1998.....................................................    1,333.00
                                                                                   ----------
                                                                                   $53,823.00
</TABLE>
 
NOTE H -- EVENTS SUBSEQUENT TO DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
   
     Effective March 15, 1996 the Company entered into a merger agreement with
PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. under which 100% of the Company stock was acquired
by PhoneTel and the Company ceased to exist as a separate entity.
    
 
                                      F-78
<PAGE>   154
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
Board of Directors
Payphones of America, Inc.
 
     We have audited the accompanying Consolidated balance sheets of Payphones
of America, Inc. (a Tennessee corporation) and subsidiary as of December 31,
1995 and 1994, and the related consolidated statements of operations,
stockholders' equity (deficit), and cash flows for the years then ended. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on
our audits.
 
     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of Payphones of
America, Inc. and subsidiary as of December 31, 1995 and 1994, and the
consolidated results of their operations and their consolidated cash flows for
the years then ended, in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
 
     The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared
assuming that the Company will continue as a going concern. As described in Note
B, the Company has suffered recurring losses from operations and has limited
liquidity which raises substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a
going concern. Management's plans in regard to these matters are also described
in Note B. The financial statements do not include any adjustments that might
result from the outcome of this uncertainty.
 
                                          /s/ KERBER, ECK & BRECKELL LLP
 
St. Louis, Missouri
January 30, 1996 (except for Note L, as
  to which the date is February 7, 1996)
 
                                      F-79
<PAGE>   155
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            DECEMBER 31,
                                                                      -------------------------
                                                                         1995           1994
                                                                      ----------     ----------
 
<S>                                                                   <C>            <C>
ASSETS

CURRENT ASSETS
Cash................................................................  $    3,852     $  147,910
Accounts receivable.................................................     377,325        367,973
Prepaid expenses....................................................      25,754         14,315
                                                                      ----------     ----------
       Total current assets.........................................     406,931        530,198
PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
Telephone equipment.................................................   3,891,230      3,831,941
Furniture and fixtures..............................................      59,497         47,396
Trucks and autos....................................................     201,555        154,956
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                       4,152,282      4,034,293
     Less accumulated depreciation and amortization.................   1,422,621        820,509
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                       2,729,661      3,213,784
Uninstalled pay telephone equipment.................................      89,145        104,074
Building not used in operations, net of accumulated depreciation of
  $5,375 for 1995 and $3,763 for 1994...............................      59,125         60,738
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                       2,877,931      3,378,596
OTHER ASSETS
Site location contracts, less accumulated amortization of $1,000,928
  for 1995 and $406,776 for 1994....................................   1,980,822      2,530,488
Excess of cost over net assets of businesses acquired, less
  accumulated amortization of $70,377 for 1995 and $50,889 for
  1994..............................................................     709,125        728,613
Covenants not to compete, less accumulated amortization of $545,417
  for 1995 and $380,417 for 1994....................................     279,584        444,584
Other intangibles, less accumulated amortization of $59,099 for 1995
  and $43,589 for 1994..............................................     102,558        117,767
Other...............................................................      24,332         21,510
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                       3,096,421      3,842,962
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                      $6,381,283     $7,751,756
                                                                       =========      =========
LIABILITIES
 
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Notes payable to bank...............................................  $  243,750     $  262,750
Current maturities of long-term obligations.........................   1,330,954      1,241,818
Accounts payable....................................................     882,723        699,385
Accrued expenses....................................................     146,063         18,656
                                                                      ----------     ----------
       Total current liabilities....................................   2,603,490      2,222,609
LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS, less current maturities......................   4,753,853      5,355,740
DEFERRED INCOME TAXES...............................................          --        284,000
COMMITMENTS
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
Convertible preferred stock -- authorized but unissued, 10,000,000
  shares............................................................          --             --
Common stock -- authorized, 10,000,000 shares without par value;
  issued and outstanding, 2,567,324 shares in 1995 and 1,033,990 
  shares in 1994....................................................     348,756        339,423
Additional contributed capital......................................          --        132,230
Accumulated deficit.................................................  (1,324,816)      (582,246)
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                        (976,060)      (110,593)
                                                                      ----------     ----------
                                                                      $6,381,283     $7,751,756
                                                                       =========      =========
</TABLE>
 
        The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
 
                                      F-80
<PAGE>   156
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                            YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1995           1994
                                                                      -----------    ----------
<S>                                                                   <C>            <C>
Net sales
  Coin calls........................................................  $ 3,747,247    $2,153,974
  Non-coin calls....................................................    4,418,667     3,692,117
  Other.............................................................       49,221        22,053
                                                                      -----------    ----------
     Total net Sales................................................    8,215,135     5,868,144
Cost of sales
  Telephone charges.................................................    3,599,271     2,676,604
  Commissions.......................................................    1,178,156       722,746
  Service, maintenance and network expense..........................      289,036       214,636
  Depreciation and amortization.....................................    1,218,095       723,516
                                                                      -----------    ----------
                                                                        6,284,558     4,337,502
                                                                      -----------    ----------
     Gross profit...................................................    1,930,577     1,530,642
Selling, general and administrative expenses
  Salaries, wages and benefits......................................      823,430       488,913
  Depreciation and amortization.....................................      200,095       198,398
  Dues and subscriptions............................................       53,905        50,960
  Outside services..................................................       40,521        63,736
  Phone maintenance.................................................      118,824            --
  Professional services.............................................      171,303        85,920
  Taxes
     Personal property..............................................       75,785         4,295
     Sales..........................................................       63,948        37,907
  Telephone.........................................................       69,137        24,696
  Rent..............................................................       71,511        31,389
  Other.............................................................      223,165       120,105
                                                                      -----------    ----------
                                                                        1,911,624     1,106,319
                                                                      -----------    ----------
     Earnings from operations.......................................       18,953       424,323
Other income (expense)
  Interest income...................................................          415        14,741
  Interest expense..................................................     (971,141)     (600,624)
  Gain (loss) on sale of assets.....................................      (80,652)       98,904
  Other income......................................................       12,135         9,366
                                                                      -----------    ----------
                                                                       (1,039,243)     (477,613)
                                                                      -----------    ----------
     Loss before income taxes.......................................   (1,020,290)      (53,290)
Income taxes
  Current...........................................................       (6,280)       (8,856)
  Deferred..........................................................      284,000      (128,000)
                                                                      -----------    ----------
                                                                          277,720      (136,856)
                                                                      -----------    ----------
     NET LOSS.......................................................  $  (742,570)   $ (190,146)
                                                                       ==========     =========
</TABLE>
 
        The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
 
                                      F-81
<PAGE>   157
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
   
            CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
    
                             PERIOD INDICATED BELOW
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            ADDITIONAL     RETAINED
                                                 COMMON     CONTRIBUTED    EARNINGS
                                                 STOCK       CAPITAL       (DEFICIT)       TOTAL
                                                --------    ----------    -----------    ---------
<S>                                             <C>         <C>           <C>            <C>
Balance at January 1, 1994
  As originally reported......................  $339,423     $ 210,219     $  (153,727)   $ 395,915
  Prior period adjustment.....................        --        55,192        (238,373)    (183,181)
                                                --------     ---------     -----------    ---------
  As restated.................................   339,423       265,411        (392,100)     212,734
Net loss for the year ended
  December 31, 1994...........................        --            --        (190,146)    (190,146)
Cash dividends................................        --      (133,181)             --     (133,181)
                                                --------     ---------     -----------    ---------
Balance at December 3l, 1994..................   339,423       132,230        (582,246)    (110,593)
Net loss for the year ended
  December 31, 1995...........................        --            --        (742,570)    (742,570)
Stock warrants exercised......................     9,333            --              --        9,333
Cash dividends................................        --      (132,230)             --     (132,230)
                                                --------     ---------     -----------    ---------
Balance at December 31, 1995..................  $348,756     $      --     $(1,324,816)   $(976,060)
                                                ========     =========     ===========    =========
</TABLE>
 
         The accompanying notes are an integral part of this statement.
 
                                      F-82
<PAGE>   158
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                            YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        1995           1994
                                                                     -----------    -----------
<S>                                                                  <C>            <C>
Increase (decrease) in cash
Cash flows from operating activities
  Net loss.........................................................  $  (742,570)   $  (190,146)
  Adjustments to reconcile net loss
     to net cash provided by operating activities
       Depreciation and amortization...............................    1,418,191        921,914
       (Gain) loss on sale of assets...............................       80,652        (98,904)
       Changes in assets and liabilities
          (Increase) decrease in accounts receivable...............       (9,352)         9,040
          (Increase) decrease in prepaid expenses..................      (11,439)            72
          Increase in other asset..................................       (2,822)            --
          Increase in accounts payable.............................      183,338        244,517
          Increase in accrued expenses.............................      127,407         18,554
          Increase (decrease) in deferred income taxes.............     (284,000)       128,000
                                                                     -----------    -----------
               Total adjustments...................................    1,501,975      1,223,193
                                                                     -----------    -----------
               Net cash provided by operating activities...........      759,405      1,033,047
Cash flows from investing activities
  Capital expenditures.............................................     (203,112)      (229,613)
  Proceeds from sale of assets.....................................       54,297        195,714
                                                                     -----------    -----------
               Net cash used in investing activities...............     (148,815)       (33,899)
Cash flows from financing activities
  Proceeds from long-term obligations..............................      507,239        123,355
  Payments on notes payable to bank................................      (19,000)       (11,900)
  Payments on long-term obligations................................   (1,119,990)      (696,191)
  Stock warrants exercised.........................................        9,333             --
  Dividends paid...................................................     (132,230)      (133,181)
                                                                     -----------    -----------
               Net cash used in financing activities...............     (754,648)      (717,917)
                                                                     -----------    -----------
Net increase (decrease) in cash....................................     (144,058)       281,231
Cash (overdraft) at beginning of period............................      147,910       (133,321)
                                                                     -----------    -----------
Cash at end of period..............................................  $     3,852    $   147,910
                                                                      ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
 
        The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
 
                                      F-83
<PAGE>   159
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                           DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
 
NOTE A -- SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
     A summary of significant accounting policies consistently applied in the
preparation of the accompanying financial statements follows.
 
1.  THE COMPANY
 
     Payphones of America, Inc. operates, services and maintains a system of
approximately 2,800 pay telephones in the Southeastern and Midwestern United
States.
 
2.  PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION
 
     The accompanying financial statements include the accounts of the Company
and its wholly-owned subsidiary. Intercompany transactions and balances have
been eliminated in consolidation.
 
3.  ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
 
     The Company considers accounts receivable to be fully collectible;
accordingly, no allowance for doubtful accounts is required. If amounts become
uncollectible, they will be charged to operations when that determination is
made.
 
4.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment are recorded at cost. Depreciation and amortization
are provided for in amounts sufficient to relate the cost of depreciable assets
to operations over their estimated service lives. Leased property under capital
leases is amortized over the service lives of the assets for those leases which
substantially transfer ownership. The straight-line method of depreciation is
followed for substantially all assets for financial reporting purposes, but
accelerated methods are used for tax purposes. Future income taxes resulting
from depreciation temporary differences have been provided for.
 
5.  INTANGIBLE ASSETS
 
     Site location contracts are exclusive rights to operate pay telephones at
various locations acquired through business combinations and are stated at cost.
Amortization of site contract costs is recorded using the straight-line method
over five years, the expected average lives of the contracts.
 
     The Company has classified as goodwill the cost in excess of fair value of
the net assets of companies acquired in purchase transactions. Goodwill is
amortized on a straight-line method over 40 years. The covenants not to compete
are being amortized over their contractual lives of five years. Other intangible
assets, including license agreements and deferred financing costs, are amortized
over the life of the agreements.
 
6.  RECOGNITION OF REVENUE
 
     Revenues from coin calls and non-coin calls are recognized as calls are
made. When revenue on a telephone call is recorded, an expense is also recorded
for fees associated with the call.
 
7.  CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT RISK
 
     Revenues have a significant concentration of credit risk in the
telecommunications industry. In addition, a significant amount of 1995 revenues
were generated by the Company's pay telephones located in the states of Missouri
(36%) and Virginia (33%). No other area has a disproportionate credit risk.
 
                                      F-84
<PAGE>   160
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE A -- SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

8.  USE OF ESTIMATES
 
     In preparing financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles, management is required to make estimates and assumptions
that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, the disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.
Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
NOTE B -- GOING CONCERN
 
     The Company has experienced recurring losses and has accumulated losses
since inception of $1,324,816. As of December 31, 1995, the Company's current
liabilities exceed its current assets by $2,196,559. These factors raise doubt
about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern. The Company's
continued existence as a going concern is dependent upon its ability to generate
sufficient cash flow to meet its obligations on a timely basis, to comply with
the terms of its debt and lease obligations and to obtain additional financing
or refinancing as may be required. Historically, the Company has generated
sufficient cash flow to meet its obligations and to pay its debt and lease
obligations, and, although it cannot be assured that the Company will be able to
continue as a going concern in view of its present financial condition,
management believes that continued strategic business acquisitions and
improvements in planning and budgeting should enable the Company to meet its
obligations and sustain its operations.
 
NOTE C -- NOTE PAYABLE TO BANK
 
     Note payable to bank is comprised of a $245,000 revolving line of credit
agreement with Mark Twain Bank. Interest is payable monthly at 1.50% over the
bank's corporate base rate (8.50% at December 31, 1995). The line of credit is
secured by certain equipment of the Company and other accounts receivable and
matures on February 10, 1996.
 
                                      F-85
<PAGE>   161
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE D -- LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 
     Long-term obligations consist of the following at December 31:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                1995
                                               --------------------------------------
                                                CURRENT      LONG-TERM                      1994
                                                PORTION       PORTION        TOTAL         TOTAL
                                               ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
<S>                                            <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
Notes payable to stockholders................  $  248,333    $  184,276    $  432,609    $  149,000
Note payable to Mark Twain Bank..............       1,594        26,988        28,582        29,683
Notes payable to Ford Motor Credit Company...      36,098        36,389        72,487        63,582
Notes payable to Ronald L. Coleman...........      14,069       299,868       313,937       426,517
Note payable to Pay-Tele Communications, Inc.
  d/b/a Midwest Telecom......................     105,454       185,273       290,727       397,818
Note payable to Communications
  Finance Corporation........................      87,466       320,034       407,500       482,853
Note payable to R. Greg Kintz and
  Paul Wm. Schindler.........................     103,350        45,750       149,100       236,550
Capital lease obligations
  Berthel, Fisher & Company Leasing, Inc.....     717,554     3,655,275     4,372,829     4,749,921
Intellicall, Inc.............................      17,036            --        17,036        59,466
Copying Concepts Office Systems..............          --            --            --         2,168
                                               ----------    ----------    ----------    ----------
                                               $1,330,954    $4,753,853    $6,084,807    $6,597,558
                                                =========     =========     =========     =========
</TABLE>
 
     The notes payable to stockholders consist of eight unsecured loans maturing
at various dates through April 30, 2000. Interest is payable at the rate of 10%.
 
     The note payable to Mark Twain Bank requires payments of $326 per month
including interest at the rate of 8.75%. The final payment of the entire unpaid
balance of principal and interest will be due October 15, 1998. This note is
secured by a deed of trust for a condominium.
 
     The notes payable to Ford Motor Credit Company consist of ten loans secured
by automobiles and trucks maturing at various dates through April 22, 1999. The
notes require monthly payments of $4,329 including interest at rates from 8.12%
to 10.54%.
 
     The notes payable to Ronald L. Coleman consist of two loans. The notes are
unsecured and mature in April, 2007. These notes require monthly payments of
$4,271 including interest at rates from 8% to 15%.
 
     The note payable to Pay-Tele Communications, Inc. d/b/a Midwest Telecom is
secured by telephone equipment and site location contracts. The note requires
annual principal payments of $100,000 with interest at the rate of 10% through
maturity on June 1, 1998. The note is personally guaranteed by the stockholders
of the Company.
 
     The note payable to Communications Finance Corporation is secured by
telephone equipment and site location contracts. The note requires monthly
payments of $11,895 including interest at the rate of 15% through maturity on
September 15, 1999. The note is personally guaranteed by the stockholders of the
Company.
 
     The note payable to R. Greg Kintz and Paul Wm. Schindler requires monthly
principal payments of $7,950 plus interest at rates from 12% to 16% through
maturity on May 1, 1997. The stockholders of the Company have personally pledged
some of their common stock to the lenders as security.
 
                                      F-86
<PAGE>   162
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE D -- LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS (CONTINUED)

     The Company conducts a portion of its business using leased pay telephone
equipment and other intangible assets. For financial and tax reporting purposes,
the present values of minimum lease payments have been capitalized. Implicit
interest rates for these leases range from 14% to 18%.
 
     The leases, which are noncancelable, expire at various dates through 2001.
The following is a schedule of leased property and other assets under capital
leases included on the accompanying balance sheets:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                       <C>
            Telephone equipment.....................................  $ 3,871,519
            Site location contracts.................................    2,980,749
                                                                      -----------
                                                                        6,852,268
              Less accumulated depreciation and amortization........   (2,256,701)
                                                                      -----------
                                                                      $ 4,595,567
                                                                       ==========
</TABLE>
 
     Annual maturities of all long-term obligations are as follows for years
following December 31, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                       <C>
            1996....................................................  $ 1,330,954
            1997....................................................    1,087,032
            1998....................................................    1,024,518
            1999....................................................      998,138
            2000....................................................      771,115
            2001 and thereafter.....................................      873,050
                                                                      -----------
                                                                      $ 6,084,807
                                                                       ==========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE E -- INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company accounts for income taxes under the provisions of Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 109 "Accounting For Income Taxes" (SFAS).
Under the liability method specified by SFAS 109, deferred tax assets and
liabilities are determined based on the difference between the financial
statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities as measured by the enacted tax
rates which will be in effect when these differences reverse. Deferred tax
income and expense is the result of changes in deferred tax assets and
liabilities. The principal types of differences between assets and liabilities
for financial statement and tax return purposes are accumulated depreciation and
accumulated amortization.
 
     The provision for income taxes consists of the following for the year ended
December 31:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             1995          1994
                                                           ---------     ---------
            <S>                                            <C>           <C>
            Current......................................  $  (6,280)    $  (8,856)
            Deferred.....................................    284,000      (128,000)
                                                           ---------     ---------
                                                           $ 277,720     $(136,856)
                                                           =========     =========
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-87
<PAGE>   163
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE E -- INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)

     Deferred tax assets and liabilities are attributable to the following at
December 31:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1995          1994
                                                                   ---------     ---------
    <S>                                                            <C>           <C>
    Deferred tax assets (liabilities)
      Noncurrent
         Accumulated depreciation................................  $(472,000)    $(365,000)
         Accumulated amortization................................    262,000        81,000
         Tax benefit of net operating loss carryforward..........    460,000            --
                                                                   ---------     ---------
                                                                     250,000      (284,000)
    Less valuation allowance.....................................   (250,000)           --
                                                                   ---------     ---------
           Net deferred tax asset (liability)....................  $      --     $(284,000)
                                                                   =========     =========
</TABLE>
 
     A valuation allowance is provided to reduce the deferred tax assets to a
level which, more likely than not, will be realized. The net deferred assets
reflect management's estimate of the amount which will be realized from future
profitability which can be predicted with reasonable certainty.
 
     The Company has net operating loss carryforwards for Federal income tax
purposes which are available to offset future Federal taxable income. These
carryforwards expire as follows:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                        <C>
            2008.....................................................  $    9,194
            2009.....................................................     332,849
            2010.....................................................     836,510
                                                                       ----------
                                                                       $1,178,553
                                                                        =========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE F -- COMMITMENTS
 
     The Company conducts a substantial portion of its operations utilizing
leased facilities and equipment. The minimum rental commitments under operating
leases are as follows for the year ended December 31:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                         <C>
            1996......................................................  $ 95,091
            1997......................................................    93,246
            1998......................................................    60,550
            1999......................................................    59,000
            2000......................................................    64,400
            2001 and thereafter.......................................   310,500
                                                                        --------
            Total minimum lease payments..............................  $682,787
                                                                        ========
</TABLE>
 
     Rent expense for all operating leases for the years ended December 31, 1995
and 1994, was $71,512 and $31,389, respectively.
 
NOTE G -- STOCK WARRANTS
 
     The Company has issued various warrants which are exercisable for common
stock as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
WARRANT      NUMBER       EXERCISE        EXPIRATION
NUMBER      OF SHARES      PRICE             DATE
- -------     ---------     --------     -----------------
<C>         <C>           <C>          <S>
   6         319,114       $ 1.00      October 24, 2004
   9         250,000       $ 2.00      July 28, 2000
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-88
<PAGE>   164
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE G -- STOCK WARRANTS (CONTINUED)

     Warrant six has been issued to the Company's vice president and warrant
nine has been issued to a lender.
 
NOTE H -- STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
     Cash paid for interest and income taxes was as follows during the year
ended December 31:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1995         1994
                                                             --------     --------
            <S>                                              <C>          <C>
            Interest.......................................  $852,612     $597,956
            Income taxes...................................     6,280       16,388
</TABLE>
 
     During 1995 and 1994, the Company entered into capital lease obligations
totalling $100,000 and $4,000,000, respectively, which represent noncash
financing activities.
 
NOTE I -- PRIOR PERIOD ADJUSTMENT
 
     Retained earnings at December 31, 1994, were restated following completion
of the Company's first audit to reflect the correction of the following account
balances:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                        <C>
            Accounts receivable......................................  $ (14,061)
            Property and equipment...................................     15,307
            Other assets.............................................     20,521
            Accumulated depreciation and amortization................     21,219
            Accounts payable.........................................    (94,965)
            Income taxes payable.....................................    (20,639)
            Notes payable............................................     49,112
            Deferred income taxes....................................   (156,000)
            Additional contributed capital...........................    (55,192)
            Other....................................................     (3,675)
                                                                       ---------
                                                                       $ 238,373
                                                                       =========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE J -- ACQUISITION
 
     On September 23, 1994, the Company purchased certain assets of Eastern
Telecom Corporation, operators of pay telephones in the Southeastern region of
the United States. The acquisition was accounted for using the purchase method.
The purchase price of $4,000,000 was allocated as follows:
 
<TABLE>
            <S>                                                        <C>
            Fair market value of assets acquired
              Inventories............................................  $    2,000
              Equipment..............................................   1,721,839
              Site contracts.........................................   2,276,161
                                                                       ----------
            Purchase price...........................................  $4,000,000
                                                                        =========
</TABLE>
 
     In connection with the asset purchase, the Company entered into a purchase
commitment with the seller for services of $500,000. In 1995, the commitment
decreased to approximately $192,000 based on actual revenues generated by the
assets acquired. The Company's annual obligation under this agreement is $32,000
through 2001.
 
                                      F-89
<PAGE>   165
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
            NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
 
NOTE K -- RECLASSIFICATIONS
 
     Certain reclassifications have been made to the 1994 financial statements
to conform to the 1995 presentation.
 
NOTE L -- SUBSEQUENT EVENT
 
     On February 7, 1996, the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was signed into
law. The Act recognizes that independent public payphone providers are entitled
to fair rules to compete with the Regional Bell Operating Companies and other
local exchange companies. For instance, the Act prohibits Bell operating
companies from subsidizing payphone service directly or indirectly with revenues
generated from their exchange or access services. Bell companies are also
prohibited from discriminating in favor of their payphone services. The
legislation directs the Federal Communications Commission to develop fair rules
in implementing the payphone provision within nine months. The potential impact
of this Act on the financial position of the Company is unknown at this time.
 
NOTE M -- FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
     The Company's financial instruments consist primarily of cash, trade
receivables, trade payables and debt instruments. The book values of cash and
trade payables are representative of their fair values due to the short-term
maturity of these instruments. The book value of the Company's debt instruments
is considered to approximate their fair value at December 31, 1995, based on
market rates and conditions.
 
                                      F-90
<PAGE>   166
 
                        INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS' REPORT
 
Payphones of America, Inc. and Subsidiary
Stockholders and Board of Directors
 
     We have reviewed the accompanying consolidated balance sheets, income
statements and cash flow statements of Payphones of America, Inc. and Subsidiary
as of June 30, 1996 and 1995, and for the six month periods then ended. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the company's management.
 
     We conducted our review in accordance with standards established by the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. A review of interim
financial information consists principally of applying analytical procedures to
financial data and making inquiries of persons responsible for financial and
accounting matters. It is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in
accordance with generally accepted auditing standards, the objective of which is
the expression of an opinion regarding the financial statements taken as a
whole. Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.
 
     Based on our review, we are not aware of any material modifications that
should be made to the accompanying financial statements for them to be in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
                                          KERBER, ECK & BRAECKEL LLP
 
St. Louis, Missouri
October 16, 1996
 
                                      F-91
<PAGE>   167
 
   
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
    
 
   
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
    
 
   
                                    JUNE 30,
    
   
                                   UNAUDITED
    
 
   
                                     ASSETS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    1996               1995
                                                               --------------     --------------
<S>                                                            <C>                <C>
Current assets
  Accounts receivable.......................................   $   372,557.99     $   339,498.44
  Prepaid expenses..........................................        39,245.11          26,097.67
  Other.....................................................        40,210.91          91,139.99
                                                               --------------     --------------
          Total current assets..............................       452,014.01         456,736.10
                                                               --------------     --------------
Operating equipment
  Telecommunications equipment..............................     3,924,343.66       3,848,670.36
  Telephone equipment held for installation.................        20,684.45          20,684.45
                                                               --------------     --------------
                                                                 3,945,028.11       3,869,354.81
  Less accumulated depreciation and amortization............    (1,533,605.18)       (991,873.18)
                                                               --------------     --------------
Net operating equipment.....................................     2,411,422.93       2,877,481.63
                                                               --------------     --------------
Leasehold improvements, equipment, furniture and fixtures
  net of accumulated depreciation and amortization of
  $180,991.76 and $118,347.19 respectively..................        30,706.63         167,422.68
Intangible assets
  Site contracts, net.......................................     1,688,500.68       2,234,952.07
  Non compete agreements, net...............................       197,083.33         362,083.35
  Other.....................................................       793,406.35         831,335.75
                                                               --------------     --------------
                                                                 2,678,990.36       3,428,371.17
                                                               --------------     --------------
                                                               $ 5,573,133.93     $ 6,930,011.58
                                                               ==============     ==============
                                          LIABILITIES
Current liabilities
  Book overdraft of cash....................................   $   170,709.08     $   169,071.69
  Notes payable to bank.....................................       243,750.00         249,750.00
  Accounts payable..........................................        73,168.23          53,245.60
  Accrued expenses..........................................       583,216.66         773,202.58
  Current maturities of long term debt......................       736,073.00          63,003.28
                                                               --------------     --------------
          Total current liabilities.........................     1,806,916.97       1,308,273.15
                                                               --------------     --------------
Long-term debt, less current maturities
  Notes payable and obligations under capital leases........     4,568,293.81       5,891,563.57
  Notes payable to stockholders.............................       568,090.19         262,894.81
Deferred income taxes.......................................               --         284,000.00
                                                               --------------     --------------
          Total liabilities.................................     6,943,300.97       7,746,731.53
                                                               --------------     --------------
Stockholders' equity
  Common stock..............................................       348,756.03         348,756.03
  Additional paid-in-capital................................               --         (46,133.09)
  Accumulated deficit.......................................    (1,718,923.07)     (1,119,342.89)
                                                               --------------     --------------
          Total stockholders' equity........................    (1,370,167.04)       (816,719.95)
                                                               --------------     --------------
                                                               $ 5,573,133.93     $ 6,930,011.58
                                                               ==============     ==============
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-92
<PAGE>   168
 
   
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
    
 
                         CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENTS
 
                           SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,
                                   UNAUDITED
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1996              1995
                                                                 -------------     -------------
<S>                                                              <C>               <C>
Revenues
  Coin calls...................................................  $1,516,505.67     $1,649,738.77
  Non coin calls...............................................   1,539,280.30      1,937,053.41
  Other........................................................     712,438.98         13,786.67
                                                                 -------------     -------------
          Total revenues.......................................   3,768,224.95      3,600,578.85
                                                                 -------------     -------------
Cost of revenues
  Line access charges..........................................     698,365.13        866,025.91
  Commissions..................................................     436,680.69        556,942.49
  Service and collections......................................   1,060,772.30        777,406.11
  Depreciation and amortization................................     596,134.05        572,783.12
                                                                 -------------     -------------
          Total cost of revenues...............................   2,791,952.17      2,773,157.63
                                                                 -------------     -------------
Gross profit...................................................     976,272.78        827,421.22
Selling, general and admin. expenses...........................     985,289.98        943,668.15
                                                                 -------------     -------------
Operating loss.................................................      (9,017.20)      (116,246.93)
Other income(expense)
  Interest expense.............................................    (333,229.92)      (479,226.62)
  Gain(loss) on sale of assets.................................     (55,474.76)         6,273.67
  Other income.................................................       4,110.74          4,192.64
                                                                 -------------     -------------
          Total other income(expense)..........................    (384,593.94)      (468,760.31)
                                                                 -------------     -------------
Loss before taxes on income....................................    (393,611.14)      (585,007.24)
Taxes on income................................................             --                --
                                                                 -------------     -------------
          Net loss.............................................  $ (393,611.14)    $ (585,007.24)
                                                                 =============     =============
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-93
<PAGE>   169
 
                    PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC AND SUBSIDIARY
 
   
                       CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENTS
    
 
                           SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,
                                   UNAUDITED
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      1996             1995
                                                                  ------------     ------------
<S>                                                               <C>              <C>
Increase(decrease) in cash
  Operating activities
     Net loss...................................................  $(393,611.14)    $(585,007.24)
     Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by
       operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization..............................    698,211.55       679,329.58
     (Gain) loss on sale of property and equipment..............     55,474.76        (6,273.67)
     Changes in assets and liabilities:
       Decrease in accounts receivable..........................      4,767.01        28,474.56
       Increase in prepaid expenses.............................    (13,491.11)      (11,782.67)
       (Decrease)increase in accounts payable and accrued
          expenses..............................................   (372,401.11)      108,407.18
                                                                  ------------     ------------
          Total adjustments.....................................    372,561.10       798,154.98
                                                                  ------------     ------------
          Net cash provided by operating activities.............    (21,050.04)      213,147.74
Investing activities
  Purchase of fixed assets......................................    (54,350.00)      (40,442.55)
  Proceeds from sale of assets..................................     20,000.00         6,273.67
                                                                  ------------     ------------
          Net cash used in investing activities.................    (34,350.00)      (34,168.88)
                                                                  ------------     ------------
Financing activities
  Proceeds from notes and capital leases........................    489,928.35       210,816.45
  Principal payments on debt....................................   (609,089.39)     (601,496.75)
  Stock warrants exercised......................................            --         9,333.34
  Dividends paid................................................            --      (114,613.68)
                                                                  ------------     ------------
Net cash used in financing activities...........................   (119,161.04)     (495,960.64)
                                                                  ------------     ------------
Net increase(decrease) in cash..................................   (174,561.08)     (316,981.78)
Cash beginning of period........................................      3,852.00       147,910.09
                                                                  ------------     ------------
Cash overdraft at end of period.................................  $(170,709.08)    $(169,071.69)
                                                                  ============     ============
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-94
<PAGE>   170
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
                             JUNE 30, 1996 AND 1995
                                   UNAUDITED
 
NOTE A -- SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
     A summary of significant accounting policies consistently applied in the
preparation of the accompanying financial statements follows.
 
     1. The Company
 
     Payphones of America, Inc. operates, services and a system of approximately
2,800 pay telephones in the Southeastern and Midwestern United States.
 
     2. Principles of Consolidation
 
     The accompanying financial statements include the accounts of the Company
and its wholly-owned subsidiary. Intercompany transactions and balances have
been eliminated in consolidation.
 
     3. Accounts Receivable
 
     The Company considers accounts receivable to be fully collectible;
accordingly, no allowance for doubtful accounts is required. If amounts become
uncollectible, they will be charged to operations when that determination is
made.
 
     4. Property and Equipment
 
     Property and equipment are recorded at cost. Depreciation and amortization
are provided for in amounts sufficient to relate the cost of depreciable assets
to operations over their estimated service lives. Leased property under capital
leases is amortized over the service lives of the assets for those leases which
substantially transfer ownership. The straight-line method of depreciation is
followed for substantially all assets for financial reporting purposes, but
accelerated methods are used for tax purposes. Future income taxes resulting
from depreciation temporary differences have been provided for.
 
     5. Intangible Assets
 
     Site location contracts are exclusive rights to operate pay telephones at
various locations acquired through business combinations and are stated at cost.
Amortization of site contract costs is recorded using the straight-line method
over five years, the expected average lives of the contracts.
 
     The Company has classified as goodwill the cost in excess of fair value of
the net assets of companies acquired in purchase transactions. Goodwill is
amortized on a straight-line method over 40 years. The covenants not to compete
are being amortized over their contractual lives of five years. Other intangible
assets, including license agreements and deferred financing costs, are amortized
over the life of the agreements.
 
     6. Recognition of Revenue
 
     Revenues from coin calls and non-coin calls are recognized as calls are
made. When revenue on a telephone call is recorded, an expense is also recorded
for fees associated with the call.
 
     7. Concentrations of Credit Risk
 
     Revenues have a significant concentration of credit risk in the
telecommunications industry. In addition, a significant amount of revenues were
generated by the Company's pay telephones located in the states of Missouri and
Virginia. No other area has a disproportionate credit risk.
 
                                      F-95
<PAGE>   171
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
                             JUNE 30, 1996 AND 1995
                                   UNAUDITED
 
     8. Use of Estimates
 
     In preparing financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles, management is required to make estimates and assumptions
that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, the disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and
the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.
Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
NOTE B -- NOTE PAYABLE TO BANK
 
     Note payable to bank is comprised of a $245,000 revolving line of credit
agreement with Mark Twain Bank. Interest is payable monthly at 1.50% over the
bank's corporate base rate (8.25% at June 30, 1996). The line of credit is
secured by certain equipment of the Company and other accounts receivable and
matures on October 10, 1996.
 
NOTE C -- LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS
 
     Long-term obligations consist of the following at June 30, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      CURRENT      LONG-TERM
                                                      PORTION       PORTION         TOTAL
                                                      --------     ----------     ----------
    <S>                                               <C>          <C>            <C>
    Notes payable to stockholders.................    $ 76,100     $  568,090     $  644,190
    Notes payable to Ford Motor Credit Company....      14,070         36,389         50,459
    Notes payable to Ronald L. Coleman............       7,232        299,868        307,100
    Note payable to Pay-Tele Communications, Inc.
      d/b/a Midwest Telecom.......................      23,909        185,273        209,182
    Note payable to Communications Finance
      Corporation.................................      66,806        320,034        386,840
    Note payable to R. Greg Kintz and Paul Wm.
      Schindler...................................      47,700         45,750         93,450
    Capital lease obligations Berthel, Fisher &
      Company Leasing, Inc........................     492,910      3,680,980      4,173,890
      Intellicall, Inc............................       7,346             --          7,346
                                                      --------     ----------     ----------
                                                      $736,073     $5,136,384     $5,872,457
                                                      ========     ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
 
     The notes payable to stockholders consist of eight unsecured loans maturing
at various dates through April 30, 2000. Interest is payable at the rate of 10%.
 
     The note payable to Mark Twain Bank requires payments of $326 per month
including interest at the rate of 8.75%. The final payment of the entire unpaid
balance of principal and interest will be due October 15, 1998. This note is
secured by a deed of trust for a condominium.
 
     The notes payable to Ford Motor Credit Company consist of ten loans secured
by automobiles and trucks maturing at various dates through April 22, 1999. The
notes require monthly payments of $4,329 including interest at rates from 8.12%
to 10.54%.
 
     The notes payable to Ronald L. Coleman consist of two loans. The notes are
unsecured and mature in April, 2007. These notes require monthly payments of
$4,271 including interest at rates from 8% to 15%.
 
                                      F-96
<PAGE>   172
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
                             JUNE 30, 1996 AND 1995
                                   UNAUDITED
 
     The note payable to Pay-Tele Communications, Inc. d/b/a Midwest Telecom is
secured by telephone equipment and site location contracts. The note requires
annual principal payments of $100,000 with interest at the rate of 10% through
maturity on June 1, 1998. The note is personally guaranteed by the stockholders
of the Company.
 
     The note payable to Communications Finance Corporation is secured by
telephone equipment and site location contracts. The note requires monthly
payments of $11,895 including interest at the rate of 15% through maturity on
September 15, 1999. The note is personally guaranteed by the stockholders of the
Company.
 
     The note payable to R. Greg Kintz and Paul Wm. Schindler requires monthly
principal payments of $7,950 plus interest at rates from 12% to 16% through
maturity on May 1, 1997. The stockholders of the Company have personally pledged
some of their common stock to the lenders as security.
 
     The Company conducts a portion of its business using leased pay telephone
equipment and other intangible assets. For financial and tax reporting purposes,
the present values of minimum lease payments have been capitalized. Implicit
interest rates for these leases range from 14% to 18%.
 
     The leases, which are noncancelable, expire at various dates through 2001.
The following is a schedule of leased property and other assets under capital
leases included on the accompanying balance sheets:
 
<TABLE>
                    <S>                                        <C>
                    Telephone equipment......................  $3,871,519
                    Site location contracts..................   2,980,749
                                                               ----------
                                                                6,852,268
                      Less accumulated depreciation and
                         amortization........................   2,934,631
                                                               ----------
                                                               $3,917,637
                                                               ==========
</TABLE>
 
     Annual maturities of all long-term obligations are as follows for years
following June 30, 1996:
 
<TABLE>
                    <S>                                        <C>
                    1997.....................................  $1,208,993
                    1998.....................................   1,055,775
                    1999.....................................   1,011,328
                    2000.....................................     884,627
                    2001.....................................     822,083
                    2002 and thereafter......................     436,524
                                                               ----------
                                                               $5,419,330
                                                               ==========
</TABLE>
 
NOTE D -- INCOME TAXES
 
   
     The Company accounts for income taxes under the provisions of Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No. 109 "Accounting For Income Taxes" (SFAS).
Under the liability method specified by SFAS 109, deferred tax assets and
liabilities are determined based on the difference between the financial
statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities as measured by the enacted tax
rates which will be in effect when these differences reverse. Deferred tax
income and expense is the result of changes in deferred tax assets and
liabilities. The principal types of differences between assets and liabilities
for financial statement and tax return purposes are accumulated depreciation and
accumulated amortization.
    
 
     There was no provision for income taxes for the periods ended June 30, 1996
and 1995.
 
                                      F-97
<PAGE>   173
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
                             JUNE 30, 1996 AND 1995
                                   UNAUDITED
 
     Deferred tax assets and liabilities are attributable to the following at
June 30,:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 1996          1995
                                                               ---------     ---------
        <S>                                                    <C>           <C>
        Deferred tax assets (liabilities)
          Noncurrent
             Accumulated depreciation........................  $(472,000)    $(365,000)
             Accumulated amortization........................    262,000        81,000
             Tax benefit of net operating loss
               carryforward..................................    460,000       284,000
                                                               ---------     ---------
                                                                 250,000            --
          Less valuation allowance...........................   (250,000)           --
                                                               ---------     ---------
                  Net deferred tax asset (liability).........  $      --     $      --
                                                               =========     =========
</TABLE>
 
     A valuation allowance is provided to reduce the deferred tax assets to a
level which, more likely than not, will be realized. The net deferred assets
reflect management's estimate of the amount which will be realized from future
profitability which can be predicted with reasonable certainty.
 
     The Company has net operating loss carryforwards (based on filed tax
returns through December 31, 1995) for Federal income tax purposes which are
available to offset future Federal taxable income. These carryforwards expire as
follows:
 
   
<TABLE>
                    <S>                                        <C>
                    2008.....................................  $    9,194
                    2009.....................................     332,849
                    2010.....................................     836,510
                                                               ----------
                                                               $1,178,553
                                                               ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
NOTE E -- COMMITMENTS
    
 
     The Company conducts a substantial portion of its operations utilizing
leased facilities and equipment. The minimum rental commitments under operating
leases are as follows for the year ended June 30,:
 
<TABLE>
                    <S>                                      <C>
                    1997...................................   $  94,169
                    1998...................................      76,898
                    1999...................................      59,775
                    2000...................................      61,700
                    2001...................................      64,400
                    2002 and thereafter....................     278,300
                                                             -----------
                    Total minimum lease payments...........   $ 635,242
                                                             ===========
</TABLE>
 
     Rent expense for all operating leases for the periods ended June 30, 1996
and 1995, was $47,545 and $35,756, respectively.
 
                                      F-98
<PAGE>   174
 
                   PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC. AND SUBSIDIARY
 
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
                             JUNE 30, 1996 AND 1995
                                   UNAUDITED
 
   
NOTE F -- STOCK WARRANTS
    
 
     The Company has issued various warrants which are exercisable for common
stock as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
WARRANT       NUMBER       EXERCISE        EXPIRATION
NUMBER      OF SHARES       PRICE             DATE
- -------     ----------     --------     -----------------
<C>         <C>            <C>          <S>
   6          319,114       $ 1.00      October 24, 2004
   9          250,000       $ 2.00      July 28, 2000
</TABLE>
 
     Warrant six has been issued to the Company's vice president and warrant
nine has been issued to a lender.
 
   
NOTE G -- FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
    
 
     The Company's financial instruments consist primarily of cash, trade
receivables, trade payables and debt instruments. The book values of cash and
trade payables are representative of their fair values due to the shortterm
maturity of these instruments. The book value of the Company's debt instruments
is considered to approximate their fair value at June 30, 1996, based on market
rates and conditions.
 
                                      F-99
<PAGE>   175
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT
 
TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC:
 
We have audited the accompanying combined balance sheets of Amtel
Communications, Inc., and Combined Companies (Note B) as of June 30, 1996 and
December 31, 1995, and the related combined statements of operations,
stockholder's deficit, and cash flows for the periods then ended. These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on
our audits.
 
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of Amtel Communications, Inc., and
combined Companies (Note B) as of June 30, 1996 and December 31, 1995, and the
results of their operations and their cash flows for the periods then ended in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
   
The accompanying combined financial statements have been prepared assuming that
the Company will continue as a going concern. As described in Note A, on August
3, 1995, the Company filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of
Title II of the United States Bankruptcy Code and was authorized to continue
managing and operating the business as a debtor in possession subject to the
control and supervision of the Bankruptcy Court. Those conditions raise
substantial doubt about the Company's ability to continue as a going concern.
The financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from
the outcome of this uncertainty.
    
 
/s/ Harlan & Boettger
 
San Diego, California
August 23, 1996
 
                                      F-100
<PAGE>   176
 
               AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMBINED COMPANIES
   
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
    
 
                            COMBINED BALANCE SHEETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               JUNE 30,
                                                                 1996        DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                             ------------    -----------------
<S>                                                          <C>             <C>
CURRENT ASSETS
  Cash.....................................................  $    422,566      $    616,974
  Accounts receivable......................................       527,883           791,238
  Inventory................................................     2,001,072         1,874,290
  Other....................................................       137,553           180,280
                                                             ------------      ------------
  TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS.....................................     3,089,074         3,462,782
                                                             ------------      ------------
FIXED ASSETS (Note C)
  Property and equipment, net..............................       462,813         1,060,119
  Deferred site costs, net.................................     9,812,154        10,359,692
                                                             ------------      ------------
     TOTAL FIXED ASSETS....................................    10,274,967        11,419,811
                                                             ------------      ------------
OTHER ASSETS...............................................       294,619           289,216
                                                             ------------      ------------
     TOTAL ASSETS..........................................  $ 13,658,660      $ 15,171,809
                                                             ============      ============
POST-PETITION LIABILITIES
  Accounts payable - trade.................................  $    677,425      $  1,010,211
  Accounts payable - bankruptcy............................     1,253,555           539,942
  Accrued expenses.........................................       767,661           709,518
                                                             ------------      ------------
  TOTAL POST-PETITION LIABILITIES..........................     2,698,641         2,259,671
PRE-PETITION LIABILITIES
  SUBJECT TO COMPROMISE (Note D)
  Accounts payable - trade.................................     6,123,480         6,123,480
  Accrued sales tax........................................     1,615,671         1,615,671
  Notes payable............................................     7,774,805         7,774,805
  Lessor liabilities.......................................    65,085,000        65,085,000
                                                             ------------      ------------
  TOTAL PRE-PETITION LIABILITIES...........................    80,598,956        80,598,956
                                                             ------------      ------------
STOCKHOLDER'S DEFICIT
  Common stock, 1,000,000 shares authorized, $0.01 par
     value, 400,000 shares authorized, no par value, 50,000 
     shares issued and outstanding.........................        50,000            50,000
  Retained deficit.........................................   (69,688,937)      (67,736,818)
                                                             ------------      ------------
  TOTAL STOCKHOLDER'S DEFICIT..............................   (69,638,937)      (67,686,818)
                                                             ------------      ------------
  TOTAL LIABILITIES & DEFICIT..............................  $ 13,658,660      $ 15,171,809
                                                             ============      ============
</TABLE>
 
              See accompanying notes to the financial statements.
 
                                      F-101
<PAGE>   177
 
               AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMBINED COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
 
                        COMBINED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             FOR THE SIX       FOR THE YEAR
                                                            MONTHS ENDED           ENDED
                                                            JUNE 30, 1996    DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                            -------------    -----------------
<S>                                                         <C>              <C>
REVENUE
  Coin....................................................   $ 4,696,852       $   9,689,179
  LD Commissions..........................................     1,406,593           2,848,753
  Interstate..............................................       578,681             761,181
  Intralata...............................................       460,601           1,849,477
  Other...................................................        62,095           1,910,550
                                                            -------------    -----------------
  TOTAL REVENUE...........................................     7,204,822          17,059,140
                                                            -------------    -----------------
COSTS AND EXPENSES
  Line charges............................................     2,428,704           6,862,015
  Location commissions....................................     1,639,127           3,921,741
  Other operating expenses................................       321,947           2,651,734
  Selling, general and administrative.....................     2,231,970          15,103,091
  Depreciation and amortization...........................       777,823           1,621,029
  Other...................................................            --              67,356
                                                            -------------    -----------------
LOSS FROM OPERATIONS BEFORE OTHER
  EXPENSES AND REORGANIZATION ITEMS.......................      (194,749)        (13,167,826)
                                                            -------------    -----------------
OTHER
  Interest income.........................................        (1,606)                 --
  Interest expense........................................         6,077           7,429,502
  Loss on asset disposal..................................       453,898             429,967
  Other expenses..........................................       505,113                  --
                                                            -------------    -----------------
  LOSS BEFORE REORGANIZATION ITEMS........................    (1,158,231)        (21,027,295)
REORGANIZATION ITEMS (Note E)
  Professional fees.......................................       721,277             539,942
  Other...................................................        68,611                  --
                                                            -------------    -----------------
LOSS BEFORE INCOME TAXES..................................    (1,948,119)        (21,567,237)
INCOME TAXES (Note F).....................................         4,000               4,000
                                                            -------------    -----------------
NET LOSS..................................................   $(1,952,119)      $ (21,571,237)
                                                            ============     =================
</TABLE>
 
              See accompanying notes to the financial statements.
 
                                      F-102
<PAGE>   178
 
               AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMBINED COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
 
            COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDER'S DEFICIT
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  COMMON STOCK                           TOTAL
                                                -----------------      RETAINED      STOCKHOLDER'S
                                                SHARES    AMOUNT       DEFICIT          DEFICIT
                                                ------    -------    ------------    -------------
<S>                                             <C>       <C>        <C>             <C>
DECEMBER 31, 1994.............................  50,000    $50,000    $(46,165,581)   $(46,115,581)
  Net loss....................................     --         --      (21,571,237)    (21,571,237)
                                                ------    -------    ------------    ------------
DECEMBER 31, 1995.............................  50,000     50,000     (67,736,818)    (67,686,818)
  Net loss....................................     --         --       (1,952,119)     (1,952,119)
                                                ------    -------    ------------    ------------
JUNE 30, 1996.................................  50,000    $50,000    $(69,688,937)   $(69,638,937)
                                                ======    =======     ===========    ============
</TABLE>
 
              See accompanying notes to the financial statements.
 
                                      F-103
<PAGE>   179
 
               AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMBINED COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
                       COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             SIX MONTHS
                                                                ENDED           YEAR ENDED
                                                            JUNE 30, 1996    DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                                            -------------    -----------------
<S>                                                         <C>              <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
  Net loss................................................   $(1,952,119)      $ (21,571,237)
  Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in
     operating activities:
     Depreciation and amortization........................       777,823           1,621,029
     Loss on disposal of property.........................       453,898             429,966
     Non-cash reorganization items........................       713,613             539,942
     Change in assets and liabilities:
       (Increase) decrease in:
       Accounts receivable................................       263,355              50,449
       Inventory..........................................      (126,782)            (16,077)
       Deposits...........................................        (5,401)           (140,157)
       Other assets.......................................        42,726            (175,612)
     Increase (decrease) in:
       Accounts payable...................................      (332,786)          2,426,573
       Accrued expenses...................................        58,143           2,325,189
       Notes payable......................................            --           4,556,207
                                                            -------------    -----------------
NET CASH USED IN OPERATING ACTIVITIES.....................      (107,530)         (9,953,728)
                                                            -------------    -----------------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Purchases of property and equipment.....................      (103,518)            (64,151)
  Proceeds from sale of property..........................       147,635                  --
  Expenditures for deferred site costs....................      (130,995)         (2,866,920)
                                                            -------------    -----------------
NET CASH USED IN INVESTING ACTIVITIES.....................       (86,878)         (2,931,071)
                                                            -------------    -----------------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Payments on capital lease obligations...................            --             (76,148)
  Proceeds from lessor liabilities........................            --          13,209,000
                                                            -------------    -----------------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES.................            --          13,132,852
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH...........................      (194,408)            248,053
CASH, BEGINNING OF PERIOD.................................       616,974             368,921
                                                            -------------    -----------------
CASH, END OF PERIOD.......................................   $   422,566       $     616,974
                                                            ============     =================
</TABLE>
 
              See accompanying notes to the financial statements.
 
                                      F-104
<PAGE>   180
 
                    AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
                     NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
A.  REORGANIZATION AND LEGAL MATTERS:
 
     Amtel Communications, Inc. and its combined companies (the "Company") filed
voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of Title II of the United States
Bankruptcy Code (the "Code") on August 3, 1995 (the "petition date")
administratively consolidated under Case No. 95-08253-All. The Company is
currently operating its business as a debtor-in-possession under the
jurisdiction of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of
California. The Company's liabilities as of the petition date are generally
subject to settlement in a plan of reorganization, which must be voted on by
certain of its creditors and confirmed by the Court. Until a reorganization plan
has been confirmed, the Company is prevented from making payments on
pre-petition debt unless permitted by the Code or approved by the Court. Certain
contracts existing at the petition date have been rejected or assumed with the
approval of the Court. The Company continues to review all other unexpired
pre-petition executory contracts to determine whether they should be assumed or
rejected. Parties affected by the rejection of contracts and leases may file
claims against the Company.
 
     The combined financial statements have been prepared assuming the Company
will continue as a going concern, which contemplates continuity of operations
and the realization of assets and the satisfaction of liabilities in the normal
course of business. The Chapter 11 filings, the Company's leveraged financial
structure, and recurring net losses resulting in a deficit in stockholder's
equity, raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going
concern. A plan of reorganization may materially change the amounts reported in
the consolidated financial statements (which do not give effect to adjustments
to the carrying values of assets and liabilities which may be necessary as a
consequence of a plan of reorganization). The continuation of the Company's
business as a going concern is contingent upon, among other things, the ability
to (1) formulate a plan of reorganization that will be confirmed by the Court,
(2) achieve satisfactory levels of future profitable operations, (3) maintain
adequate financing, and (4) provide sufficient cash from operations to meet
future obligations.
 
     The Company has commenced actions against various parties relating to the
management of the Company. These actions seek to avoid or subordinate certain
obligations incurred by the Company and to recover certain payments made by or
on behalf of the Company in connection with its operations. The Company has also
filed actions against several entities seeking avoidance and recovery of certain
transfers of interests of the Company in property alleged to be preferences
under section 547(b) of the Code. The ultimate outcome of these actions and the
potential recoveries, if any, resulting from the resolution of these actions is
unknown at this time and, accordingly, no provision for any amounts has been
recorded in these combined financial statements.
 
B.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES:
 
     BASIS OF COMBINATION
 
     The combined financial statements include the accounts of Amtel
Communications, Inc., Amtel Communications Payphones, Inc., Amtel Communications
Services, Inc., Amtel Communications Correctional Facilities, Inc. and ACI-HDT
Supply Company. The five entities are all owned 100% by the same individual.
Collectively, the five entities will be referred to as "the Company". Material
intercompany transactions and balances have been eliminated.
 
     CASH
 
     For purposes of the statement of cash flows, the Company considers all
highly liquid debt instruments purchased with a maturity of three months or less
and money market funds to be cash equivalents.
 
                                      F-105
<PAGE>   181
 
                    AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
                     NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  (CONTINUED)
 
B.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED):

     INVENTORY
 
     Inventory consists primarily of pay telephones, pedestals, and enclosures
to be installed in the Company's business locations. Inventory is stated at the
lower of cost or market.
 
     PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
 
     Property and equipment are stated at cost and are depreciated on the
straight-line basis over estimated useful lives of 3-5 years.
 
     DEFERRED SITE COSTS
 
     Deferred site costs consist of pay telephones and related components and
installation costs necessary to make the pay phone ready for operation. Costs
are being amortized on the straight-line method over estimated useful lives of 8
years.
 
     REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
     Revenue is recognized when it is earned with the exception of coin revenue,
which is recognized when it is collected.
 
     INCOME TAXES
 
     The Company provides for federal and state income taxes currently payable
as well as for those deferred because of timing differences between reporting
income and expenses for financial statement purposes and income and expenses for
tax purposes.
 
     The Company adopted the provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 109 ("SFAS 109"), "Accounting for Income Taxes".
 
     ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and
accompanying notes. Although these estimates are based on management's knowledge
of current events and actions it may undertake in the future, they may
ultimately differ from actual results.
 
C.  FIXED ASSETS:
 
     Included in fixed assets are property and equipment (furniture, fixtures,
and computers) and deferred site costs (pay phones, housing and installation
costs) both of which are carried at cost.
 
     Property and equipment and deferred site costs are summarized as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         JUNE 30, 1996     DECEMBER 31, 1995
                                         -------------     -----------------
<S>                                      <C>               <C>
Property and equipment...............     $   989,108         $ 1,898,564
Accumulated depreciation.............        (526,295)           (838,446)
                                         -------------     -----------------
       Net...........................     $   462,813         $ 1,060,118
                                         ============      =================
Deferred site costs..................     $13,284,000         $13,153,005
Accumulated amortization.............      (3,471,849)         (2,793,313)
                                         -------------     -----------------
       Net...........................     $ 9,812,151         $10,359,692
                                         ============      =================
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-106
<PAGE>   182
 
                    AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
                     NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  (CONTINUED)
 
D.  PRE-PETITION LIABILITIES SUBJECT TO COMPROMISE UNDER REORGANIZATION
PROCEEDINGS:
 
     Pre-petition liabilities consist of secured and unsecured debt, all of
which are subject to compromise under the proposed plan of reorganization.
Certain inventory was returned to the parties claiming a secured interest in the
asset at or around the petition filing date. The claimed secured claims are
classified as subject to compromise as the value of the collateral is less than
the corresponding obligation.
 
     Pre-petition liabilities at June 30, 1996 and December 31, 1995 are as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1996             1995
                                                            -----------      -----------
        <S>                                                 <C>              <C>
        Accounts payable.................................   $ 6,123,480      $ 6,123,480
        Accrued state sales tax..........................     1,615,671        1,615,671
        Secured notes payable............................     7,774,805        7,774,805
        Lessor liabilities...............................    65,085,000       65,085,000
                                                            -----------      -----------
                                                            $80,598,956      $80,598,956
                                                             ==========       ==========
</TABLE>
 
     A plan of reorganization may materially change the amount and terms of
these pre-petition liabilities.
 
     Lessor liability consists of funds borrowed from independent third parties,
under which the Company agreed to sell, lease-back, install and maintain, a pay
telephone for an initial investment of $3,000 -- $3,600 per pay telephone. The
Company agreed to pay $51 per month per phone, for a five year period and then
return the initial investment to the investors. Investors had the right to have
their investment returned at any time within the five year period for a nominal
surrender fee. These transactions have been accounted for as financing
transactions and payments made by the Company have been recorded as interest
expense in the statement of operations.
 
     Payments to investors for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and the year
ended December 31, 1995 were approximately $0 and $6,762,000, respectively.
 
     As of the petition date, in accordance with current accounting
pronouncements, the Company discontinued accruing interest on its pre-petition
debt obligations. If such interest had continued to be accrued, interest expense
for the first six months of 1996 and the last five months of 1995 would have
been $457,628 and $379,351, respectively. Interest expense associated with the
lessor liability is not reflected in these accruals as the obligations are not
represented by formal notes.
 
     In conjunction with the Chapter 11 case, there are differences between
claims filed by potential creditors and amounts recorded by the Company. These
differences will be resolved by negotiated agreement between the Company and the
claimant or by the Court. Additional claims may arise in conjunction with the
termination of contractual obligations related to executory contracts and
leases. As a result, recorded amounts may be adjusted but the Company believes
that any such adjustments will not be material.
 
E.  REORGANIZATION ITEMS:
 
     Reorganization items represent expenses resulting from the reorganization
and restructuring of the business. Since these expenses do not relate to the
Company's normal operations they are reported separately on the statement of
operations.
 
F.  INCOME TAXES:
 
     As discussed in Note B, the Company adopted SFAS 109, "Accounting for
Income Taxes". SFAS 109 requires the use of the balance sheet method of
accounting for income taxes. Under this method, a deferred
 
                                      F-107
<PAGE>   183
 
                    AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
                     NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  (CONTINUED)
 
F.  INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED):

tax asset or liability represents the tax effect of temporary differences
between financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities and is
measured using the latest enacted tax rates.
 
     The provision for income taxes for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and
the year ended December 31, 1995 is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          1996       1995
                                         ------     ------
<S>                                      <C>        <C>
Current provision....................    $4,000     $4,000
                                         ======     ======
</TABLE>
 
     The Company realized substantial net operating losses for the six months
ended June 30, 1996 and the year ended December 31, 1995 as well as in prior
periods. Calculation of the temporary differences between financial statement
and tax bases of assets and liabilities is complicated by the fact the Company
has not filed tax returns since 1993. A valuation reserve has been established
equal to the potential tax benefit that could result from the use of the net
operating losses for these periods since there is reasonable doubt the Company
can generate income to utilize these losses.
 
G.  COMMITMENTS:
 
     The Company leases building space for its six branches, including warehouse
facilities in Seattle, Washington; Denver, Colorado; Portland, Oregon; Hayward,
California; Los Angeles, California; and its corporate headquarters in San
Diego, California. The leases have expiration dates ranging from September, 1996
to October, 1998. The agreements call for a cumulative annual base rent of
$246,336.
 
     Net future minimum rental payments required under this lease as of June 30,
1996 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
             YEARS ENDED
              JUNE 30,
- -------------------------------------
<S>                                      <C>
1997.................................    $209,461
1998.................................     113,040
1999.................................      33,600
2000.................................          --
2001.................................          --
                                         --------
                                         $356,101
                                         ========
</TABLE>
 
     Total rent expense charged to operations for the six months ended June 30,
1996 and the year ended December 31, 1995 was $204,227 and $544,193,
respectively.
 
H.  PROPOSED PLAN OF REORGANIZATION:
 
     During the six months ended June 30, 1996, the Company evaluated its
long-term market strategies with the goal of reducing expenses and improving
overall operating results. As a result, the Company entered into an asset
purchase agreement with PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (an Ohio Corporation)
("PhoneTel") dated June 26, 1996 wherein the Company will sell substantially all
of its pay phone operating assets for cash and stock of PhoneTel totaling
$13,000,000 ($7,000,000 cash and $6,000,000 PhoneTel stock). In July, 1996
PhoneTel made a non refundable deposit of $1,300,000 to open escrow for the
purchase of these assets.
 
                                      F-108
<PAGE>   184
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT
 
TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC:
 
     We have audited the accompanying combined statement of revenues and direct
operating expenses of Amtel Communications, Inc., and combined Companies (Note
B) for the three months ended December 31, 1994. This combined statement of
revenues and direct operating expenses is the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the statement of
revenues and direct operating expenses based on our audit.
 
     We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the combined statement of revenues and direct
operating expenses are free of material misstatement. An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the combined statement of revenues and direct operating expenses. An audit also
includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made
by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the combined
statement of revenues and direct operating expenses. We believe that our audit
provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     The accompanying statement was prepared to present the revenues and direct
operating expenses for the three months ended December 31, 1994, pursuant to the
Securities and Exchange Commission's communication dated July 25, 1996 described
in Note C, and is not intended to be a complete presentation of the Company's
operations.
 
     In our opinion, the combined statement of revenues and direct operating
expenses referred to above presents fairly, in all material respects, the
revenue and direct operating expenses of Amtel Communications, Inc., and
combined Companies (Note B) for the three months ended December 31, 1994 in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
   
     The accompanying combined statement of revenues and direct operating
expenses has been prepared assuming that the Company will continue as a going
concern. As described in Note A, on August 3, 1995, the Company filed voluntary
petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of Title II of the United States
Bankruptcy Code and was authorized to continue managing and operating the
business as a debtor in possession subject to the control and supervision of the
Bankruptcy Court. Those conditions raise substantial doubt about the Company's
ability to continue as a going concern. The combined statement of revenues and
direct operating expenses does not include any adjustment that might result from
the outcome of this uncertainty.
    
 
/s/ Harlan & Boettger
 
San Diego, California
August 23, 1996
 
                                      F-109
<PAGE>   185
 
               AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMBINED COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
 
          COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND DIRECT OPERATING EXPENSES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      FOR THE THREE
                                                                      MONTHS ENDED
                                                                    DECEMBER 31, 1994
                                                                    -----------------
<S>                                                                 <C>
REVENUE
  Coin..........................................................       $ 2,603,577
  LD Commissions................................................           593,370
  Interstate....................................................            68,155
  Intralata.....................................................           593,842
  Other.........................................................         1,509,861
                                                                    -----------------
  TOTAL REVENUE.................................................         5,368,805
                                                                    -----------------
COSTS AND EXPENSES
  Line charges..................................................         1,342,855
  Location commissions..........................................           890,903
  Other operating expenses......................................         1,481,073
  Selling, general and administrative...........................         4,115,854
  Depreciation and amortization.................................           480,702
                                                                    -----------------
  LOSS FROM OPERATIONS BEFORE OTHER INCOME AND EXPENSES.........        (2,942,582)
                                                                    -----------------
OTHER
  Interest income...............................................              (105)
  Interest expense..............................................         2,295,382
                                                                    -----------------
  NET LOSS......................................................       $(5,237,859)
                                                                    =================
</TABLE>
 
         The accompanying notes are an integral part of this statement.
 
                                      F-110
<PAGE>   186
 
                    AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
     NOTES TO COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND DIRECT OPERATING EXPENSES
 
A.  REORGANIZATION AND LEGAL MATTERS:
 
     Amtel Communications, Inc. and its combined companies (the "Company") filed
voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of Title II of the United States
Bankruptcy Code (the "Code") on August 3, 1995 (the "petition date")
administratively consolidated under Case No. 95-08253-A11. The Company is
currently operating its business as a debtor-in-possession under the
jurisdiction of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of
California. The Company's liabilities as of the petition date are generally
subject to settlement in a plan of reorganization, which must be voted on by
certain of its creditors and confirmed by the Court. Until a reorganization plan
has been confirmed, the Company is prevented from making payments on
pre-petition debt unless permitted by the Code or approved by the Court. Certain
contracts existing at the petition date have been rejected or assumed with the
approval of the Court. The Company continues to review all other unexpired
pre-petition executory contracts to determine whether they should be assumed or
rejected. Parties affected by the rejection of contracts and leases may file
claims against the Company.
 
     The combined statement of revenues and direct operating expenses has been
prepared assuming the Company will continue as a going concern, which
contemplates continuity of operations and the realization of assets and the
satisfaction of liabilities in the normal course of business. The Chapter 11
filings, the Company's leveraged financial structure, and recurring net losses
resulting in a deficit in stockholder's equity, raise substantial doubt about
its ability to continue as a going concern. A plan of reorganization may
materially change the amounts reported in the combined statement of revenues and
direct operating expenses (which do not give effect to adjustments to the
carrying values of assets and liabilities which may be necessary as a
consequence of a plan of reorganization). The continuation of the Company's
business as a going concern is contingent upon, among other things, the ability
to (1) formulate a plan of reorganization that will be confirmed by the Court,
(2) achieve satisfactory levels of future profitable operations, (3) maintain
adequate financing, and (4) provide sufficient cash from operations to meet
future obligations.
 
     The Company has commenced actions against various parties relating to the
management of the Company. These actions seek to avoid or subordinate certain
obligations incurred by the Company and to recover certain payments made by or
on behalf of the Company in connection with its operations. The Company has also
filed actions against several entities seeking avoidance and recovery of certain
transfers of interests of the Company in property alleged to be preferences
under section 547(b) of the Code. The ultimate outcome of this actions and the
potential recoveries, if any, resulting from the resolution of these actions is
unknown at this time and, accordingly, no provision for any amounts has been
recorded in this combined statement of revenues and direct operating expenses.
 
B.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES:
 
     BASIS OF COMBINATION
 
     The combined statement of revenues and direct operating expenses includes
the accounts of Amtel Communications, Inc., Amtel Communications Payphones,
Inc., Amtel Communications Services, Inc., Amtel Communications Correctional
Facilities, Inc. and ACI-HDT Supply Company. The five entities are all owned
100% by the same individual. Collectively, the five entities will be referred to
as "the Company". Material intercompany transactions and balances have been
eliminated.
 
     REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
     Revenue is recognized when it is earned with the exception of coin revenue,
which is recognized when it is collected.
 
                                      F-111
<PAGE>   187
 
                    AMTEL COMMUNICATIONS, INC. AND COMPANIES
                             (DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION)
     NOTES TO COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND DIRECT OPERATING EXPENSES
                                  (CONTINUED)
 
B.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES: -- (CONTINUED)

     ESTIMATES
 
     The preparation of a combined statement of revenues and direct operating
expenses in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles requires
management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in
the combined statement of revenues and direct operating expenses and
accompanying notes. Although these estimates are based on management's knowledge
of current events and actions it may undertake in the future, they may
ultimately differ from actual results.
 
C.  INCOMPLETE PRESENTATION:
 
     By letter dated July 25, 1996 to PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) granted a waiver of Item 310(c) of
Regulation S-B which requires submission of two years of audited statements of
operations. Instead, the SEC has accepted audited statements of operations for a
twenty-one month period. This combined statement of revenues and direct
operating expenses together with the combined statement of operations from the
audited financial statements for the six months ended June 30, 1996 and for the
year ended December 31, 1996 comprise the twenty-one month period.
 
D.  SUBSEQUENT EVENT -- PROPOSED PLAN OF REORGANIZATION:
 
     In 1996, the Company evaluated its long-term market strategies with the
goal of reducing expenses and improving overall operating results. As a result,
the Company entered into an asset purchase agreement with PhoneTel Technologies,
Inc. (an Ohio Corporation) ("PhoneTel") dated June 26, 1996 wherein the Company
will sell substantially all of its pay phone operating assets for cash and stock
of PhoneTel totaling $13,000,000 ($7,000,000 cash and $6,000,000 PhoneTel
stock). In July, 1996 PhoneTel made a non refundable deposit of $1,300,000 to
open escrow for the purchase of these assets.
 
                                      F-112
<PAGE>   188
 
   
INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
    
 
   
To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of
  Cherokee Communications, Inc.:
    
 
   
     We have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Cherokee Communications,
Inc. (the Company) as of September 30, 1995 and 1994, and the related statements
of income, shareholders' equity and cash flows for each of the three years in
the period ended September 30, 1995. These financial statements are the
responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.
    
 
   
     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
    
 
   
     In our opinion, such financial statements present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the Company at September 30, 1995 and 1994,
and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years
in the period ended September 30, 1995, in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.
    
 
   
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
    
   
Dallas, Texas
    
   
November 17, 1995
    
 
                                      F-113
<PAGE>   189
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                                 BALANCE SHEETS
    
   
                          SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 AND 1994
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       1995            1994
                                                                    -----------     -----------
<S>                                                                 <C>             <C>
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents.......................................  $   668,778     $   780,962
  Short-term cash investments.....................................                      150,000
  Trade accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts
     of $264,803 and $255,965, respectively (Notes 6 and 10)......    4,453,192       4,251,894
  Inventories (Note 6)............................................      137,036          78,792
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets (Note 10).............      303,273         213,863
  Deferred income tax benefits (Note 9)...........................      108,717         112,718
                                                                    -----------     -----------
          Total current assets....................................    5,670,996       5,588,229
Property and equipment -- net (Notes 2, 3 and 6)..................   12,935,453      11,334,863
Site licenses -- net (Note 1).....................................    1,941,467       2,221,780
Investment in and advances to affiliates (Note 5).................      164,549          30,188
Deferred income tax benefits (Note 9).............................                       93,704
Other assets -- net (Note 4)......................................      681,754         890,856
                                                                    -----------     -----------
               TOTAL..............................................  $21,394,219     $20,159,620
                                                                    ===========     ===========
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Note payable -- receivable financing (Note 6)...................  $   659,604     $ 1,705,174
  Current portion of other notes payable (Note 6).................    1,491,767       1,395,338
  Current portion of capital lease obligations (Note 7)...........    1,094,381       1,616,814
  Accounts payable................................................      310,358         267,755
  Accrued telecommunication and other expenses....................    2,971,935       2,575,808
  Income taxes payable............................................      256,140         368,143
                                                                    -----------     -----------
          Total current liabilities...............................    6,784,185       7,929,032
Long-term liabilities:
  Notes payable, less current portion (Note 6)....................    6,605,835       5,295,294
  Capital lease obligations, less current portion (Note 7)........      780,593       2,139,216
  Deferred income tax liability (Note 9)..........................      342,359
                                                                    -----------     -----------
          Total long-term liabilities.............................    7,728,787       7,434,510
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 7 and 11)
Shareholders' equity (Note 8):
  Convertible redeemable preferred stock..........................    2,400,000       2,400,000
  Common stock warrants, with mandatory redemption requirements...    1,087,000       1,087,000
  Common stock, no par value; 15,000,000 shares authorized,
     5,320,467 and 5,312,467 shares issued and outstanding,
     respectively.................................................      351,903         343,183
  Additional paid-in capital......................................       10,630          10,630
  Retained earnings...............................................    3,031,714         955,265
                                                                    -----------     -----------
          Total shareholders' equity..............................    6,881,247       4,796,078
                                                                    -----------     -----------
               TOTAL..............................................  $21,394,219     $20,159,620
                                                                    ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                       See notes to financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-114
<PAGE>   190
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                              STATEMENTS OF INCOME
    
   
                 YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995, 1994 AND 1993
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           1995           1994           1993
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
<S>                                                     <C>            <C>            <C>
Telecommunications revenues:
  Pay phone coin calls................................  $14,036,665    $10,797,869    $ 7,258,037
  Automated operator, routed calls....................   17,049,394     16,425,708     13,543,072
  Other (Note 5)......................................      505,581        641,899        825,694
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
          Total.......................................   31,591,640     27,865,476     21,626,803
Operating costs and expenses:
  Telephone charges...................................    7,851,842      7,257,272      4,956,950
  Commissions.........................................    4,909,445      4,341,260      3,258,932
  Telecommunication fees and validation...............    1,821,930      1,834,389      1,843,614
  Depreciation and amortization (Note 2)..............    4,298,090      4,284,734      3,218,450
  Field operations personnel..........................    2,016,935      1,610,952      1,191,829
  Chargebacks and doubtful accounts...................    1,104,896        784,636      1,046,353
  Selling, general and administrative (Note 10).......    5,520,405      4,634,890      3,714,601
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
          Total.......................................   27,523,543     24,748,133     19,230,729
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
Operating income......................................    4,068,097      3,117,343      2,396,074
Other income (expense):
  Interest expense....................................   (1,450,249)    (1,682,465)    (1,345,065)
  Amortization of debt discount.......................     (181,167)      (181,167)       (75,486)
  Interest income.....................................       57,278         20,329         20,731
  Equity in earnings (losses) of affiliates (Note
     5)...............................................      (34,608)      (226,625)        (6,948)
  Gain on equipment sales and other (Note 3)..........    1,160,238         67,917         84,325
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
          Total.......................................     (448,508)    (2,002,011)    (1,322,443)
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
Income before income taxes............................    3,619,589      1,115,332      1,073,631
Provision for income taxes (Note 9)...................    1,399,140        512,402        418,508
                                                        -----------    -----------    -----------
          Net income..................................  $ 2,220,449    $   602,930    $   655,123
                                                        ===========    ===========    ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                       See notes to financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-115
<PAGE>   191
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                       STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
    
   
                 YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995, 1994 AND 1993
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   PREFERRED STOCK        COMMON         COMMON STOCK       ADDITIONAL    RETAINED
                                 --------------------     STOCK      --------------------    PAID-IN      EARNINGS
                                 SHARES      AMOUNT      WARRANTS     SHARES      AMOUNT     CAPITAL     (DEFICIT)
                                 -------   ----------   ----------   ---------   --------   ----------   ----------
<S>                              <C>       <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>          <C>
Balance, October 1, 1992.......       --   $       --   $       --   5,000,000   $  5,000    $ 10,630    $  (50,788)
  Issuance of preferred
    stock......................  240,000    2,400,000
  Cash dividends on preferred
    stock......................                                                                            (108,000)
  Issuance of common stock.....                                        312,467    338,183
  Issuance of common stock
    warrant (Note 8)...........                          1,087,000
  Net income...................                                                                             655,123
                                 -------   ----------   ----------   ---------   --------     -------    ----------
Balance, September 30, 1993....  240,000    2,400,000    1,087,000   5,312,467    343,183      10,630       496,335
  Cash dividends on preferred
    stock......................                                                                            (144,000)
  Net income...................                                                                             602,930
                                 -------   ----------   ----------   ---------   --------     -------    ----------
Balance, September 30, 1994....  240,000    2,400,000    1,087,000   5,312,467    343,183      10,630       955,265
  Cash dividends on preferred
    stock......................                                                                            (144,000)
  Proceeds from exercise of
    common stock options.......                                          8,000      8,720
  Net income...................                                                                           2,220,449
                                 -------   ----------   ----------   ---------   --------     -------    ----------
Balance, September 30, 1995....  240,000   $2,400,000   $1,087,000   5,320,467   $351,903    $ 10,630    $3,031,714
                                 =======   ==========   ==========   =========   ========     =======    ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                       See notes to financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-116
<PAGE>   192
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
    
   
                 YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995, 1994 AND 1993
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   1995            1994            1993
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
<S>                                                             <C>             <C>             <C>
Operating Activities:
  Net income..................................................  $ 2,220,449     $   602,930     $   655,123
  Noncash items in net income:
    Depreciation and amortization.............................    4,298,090       4,284,734       3,218,450
    Amortization of debt discount.............................      181,167         181,167          75,486
    Equity in earnings (losses) of affiliates.................       34,608         226,625           6,948
    Deferred income taxes.....................................      440,064          88,456         (35,731)
    Gain on sale of property and equipment....................   (1,136,894)        (51,854)        (59,491)
  Cash from (used for) changes in operating working capital:
    Trade accounts receivable.................................     (201,298)       (946,867)     (1,933,366)
    Inventories...............................................      (58,244)         58,875        (137,667)
    Prepaid expenses and other current assets.................      (89,410)        (56,234)        (70,710)
    Accounts payable and accrued liabilities..................      438,730         619,244         424,157
    Income taxes payable......................................     (112,003)        335,672         (91,743)
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
      Net cash from operating activities......................    6,015,259       5,342,748       2,051,456
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
Investing Activities:
  Additions to property and equipment.........................   (5,794,108)     (4,059,111)     (5,224,466)
  Increase in site licenses...................................     (440,220)       (433,746)       (753,966)
  Increase in other assets....................................      (79,353)                       (644,428)
  Proceeds from sale of property and equipment................    2,041,310          96,905         108,700
  Investments in and advances to affiliates...................     (218,767)        (40,591)       (333,329)
  Distributions from affiliates...............................       49,798          60,427          55,765
  Sale (purchase) of short-term cash investments..............      150,000        (150,000)
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
      Net cash used for investing activities..................   (4,291,340)     (4,526,116)     (6,791,724)
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
Financing Activities:
  Issuance of (payments on) note payable -- receivable
    financing.................................................   (1,045,570)        161,812       1,543,362
  Issuance of other notes payable.............................    4,048,753       2,122,523       9,333,355
  Payments on notes payable and capital lease obligations.....   (4,704,006)     (2,948,227)     (7,950,674)
  Issuance of common stock....................................        8,720
  Issuance of preferred stock.................................                                    2,400,000
  Cash dividends on preferred stock...........................     (144,000)       (144,000)       (108,000)
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
      Net cash from (used for) financing activities...........   (1,836,103)       (807,892)      5,218,043
Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents..............     (112,184)          8,740         477,775
Cash and cash equivalents:
  Beginning of year...........................................      780,962         772,222         294,447
                                                                -----------     -----------     -----------
  End of year.................................................  $   668,778     $   780,962     $   772,222
                                                                ===========     ===========     ===========
Supplemental information:
  Interest paid...............................................  $ 1,462,519     $ 1,635,052     $ 1,230,562
                                                                ===========     ===========     ===========
  Income taxes paid...........................................  $ 1,091,368     $    23,000     $   568,861
                                                                ===========     ===========     ===========
  Noncash investing and financing activities:
    Equipment and other assets acquired under capital lease
      obligations and debt....................................  $   --          $   367,500     $ 2,718,189
                                                                ===========     ===========     ===========
    Common stock issued for financing costs...................  $   --          $   --          $   338,183
                                                                ===========     ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                       See notes to financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-117
<PAGE>   193
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    
   
                 YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995, 1994 AND 1993
    
 
   
1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
    
 
   
     BUSINESS -- Cherokee Communications, Inc. (the Company) owns, operates and
maintains pay telephone systems connected to the network of regulated telephone
companies throughout the United States at various third-party property owner
locations. In connection with the telephone systems, the Company also derives
revenue from routing calls to operator service companies and through its own
automated operator system (AOS) installed in its telephones. A summary of owned
and managed phones at September 30 is as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               1995      1994      1993
                                                              ------    ------    ------
        <S>                                                   <C>       <C>       <C>
        Owned...............................................   9,333     8,182     6,320
        Managed.............................................     276       233       235
                                                               -----     -----     -----
                  Total.....................................   9,609     8,415     6,555
                                                               =====     =====     =====
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     REVENUES from coin and noncoin calls are recognized at the time the calls
are made and are dependent on service provided by the long-distance carriers.
Accounts receivable primarily includes revenues generated from calls completed
through the Company's AOS and from commissions to be received from operator
service companies. An allowance for doubtful accounts is provided at the time of
revenue recognition for the estimated settlement ("true-up") for actual
chargebacks made by the telephone companies, based on historical experience. The
"true-up" for actual chargebacks is typically made within six months. Also, the
related telecommunication expenses are accrued for the costs for validating,
transmitting, and billing and collecting calls completed through the AOS, as
well as for commissions to be paid to third-party property owners.
    
 
   
     CASH EQUIVALENTS represent highly liquid investments with initial or
remaining maturities at the date of purchase of three months or less. Short-term
cash investments consist of certificates of deposit with maturities greater than
three months.
    
 
   
     INVENTORIES, which primarily consist of telephone booth enclosures and
related parts, are stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out method) or
market.
    
 
   
     PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and
amortization. Cost of telecommunications equipment includes the initial line
hook-up charges, sales commissions, labor and other charges incurred for
installing pay phones. Depreciation and amortization are provided primarily
using the double declining balance method, later switching to the straight-line
method over the following estimated useful lives of the related assets:
buildings, 20 years; leasehold improvement, 25 years; telecommunications
equipment, seven years and ten years; telecommunications software licenses, four
years; vehicles, computer equipment and software, five years; and furniture and
office equipment, five to seven years. Beginning October 1, 1993, the Company
began depreciating newly acquired telecommunications equipment over a ten-year
period using the straight-line method (see Note 2). Refurbishment, repairs and
maintenance costs are expensed as incurred.
    
 
   
     SITE LICENSES are stated at the cost of site licenses acquired in asset
acquisitions, less accumulated amortization of $2,690,403 and $2,224,277 at
September 30, 1995 and 1994, respectively. Amortization is provided using the
straight-line method over the terms of the related site license agreements,
generally two to seven years.
    
 
   
     OTHER ASSETS are amortized using the straight-line method over the
following periods: deferred financing costs over the life of the respective
financing agreement; and noncompete agreements and patents, five years.
    
 
                                      F-118
<PAGE>   194
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
     DEFERRED FEDERAL INCOME TAXES are provided under the asset and liability
method for temporary differences in the recognition of income and expense for
tax and financial reporting purposes and for the expected benefit of tax credit
carryforwards.
    
 
   
2.  CHANGE IN DEPRECIABLE LIFE
    
 
   
     Effective October 1, 1993, the Company increased the estimated useful life
of its telecommunications equipment acquired after that date from seven to ten
years. This was to more appropriately reflect the anticipated useful service
period for newly acquired equipment. The effect of this change in accounting
method reduced depreciation expense by approximately $293,000 and increased net
income during the 1994 period by approximately $193,000.
    
 
   
3.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
    
 
   
     Property and equipment at September 30 consist of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   1995            1994
                                                                -----------     -----------
    <S>                                                         <C>             <C>
    Telecommunications equipment:
      Owned...................................................  $12,577,986     $ 9,312,536
      Under capital leases....................................    5,725,587       6,328,695
    Telecommunications software licenses......................    2,214,455       1,880,832
    Vehicles..................................................    2,184,227       1,630,211
    Furniture and office equipment............................      686,820         491,401
    Machinery.................................................       30,005          30,005
    Land and buildings........................................       75,747          73,787
                                                                -----------     -----------
              Total...........................................   23,494,827      19,747,467
    Less accumulated depreciation and amortization............   10,559,374       8,412,604
                                                                -----------     -----------
    Property and equipment -- net.............................  $12,935,453     $11,334,863
                                                                ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     In October 1994, the Company sold approximately 760 telephones, certain
other assets and related site agreements for approximately $1.7 million, which
resulted in a gain on the sale of assets of approximately $1 million.
    
 
   
4.  OTHER ASSETS
    
 
   
     Other assets at September 30 consist of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1995           1994
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    <S>                                                           <C>            <C>
    Deferred financing costs....................................  $1,113,451     $1,034,098
    Patents.....................................................      46,009         46,009
    Noncompete agreements.......................................     252,500        252,500
                                                                  ----------     ----------
              Total.............................................   1,411,960      1,332,607
    Less accumulated amortization...............................     730,206        441,751
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    Other assets -- net.........................................  $  681,754     $  890,856
                                                                  ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     In connection with the subordinated debt financing in May 1993, the Company
paid certain investment banking fees of $365,992 in cash and $338,183 in common
stock of 312,467 shares (at $1.08 per share). These amounts were accounted for
as deferred financing costs.
    
 
                                      F-119
<PAGE>   195
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
5.  INVESTMENT IN AND ADVANCES TO AFFILIATES
    
 
   
     The Company has a 50% investment in a partnership, Cherokee Public Phones
(CPP), which owns pay phones. The Company provides certain management and
recordkeeping services to CPP.
    
 
   
     During 1993, the Company invested $80,000 for a 49% investment in a
corporate joint venture in Mexico, Corporaciones Interamericana De Desarrollo
Comunicaciones, S.A. de C.V. (CID), which owns and operates pay phones primarily
in Monterrey, Mexico. During the year ended September 30, 1994, the Company made
additional cash advances of $69,839. Total advances at September 30, 1994, of
$323,168 were converted to the investment in CID. In July 1994, an outside
investor invested $250,000 in CID, which reduced the Company's ownership
interest in CID to 33% as of September 30, 1994.
    
 
   
     In March 1995, the Company invested $25,000 to acquire an additional 17%
interest in CID, increasing its ownership percentage to 50% as of September 30,
1995. Additional cash advances of $193,767 made to CID during the year are
included in the investment.
    
 
   
     The Company has the following balances with these affiliates at September
30:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       1995         1994
                                                                     --------     --------
    <S>                                                              <C>          <C>
    CID -- Investment, at equity...................................  $179,020     $ 44,659
    CPP -- Equity interest in (net advances from) the
      partnership..................................................   (14,471)     (14,471)
                                                                     --------      -------
              Total................................................  $164,549     $ 30,188
                                                                     ========      =======
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     Equity in earnings (losses) of affiliates consist of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          1995         1994          1993
                                                        --------     ---------     --------
    <S>                                                 <C>          <C>           <C>
    CID...............................................  $(84,406)    $(287,052)    $(62,713)
    CPP...............................................    49,798        60,427       55,765
                                                        ---------    ----------    ---------
              Total...................................  $(34,608)    $(226,625)    $ (6,948)
                                                        =========    ==========    =========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     Transactions in the Company's financial statements arising from the above
arrangement with CPP are as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          1995         1994          1993
                                                        --------     ---------     --------
    <S>                                                 <C>          <C>           <C>
    Other revenue -- management fees..................  $ 47,637     $  50,525     $ 39,559
    Distributions from affiliates.....................    49,798        60,427       55,765
</TABLE>
    
 
   
6.  NOTES PAYABLE
    
 
   
     Notes payable to Zero Plus Dialing Inc. (ZPDI) of $659,604 and $1,705,174
at September 30, 1995 and 1994, respectively, are due on demand and bear
interest at prime plus 3% (11.75% at September 30, 1995). These notes represent
advances on trade accounts receivable being collected by ZPDI on behalf of the
Company, under an agreement which expires July 1, 1996, and are collateralized
by accounts receivable of $3,651,571 at September 30, 1995.
    
 
                                      F-120
<PAGE>   196
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
     Long-term notes payable at September 30 consist of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1995           1994
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    <S>                                                           <C>            <C>
    Equipment notes:
    Notes payable, Comerica Bank:
      Revolving capital expenditure facility....................  $  906,200     $      --
      Revolving acquisition facility............................   1,636,582
    Note payable, Paycom, Inc. -- due in monthly installments
      through July 1997 of $39,015, including interest at 15.0%,
      collateralized by equipment, paid in 1995.................                  1,038,157
    Note payable, G.E. Capital -- due in monthly installments
      through July 1995 of $58,141, including interest at 12.0%,
      collateralized by equipment...............................                    550,673
    Notes payable, Tri Con Capital Corp. due in monthly
      installments through May 1995, collateralized by
      equipment.................................................                     13,363
    Other equipment notes payable...............................     131,327
                                                                  ----------     ----------
              Total equipment notes.............................   2,674,109      1,602,193
    Vehicle notes:
    Notes payable, FMCC -- due in monthly installments of
      $18,104, including interest ranging from 2.9% to 16.75%,
      maturing through November 1998, collateralized by
      automobiles...............................................  $  902,726     $  743,407
    Notes payable, GMAC -- due in monthly installments of
      $1,210, including interest ranging from 7.0% to 9.0%,
      maturing through October 1997, collateralized by
      automobiles...............................................      22,630         32,070
    Note payable, Lone Oak Bank -- due in monthly installments
      through July 1996 of $475, including interest at 10.0%,
      collateralized by an automobile...........................                      9,521
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    Total vehicle notes.........................................     925,356        784,998
    Subordinated and other notes:
    Subordinated note payable, Banc One Capital Partners
      Corporation -- bearing interest at 12% payable quarterly
      beginning July 1993, with principal due at maturity in May
      1999, net of $649,181 and $830,347, respectively, of
      unamortized debt discount assigned to common stock warrant
      (see Note 8). Borrowings under this $5 million financing
      commitment are unsecured and subject to certain financial
      covenants and ratios......................................   4,350,819      4,169,653
    Notes payable insurance companies -- due in monthly
      installments through June 1996, including interest,
      unsecured.................................................     147,318        133,788
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    Total subordinated and other notes payable..................   4,498,137      4,303,441
                                                                  ----------     ----------
              Total.............................................   8,097,602      6,690,632
    Less current portion........................................   1,491,767      1,395,338
                                                                  ----------     ----------
    Long-term notes payable, less current portion...............  $6,605,835     $5,295,294
                                                                  ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     Notes payable to Comerica Bank consist of revolving credit loans under
which the Company may borrow up to $5 million under each credit facility ($10
million under the acquisition facility effective November 1, 1995 -- see Note
12), or the collateral base amount, which is equal to $1,200 per telephone. The
notes are collateralized by substantially all assets, subject to the preferences
of other notes payable, and the personal guaranty of the Company's majority
shareholder for $1 million. Outstanding principal on the capital expenditure
facility is payable in 48 equal monthly payments of $19,700 beginning August 1,
1995. Borrowings under the acquisition facility are payable in 36 and 48 equal
monthly payments beginning the month after
    
 
                                      F-121
<PAGE>   197
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
advances are made. Interest is payable monthly at the prime rate plus 1% to 3%.
The interest rate margin is adjustable monthly based on a certain financial
ratio under the terms of the agreement. Interest rates on these notes were 9.75%
at September 30, 1995. Borrowings under the acquisition facility may occur
through January 24, 1997.
    
 
   
     Maturities of long-term notes payable at September 30, 1995 (before
reduction for the $649,181 unamortized debt discount), are as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
        <S>                                                                <C>
        1996.............................................................  $1,491,767
        1997.............................................................   1,171,235
        1998.............................................................     760,757
        1999.............................................................   5,323,024
                                                                           ----------
                  Total..................................................  $8,746,783
                                                                           ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
7.  LEASE COMMITMENTS
    
 
   
     The Company is leasing telecommunications equipment under capital leases,
and all of its operating facilities through operating leases. The Company leases
its primary office facility under an operating lease with a related party, as
discussed in Note 10. Rental expense for all operating leases was $174,808,
$116,009 and $111,890 for the years ended September 30, 1995, 1994 and 1993,
respectively. Future minimum rental payments required under these noncancelable
leases at September 30, 1995, are as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                CAPITAL       OPERATING
                                                               ----------     ---------
        <S>                                                    <C>            <C>
        Year ending September 30:
          1996...............................................  $1,305,115     $ 135,361
          1997...............................................     841,827        64,172
          1998...............................................           0        35,696
          1999...............................................           0         4,180
                                                               ----------      --------
                                                                2,146,942     $ 239,409
                                                                               ========
        Amount representing interest.........................     271,968
                                                               ----------
        Present value of minimum lease payments..............   1,874,974
        Less current portion.................................   1,094,381
                                                               ----------
        Capital lease obligations, less current portion......  $  780,593
                                                               ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
8.  CAPITAL STOCK
    
 
   
     DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS -- Certain note payable agreements and preferred
stock instruments restrict the Company's ability to pay cash dividends on its
common stock.
    
 
   
     CONVERTIBLE REDEEMABLE PREFERRED STOCK -- The Company has authorized and
issued 240,000 shares of nonvoting, cumulative convertible redeemable preferred
stock ($1.00 par value) for $2,400,000. Each share of preferred stock is
convertible into approximately 9.24 shares of common stock, subject to
adjustments in certain events, prior to December 31, 2000. The preferred stock
will be automatically converted in the event of an initial public offering.
    
 
   
     Holders of the preferred stock are entitled to receive cumulative cash
dividends payable quarterly, at an annual rate of $.60 per share commencing
March 31, 1993, through January 1, 2003, and at an annual rate of $1.10 per
share commencing April 1, 2003. In liquidation, the preferred stock is entitled
to $10 per share.
    
 
                                      F-122
<PAGE>   198
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
     Beginning on December 30, 2000, or at any time thereafter, the Company may,
at its option, redeem any number of outstanding shares of preferred stock at $10
per share, plus all accrued and unpaid dividends. At any time after December 31,
2002, and prior to December 31, 2010, holders of the preferred stock have the
option to sell, and the Company has the obligation to purchase, any number of
outstanding shares at the then-determined fair market value.
    
 
   
     COMMON STOCK WARRANTS -- In connection with the subordinated debt financing
in May 1993, the Company issued warrants exercisable for 1,562,338 shares of
common stock at $1.08206 per share through May 1999. Upon certain occurrences or
after May 1998, the warrant holder may require the Company to redeem the
warrants at a specified price, which generally is a multiple of defined cash
flow. A fair value of $1,087,000 was assigned to the warrants when issued and is
accounted for as debt issue discount (see Note 6).
    
 
   
     STOCK OPTIONS -- The stock option plan provides for granting incentive
stock options to key employees. Incentive stock options must have an exercise
price of at least the fair market value on the date of grant. Options may be
exercised in whole or in installments over ten years after the grant. All
options would become exercisable upon a public offering. The total aggregate
number of the Company's common stock that may be granted under this plan cannot
exceed 12.7% of the common stock, determined on a fully diluted basis, not to
exceed 1,471,000 shares. The Company has granted the following options which
vest over three years:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    OPTIONS       EXERCISE PRICE
                                                                  OUTSTANDING       PER SHARE
                                                                  -----------     --------------
    <S>                                                           <C>             <C>
    Granted:
      December 1992.............................................    376,344           $ 1.09
      March 1994................................................    108,333           $ 1.09
    Forfeited:
      February 1994.............................................    (26,882)          $ 1.09
    Exercised:
      December 1994.............................................     (8,000)          $ 1.09
                                                                    -------
    Total options outstanding at September 30, 1995.............    449,795
                                                                    =======
    Options exercisable at September 30, 1995...................    261,087           $ 1.09
                                                                    =======
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     A summary of the Company's common shares reserved for future conversions or
issuances is as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
    <S>                                                                         <C>
    Convertible preferred stock...............................................   2,218,000
    Common stock warrants.....................................................   1,562,338
    Common stock options granted..............................................     449,795
                                                                                 ---------
    Total shares contingently issuable........................................   4,230,133
    Common stock options available for future grants..........................     986,323
                                                                                 ---------
              Total common shares reserved....................................   5,216,456
                                                                                 =========
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-123
<PAGE>   199
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
9.  INCOME TAXES
    
 
   
     Deferred income taxes under SFAS No. 109 represent the net tax effects of
(a) temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities
for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes
and (b) tax credit carryforwards. The tax effects of significant items
comprising the Company's net deferred tax benefits (liability) as of September
30, 1995 and 1994, are as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     1995          1994
                                                                   ---------     ---------
    <S>                                                            <C>           <C>
    Allowance for doubtful accounts, not currently deductible....  $  90,033     $  86,868
    Accrued expenses, not currently deductible...................     18,684        17,108
    All other....................................................                    8,742
                                                                   ---------     ---------
    Total current asset..........................................    108,717       112,718
    Accelerated depreciation and amortization for tax purposes...   (348,391)     (253,457)
    Alternative minimum tax (AMT) credit carryforwards...........      6,032       340,135
    Other........................................................                    7,026
                                                                   ---------     ---------
    Total noncurrent asset (liability)...........................   (342,359)       93,704
                                                                   ---------     ---------
              Net deferred tax asset (liability).................  $(233,642)    $ 206,422
                                                                   =========     =========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     Components of the provision for income taxes are as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           1995          1994         1993
                                                        ----------     --------     --------
    <S>                                                 <C>            <C>          <C>
    Current...........................................  $  959,076     $423,946     $454,239
    Deferred..........................................     440,064       88,456      (35,731)
                                                        ----------     --------     --------
                                                        $1,399,140     $512,402     $418,508
                                                        ==========     ========     ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     A reconciliation between income taxes computed at the federal statutory
rate and income tax expense is shown below:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           1995          1994         1993
                                                        ----------     --------     --------
    <S>                                                 <C>            <C>          <C>
    Income taxes computed at federal statutory rate...  $1,230,661     $379,213     $365,034
    State income taxes................................     103,210       34,000       33,911
    Expenses not deductible for tax purposes..........      13,585        5,578        5,920
    Nondeductible loss of foreign affiliate...........      28,590       67,642
    Other.............................................      23,094       25,969       13,643
                                                        ----------     --------     --------
              Total...................................  $1,399,140     $512,402     $418,508
                                                        ==========     ========     ========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
10.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
    
 
   
     The Company leases its primary office facilities from a shareholder on a
monthly basis. The Company also conducts certain other transactions with this
shareholder and affiliated corporations which are 100%
    
 
                                      F-124
<PAGE>   200
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- CONTINUED
    
 
   
owned by the shareholder. Transactions and balances in the Company's financial
statements arising from the above arrangements are as follows:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             1995        1994        1993
                                                            -------     -------     -------
    <S>                                                     <C>         <C>         <C>
    During the period:
      Rent expense........................................  $49,200     $43,200     $43,200
      Airplane charter expense............................   96,470
      Management and consulting fees expense..............                            3,750
      Other operating expenses............................   32,483      37,717
    Note receivable from an employee at September 30, due
      on demand (included in other current assets)........                2,193       4,944
    Accounts receivable from employees....................   12,428      18,039      23,558
</TABLE>
    
 
   
     Trade accounts receivable include $385,146 at September 30, 1995, due from
an operator service company, which is a co-owner in the Mexican joint venture
(Note 5) and is a significant lender to the Company's majority shareholder, who
has pledged approximately 20% of his common stock as collateral on the related
debt.
    
 
   
11.  CONTINGENCIES
    
 
   
     The Company is a defendant in various legal proceedings arising in the
ordinary course of business. Although the results of these matters cannot be
predicted with certainty, management believes the outcome will not have a
material adverse effect on the Company's financial position.
    
 
   
12.  SUBSEQUENT TELEPHONE PURCHASE AND FINANCING
    
 
   
     On November 1, 1995, the Company purchased approximately 1,600 telephones
and related assets and agreements for approximately $3.5 million. The purchase
was financed through the Company's revolving acquisition facility, which was
increased from $5 million to $10 million effective November 1, 1995.
    
 
   
                                  * * * * * *
    
 
                                      F-125
<PAGE>   201
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                            CONDENSED BALANCE SHEETS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    SEPTEMBER 30,      (UNAUDITED)
                                                                        1995          JUNE 30, 1996
                                                                    -------------     -------------
<S>                                                                 <C>               <C>
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents.......................................   $    668,778      $    364,691
  Trade accounts receivable, less allowance for doubtful accounts
     of $264,803 and $200,692, respectively.......................      4,453,192         3,712,950
  Inventories.....................................................        137,036           168,200
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets.......................        303,273            64,998
  Deferred income tax benefits....................................        108,717           145,441
                                                                      -----------       -----------
          Total current assets....................................      5,670,996         4,456,280
Property and equipment -- net.....................................     12,935,453        16,186,760
Site licenses -- net..............................................      1,941,467         4,048,701
Investment in and advances to affiliates..........................        164,549           152,989
Other assets......................................................        681,754           512,055
                                                                      -----------       -----------
          Total...................................................   $ 21,394,219      $ 25,356,785
                                                                      ===========       ===========
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Note payable -- receivable financing............................   $    659,604      $          0
  Current portion of other notes payable..........................      1,491,767         2,982,325
  Current portion of capital lease obligations....................      1,094,381           977,433
  Accounts payable................................................        310,358           754,048
  Accrued telecommunications and other expenses...................      2,971,935         2,977,635
  Income taxes payable............................................        256,140             2,327
                                                                      -----------       -----------
          Total current liabilities...............................      6,784,185         7,693,768
Long term liabilities
  Note payable, less current portion..............................      6,605,835        10,636,237
  Capital lease obligations, less current portion.................        780,593                 0
  Deferred income tax liability...................................        342,359           342,359
                                                                      -----------       -----------
          Total long-term liabilities.............................      7,728,787        10,978,596
Shareholders' equity
  Convertible redeemable preferred stock..........................      2,400,000         2,400,000
  Common stock warrants, with mandatory redemption requirements...      1,087,000         1,087,000
  Common stock....................................................        351,903           351,903
  Additional paid-in capital......................................         10,630            10,630
  Retained earnings...............................................      3,031,714         2,834,888
                                                                      -----------       -----------
  Total shareholders' equity......................................      6,881,247         6,684,421
                                                                      -----------       -----------
          Total...................................................   $ 21,394,219      $ 25,356,785
                                                                      ===========       ===========
</TABLE>
    
 
                       See notes to financial statements.
 
                                      F-126
<PAGE>   202
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                          CONDENSED INCOME STATEMENTS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 (UNAUDITED)
                                                (UNAUDITED)                  THREE MONTHS ENDED 
                                         NINE MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30                JUNE 30
                                        ---------------------------       -------------------------
                                           1995            1996              1995           1996
                                        -----------     -----------       ----------     ----------
<S>                                     <C>             <C>               <C>            <C>
Telecommunications revenues:
  Payphone coin calls.................  $ 9,942,304     $12,571,961       $3,511,706     $4,322,079
  Automated operator, routed calls....   11,540,935      11,061,973        4,587,250      4,098,481
  Other...............................      363,273         817,273          113,941        368,005
                                         ----------      ----------       ----------     ----------
          Total.......................   21,846,512      24,451,207        8,212,897      8,788,565
Operating costs and expenses:
  Telephone charges...................    5,675,136       6,451,165        2,034,337      2,276,146
  Commissions.........................    3,429,761       3,885,956        1,299,886      1,413,149
  Telecommunications fees and
     validation.......................    1,273,673       1,179,606          541,814        460,227
  Depreciation and amortization.......    3,248,748       3,831,645        1,088,844      1,363,637
  Field operations personnel..........    1,370,974       2,191,875          447,289        740,659
  Chargebacks and doubtful accounts...      578,823         736,374          232,171        329,914
  Selling, general and
     administrative...................    4,180,403       4,909,963        1,392,213      1,472,583
                                         ----------      ----------       ----------     ----------
          Total.......................   19,757,518      23,186,584        7,036,554      8,056,315
Operating income......................    2,088,994       1,264,623        1,176,343        732,250
Other income (expense)
  Interest expense....................   (1,125,584)     (1,223,042)        (382,827)      (427,100)
  Amortization of debt discount.......     (138,303)       (135,875)         (47,721)       (45,292)
  Interest income.....................       38,303           3,645           16,954            780
  Equity in earnings (losses) of
     affiliates.......................        8,936         (46,671)          (4,113)       (39,759)
  Gain on equipment sales and other...    1,150,521          29,306           15,664          3,116
                                         ----------      ----------       ----------     ----------
          Total.......................      (66,127)     (1,372,637)        (402,043)      (508,255)
                                         ----------      ----------       ----------     ----------
Income before income taxes............    2,022,867        (108,014)         774,300        223,995
Provision (benefit) for income
  taxes...............................      692,882         (19,188)         291,159         76,158
                                         ----------      ----------       ----------     ----------
Net income (loss).....................  $ 1,329,985     $   (88,826)      $  483,141     $  147,837
                                         ==========      ==========       ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                       See notes to financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-127
<PAGE>   203
 
   
                         CHEROKEE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
    
 
   
                       CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     (UNAUDITED)       (UNAUDITED)
                                                                     NINE MONTHS       NINE MONTHS
                                                                        ENDED             ENDED
                                                                    JUNE 30, 1995     JUNE 30, 1996
                                                                    -------------     -------------
<S>                                                                 <C>               <C>
Operating activities:
  Net income......................................................   $  1,329,985      $    (88,826)
  Noncash items in net income:
     Depreciation and amortization................................      3,248,748         3,831,645
     Amortization of debt discount................................        138,303           135,875
     Equity in earnings (losses) of affiliates....................          8,936           (46,671)
     Gain on sale of property and equipment.......................     (1,123,268)          (11,672)
  Cash from (used for) changes in operating working capital:
     Trade accounts receivable....................................        444,819           740,242
     Other current assets.........................................        (95,746)           67,888
     Prepaid expenses.............................................        (96,014)          238,275
     Accounts payable and accrued liabilities.....................        782,566           449,390
     Income taxes payable.........................................        (16,616)         (253,813)
                                                                       ----------         ---------
          Net cash from operating activities......................      4,621,713         5,062,333
Investing activities:
  Additions to property and equipment.............................     (4,771,952)       (6,007,499)
  Increase in site licenses.......................................       (418,274)       (3,052,918)
  Increase in other assets........................................        (79,353)                0
  Proceeds from sale property and equipment.......................      1,979,406            50,668
  Increase in investments in affiliates...........................        (18,946)          (34,177)
                                                                       ----------         ---------
          Net cash used for investing activities..................     (3,309,119)       (9,043,926)
Financing activities
  Issuance of (payments on) note payable-receivable financing.....       (461,277)         (659,604)
  Issuance of other notes payable.................................      4,123,985         7,750,005
  Payments on notes payable and capital lease obligations.........     (4,409,580)       (3,304,895)
  Issuance of common stock........................................          8,720                 0
  Cash dividends on preferred stock...............................       (108,000)         (108,000)
                                                                       ----------         ---------
          Net cash from financing activities......................       (846,152)        3,677,506
                                                                       ----------         ---------
Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents..................        466,442          (304,087)
Cash and cash equivalents
  Beginning of period.............................................        780,962           668,778
                                                                       ----------         ---------
  End of period...................................................   $  1,247,404      $    364,691
                                                                       ==========         =========
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                       See notes to financial statements.
    
 
                                      F-128
<PAGE>   204
 
   
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
    
   
               FOR THE THREE AND NINE MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 1996
    
 
   
1.  BASIS OF PRESENTATION
    
 
   
     The accompanying unaudited financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles for interim financial
information. Accordingly, they do not include all the information and footnotes
required by generally accepted accounting principles for complete financial
statements. In the opinion of management, all adjustments (consisting of normal
recurring accruals) considered necessary for a fair presentation have been
included. Operating results for the three and nine months ended June 30, 1996
are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the year
ended September 30, 1996.
    
 
   
     The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
    
 
   
2.  ACQUISITIONS AND MERGERS
    
 
   
     On November 1, 1995, the Company completed the acquisition of the assets of
Teltrust, Inc. (a Utah corporation). In connection with the acquisition of
Teltrust, Inc., the Company acquired 1,488 installed payphones and 81 jail
phones for a purchase price of $3,523,568 in cash.
    
 
   
     The Teltrust, Inc. acquisition was recorded as a purchase and the
difference between the fair value of the tangible assets acquired and the total
purchase price of $3,523,568, was recorded as site licenses and are being
amortized over the average life of the acquired location contracts which have
been estimated to be 60 months.
    
 
   
3.  PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
    
 
   
     As of September 30, 1995 and June 30, 1996, property and equipment
consisted of the following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  ESTIMATED
                                                 USEFUL LIVES     SEPTEMBER 30       JUNE 30
                                                  (IN YEARS)          1995             1996
                                                 ------------     ------------     ------------
    <S>                                          <C>              <C>              <C>
    Telephones, boards, and enclosures.........       7-10        $ 18,303,573     $ 23,093,015
    Telecommunications software licenses.......        4-5           2,214,455        2,512,242
    Vehicles...................................          5           2,184,227        2,732,601
    Other equipment............................        5-7             716,825          845,783
    Land and buildings.........................      20-25              75,747           75,747
                                                                  ------------     ------------
                                                                  $ 23,494,827     $ 29,259,388
      Less: accumulated depreciation...........                    (10,559,374)     (13,072,628)
                                                                  ------------     ------------
                                                                  $ 12,935,453     $ 16,186,760
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-129
<PAGE>   205
 
   
             NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) -- CONTINUED
    
   
               FOR THE THREE AND NINE MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 1996
    
 
   
4.  OTHER ASSETS
    
 
   
     As of September 30, 1995 and June 30, 1996, other assets consisted of the
following:
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    AMORTIZATION
                                                       PERIOD        SEPTEMBER 30      JUNE 30
                                                     (IN YEARS)          1995            1996
                                                    ------------     ------------     ----------
    <S>                                             <C>              <C>              <C>
    Deferred financing costs......................       3-6          $1,113,451      $1,113,451
    Patents.......................................         5              46,009          46,009
    Noncompete agreements.........................         5             252,500         252,500
                                                                     ------------     ------------
                                                                      $1,411,960      $1,411,960
      Less: accumulated amortization..............                      (730,206)       (899,905)
                                                                     ------------     ------------
                                                                      $  681,754      $  512,055
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      F-130
<PAGE>   206
 
- ------------------------------------------------------
- ------------------------------------------------------
 
No dealer, salesperson or any other individual has been authorized to give any
information or to make any representations other than those contained in this
Prospectus in connection with the Offering covered by this Prospectus. If given
or made, such information or representations must not be relied upon as having
been authorized by the Company or the Underwriters. This Prospectus does not
constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, the Common
Stock in any jurisdiction where or to any person to whom it is unlawful to make
such offer or solicitation. Neither the delivery of this Prospectus nor any sale
made hereunder shall, under any circumstances, create any implications that
there has not been any change in the facts set forth in this Prospectus or in
the affairs of the Company since the date hereof.
 
                            ------------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        PAGE
                                        ----
<S>                                     <C>
Available Information.................    3
Prospectus Summary....................    4
Risk Factors..........................   11
The Pending Acquisitions..............   17
Use of Proceeds.......................   18
Capitalization........................   19
Price Range of Common Stock...........   21
Dividend Policy.......................   21
Selected Financial Data...............   22
Pro Forma Financial Data..............   25
Management's Discussion and Analysis
  of Financial Condition and Results 
  of Operations.......................   39
Business..............................   47
Management............................   58
Principal and Selling Shareholders....   62
Certain Transactions..................   65
Description of Capital Stock..........   66
Shares Eligible for Future Sale.......   69
Description of Certain Indebtedness...   70
Underwriting..........................   72
Legal Matters.........................   73
Experts...............................   73
Glossary..............................  A-1
Index to Financial Statements.........  F-1
</TABLE>
    
 
- ------------------------------------------------------
- ------------------------------------------------------
 
- ------------------------------------------------------
- ------------------------------------------------------
 
                                6,750,000 SHARES
 
                                [PHONETEL LOGO]
 
                                    PHONETEL
                               TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
 
                                  COMMON STOCK
                              --------------------
                                   PROSPECTUS
                              --------------------
   
                               SOUTHCOAST CAPITAL
    
   
                        C  o  r  p  o  r  a  t  i  o  n
    
 
                                            , 1996
 
- ------------------------------------------------------
- ------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>   207
 
                                    PART II
 
                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
 
ITEM 24.  INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
 
Article Sixth of the Articles of Incorporation of the Company provides for
indemnification, to the fullest extent permitted or required under law, of any
director or officer of the Company or any person serving at the request of the
Company as a director, trustee or officer of another entity, in connection with
any action, suit or proceeding, criminal, civil or administrative, to which such
person, is or may be a party by reason of their status as such.
 
   
Pursuant to section 1701.13(E) of the Ohio Revised Code, a director, officer or
employee is entitled to indemnification only if a determination is made (i) by
the directors of the Company acting at a meeting at which a quorum consisting of
directors who neither were nor are parties to or threatened with any such
action, suit or proceeding is present or (ii) by the shareholders of the Company
at a meeting held for such purpose by the affirmative vote of the holders of
shares entitling them to exercise a majority of the voting power of the Company
on such proposal or without a meeting by the written consent of the holders of
shares entitling them to exercise two-thirds of the voting power on such
proposal, that such director, officer or employee (a) was not, and has not been
adjudicated to have been, negligent or guilty of misconduct in the performance
of his duty to the Company, (b) acted in good faith and in a manner he
reasonably believed to be in the best interest of the Company and (c) in any
matter the subject of a criminal action, suit or proceeding, had no reasonable
cause to believe that his conduct was unlawful.
    
 
Additionally, section 1701.13(E)(5)(a) of the Ohio Revised Code provides that,
unless prohibited by specific reference in a corporation's articles of
incorporation or code of regulations, a corporation shall pay a director's
expenses, including attorneys' fees, incurred in defending an action, suit or
proceeding brought against a director in such capacity, whether such action,
suit or proceeding is brought by a third party or by or in the right of the
corporation, provided the director delivers to the corporation an undertaking to
(a) repay such amount if it is proved in a court of competent jurisdiction that
his action or failure to act was undertaken with deliberate intent to injure the
corporation or with reckless disregard for the best interests of the corporation
and (b) reasonably cooperate with the corporation in such action, suit or
proceeding.
 
Section 1701.13(E)(7) of the Ohio Revised Code provides that a corporation may
purchase insurance or furnish similar protection for any director, officer or
employee against any liability asserted against him in any such capacity,
whether or not the corporation would have power to indemnify him under Ohio law.
Such insurance may be purchased from or maintained with a person in which the
corporation has a financial interest.
 
ITEM 25.  OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCES AND DISTRIBUTION.
 
Except for the Securities and Exchange Commission registration fee, all fees and
expenses are estimated and will be paid by the Company.
 
   
<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                                      <C>
     Securities and Exchange Commission Registration Fee                                      $8,182
     NASD Filing Fee                                                                           3,200
     American Stock Exchange listing fees                                                          *
     Printing and Engraving Expenses                                                               *
     Accounting Fees and Expenses                                                                  *
     Legal Fees and Expenses                                                                       *
     Transfer Agent's and Registrar's Fees and Expenses                                            *
     Miscellaneous                                                                                 *
                                                                                              ------
               Total                                                                          $    *
                                                                                              ======
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
 
* To be completed by amendment.
 
ITEM 26.  RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES
 
   
During 1993 the Company issued 20,833 shares of Common Stock to Zandec, Ltd. in
connection with the exercise of certain options resulting in proceeds to the
Company in the amount of $66,250. In addition, the Company issued 310,962 shares
of Common Stock to various individuals in connection with the exercise of Series
B, C, D and E Warrants resulting in proceeds to the Company
    
 
                                      II-1
<PAGE>   208
 
   
totaling $1,272,945. The aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to the
exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
    
 
On February 13, 1993 the Company issued 8,333 shares of Common Stock to The
Cafaro Company ("Cafaro") at a value of $56,250 in consideration for entering
into a ten-year agreement with the Company to provide Cafaro with
telecommunications services. On June 30, 1993 a director was issued 1,830 shares
of Common Stock as reimbursement for certain fees which were valued at $22,573.
Both issuances were exempt from registration pursuant to the exemption provided
under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
   
On June 30, 1993 the Company issued 6,667 shares of Common Stock to a director
and 1,686 shares to Susan Etter in a private sale resulting in proceeds to the
Company in the aggregate of $63,916. On the same day, the Company issued 16,164
shares of Common Stock to Zandec, Ltd. representing the conversion of $220,957
of debt and interest into equity. In addition, shares of 12% Preferred Stock
valued at $742,584 were converted into 123,764 shares of Common Stock of the
Company. On June 30, 1993 the Company issued 12,000 and 200 shares of 8%
Preferred, respectively, to J&C Resources, Inc. and Susan Etter with proceeds
totaling $981,084. All of the aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to the
exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
    
 
On July 12, 1993 an employee was issued 1,533 shares of Common Stock as
compensation in the amount of $10,350. On December 31, 1993 Standard Phone
Company was issued 8,582 shares of Common Stock in connection with the
acquisition of certain pay telephones, enclosures and the associated location
contracts. The value of said shares issued was $103,004. All of the
aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration
provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
During 1993, the Company issued 2,500 shares of 7% Preferred Stock to Joseph
Abrams with proceeds totalling $200,000. The shares were issued pursuant to the
exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
During the first quarter of 1994 a total of 87,927 shares of Common Stock were
issued in consideration of the exercise of certain warrants and options.
Proceeds from the exercise of said warrants and options totalled $553,964. Said
shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration provided under
Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
   
In four private sales during March and May 1994, the Company sold 136,109 shares
of its Common Stock for an aggregate of $1,478,165. Said shares were issued
pursuant to the exemption from registration provided under Regulation S of the
Act. In addition, 5,276 shares of Common Stock were issued to Montmelion
Investments pursuant to the exemption provided under Section 4(2) of the Act to
pay for a portion of the financing costs, valued at $99,690, associated with the
aforementioned private placement.
    
 
On March 1, 1994 the Company issued 1,282 shares of Common Stock valued at
$11,128 to two directors as compensation for their service on the Board of
Directors. On the same day the Company issued 500 shares to a consultant for
services rendered in the amount of $4,340. On November 28, 1994 the Company
issued 1,480 shares of Common Stock to two directors as compensation valued at
$12,846 for their service on the Board of Directors. On the same day, the
Company issued 2,091 shares to a director for reimbursement of certain fees and
expenses valued at $18,150 and 3,033 shares to a contractor for services
rendered which were valued at $26,363. All of the aforementioned shares were
issued pursuant to the exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2)
of the Act.
 
On March 8, 1995 and July 14, 1995 the Company issued 3,333 and 5,000 shares of
Common Stock in consideration of the exercise of options with proceeds to the
Company totalling $35,000. The shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from
registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
In May 1995 the Company issued 162,498 shares of Common Stock in a private
placement to five individuals with proceeds totalling $640,000. On May 8, 1995
the Company issued a total of 7,532 shares of Common Stock to three former
executives of the Company as compensation totalling $36,160. On July 26, 1995
the Company issued 66,666 shares of Common Stock in a private placement to three
individuals with proceeds totalling $300,000. On August 18, 1995 the Company
issued 65,091 shares of Common Stock two private placements with proceeds
totalling $277,913 and issued 1,111 shares of Common Stock valued at $5,000 to a
director as consideration for his service on the Board of Directors. On August
30, 1995 the Company issued an aggregate of 116,666 shares to Ariel Fund Limited
and Gabriel Capital, L.P. in a private placement with proceeds totalling
$525,000. On September 6, 1995 the Company issued an aggregate of 26,666 shares
of Common Stock to two individuals in a private placement with proceeds
totalling $119,999. On October 26, 1995 the Company issued 6,832 shares of
Common Stock in a private placement to two employees and Sanford J. Spitzer with
proceeds totalling $30,750. On November 6, 1995 the Company issued 16,666 shares
of Common Stock in a private placement to Ariel Fund Limited and Gabriel
Capital, L.P. with proceeds totalling $75,000. On November 15, 1995 the Company
issued 5,555 shares of Common Stock to an employee in a private placement with
proceeds totalling 25,000. In November and December 1995 the Company issued
3,750 and 1,666 shares,
 
                                      II-2
<PAGE>   209
 
   
respectively, to Moira MB Neidt and John and Patricia McCadden with proceeds
totaling $33,625. All of the aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to the
exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
    
 
On February 7, 1995 the Company issued 833 shares of Common Stock valued at
$5,000 to an employee as compensation for services rendered. In May and June
1995 the Company issued 30,231 shares of Common Stock to five lenders in
connection with the conversion of $137,678 of debt into equity. In July 1995 the
Company issued 1,271 shares of Common Stock to a director as reimbursement of
Company related expenses totalling $5,726. In August 1995 the Company issued
3,128 shares of Common Stock to two directors as reimbursement of Company
related expenses totalling $14,083. In September 1995 the Company issued 1,018
shares of Common Stock to a director as reimbursement of Company related
expenses totalling $4,585. In October 1995 the Company issued 971 shares of
Common Stock to a director for reimbursement of Company related expenses
totalling $5,127. In November 1995 the Company issued 1,719 shares of Common
Stock to a director for reimbursement of Company related expenses totalling
$13,084. In December 1995 the Company issued 25,682 shares of Common Stock to
two directors for reimbursement of Company related expenses totalling $24,282.
On December 20, 1995 the Company issued 12,500 shares of Common Stock to M&M
Financial Services, Inc. in consideration of services rendered in the amount of
$75,000 in connection with the World acquisition. All of the aforementioned
shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration provided under
Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
   
On December 26, 1995 the Company issued 56,666 shares of Common Stock to Brenner
Securities Corporation, a predecessor of Southcoast Capital Corporation, for
financial services valued in the amount of $340,000 rendered in connection with
the World acquisition. All of the aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to
the exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
    
 
On September 21, 1995 the Company issued 402,500 shares of Common Stock to the
former shareholders of World in connection with the acquisition. The value of
the stock issued in connection with said acquisition was $2,716,876. The
aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration
provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
   
On September 21, 1995 the Company also issued 530,534 shares of 10% Preferred
Stock to the former shareholders of World in connection with the acquisition.
Such shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration provided
under Section 4(2) of the Act.
    
 
On October 16, 1995 the Company issued 224,881 shares of Common Stock to the
former shareholders of Public Telephone in connection with the acquisition at a
value of $1,517,951. In addition, the Company issued 45,833 and 34,166 shares of
Common Stock to Thomas Martin and James Martin, respectively, as consideration
for the execution of non-compete agreements valued at $540,000. The
aforementioned shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration
provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
On November 24, 1995 the Company issued 23,809 shares of Common Stock at a value
of $150,000 in connection with the IPP acquisition. The shares were issued
pursuant to the exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the
Act.
 
During January 1996 the Company issued 528 shares of Common Stock to a director
for reimbursement of Company related expenses totalling $3,168. The shares were
issued pursuant to the exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2)
of the Act.
 
On March 15, 1996 the Company issued 555,589 shares of Common Stock valued at
$1,106,506 and 5,453.14 shares of 14% Preferred valued at $245,897 and Nominal
Value Warrants to purchase 117,785 shares of the Company's Common Stock to the
former shareholders of IPP in connection with the IPP acquisition. In addition,
the Company also issued 8,333.33 shares of 14% Preferred valued at $375,769 and
Nominal Value Warrants to purchase 179,996 shares of the Company's Common Stock
to the former shareholders of Paramount in connection with the Paramount
acquisition. On March 15, 1996 the Company also issued 204,824 shares of Series
A Preferred to the Lenders under the Credit Agreement. The Company also issued
3,871 shares of Common Stock to Applied Telecommunications Technologies, Inc.
representing conversion of $30,000 of debt into equity. The aforementioned
securities were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration provided
under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
On March 15, 1996, concurrent with the Company entering into the Credit
Agreement, the Company redeemed the 10% Preferred, 8% Preferred and 7%
Preferred. In connection with the redemption of said classes of stock, the
Company issued 34,436.33 shares of 14% Preferred and Nominal Value Warrants to
purchase 503,770 shares of Common Stock. The Company also issued 59,695.39
shares of 14% Preferred and Nominal Value Warrants to purchase 1,217,391 shares
of Common Stock in connection with the conversion of $3,581,723 of debt owed to
related parties. All of the securities were issued pursuant to the exemption
from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
During April 1996 the Company issued 432,498 shares of Common Stock, in the
aggregate, to J&C Resources, Inc., Jeffrey Huffman, Alton Huffman, Thomas Martin
and James Martin in consideration of the exercise of certain warrants resulting
in
 
                                      II-3
<PAGE>   210
 
proceeds totalling $4,325. On May 2, 1996 the Company issued 539,989 shares of
Common Stock to a director in consideration of the exercise of certain warrants
resulting in proceeds totalling $5,400. On July 22, 1996 the Company issued
62,650 shares of Common Stock to a director in consideration of the exercise of
certain warrants resulting in proceeds to the Company totalling $627. The
aforementioned securities were issued pursuant to the exemption from
registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
On September 13, 1996 the Company issued 2,162,163 shares of Common Stock valued
at $4,637,840 to Amtel, as debtor-in-possession pursuant to a Chapter 11
bankruptcy proceeding, as partial consideration for the Amtel acquisitions. On
September 16, 1996 the Company issued 166,666 shares of Common Stock valued at
$311,665 to the former shareholders of POA, as partial consideration for the POA
acquisition. Said shares were issued pursuant to the exemption from registration
provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
On June 27, 1996 the Company issued 884,214 shares of Common Stock valued at
$5,305,284 to the former shareholders of World in connection with the conversion
of the convertible 10% Preferred. Said shares were issued pursuant to the
exemption from registration provided under Section 4(2) of the Act.
 
ITEM 27.  EXHIBITS
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                            DESCRIPTION
- -----------   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>
    1.1       Form of Underwriting Agreement.*
    3.1       Articles of Incorporation. (1)**
    3.2       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated August 30, 1989. (2)**
    3.3       Amendment and Restated Code of Governmental Regulations. (5)**
    3.5       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated January 3, 1992. (5)**
    3.6       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated January 20, 1992. (5)**
    3.7       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated April 9, 1992. (8)**
    3.8       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated June 18, 1993. (8)**
    3.9       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated June 30, 1993. (8)**
    3.10      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated September 22, 1995. (13)**
    3.11      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated December 15, 1995. (13)**
    3.12      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated February 28, 1996. (13)**
    4.1       Specimen of Common Stock Certificate. (3)**
    4.2       Form of 14% Convertible Preferred Stock. (13)**
    4.3       Form of Indenture relating to the Notes offered in the Company Debt Offering (including the
              form of Note).
    5.1       Opinion of Tammy L. Martin, Esq. regarding validity of the shares of Common Stock registered
              hereby.*
   10.1       Stock Option Agreement between William Tymoszczuk and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., dated
              March 1, 1987. (3)**
   10.2       Stock Incentive Plan for Key Employees, dated May 5, 1987. (1)
   10.3       Amended and Restated Stock Option Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Jerry H.
              Burger dated July 1, 1993. (8)**
   10.4       Stock Option Agreement dated July 1, 1993 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Bernard
              Mandel. (8)**
   10.5       Form of Stock Option Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and DeBartolo, Inc.(4)**
   10.6       Extension of Stock Option Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and The Edward J.
              DeBartolo Corporation. (8)**
   10.7       Separation Agreement dated September 15, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Jerry
              Burger, together with amendments thereto. (13)**
   10.8       Separation Agreement dated September 15, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Bernard
              Mandel, together with amendments thereto. (13)**
   10.9       Lease Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Bankers Leasing Association, Inc.
              dated February 12, 1992. (5)**
   10.10      Registration Rights Agreement dated April 10, 1992 among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., George
              H. Henry, Carl Kirchhoff and Charles Stuart. (5)**
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-4
<PAGE>   211
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                            DESCRIPTION
- -----------   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>
   10.11      Registration Rights Agreement among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., J & C Resources, Inc. and
              Allen Moskowitz. (5)**
   10.12      Form of Stock Option Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement between PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. and The Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation. (5)**
   10.13      Stock Option Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and William D. Moses, Jr. dated May 11, 1992. (5)**
   10.14      Assignment Agreement between William D. Moses, Jr. and Edward A. Moulton transferring the
              right to receive options to acquire 5,000 shares of Common Stock of PhoneTel Technologies,
              Inc. (9)**
   10.15      Stock Option Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and George H. Henry dated March 24, 1992. (5)**
   10.16      Amendment No. 1 to Amended and Restated Loan Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement
              dated October 23, 1992 by and among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., J & C Resources, Inc. and
              Allen Moskowitz. (6)**
   10.17      Lease between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Trembal Construction Co. dba Statler Office
              Tower dated April 23, 1992. (6)**
   10.18      Master Agreement between The Cafaro Company and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated December
              23, 1992. (6)**
   10.19      Operator Subscriber Service Agreement dated March 25, 1994 between U.S. Long Distance, Inc.
              and Alpha Pay Phones-IV, L.P. (7)**
   10.20      Non-competition Agreement among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., Alpha Pay Phones-IV, L.P.,
              American Telecommunications Management Corporation, Stephen C. Fowler and Ronald T. Huggard
              dated January 5, 1994. (8)**
   10.21      Stock Option Agreement for WEA Investments, Inc. relative to 50,000 shares of Common Stock
              under option dated on or about November 30, 1993. (8)**
   10.22      Stock Option Agreement with Allenstown Investments Limited dated on or about January 10, 1994
              relative to grant of an option to purchase 126,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (8)**
   10.23      Stock Option Agreement with Douglas Abrams with respect to 45,000 shares of Common Stock of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated on or about January 10, 1994. (8)**
   10.24      Amendment to Stock Option Agreement dated January 10, 1994 with Douglas Abrams with respect
              to 45,000 shares of Common Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (9)**
   10.25      Stock Option Agreement with William Moses, Jr. relative to 75,000 shares of Common Stock of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated on or about January 29, 1993. (8)**
   10.26      Agreement dated January 5, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the Estate of William
              Moses relative to loan in the amount of one million dollars and providing for warrants to
              purchase 100,000 shares and contingent right to acquire warrants to purchase 400,000 shares
              of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (8)**
   10.27      Agreement dated September 13, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the Estate of
              William Moses relative to restructuring the repayment schedule of certain monies owed by
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and providing for warrants to purchase 45,000 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.28      Loan Agreement dated December 29, 1993 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and certain
              lenders identified therein with respect to borrowing by PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. of
              $400,000 and the granting of warrants to purchase, in the aggregate, a total of 62,745 shares
              of Common Stock by PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (8)**
   10.29      Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and certain
              lenders identified therein with respect to the extension of the maturity dates of certain
              promissory notes and the granting of additional warrants to purchase Common Stock of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. (9)**
   10.30      Stock Option Agreement dated March 3, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and George H.
              Henry relative to a grant of an option to purchase 39,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies,
              Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.31      Stock Option Agreements dated in January 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and George
              H. Henry granting options to purchase, in the aggregate, a total of 106,551 shares of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.32      Stock Option Agreement with George H. Henry dated in August 1993 relative to a grant of an
              option to purchase 150,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.33      Stock Option Agreement with Vincent Mann relative to 5,000 shares of Common Stock under
              option dated November 15, 1994. (9)**
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-5
<PAGE>   212
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                            DESCRIPTION
- -----------   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>
   10.34      Stock Option Agreement with Donald Vella with respect to 20,000 shares of Common Stock of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated on or about November 15, 1994. (9)**
   10.35      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Richard Thatcher
              dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to a Letter
              Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the aggregate, to
              purchase a total of 49,412 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.36      Warrant Agreements with Richard Thatcher dated February, March and April 1995, issued
              pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in
              the aggregate, to purchase a total of 7,500 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common
              Stock. (9)**
   10.37      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Gerald Waldshutz
              dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to a Letter
              Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the aggregate, to
              purchase a total of 41,177 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.38      Warrant Agreements with Gerald Waldshutz dated February, March and April 1995, issued
              pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in
              the aggregate, to purchase a total of 6,250 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common
              Stock. (9)**
   10.39      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Steve Richman dated
              March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to a Letter Agreement
              dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a
              total of 41,177 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.40      Warrant Agreements with Steven Richman dated February, March and April 1995, issued pursuant
              to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the
              aggregate, to purchase a total of 6,250 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock.
              (9)**
   10.41      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Janice Fuelhart
              dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to a Letter
              Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the aggregate, to
              purchase a total of 49,412 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.42      Warrant Agreements with Janice Fuelhart dated February, March and April 1995, issued pursuant
              to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the
              aggregate, to purchase a total of 1,250 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock.
              (9)**
   10.43      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Peter Graf dated in
              March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to a Letter Agreement
              dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a
              total of 148,235 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.44      Warrant Agreements with Peter Graf dated February, March and April 1995, issued pursuant to a
              Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the
              aggregate, to purchase a total of 28,750 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock.
              (9)**
   10.45      Stock Option Agreement dated May 24, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the Estate
              of William D. Moses, and subsequent assignment thereof dated February 2, 1995, relative to
              the grant of an option to purchase 50,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock.
              (9)**
   10.46      Stock Option Agreement dated September 13, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the
              Estate of William D. Moses, and subsequent assignment thereof dated February 2, 1995,
              relative to the grant of an option to purchase 45,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (9)**
   10.47      Warrant Agreement dated March 31, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the Estate of
              William D. Moses, and subsequent assignment thereof dated February 2, 1995, relative to the
              grant of warrants to purchase 200,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock.
              (9)**
   10.48      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated September 22, 1995, together with Exhibits attached
              thereto, by and among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Phone Tel II, Inc., and World
              Communications, Inc. (10)**
   10.49      Amendment to Agreement and Plan of Merger dated September 22, 1995 by and among PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc., PhoneTel II, Inc., and World Communications, Inc. (10)**
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-6
<PAGE>   213
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                            DESCRIPTION
- -----------   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>
   10.50      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated October 16, 1995, together with Exhibits attached thereto,
              by and among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., PhoneTel II, Inc., and Public Telephone
              Corporation. (11)**
   10.51      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated November 22, 1995, between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              International Pay Phones, Inc., a South Carolina corporation, and all amendments thereto.
              (12)**
   10.52      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated November 22, 1995, between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              International Pay Phones, Inc., a Tennessee corporation, and all amendments thereto. (12)**
   10.53      Share Purchase Agreement dated as of November 16, 1995, between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and Paramount Communications Systems, Inc., and all amendments thereto. (12)**
   10.54      Credit Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., Various
              Lenders and Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation (the "Credit Agreement").
              (12)**
   10.55      Security Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., Public
              Telephone Corporation, World Communications, Inc., Northern Florida Telephone Corporation and
              Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. and Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital
              Corporation as Agent for itself and certain other lenders. (12)**
   10.56      Warrant Purchase Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and Cerberus Partners, L.P. (12)**
   10.57      Registration Rights Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and Cerberus Partners, L.P. (12)**
   10.58      Warrant Certificate dated as of March 15, 1996 granting Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.)
              Capital Corporation the right to purchase 102,412 shares of Series A Special Convertible
              Preferred Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.59      Warrant Certificate dated as of March 15, 1996 granting Cerberus Partners, L.P. the right to
              purchase 102,412 shares of Series A Special Convertible Preferred Stock of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.60      Form of Warrant issued on March 15, 1996 to persons listed on Schedule A to this exhibit.
              (13)**
   10.61      Operator Service Subscriber Agreement dated as of February 29, 1996 by and between
              Intellicall Operator Services, Inc. and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.62      Intellistar License Agreement dated as of February 29, 1996 by and between Intellicall, Inc.
              and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.63      Relay Services Agreement dated as of February 29, 1996 by and between Intellicall, Inc. and
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.64      Stock Option Agreement dated April 1, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Daniel J.
              Moos. (13)**
   10.65      Separation Agreement dated July 29, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Daniel J.
              Moos.*
   10.66      Employment Agreement dated September 1, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Richard
              Kebert.*
   10.67      First Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of April 11, 1996. (15)
   10.68      Second Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of June 1996. (14)**
   10.69      Third Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of August 1, 1996. (14)**
   10.70      Fourth Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of September 13, 1996. (14)**
   10.71      Fifth Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of September 13, 1996. (14)**
   10.72      Sixth Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of October 8, 1996. (15)
   10.73      Asset Purchase Agreement among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., an Ohio Corporation as Buyer and
              ACI-HDT Supply Company, a California corporation, Amtel Communications Services, a California
              corporation, Amtel Communications Correctional Facilities, a California corporation, Amtel
              Communication, Inc., a California corporation, Amtel Communications, Inc., a California
              corporation, and Amtel Communications Payphones, Inc., a California corporation, as Seller,
              dated June 26, 1996, and all amendments thereto. (14)**
   10.74      Amended and Restated Share Purchase Agreement among PhoneTel III, Inc., Payphones of America,
              Inc. and all of the Shareholders of Payphones of America, Inc., dated as of August 1, 1996,
              and all amendments thereto. (14)**
   21.1       Subsidiaries of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   23.1       Consent of Price Waterhouse LLP regarding PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
</TABLE>
    
 
                                      II-7
<PAGE>   214
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                            DESCRIPTION
- -----------   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<C>           <S>
   23.2       Consent of Price Waterhouse LLP regarding Paramount Communication Systems, Inc.
   23.3       Consent of Harlan & Boettger, CPAs
   23.4       Consent of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
   23.5       Consent of Ernest M. Sewell, CPA
   23.6       Consent of Miller Sherrill Blake, CPA, PA
   23.7       Consent of Kerber, Eck & Braeckel, LLP
   23.8       Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP
   23.9       Consent of Tammy L. Martin, Esq. (included in Exhibit 5.1).*
   24.1       Powers of Attorney (included on signature pages to the Registration Statement).**
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
 
 * To be filed by amendment.
   
** Previously filed.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<C>   <S>
  (1) Incorporated by reference from the Registration Statement on Form S-18 (Registration No. 33-16962C)
      of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (the "Company"), filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
      September 1, 1987.
  (2) Incorporated by reference from Amendment No. 1 to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1,
      Registration No. 33-30428, filed September 27, 1989.
  (3) Incorporated by reference from Amendment No. 1 to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-18
      (Registration No. 33-16962C), filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 30, 1987.
  (4) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1989.
  (5) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1991.
  (6) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 1992.
  (7) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 8-K dated March 25, 1994.
  (8) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 1993.
  (9) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 1994.
 (10) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 8-K dated September 22, 1995.
 (11) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 8-K dated October 16, 1995.
 (12) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 8-K dated March 15, 1996.
 (13) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 1995.
 (14) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 8-K dated September 13, 1996.
 (15) Incorporated by reference from the Company's Form 10-QSB for the quarter ended September 30, 1996.
</TABLE>
    
 
ITEM 28.  UNDERTAKINGS.
 
   
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act of
1933 (the "Act") may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons
of the small business issuer pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise,
the small business issuer has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities
and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as
expressed in the Act and is therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim
for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the
small business issuer of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or
controlling person of the small business issuer in the successful defense of any
action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling
person in connection with the securities being registered, the small business
issuer will, unless in the opinion of its counsel that matter has been settled
by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the
question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as
expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication
of such issue.
    
 
The undersigned small business issuer will:
 
        (1) For determining any liability under the Securities Act, treat the
     information omitted from the form of prospectus filed as part of this
     Registration Statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in a form
     of prospectus filed by the small
 
                                      II-8
<PAGE>   215
 
     business issuer pursuant to Rule 424(b)(1) or (4) or 497(h) under the
     Securities Act as part of this Registration Statement as of that time the
     Commission declared it effective.
 
        (2) For determining any liability under the Securities Act of 1933,
     treat each post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus as a
     new registration statement for the securities offered in the Registration
     Statement, and that offering of the securities at that time as the initial
     bona fide offering of those securities.
 
                                      II-9
<PAGE>   216
 
                                   SIGNATURES
 
   
In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the
Registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all
of the requirements for filing on form SB-2 and authorizes this Amendment No. 1
to the Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New York, State of New York, on
November 18, 1996.
    
 
                                   PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
 
   
                                   By: /s/  Peter G. Graf
                                   -----------------------
    
                                     Peter G. Graf
                                     Chairman of the Board
 
   
In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement has been signed by the following
persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                  NAME                                      TITLE                             DATE
- ----------------------------------------  ------------------------------------------  ---------------------
<S>                                       <C>                                         <C>
/s/  Peter G. Graf                        Chairman of the Board,                        November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------  Chief Executive Officer,
Peter G. Graf                             and Director

*                                         Chief Operating Officer and                   November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------  Director
Nickey B. Maxey

*                                         Director                                      November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------
Stuart Hollander

/s/  Richard Kebert                       Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer         November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------  (Principal Financial and Accounting
Richard Kebert                            Officer)

*                                         Director                                      November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------
Joseph Abrams

*                                         Director                                      November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------
George Henry

*                                         Director                                      November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------
Aron Katzman

*                                         Director                                      November 18, 1996
- ----------------------------------------
Steven Richman
</TABLE>
    
 
- ---------------
   
* Tammy L. Martin, by signing her name hereto, does hereby execute this
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on behalf of the directors of the
Registrant indicated above by asterisks, pursuant to powers of attorney duly
executed by such directors contained on the signature pages of the original
Registration Statement.
    
 
   
                                   By: /s/  Tammy L. Martin
                                   ------------------------
                                     Tammy L. Martin
                                     Attorney-in-Fact
    
 
                                      II-10
<PAGE>   217
 
                                 EXHIBIT INDEX
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                       DESCRIPTION                                       PAGE NO.
- -----------   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------
<C>           <S>                                                                                   <C>
    1.1       Form of Underwriting Agreement.*
    3.1       Articles of Incorporation. (1)**
    3.2       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated August 30, 1989. (2)**
    3.3       Amendment and Restated Code of Governmental Regulations. (5)**
    3.5       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated January 3, 1992. (5)**
    3.6       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated January 20, 1992. (5)**
    3.7       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated April 9, 1992. (8)**
    3.8       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated June 18, 1993. (8)**
    3.9       Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated June 30, 1993. (8)**
    3.10      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated September 22, 1995. (13)**
    3.11      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated December 15, 1995. (13)**
    3.12      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation dated February 28, 1996. (13)**
    4.1       Specimen of Common Stock Certificate. (3)**
    4.2       Form of 14% Convertible Preferred Stock. (13)**
    4.3       Form of Indenture relating to the Notes offered in the Company Debt Offering
              (including the form of Note).
    5.1       Opinion of Tammy L. Martin, Esq. regarding validity of the shares of Common Stock
              registered hereby.*
   10.1       Stock Option Agreement between William Tymoszczuk and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.,
              dated March 1, 1987. (3)**
   10.2       Stock Incentive Plan for Key Employees, dated May 5, 1987. (1)
   10.3       Amended and Restated Stock Option Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              Jerry H. Burger dated July 1, 1993. (8)**
   10.4       Stock Option Agreement dated July 1, 1993 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              Bernard Mandel. (8)**
   10.5       Form of Stock Option Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and DeBartolo,
              Inc. (4)**
   10.6       Extension of Stock Option Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and The
              Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation. (8)**
   10.7       Separation Agreement dated September 15, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and Jerry Burger, together with amendments thereto. (13)**
   10.8       Separation Agreement dated September 15, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and Bernard Mandel, together with amendments thereto. (13)**
   10.9       Lease Agreement between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Bankers Leasing Association,
              Inc. dated February 12, 1992. (5)**
   10.10      Registration Rights Agreement dated April 10, 1992 among PhoneTel Technologies,
              Inc., George H. Henry, Carl Kirchhoff and Charles Stuart. (5)**
   10.11      Registration Rights Agreement among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., J & C Resources,
              Inc. and Allen Moskowitz. (5)**
   10.12      Form of Stock Option Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement between PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. and The Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation. (5)**
   10.13      Stock Option Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement between PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. and William D. Moses, Jr. dated May 11, 1992. (5)**
   10.14      Assignment Agreement between William D. Moses, Jr. and Edward A. Moulton
              transferring the right to receive options to acquire 5,000 shares of Common Stock of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (9)**
</TABLE>
    
<PAGE>   218
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                       DESCRIPTION                                       PAGE NO.
- -----------   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------
<C>           <S>                                                                                   <C>
   10.15      Stock Option Agreement and Registration Rights Agreement between PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. and George H. Henry dated March 24, 1992. (5)**
   10.16      Amendment No. 1 to Amended and Restated Loan Agreement and Registration Rights
              Agreement dated October 23, 1992 by and among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., J & C
              Resources, Inc. and Allen Moskowitz. (6)**
   10.17      Lease between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Trembal Construction Co. dba Statler
              Office Tower dated April 23, 1992. (6)**
   10.18      Master Agreement between The Cafaro Company and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated
              December 23, 1992. (6)**
   10.19      Operator Subscriber Service Agreement dated March 25, 1994 between U.S. Long
              Distance, Inc. and Alpha Pay Phones-IV, L.P. (7)**
   10.20      Non-competition Agreement among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., Alpha Pay Phones-IV,
              L.P., American Telecommunications Management Corporation, Stephen C. Fowler and
              Ronald T. Huggard dated January 5, 1994. (8)**
   10.21      Stock Option Agreement for WEA Investments, Inc. relative to 50,000 shares of Common
              Stock under option dated on or about November 30, 1993. (8)**
   10.22      Stock Option Agreement with Allenstown Investments Limited dated on or about January
              10, 1994 relative to grant of an option to purchase 126,000 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (8)**
   10.23      Stock Option Agreement with Douglas Abrams with respect to 45,000 shares of Common
              Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated on or about January 10, 1994. (8)**
   10.24      Amendment to Stock Option Agreement dated January 10, 1994 with Douglas Abrams with
              respect to 45,000 shares of Common Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (9)**
   10.25      Stock Option Agreement with William Moses, Jr. relative to 75,000 shares of Common
              Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated on or about January 29, 1993. (8)**
   10.26      Agreement dated January 5, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the Estate
              of William Moses relative to loan in the amount of one million dollars and providing
              for warrants to purchase 100,000 shares and contingent right to acquire warrants to
              purchase 400,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (8)**
   10.27      Agreement dated September 13, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the
              Estate of William Moses relative to restructuring the repayment schedule of certain
              monies owed by PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and providing for warrants to purchase
              45,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.28      Loan Agreement dated December 29, 1993 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              certain lenders identified therein with respect to borrowing by PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. of $400,000 and the granting of warrants to purchase, in the
              aggregate, a total of 62,745 shares of Common Stock by PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              (8)**
   10.29      Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              certain lenders identified therein with respect to the extension of the maturity
              dates of certain promissory notes and the granting of additional warrants to
              purchase Common Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (9)**
   10.30      Stock Option Agreement dated March 3, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              George H. Henry relative to a grant of an option to purchase 39,000 shares of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.31      Stock Option Agreements dated in January 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and George H. Henry granting options to purchase, in the aggregate, a total of
              106,551 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.32      Stock Option Agreement with George H. Henry dated in August 1993 relative to a grant
              of an option to purchase 150,000 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Common Stock.
              (9)**
   10.33      Stock Option Agreement with Vincent Mann relative to 5,000 shares of Common Stock
              under option dated November 15, 1994. (9)**
</TABLE>
    
<PAGE>   219
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                       DESCRIPTION                                       PAGE NO.
- -----------   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------
<C>           <S>                                                                                   <C>
   10.34      Stock Option Agreement with Donald Vella with respect to 20,000 shares of Common
              Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. dated on or about November 15, 1994. (9)**
   10.35      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Richard
              Thatcher dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant
              to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in
              the aggregate, to purchase a total of 49,412 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (9)**
   10.36      Warrant Agreements with Richard Thatcher dated February, March and April 1995,
              issued pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant
              of warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a total of 7,500 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.37      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Gerald
              Waldshutz dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant
              to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in
              the aggregate, to purchase a total of 41,177 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (9)**
   10.38      Warrant Agreements with Gerald Waldshutz dated February, March and April 1995,
              issued pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant
              of warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a total of 6,250 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.39      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Steve
              Richman dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to
              a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in
              the aggregate, to purchase a total of 41,177 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (9)**
   10.40      Warrant Agreements with Steven Richman dated February, March and April 1995, issued
              pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of
              warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a total of 6,250 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.41      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Janice
              Fuelhart dated March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant
              to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in
              the aggregate, to purchase a total of 49,412 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (9)**
   10.42      Warrant Agreements with Janice Fuelhart dated February, March and April 1995, issued
              pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of
              warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a total of 1,250 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.43      Amendments to Warrant Agreements between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and Peter Graf
              dated in March 1995, and related Warrant Agreements thereto, issued pursuant to a
              Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of warrants, in the
              aggregate, to purchase a total of 148,235 shares of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              Common Stock. (9)**
   10.44      Warrant Agreements with Peter Graf dated February, March and April 1995, issued
              pursuant to a Letter Agreement dated February 23, 1995, relative to the grant of
              warrants, in the aggregate, to purchase a total of 28,750 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.45      Stock Option Agreement dated May 24, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              the Estate of William D. Moses, and subsequent assignment thereof dated February 2,
              1995, relative to the grant of an option to purchase 50,000 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.46      Stock Option Agreement dated September 13, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
              and the Estate of William D. Moses, and subsequent assignment thereof dated February
              2, 1995, relative to the grant of an option to purchase 45,000 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.47      Warrant Agreement dated March 31, 1994 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and the
              Estate of William D. Moses, and subsequent assignment thereof dated February 2,
              1995, relative to the grant of warrants to purchase 200,000 shares of PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. Common Stock. (9)**
   10.48      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated September 22, 1995, together with Exhibits
              attached thereto, by and among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. Phone Tel II, Inc., and
              World Communications, Inc. (10)**
   10.49      Amendment to Agreement and Plan of Merger dated September 22, 1995 by and among
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., PhoneTel II, Inc., and World Communications, Inc.
              (10)**
</TABLE>
    
<PAGE>   220
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                       DESCRIPTION                                       PAGE NO.
- -----------   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------
<C>           <S>                                                                                   <C>
   10.50      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated October 16, 1995, together with Exhibits attached
              thereto, by and among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., PhoneTel II, Inc., and Public
              Telephone Corporation. (11)**
   10.51      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated November 22, 1995, between PhoneTel Technologies,
              Inc. and International Pay Phones, Inc., a South Carolina corporation, and all
              amendments thereto. (12)**
   10.52      Agreement and Plan of Merger dated November 22, 1995, between PhoneTel Technologies,
              Inc. and International Pay Phones, Inc., a Tennessee corporation, and all amendments
              thereto. (12)**
   10.53      Share Purchase Agreement dated as of November 16, 1995, between PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. and Paramount Communications Systems, Inc., and all amendments
              thereto. (12)**
   10.54      Credit Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.,
              Various Lenders and Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation (the
              "Credit Agreement"). (12)**
   10.55      Security Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.,
              Public Telephone Corporation, World Communications, Inc., Northern Florida Telephone
              Corporation and Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. and Internationale
              Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation as Agent for itself and certain other
              lenders. (12)**
   10.56      Warrant Purchase Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies,
              Inc. and Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and Cerberus
              Partners, L.P. (12)**
   10.57      Registration Rights Agreement dated as of March 15, 1996 between PhoneTel
              Technologies, Inc. and Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and
              Cerberus Partners, L.P. (12)**
   10.58      Warrant Certificate dated as of March 15, 1996 granting Internationale Nederlanden
              (U.S.) Capital Corporation the right to purchase 102,412 shares of Series A Special
              Convertible Preferred Stock of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.59      Warrant Certificate dated as of March 15, 1996 granting Cerberus Partners, L.P. the
              right to purchase 102,412 shares of Series A Special Convertible Preferred Stock of
              PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.60      Form of Warrant issued on March 15, 1996 to persons listed on Schedule A to this
              exhibit. (13)**
   10.61      Operator Service Subscriber Agreement dated as of February 29, 1996 by and between
              Intellicall Operator Services, Inc. and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.62      Intellistar License Agreement dated as of February 29, 1996 by and between
              Intellicall, Inc. and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.63      Relay Services Agreement dated as of February 29, 1996 by and between Intellicall,
              Inc. and PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   10.64      Stock Option Agreement dated April 1, 1995 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              Daniel J. Moos. (3)**
   10.65      Separation Agreement dated July 29, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              Daniel J. Moos.*
   10.66      Employment Agreement dated September 1, 1996 between PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. and
              Richard Kebert.*
   10.67      First Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of April 11, 1996.*
   10.68      Second Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of June 1996. (14)**
   10.69      Third Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of August 1, 1996. (14)**
   10.70      Fourth Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of September 13, 1996. (14)**
   10.71      Fifth Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of September 13, 1996. (14)**
   10.72      Sixth Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of October 8, 1996.
   10.73      Asset Purchase Agreement among PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., an Ohio Corporation as
              Buyer and ACI-HDT Supply Company, a California corporation, Amtel Communications
              Services, a California corporation, Amtel Communications Correctional Facilities, a
              California corporation, Amtel Communication, Inc., a California corporation, Amtel
              Communications, Inc., a California corporation, and Amtel Communications Payphones,
              Inc., a California corporation, as Seller, dated June 26, 1996, and all amendments
              thereto. (14)**
</TABLE>
    
<PAGE>   221
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXHIBIT NO.                                       DESCRIPTION                                       PAGE NO.
- -----------   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------
<C>           <S>                                                                                   <C>
   10.74      Amended and Restated Share Purchase Agreement among PhoneTel III, Inc., Payphones of
              America, Inc. and all of the Shareholders of Payphones of America, Inc., dated as of
              August 1, 1996, and all amendments thereto. (14)**
   21.1       Subsidiaries of PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (13)**
   23.1       Consent of Price Waterhouse LLP regarding PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
   23.2       Consent of Price Waterhouse LLP regarding Paramount Communication Systems, Inc.
   23.3       Consent of Harlan & Boettger, CPAs
   23.4       Consent of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
   23.5       Consent of Ernest M. Sewell, CPA
   23.6       Consent of Miller Sherrill Blake, CPA, PA
   23.7       Consent of Kerber, Eck & Braeckel, LLP
   23.8       Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP
   23.9       Consent of Tammy L. Martin, Esq. (included in Exhibit 5.1).*
   24.1       Powers of Attorney (included on signature pages to the Registration Statement).**
</TABLE>
    

<PAGE>   1
                                                                     EXHIBIT 4.3


================================================================================

                          PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,
                                   As Issuer,


                            THE SUBSIDIARY GUARANTORS
                           named on Schedule I hereto

                                       AND

                              
                                   As Trustee



                                    INDENTURE


                        Dated as of               , 1996


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


                                  $110,000,000


                             % SENIOR NOTES DUE 2006

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

================================================================================
<PAGE>   2
                             CROSS-REFERENCE TABLE*

Trust Indenture
  Act Section                                      Indenture Section
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------

310(a)(1)..........................................         7.10
   (a)(2)..........................................         7.10
   (a)(3)..........................................         N.A.**
   (a)(4)..........................................         N.A.
   (a)(5)..........................................         7.10
   (b).............................................         7.10
   (c).............................................         N.A.
311(a).............................................         7.11
   (b).............................................         7.11
   (c).............................................         N.A.
312(a).............................................         2.05
   (b).............................................         11.03
   (c).............................................         11.03
313(a).............................................         7.06
   (b)(1)..........................................         7.06
   (b)(2)..........................................         7.06
   (c).............................................         7.06; 11.02
   (d).............................................         7.06
314(a).............................................         4.02; 4.03;
      .............................................         11.02
   (b).............................................          4.18
   (c)(1)..........................................         11.04
   (c)(2)..........................................         11.04
   (c)(3)..........................................         N.A.
   (d).............................................          4.18
   (e).............................................         11.05
   (f).............................................         N.A.
315(a).............................................         7.01
   (b).............................................         7.05
   (c).............................................         7.01
   (d).............................................         7.01
   (e).............................................         6.11
316(a)(last sentence)..............................         2.09
   (a)(1)(A).......................................         6.05
   (a)(1)(B).......................................         6.04
   (a)(2)..........................................         N.A.
   (b).............................................         6.04; 6.07
317(a)(1)..........................................         6.08
   (a)(2)..........................................         6.09
   (b).............................................         2.04
318(a).............................................         11.01

- ----------

*     This Cross-Reference Table is not part of the Indenture.
**    Not applicable.
<PAGE>   3
                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                          Page

                                    ARTICLE I
                          DEFINITIONS AND INCORPORATION
                                  BY REFERENCE

SECTION 1.01.           Definitions....................................     1
SECTION 1.02.           Other Definitions..............................    17
SECTION 1.03.           Incorporation by Reference of TIA .............    18
SECTION 1.04.           Rules of Construction..........................    18

                                   ARTICLE II
                                    THE NOTES

SECTION 2.01.           Form and Dating................................    18
SECTION 2.02.           Execution and Authentication...................    19
SECTION 2.03.           Registrar; Paying Agent; Depositary............    20
SECTION 2.04.           Paying Agent to Hold Money in Trust............    20
SECTION 2.05.           Holder Lists...................................    21
SECTION 2.06.           Transfer and Exchange..........................    21
SECTION 2.07.           Replacement Notes..............................    22
SECTION 2.08.           Outstanding Notes..............................    22
SECTION 2.09.           Treasury Notes.................................    23
SECTION 2.10.           Temporary Notes................................    23
SECTION 2.11.           Cancellation...................................    23
SECTION 2.12.           Defaulted Interest.............................    24
SECTION 2.13.           Record Date....................................    24
SECTION 2.14.           CUSIP Number...................................    24
SECTION 2.15.           Book-Entry Provisions for Global Notes.........    25

                                   ARTICLE III
                                   REDEMPTION

SECTION 3.01.           Redemption Provisions..........................    26
SECTION 3.02.           Notice to Trustee..............................    27
SECTION 3.03.           Selection of Notes to Be Redeemed..............    27
SECTION 3.04.           Notice of Redemption...........................    28
SECTION 3.05.           Effect of Notice of Redemption.................    29
SECTION 3.06.           Deposit of Redemption Price....................    29
SECTION 3.07.           Notes Redeemed in Part.........................    29

                                       -i-
<PAGE>   4
                                                                            Page
                                   ARTICLE IV
                                    COVENANTS

SECTION 4.01.           Payment of Principal, Premium and Interest.........  30
SECTION 4.02.           Provision of Financial Statements..................  30
SECTION 4.03.           Compliance Certificate.............................  31
SECTION 4.04.           Stay, Extension and Usury Laws.....................  32
SECTION 4.05.           Limitation on Restricted Payments..................  32
SECTION 4.06.           Corporate Existence................................  34
SECTION 4.07.           Limitation on Incurrence of Indebtedness...........  34
SECTION 4.08.           Taxes..............................................  36
SECTION 4.09.           Limitation on Dividends and Other Payment
                           Restrictions Affecting Subsidiaries.............  37
SECTION 4.10.           Maintenance of Office or Agency....................  38
SECTION 4.11.           Change of Control..................................  38
SECTION 4.12.           Special Offer upon Failure to Consummate Cherokee
                           Acquisition.....................................  40
SECTION 4.13.           Limitation on Asset Sales..........................  42
SECTION 4.14.           Limitation on Issuance and Sale of Preferred
                           Stock of Subsidiaries...........................  44
SECTION 4.15.           Future Subsidiary Guarantors.......................  45
SECTION 4.16.           Maintenance of Properties..........................  45
SECTION 4.17.           Maintenance of Insurance...........................  45
SECTION 4.18.           Deposit of Trust Funds with Trustee
                           Pending Consummation of Cherokee Acquisition....  45
SECTION 4.19.           Limitation on Transactions with Interested
                           Persons.........................................  47
SECTION 4.20.           Limitation on Lines of Business....................  48

                                    ARTICLE V
                                   SUCCESSORS

SECTION 5.01.           Merger, Consolidation and Sale of Assets...........  48
SECTION 5.02.           Surviving Person Substituted.......................  49


                                      -ii-
<PAGE>   5
                                                                          Page

                                   ARTICLE VI
                              DEFAULTS AND REMEDIES

SECTION 6.01.   Events of Default......................................    49
SECTION 6.02.   Acceleration...........................................    51
SECTION 6.03.   Other Remedies.........................................    52
SECTION 6.04.   Waiver of Past Defaults................................    52
SECTION 6.05.   Control by Majority of Holders.........................    52
SECTION 6.06.   Limitation of Suits by Holders.........................    53
SECTION 6.07.   Rights of Holders to Receive Payment...................    53
SECTION 6.08.   Collection Suit by Trustee.............................    53
SECTION 6.09.   Trustee May File Proofs of Claim.......................    53
SECTION 6.10.   Priorities.............................................    54
SECTION 6.11.   Undertaking for Costs..................................    55

                                   ARTICLE VII
                                     TRUSTEE

SECTION 7.01.   Duties of Trustee......................................    56
SECTION 7.02.   Rights of Trustee......................................    56
SECTION 7.03.   Individual Rights of Trustee...........................    57
SECTION 7.04.   Trustee's Disclaimer...................................    57
SECTION 7.05.   Notice to Holders of Defaults and Events of Default....    57
SECTION 7.06.   Reports by Trustee to Holders..........................    57
SECTION 7.07.   Compensation and Indemnity.............................    58
SECTION 7.08.   Replacement of Trustee.................................    59
SECTION 7.09.   Successor Trustee by Merger, Etc.......................    60
SECTION 7.10.   Eligibility; Disqualification..........................    60
SECTION 7.11.   Preferential Collection of Claims Against Company......    60

                                  ARTICLE VIII
                             DISCHARGE OF INDENTURE

SECTION 8.01.   Discharge of Liability on Notes; Defeasance............    61
SECTION 8.02.   Conditions to Defeasance...............................    62
SECTION 8.03.   Application of Trust Money.............................    63
SECTION 8.04.   Repayment to Company...................................    63
SECTION 8.05.   Indemnity for U.S. Government Obligations..............    63
SECTION 8.06.   Reinstatement..........................................    64


                                      -iii-
<PAGE>   6
                                                                          Page


                                   ARTICLE IX
                                   AMENDMENTS

SECTION 9.01.    Amendments and Supplements Permitted
                    Without Consent of Holders.........................    64
SECTION 9.02.    Amendments and Supplements Requiring
                    Consent of Holders ................................    65
SECTION 9.03.    Compliance with TIA...................................    66
SECTION 9.04.    Revocation and Effect of Consents.....................    66
SECTION 9.05.    Notation on or Exchange of Notes......................    67
SECTION 9.06.    Trustee Protected.....................................    67

                                    ARTICLE X
                              SUBSIDIARY GUARANTEES

SECTION 10.01.   Subsidiary Guarantees.................................    68
SECTION 10.02.   Trustee to Include Paying Agents......................    70
SECTION 10.03.   Limits on Subsidiary Guarantees.......................    70
SECTION 10.04.   Execution of Subsidiary Guarantee.....................    70
SECTION 10.05.   Stay, Extension and Usury Laws........................    71
SECTION 10.06.   Payment...............................................    71

                                   ARTICLE XI
                                  MISCELLANEOUS

SECTION 11.01.   Trust Indenture Act Controls..........................    71
SECTION 11.02.   Notices...............................................    72
SECTION 11.03.   Communication by Holders with Other Holders...........    73
SECTION 11.04.   Certificate and Opinion as to Conditions Precedent....    74
SECTION 11.05.   Statements Required in Certificate or Opinion.........    74
SECTION 11.06.   Rules by Trustee and Agents...........................    74
SECTION 11.07.   Legal Holidays........................................    74
SECTION 11.08.   No Recourse Against Others............................    75
SECTION 11.09.   Counterparts..........................................    75
SECTION 11.10.   Initial Appointments, Compliance Certificates.........    75
SECTION 11.11.   Governing Law.........................................    75
SECTION 11.12.   No Adverse Interpretation of Other Agreements.........    75
SECTION 11.13.   Successors............................................    76
SECTION 11.14.   Severability..........................................    76
SECTION 11.15.   Third Party Beneficiaries.............................    76

                                      -iv-
<PAGE>   7
                                                                           Page

SECTION 11.16.    Table of Contents, Headings, Etc.......................... 76

SCHEDULE I        .............SUBSIDIARY GUARANTORS EXISTING ON THE ISSUE DATE

EXHIBIT A         .................................................FORM OF NOTE
EXHIBIT A-1       ...............FORM OF NOTATION ON NOTE RELATING TO GUARANTEE
EXHIBIT B         ................................FORM OF BOOK-ENTRY LEGEND AND
                                           SCHEDULE OF EXCHANGES OF GLOBAL NOTE


                                       -v-
<PAGE>   8
                  THIS INDENTURE, dated as of      , 1996, is by and among (i)
PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., an Ohio corporation (the "Company"), as issuer of
the     % Senior Notes due 2006, (ii) each Subsidiary of the Company existing 
on the Issue Date as set forth on Schedule I hereto, each of the Company's
Subsidiaries which becomes a guarantor of the Notes in compliance with Section
4.15 and each of the Company's Subsidiaries executing a supplemental indenture
in which such Subsidiary agrees to be bound by the terms of this Indenture, as
guarantors of the Company's obligations under this Indenture and the Notes (each
a "Subsidiary Guarantor"), and (iii)                    , as trustee (the
"Trustee").

                  The Company, each Subsidiary Guarantor and the Trustee agree
as follows for the benefit of each other and for the equal and ratable benefit
of the holders of the Notes:


                                    ARTICLE I
                          DEFINITIONS AND INCORPORATION
                                  BY REFERENCE


SECTION 1.01.   Definitions.

                  "Acquired Debt" means, with respect to any specified Person,
Indebtedness of any other Person (the "Acquired Person") existing at the time
the Acquired Person merges with or into, or becomes a Subsidiary of, such
specified Person, including Indebtedness incurred in connection with, or in
contemplation of, the Acquired Person merging with or into, or becoming a
Subsidiary of, such specified Person.

                  "Affiliate" means, with respect to any specified Person, any
other Person directly or indirectly controlling or controlled by or under direct
or indirect common control with such specified Person. For purposes of this
definition, "control" (including, with correlative meanings, the terms
"controlling," "controlled by" and "under common control with") of any Person
means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause
the direction of the management or policies of such Person, whether through the
ownership of voting securities, by agreement or otherwise.

                  "Agent" means any Registrar, Paying Agent, or co-registrar.

                  "Asset Acquisition" means (a) an Investment by the Company or
any Subsidiary in any other Person pursuant to which such Person shall become a
Subsidiary or shall be merged with or into the Company or any Subsidiary, (b)
the acquisition by the Company or any Subsidiary of the assets of any Person
which constitute all or substantially all of the assets of such Person or any
division or line (whether based on product or geography) of business of such
Person or (c) the acquisition by the Company or any Subsidiary of any public pay
telephones from any Person other than the manufacturer (or an Affiliate thereof
or special
<PAGE>   9
                                       -2-


purpose finance entity related thereto) of such telephones in a transaction
involving consideration having a Fair Market Value equal to or greater than
$250,000.

                  "Asset Sale" means (i) any sale, lease, conveyance or other
disposition by the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company of any assets
(including by way of a sale-and-leaseback) other than in the ordinary course of
business (provided that the sale, lease, conveyance or other disposition of all
or substantially all of the assets of the Company shall not be an "Asset Sale"
but instead shall be governed by the provisions of Section 5.01), or (ii) the
issuance or sale of Capital Stock of any Subsidiary of the Company, in each
case, whether in a single transaction or a series of related transactions, to
any Person (other than to the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor), provided that
the term "Asset Sale" shall not include (i) any simultaneous exchange of public
pay telephones and related location agreements of the Company or any
Subsidiaries for public pay telephones and related location agreements of
another person with equivalent Fair Market Value; provided that the number of
pay telephones so exchanged in any calendar year shall not exceed 10% of (A) the
sum of the number of pay telephones owned by the Company and its Subsidiaries on
January 1 of such year and the number of pay telephones acquired by the Company
and its Subsidiaries since January 1 of such year less (B) the number of pay
telephones sold since January 1 of such year, and (ii) any disposition or
dispositions during any twelve-month period of assets or property having a fair
market value of less than $250,000 in the aggregate.

                  "Bankruptcy Law" means Title 11, United States Bankruptcy Code
of 1978, as amended, or any similar United States federal or state law relating
to bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership, winding up, liquidation, reorganization
or relief of debtors, or any amendment to, succession to or change in any such
law.

                  "Board of Directors" means the Company's board of directors or
any authorized committee of such board of directors.

                  "Business Day" means any day other than a Legal Holiday.

                  "Capital Lease Obligations" of any Person means the
obligations to pay rent or other amounts under a lease of (or other Indebtedness
arrangements conveying the right to use) real or personal property of such
Person which are required to be classified and accounted for as a capital lease
or liability on the face of a balance sheet of such Person in accordance with
GAAP. The amount of such obligations shall be the capitalized amount thereof in
accordance with GAAP and the stated maturity thereof shall be the date of the
last payment of rent or any other amount due under such lease prior to the first
date upon which such lease may be terminated by the lessee without payment of a
penalty.
<PAGE>   10
                                       -3-


                  "Capital Stock" of any Person means any and all shares,
interests, rights to purchase, warrants, options, participations or other
equivalents of or interests in (however designated) corporate stock or other
equity participations, including partnership interests, whether general or
limited, of such Person, including any Preferred Stock.

                  "Cash Equivalents" means (i) marketable direct obligations
issued or guaranteed by the United States of America, or any governmental entity
or agency or political subdivision thereof (provided, that the full faith and
credit of the United States of America is pledged in support thereof) maturing
within one year of the date of purchase; (ii) commercial paper issued by
corporations, each of which shall have a consolidated net worth of at least $500
million, maturing within 180 days from the date of the original issue thereof,
and rated "P-1" or better by Moody's Investors Service or "A-1" or better by
Standard & Poor's Corporation or an equivalent rating or better by any other
nationally recognized securities rating agency; (iii) certificates of deposit
issued or acceptances accepted by or guaranteed by any bank or trust company
organized under the laws of the United States of America or any state thereof or
the District of Columbia, in each case having capital, surplus and undivided
profits totalling more than $500 million, maturing within one year of the date
of purchase; and (iv) money market accounts with a bank or trust company of a
type described in clause (iii).

                  "Change of Control" means the occurrence of any of the
following events:

                  (a) any "person" or "group" (as such terms are used in
Sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the Exchange Act), other than the Permitted Holders,
becomes the "beneficial owner" (as defined in Rules 13d-3 and 13d-5 under the
Exchange Act, except that a person or group shall be deemed to have beneficial
ownership of all shares of Capital Stock that such person or group has the right
to acquire regardless of when such right is first exercisable), directly or
indirectly, of more than 35% of the total voting power represented by the
outstanding Voting Stock of the Company;

                  (b) the Company merges with or into another Person or sells,
assigns, conveys, transfers, leases or otherwise disposes of all or
substantially all of its assets to any Person, or any Person merges with or into
the Company, in any such event pursuant to a transaction in which the
outstanding Voting Stock of the Company is converted into or exchanged for cash,
securities or other property, other than any such transaction where (x) the
outstanding Voting Stock of the Company is converted into or exchanged for
Voting Stock (other than Disqualified Stock) of the surviving or transferee
corporation and (y) immediately after such transaction no "person" or "group"
(as such terms are used in Sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the Exchange Act),
disregarding the Permitted Holders, is the "beneficial owner" (as defined in
Rules 13d-3 and 13d-5 under the Exchange Act, except that a person or group
shall be deemed to have beneficial ownership of all shares of Capital Stock that
such person or group has the right to acquire regardless of when such right is
first exercisable), directly or indirectly,
<PAGE>   11
                                       -4-


of more than 35% of the total voting power represented by the outstanding Voting
Stock of the surviving or transferee corporation;

                  (c) during any consecutive two-year period, individuals who at
the beginning of such period constituted the Board of Directors of the Company
(together with any new directors whose election by the Board of Directors of the
Company or whose nomination for election by the stockholders of the Company was
approved by (x) a vote of at least a majority of the directors then still in
office who were either directors at the beginning of such period or whose
election or nomination for election was previously so approved (as described in
this clause (x) or in the following clause (y)) or (y) Permitted Holders that
are "beneficial owners" (as defined in Rules 13d-3 and 13d-5 under the Exchange
Act) of a majority of the total voting power represented by the outstanding
Voting Stock of the Company) cease for any reason to constitute a majority of
the Board then in office; or

                  (d) the Company is liquidated or dissolved or adopts a plan of
liquidation.

                  "Cherokee Acquisition" means the acquisition by the Company of
all of the capital stock of Cherokee Communications Inc. ("Cherokee") pursuant
to the Share Purchase Agreement dated as of __________________, 1996, between
the Company and Cherokee.

                  "Commission" means the Securities and Exchange Commission.

                  "Company" means PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., an Ohio
corporation, unless and until a successor replaces it in accordance with Article
V and thereafter means such successor.

                  "Concurrent Offering" means the public offering by the Company
of up to [ ] shares of its common stock, $.01 par value, as contemplated by the
related prospectus dated , 1996, including the sale of any such shares of common
stock in connection with the exercise of any over-allotment options granted to
the underwriters of such public offering.

                  "Consolidated EBITDA" is defined to mean, for any period, the
sum of the amounts for such period of (i) Consolidated Interest Expense, (ii)
Consolidated Fixed Charges, (iii) income taxes, to the extent such amount was
deducted in calculating Consolidated Net Income (other than income taxes (either
positive or negative) attributable to extraordinary and non-recurring gains or
losses or sales of assets), (iv) depreciation expense, to the extent such amount
was deducted in calculating Consolidated Net Income, (v) amortization expense,
to the extent such amount was deducted in calculating Consolidated Net Income,
and (vi) all other non-cash items reducing Consolidated Net Income, less all
non-cash items increasing Consolidated Net Income, all as determined on a
consolidated basis for the Company and its Subsidiaries in conformity with GAAP;
provided that, if any Subsidiary is not a Wholly-Owned Subsidiary, Consolidated
EBITDA shall be reduced (to the extent not otherwise reduced in
<PAGE>   12
                                       -5-


accordance with GAAP) by an amount equal to (A) the amount of the Consolidated
Net Income attributable to such Subsidiary multiplied by (B) the quotient of (1)
the number of shares of outstanding common stock of such Subsidiary not owned on
the last day of such period by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries divided by
(2) the total number of shares of outstanding common stock of such Subsidiary on
the last day of such period.

                  "Consolidated Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio" means, on any
determination date (the "Transaction Date"), the ratio of (i) Consolidated
EBITDA for the four fiscal quarters for which financial information in respect
thereof is available immediately prior to such Transaction Date (the "Reference
Period") to (ii) the aggregate Consolidated Fixed Charges during such Reference
Period. In making the foregoing calculation, (A) pro forma effect shall be given
to (1) any Indebtedness Incurred subsequent to the end of the Reference Period
and prior to the Transaction Date, (2) any Indebtedness Incurred during such
Reference Period to the extent such Indebtedness is outstanding at the
Transaction Date, and (3) any Indebtedness to be Incurred on the Transaction
Date, in each case as if such Indebtedness had been Incurred on the first day of
such Reference Period and after giving pro forma effect to the application of
the proceeds thereof as if such application had occurred on such first day, (B)
Consolidated Interest Expense attributable to interest on any Indebtedness
(whether existing or being Incurred) computed on a pro forma basis and bearing a
floating interest rate shall be computed as if the rate in effect on the
Transaction Date (taking into account any Interest Rate Agreement applicable to
such Indebtedness if such Interest Rate Agreement has a remaining term in excess
of 12 months) had been the applicable rate for the entire period, (C) there
shall be excluded from Consolidated Fixed Charges any Consolidated Fixed Charges
related to any amount of Indebtedness, Disqualified Stock, or obligations under
leases that were outstanding during such Reference Period or thereafter but that
are not outstanding or are to be repaid on the Transaction Date, except for
Consolidated Interest Expense accrued (as adjusted pursuant to clause (B) above)
during such Reference Period under a revolving credit or similar arrangement to
the extent of the commitment thereunder (or under any successor revolving credit
or similar arrangement) in effect on the Transaction Date, (D) pro forma effect
shall be given to Asset Sales and Asset Acquisitions (including giving pro forma
effect to the application of proceeds of any Asset Sales) that occur during such
Reference Period or thereafter and on or prior to the Transaction Date as if
they had occurred and such proceeds had been applied on the first day of such
Reference Period, (E) with respect to any such Reference Period commencing prior
to the Issue Date, the issuance of the Notes shall be deemed to have taken place
on the first day of such Reference Period, and (F) pro forma effect shall be
given to Asset Sales and Asset Acquisitions (including giving pro forma effect
to the application of proceeds of any Asset Sale) that have been made by any
Person that has become a Subsidiary or has been merged with or into the Company
or any Subsidiary during such Reference Period or subsequent to such period and
prior to the Transaction Date and that would have constituted Asset Sales or
Asset Acquisitions had such transactions occurred when such person was a
Subsidiary as if such asset dispositions or asset acquisitions were Asset Sales
or Asset Acquisitions that occurred on the
<PAGE>   13
                                       -6-


first day of such Reference Period; provided that to the extent that clause (D)
or (F) of this sentence requires that pro forma effect be given to an asset
acquisition or asset disposition, such pro forma calculation shall be based upon
the four full fiscal quarters immediately preceding the Transaction Date of the
person, or division or line of business of the person, or property, that is
acquired or disposed of, for which financial information is available.

                  "Consolidated Fixed Charges" is defined to mean, for any
period, the sum (without duplication) of (i) Consolidated Interest Expense for
such period, (ii) all but the principal component of rentals in respect of
Capitalized Lease Obligations paid, accrued, or scheduled to be paid or to be
accrued by the Company and its Subsidiaries during such period, and (iii) cash
dividends declared or paid in respect of any Preferred Stock of the Company and
its Subsidiaries during such period (other than dividends paid or payable to the
Company or a Wholly-Owned Subsidiary), in each case as determined on a
consolidated basis in accordance with GAAP consistently applied. For purposes of
this definition, the amount of any cash dividends declared or paid will be
deemed to be equal to the amount of such dividends multiplied by a fraction, the
numerator of which is one and the denominator of which is one minus the maximum
statutory combined Federal, state, local and foreign income tax rate then
applicable to the Company and its Subsidiaries (expressed as a decimal between
one and zero) on a consolidated basis.

                  "Consolidated Interest Expense" means, with respect to any
period, the interest expense of the Company and its Subsidiaries for such
period, determined on a consolidated basis in accordance with GAAP consistently
applied, including, without limitation, (a) amortization of debt discount, (b)
the net payments, if any, under interest rate contracts (including amortization
of discounts), (c) the interest portion of any deferred payment obligation and
(d) accrued interest.

                  "Consolidated Net Income" means, with respect to any period,
the net income (or loss) of the Company and its Subsidiaries for such period,
determined on a consolidated basis in accordance with GAAP consistently applied,
adjusted, to the extent included in calculating such net income (or loss), by
excluding, without duplication, (i) all extraordinary gains and losses (net of
fees and expenses relating to the transaction giving rise thereto), (ii) the
portion of net income (or loss) of the Company and its Subsidiaries allocable to
interests in unconsolidated Persons, except to the extent of the amount of
dividends or distributions actually paid to the Company or its Subsidiaries by
such other Person during such period, (iii) net income (or loss) of any Person
combined with the Company or any of its Subsidiaries on a "pooling of interests"
basis attributable to any period prior to the date of combination, (iv) net gain
but not losses in respect of Asset Sales, or (v) the net income of any
Subsidiary to the extent that the declaration of dividends or similar
distributions by that Subsidiary of that income to the Company is not at the
time permitted, directly or indirectly, by operation of the terms of its charter
or any
<PAGE>   14
                                       -7-


agreement, instrument, judgment, decree, order, statute, rule or governmental
regulation applicable to that Subsidiary or its stockholders.

                  "Consolidated Net Worth" means, with respect to any Person on
any date, the equity of the common and preferred stockholders of such Person and
its Subsidiaries as of such date, determined on a consolidated basis in
accordance with GAAP consistently applied.

                  "Corporate Trust Office" shall be at the address of the
Trustee specified in Section 11.02 or such other address as the Trustee may give
notice to the Company.

                  "Credit Facility" means the credit agreement, to be entered
into as of                 , 1996, among the Company and the lenders named
therein and ,                               as, as the same may be amended,
modified, renewed, refunded, replaced or refinanced from time to time, including
(i) any related notes, letters of credit, guarantees, collateral documents,
instruments and agreements executed in connection therewith, and in each case as
amended, modified, renewed, refunded, replaced or refinanced from time to time,
and (ii) any notes, guarantees, collateral documents, instruments and agreements
executed in connection with any such amendment, modification, renewal,
refunding, replacement or refinancing.

                  "Custodian" means any custodian, receiver, trustee, assignee,
liquidator or similar official under any Bankruptcy Law.

                  "Debt to Operating Cash Flow Ratio" means, with respect to any
date of determination, the ratio of (i) the aggregate principal amount of all
outstanding Indebtedness of the Company and its Subsidiaries as of such date on
a consolidated basis, to (ii) Operating Cash Flow of the Company and its
Subsidiaries on a consolidated basis for the four most recent full fiscal
quarters ending on or immediately prior to such date, determined on a pro forma
basis after giving pro forma effect to (a) the incurrence of all Indebtedness to
be incurred on such date and (if applicable) the application of the net proceeds
therefrom, including to refinance other Indebtedness, as if such Indebtedness
was incurred, and the application of such proceeds occurred, at the beginning of
such four-quarter period; (b) the incurrence, repayment or retirement of any
other Indebtedness by the Company and its Subsidiaries since the first day of
such four-quarter period as if such Indebtedness was incurred, repaid or retired
at the beginning of such four-quarter period (except that, in making such
computation, the amount of Indebtedness under any revolving credit facility
shall be computed based upon the average balance of such Indebtedness at the end
of each month during such four-quarter period); (c) in the case of Acquired
Debt, the related acquisition as if such acquisition had occurred at the
beginning of such four-quarter period; and (d) any acquisition or disposition by
the Company and its Subsidiaries of any company or any business or any assets
out of the ordinary course of business, or any related repayment of
Indebtedness, in each case since the first day of such four-quarter period,
assuming such acquisition or disposition had been consummated on the first
<PAGE>   15
                                       -8-


day of such four-quarter period. In addition, the consolidated net income of a
Person with outstanding Indebtedness or Capital Stock providing for a Payment
Restriction which is permitted to exist by reason of clause (c) of Section 4.11
shall not be taken into account in determining whether any Indebtedness is
permitted to be incurred under this Indenture.]

                  "Default" means any event that is, or after the giving of
notice or passage of time or both would be, an Event of Default.

                  "Depositary" means, with respect to Notes issued in the form
of one or more Global Notes, DTC or another Person designated as Depositary by
the Company, which Person must be a clearing agency registered under Section 17A
of the Exchange Act.

                  "Disposition" means, with respect to any Person, any merger,
consolidation or other business combination involving such Person (whether or
not such Person is the Surviving Person) or the sale, assignment, transfer,
lease, conveyance or other disposition of all or substantially all of such
Person's assets.

                  "Disqualified Stock" means any Capital Stock that, by its
terms (or by the terms of any security into which it is convertible or for which
it is exchangeable), or upon the happening of any event, matures or is
mandatorily redeemable, pursuant to a sinking fund obligation or otherwise, or
is redeemable at the option of the holder thereof, in whole or in part on or
prior to the stated maturity of the Notes.

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

                  "DTC" means The Depository Trust Company.

                  "Equity Offering" means (i) an underwritten public offering of
Capital Stock (other than Disqualified Stock) of the Company subsequent to the
Issue Date (excluding Capital Stock which may be issued upon exercise of any
over-allotment option exercisable after the Issue Date and granted in connection
with the Concurrent Offering), pursuant to an effective registration statement
filed under the Securities Act, or (ii) any private placement of Capital Stock
(other than Disqualified Stock) of the Company subsequent to the Issue Date, in
either case the net proceeds of which to the Company (after deducting any
underwriting discounts and commissions) exceed $25 million.

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

                  "Fair Market Value" means, with respect to any asset, the
price (after taking into account any liabilities relating to such asset) which
could be negotiated in an arm's length free market transaction, for cash,
between a willing seller and a willing buyer, neither of which is
<PAGE>   16
                                       -9-


under pressure or compulsion to complete the transaction; provided that, except
with respect of any Asset Sale which involves an asset or assets the value of
which could reasonably be expected to exceed $250,000, the Fair Market Value of
any such asset or assets shall be determined by the Board of Directors of the
Company, acting in good faith, and shall be evidenced by resolutions of the
Board of Directors of the Company delivered to the Trustee; and provided,
further, that the fair market value of a location agreement shall be the present
value of the revenue to be received by the Company under such agreement until
the expiration of the term of such agreement, without giving effect to any
rights to renew or extend such agreement, based on the actual amount of
revenue, net of related costs associated with the telephone or telephones
covered by such agreement, received by the Company under such agreement for 
the most recent fiscal quarter.

                  "GAAP" means generally accepted accounting principles set
forth in the opinions and pronouncements of the Accounting Principles Board of
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and statements and
pronouncements of the Financial Accounting Standards Board or in such other
statements by such other entity as have been approved by a significant segment
of the accounting profession, which are in effect on the Issue Date.

                  "Global Note" means a Note evidencing all or part of the Notes
issued to the Depositary in accordance with Section 2.15 and bearing the legend
described in Exhibit B.

                  "guarantee" by any Person means any obligation, contingent or
otherwise, of such Person guaranteeing any Indebtedness of any other Person (the
"primary obligor") in any manner, whether directly or indirectly, and including,
without limitation, any obligation of such Person (i) to purchase or pay (or
advance or supply funds for the purchase or payment of) such Indebtedness or to
purchase (or to advance or supply funds for the purpose of) any security for the
payment of such Indebtedness, (ii) to purchase property, securities or services
for the purpose of assuring the holder of such Indebtedness of the payment of
such Indebtedness, or (iii) to maintain working capital, equity capital or other
financial statement condition or liquidity of the primary obligor so as to
enable the primary obligor to pay such Indebtedness (and "guaranteed,"
"guaranteeing" and "guarantor" shall have the meanings correlative to the
foregoing); provided, however, that the guarantee by any Person shall not
include endorsements by such Person for collection or deposit, in either case,
in the ordinary course of business.

                  "Holder" means any person in whose name a Note is registered.

                  "Indebtedness" means, with respect to any Person, without
duplication, and whether or not contingent, (i) all indebtedness of such Person
for borrowed money or for the deferred purchase price of property or services or
which is evidenced by a note, bond, debenture or similar instrument, (ii) all
Capital Lease Obligations of such Person, (iii) all obligations of such Person
in respect of letters of credit or bankers' acceptances issued or created for
the account of such Person, (iv) all Interest Rate Agreement Obligations of such
<PAGE>   17
                                      -10-


Person, (v) all liabilities secured by any Lien on any property owned by such
Person even if such Person has not assumed or otherwise become liable for the
payment thereof to the extent of the lesser of (x) the amount of the Obligations
so secured and (y) the fair market value of the property subject to such Lien,
(vi) all obligations to purchase, redeem, retire, or otherwise acquire for value
any Capital Stock of such Person, or any warrants, rights or options to acquire
such Capital Stock, now or hereafter outstanding, (vii) to the extent not
included in (vi), all Disqualified Stock issued by such Person, valued at the
greater of its voluntary or involuntary maximum fixed repurchase price plus
accrued and unpaid dividends thereon, and (viii) to the extent not otherwise
included, any guarantee by such Person of any other Person's indebtedness or
other obligations described in clauses (i) through (vii) above. "Indebtedness"
of the Company and its Subsidiaries shall not include current trade payables
incurred in the ordinary course of business and payable in accordance with
customary practices, and non-interest bearing installment obligations and
accrued liabilities incurred in the ordinary course of business which are not
more than 90 days past due. For purposes hereof, the "maximum fixed repurchase
price" of any Disqualified Stock which does not have a fixed repurchase price
shall be calculated in accordance with the terms of such Disqualified Stock as
if such Disqualified Stock were purchased on any date on which Indebtedness
shall be required to be determined pursuant to this Indenture, and if such price
is based upon, or measured by the fair market value of, such Disqualified Stock,
such fair market value is to be determined in good faith by the board of
directors of the issuer of such Disqualified Stock.

                  "Indenture" means this Indenture as amended or supplemented
from time to time.

                  "Independent Director" means a director of the Company other
than a director (i) who (apart from being a director of the Company or any
Subsidiary) is an employee, associate or Affiliate of the Company or a
Subsidiary or has held any such position during the previous five years, (ii)
who is a director, employee, associate or Affiliate of another party to the
transaction in question, or (iii) who has, or who has been appointed to the
Board of Directors by a shareholder who has, a direct or indirect financial
interest in the transaction in question.

                  "Insolvency or Liquidation Proceeding" means, with respect to
any Person, any liquidation, dissolution or winding up of such Person, or any
bankruptcy, reorganization, insolvency, receivership or similar proceeding with
respect to such Person, whether voluntary or involuntary.

                  "Interest Rate Agreement Obligations" means, with respect to
any Person, the Obligations of such Person under (i) interest rate swap
agreements, interest rate cap agreements and interest rate collar agreements,
and (ii) other agreements or arrangements designed to protect such Person
against fluctuations in interest rates.
<PAGE>   18
                                      -11-


                  "Investments" means, with respect to any Person, all
investments by such Person in other Persons (including Affiliates of such
Person) in the form of loans, guarantees, advances or capital contributions
(excluding commission, travel, relocation expenses and similar loans and
advances to officers and employees made in the ordinary course of business),
purchases or other acquisitions for consideration of Indebtedness, Capital Stock
or other securities and all other items that are or would be classified as
investments on a balance sheet prepared in accordance with GAAP. "Investments"
shall exclude extensions of trade credit (including extensions of credit in
respect of equipment leases) by the Company and its Subsidiaries in the ordinary
course of business in accordance with normal trade practices of the Company or
such Subsidiary, as the case may be.

                  "Issue" means create, issue, assume, guarantee, incur or
otherwise become, directly or indirectly, liable for any Indebtedness or Capital
Stock, as applicable; provided, however, that any Indebtedness or Capital Stock
of a Person existing at the time such Person becomes a Subsidiary (whether by
designation, merger, consolidation, acquisition or otherwise) shall be deemed to
be issued by such Subsidiary at the time it becomes a Subsidiary. For this
definition, the terms "issuing," "issuer," "issuance" and "issued" have meanings
correlative to the foregoing.

                  "Issue Date" means the date of original issuance of the Notes.

                  "Legal Holiday" means a Saturday, a Sunday or a day on which
banking institutions in the City of New York, or in the city in which the
principal office of the Trustee is located, are not required to be open.

                  "Lien" means, with respect to any asset, any mortgage, lien,
pledge, charge, security interest or encumbrance of any kind in respect of such
asset, whether or not filed, recorded or otherwise perfected under applicable
law (including any conditional sale or other title retention agreement, any
lease in the nature thereof, any option or other agreement to sell or give a
security interest in any asset and any filing of, or agreement to give, any
financing statement under the Uniform Commercial Code (or equivalent statutes)
of any jurisdiction).

                  "Net Proceeds" means, with respect to any Asset Sale by any
Person, the aggregate cash proceeds received by such Person and/or its
Affiliates in respect of such Asset Sale, which amount is equal to the excess,
if any, of (i) the cash received by such Person and/or its Affiliates (including
any cash payments received by way of deferred payment pursuant to, or
monetization of, a note, an equity security or installment receivable or
otherwise, but only as and when received) in connection with such Asset Sale,
over (ii) the sum of (a) the amount of any Indebtedness that is secured by such
asset and which is required to be repaid by such Person in connection with such
Asset Sale, plus (b) all fees, commissions and other expenses incurred by such
Person in connection with such Asset Sale, plus (c) provision for taxes,
<PAGE>   19
                                      -12-


including income taxes, attributable to the Asset Sale or attributable to
required prepayments or repayments of Indebtedness with the proceeds of such
Asset Sale, plus (d) a reasonable reserve for the after-tax cost of any
indemnification payments (fixed or contingent) attributable to seller's
indemnities to purchaser in respect of such Asset Sale undertaken by the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries in connection with such Asset Sale plus (e) if such
Person is a Subsidiary, any dividends or distributions payable to holders of
minority interests in such Subsidiary from the proceeds of such Asset Sale.

                  "Notes" means the     % Senior Notes due 2006, including the
Subsidiary Guarantees, as amended or supplemented from time to time in
accordance with the terms hereof that are issued pursuant to this Indenture.

                  "Notes Custodian" means the Trustee, as custodian with respect
to the Notes in global form, or any successor entity thereto.

                  "Obligations" means any principal, interest, penalties, fees,
indemnifications, reimbursement obligations, damages and other liabilities
payable under the documentation governing any Indebtedness.

                  "Officer" means, with respect to any Person, the Chairman, the
President, the Treasurer, any Assistant Treasurer, the Controller, the
Secretary, any Assistant Secretary or any Vice-President of such Person.

                  "Officers' Certificate" means a certificate signed by two
Officers of the Company which shall include at least one of the Chairman, the
President or any Vice President.

                  "Operating Cash Flow" means, with respect to any period, the
Consolidated Net Income of the Company and its Subsidiaries for such period,
plus (i) extraordinary net losses and net losses realized on any sale of assets
during such period, to the extent such losses were deducted in computing
Consolidated Net Income, plus (ii) provision for taxes based on income or
profits, to the extent such provision for taxes was included in computing such
Consolidated Net Income, and any provision for taxes utilized in computing the
net losses under clause (i) hereof, plus (iii) Consolidated Interest Expense of
the Company and its Subsidiaries for such period to the extent deducted in
computing such Consolidated Net Income, plus (iv) depreciation, amortization and
all other non-cash charges, to the extent such depreciation, amortization and
other non-cash charges were deducted in computing such Consolidated Net Income
(including amortization of goodwill and other intangibles), but excluding any
such charges which represent any accrual of, or a reserve for, cash charges for
a future period, minus (v) any cash payments contractually required to be made
with respect to [telephone] Contracts (to the extent not previously included in
computing such Consolidated Net Income),
<PAGE>   20
                                      -13-


minus (vi) non-cash items increasing Consolidated Net Income (to the extent
included in computing such Consolidated Net Income).

                  "Opinion of Counsel" means a written opinion in form and
substance satisfactory to, and from legal counsel acceptable to, the Trustee
(such counsel may be an employee of or counsel to the Company or the Trustee).

                  "Other Senior Debt" means Indebtedness of the Company ranking
pari passu in right of payment with the Notes and Indebtedness of a Subsidiary
Guarantor ranking pari passu in right of payment with the Subsidiary Guarantees,
in each case, the terms of which require that Net Cash Proceeds be used to
permanently reduce (and thereby also reduce commitments relating to) such
Indebtedness.

                  "Other Senior Debt Pro Rata Share" means a fraction, (i) the
numerator of which is the aggregate principal amount of Other Senior Debt
outstanding on the date Net Cash Proceeds are received and (ii) the denominator
of which is the sum of (x) the aggregate principal amount of Notes outstanding
on such date and (y) the aggregate principal amount of any Other Senior Debt
outstanding on such date.

                  "Pari Passu Indebtedness" means any Indebtedness of the
Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor which ranks pari passu in right of payment
with the Notes or the Subsidiary Guarantee of such Subsidiary Guarantor, as the
case may be (whether or not such Indebtedness is secured by any Lien).

                  "Permitted Holders" means (i) [Peter Graf]; (ii) his spouse
and lineal descendants; (iii) in the event of the incompetence or death of any
of the Persons described in clauses (i) and (ii), such Person's estate,
executor, administrator, committee or other personal representative; (iv) any
trusts created for the benefit of the Persons described in clause (i) or (ii);
(v) each of Internationale Nederlanden (U.S.) Capital Corporation and Cerberus
Partners, L.P.; or (vi) any Person controlled by any of the Persons described in
clause (i), (ii), (iv) or (v). For purposes of this definition, "control," as
used with respect to any Person, shall mean the possession, directly or
indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and
policies of such Person, whether through ownership of voting securities or by
contract or otherwise.

                  "Permitted Investments" means (i) any Investment in the
Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor; (ii) any Investments in Cash Equivalents;
(iii) any Investment in a Person (an "Acquired Person") if, as a result of such
Investment, (a) the Acquired Person becomes a Subsidiary Guarantor, or (b) the
Acquired Person either (1) is merged, consolidated or amalgamated with or into
the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor and the Company or such Subsidiary
Guarantor is the Surviving Person, or (2) transfers or conveys substantially all
of its
<PAGE>   21
                                      -14-


assets to, or is liquidated into, the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor; (iv)
Investments in accounts and notes receivable acquired in the ordinary course of
business; (v) Interest Rate Agreement Obligations permitted pursuant to Section
4.07(b)(vi); (vi) loans to employees the proceeds of which are used to pay taxes
due in respect of stock grants to such employees in an amount not to exceed in
the aggregate $1 million in each of calendar year 1997 and 1998 and $750,000 in
calendar year 1999; and (vii) Investments, not to exceed $2,500,000 at any time
outstanding, in joint ventures in which Cherokee or any of its Subsidiaries is a
party as of the Issue Date and which relate solely to certain public pay
telephones located in Mexico that are to be acquired from Cherokee by the
Company in connection with the Cherokee Acquisition.

                  "Permitted Liens" means (i) (A) Liens on assets or property of
the Company that secure Indebtedness outstanding under the Credit Facility
pursuant to Section 4.07 and (B) Liens securing up to $25 million of additional
Indebtedness outstanding under the Credit Facility incurred pursuant to the
Consolidated Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio in Section 4.07 and (C) Liens securing
up to $25 million of additional Indebtedness, if the Consolidated Fixed Charge
Coverage Ratio at the time of such incurrence, after giving effect to such
Indebtedness, is 3.0 to 1.0; (ii) Liens securing Indebtedness of a Person
existing at the time that such Person is merged into or consolidated with the
Company or a Subsidiary of the Company, provided that such Liens were in
existence prior to the contemplation of such merger or consolidation and do not
extend to any assets other than those of such Person; (iii) Liens on property
acquired by the Company or a Subsidiary; provided that such Liens were in
existence prior to the contemplation of such acquisition and do not extend to
any other property; (iv) Liens in favor of the Company or any Subsidiary of the
Company; (v) Liens incurred, or pledges and deposits in connection with,
workers' compensation, unemployment insurance and other social security
benefits, and leases, appeal bonds and other obligations of like nature incurred
by the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company in the ordinary course of
business; (vi) Liens imposed by law, including, without limitation, mechanics',
carriers', warehousemen's, materialmen's, suppliers' and vendors' Liens,
incurred by the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company in the ordinary course
of business; (vii) Liens for ad valorem, income or property taxes or assessments
and similar charges which either are not delinquent or are being contested in
good faith by appropriate proceedings for which the Company has set aside on its
books reserves to the extent required by GAAP; (viii) Liens created under this
Indenture; (ix) Liens securing Capital Lease Obligations on property subject to
the applicable lease; (x) Liens securing Interest Rate Agreement Obligations;
and (xi) purchase money Liens incurred in the ordinary course of business,
provided that such Liens relate only to the property or asset acquired and such
Liens are created within 90 days of the acquisition of such property or assets.

                  "Person" means any individual, corporation, partnership, joint
venture, association, joint-stock company, limited liability company, trust,
unincorporated organization or government or any agency or political subdivision
thereof.

                  "Physical Notes" has the meaning set forth in Section 2.15.

                  "Preferred Stock" as applied to the Capital Stock of any
Person, means Capital Stock of any class or classes (however designated) which
is preferred as to the payment of
<PAGE>   22
                                      -15-


dividends or distributions, or as to the distribution of assets upon any
voluntary or involuntary liquidation or dissolution of such Person, over Capital
Stock of any other class of such Person.

                  "Prospectus" means the final prospectus relating to the public
offering of the Notes dated         , 1996.

                  "Purchase Money Indebtedness" means Indebtedness of the
Company and its Subsidiaries incurred in connection with the purchase of
property or assets for the business of the Company and its Subsidiaries.

                  "Restricted Investment" means an Investment other than a
Permitted Investment.

                  "Restricted Payment" means (i) any dividend or other
distribution declared or paid on any Capital Stock of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries (other than dividends or distributions payable solely in Capital
Stock (other than Disqualified Stock) of the Company or such Subsidiary or
dividends or distributions payable to the Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor);
(ii) any payment to purchase, redeem or otherwise acquire or retire for value
any Capital Stock of the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company or other
Affiliate of the Company (other than any Capital Stock owned by the Company or
any Subsidiary Guarantor); (iii) any payment to purchase, redeem, defease or
otherwise acquire or retire for value any Subordinated Indebtedness prior to the
maturity thereof; or (iv) any Restricted Investment.

                  "Securities Act" means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

                  "Special Offer Notice Date" means ___________________, 1997.

                  "Subordinated Indebtedness" means any Indebtedness of the
Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor if the instrument creating or evidencing such
Indebtedness or pursuant to which such Indebtedness is outstanding expressly
provides that such Indebtedness is subordinated in right of payment to the Notes
or the Subsidiary Guarantee of such Subsidiary Guarantor, as the case may be.

                  "Subsidiary" of any Person means (i) any corporation more than
50% of the outstanding Voting Stock of which is owned or controlled, directly or
indirectly, by such Person or by one or more other Subsidiaries of such Person,
or by such Person and one or more other Subsidiaries thereof, or (ii) any
limited partnership of which such Person or any Subsidiary of such Person is a
general partner, or (iii) any other Person (other than a corporation or limited
partnership) in which such Person, or one or more other Subsidiaries of such
Person, or such Person and one or more other Subsidiaries thereof, directly or
indirectly, has more than 50% of the outstanding partnership or similar
interests or has the power, by contract or otherwise, to direct or cause the
direction of the policies, management and affairs thereof.
<PAGE>   23
                                      -16-



                  "Subsidiary Guarantees" means the guarantees of the Notes
issued by the Subsidiary Guarantors.

                  "Subsidiary Guarantor" means (i) each Subsidiary of the
Company existing on the Issue Date, (ii) each of the Company's Subsidiaries
which becomes a guarantor of the Notes in compliance with the provisions
pursuant to Section 4.17 and (iii) each of the Company's Subsidiaries executing
a supplemental indenture in which such Subsidiary agrees to be bound by the
terms of this Indenture.

                  "Surviving Person" means, with respect to any Person involved
in or that makes any Disposition, the Person formed by or surviving such
Disposition or the Person to which such Disposition is made.

                  "TIA" means the Trust Indenture Act of 1939 (15 U.S.C.
Sections 77aaa-77bbbb), as amended by the Trust Indenture Reform Act of 1990,
and as in effect on the Issue Date.

                  "Trustee" means                   until a successor replaces
it in accordance with the applicable provisions of this Indenture and thereafter
means such successor.

                  "Trust Officer" means any officer within the Corporate Trust
and Agency Group of the Trustee, including, without limitation, any vice
president, assistant vice president, treasurer, assistant treasurer, assistant
secretary or special assistant secretary or any other officer of the Trustee
customarily performing functions similar to those performed by any of the
above-designated officers, and also means, with respect to a particular
corporate trust matter, any other officer to whom such matter is referred
because of his or her knowledge of and familiarity with the particular subject.

                  "U.S. Government Obligations" means direct obligations of the
United States of America for the payment of which the full faith and credit of
the United States of America is pledged, provided that no U.S. Government
Obligation shall be callable at the Issuer's option prior to the stated maturity
date of the Notes.

                  "Voting Stock" means, with respect to any Person, Capital
Stock of such Person of the class or classes pursuant to which the holders
thereof have the general voting power under ordinary circumstances to elect at
least a majority of the board of directors, managers or trustees of such Person
(irrespective of whether or not at the time stock of any other class or classes
shall have or might have voting power by reason of the happening of any
contingency).

                  "Weighted Average Life to Maturity" means, with respect to any
Indebtedness at any date, the number of years obtained by dividing (i) the sum
of the products obtained by multiplying (a) the amount of each then remaining
installment, sinking fund, serial maturity or
<PAGE>   24
                                      -17-


other required scheduled payment of principal, including payment at final
maturity, in respect thereof, with (b) the number of years (calculated to the
nearest one-twelfth) that will elapse between such date and the making of such
payment, by (ii) the then outstanding aggregate principal amount of such
Indebtedness.

                  "Wholly-Owned Subsidiary" means any Subsidiary of which 100%
of the outstanding Capital Stock is owned by the Company or another Wholly-Owned
Subsidiary. For purposes of this definition, any director's qualifying shares or
investments by foreign nationals mandated by applicable law shall be disregarded
in determining the ownership of a Subsidiary.


SECTION 1.02.   Other Definitions.

                                                                DEFINED IN
              TERM                                               SECTION

              "Asset Sale Offer".............................     4.13
              "Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date"...............     4.13
              "Asset Sale Offer Trigger Date"................     4.13
              "Change of Control Offer"......................     4.11
              "Change of Control Purchase Date"..............     4.11
              "Collateral Account"...........................     4.18
              "Covenant Defeasance Option"...................     8.01
              "Event of Default".............................     6.01
              "Excess Proceeds"..............................     4.13
              "Final Special Offer Purchase Date"............     4.12
              "Incur"........................................     4.07
              "Interested Person"............................     4.19
              "Legal Defeasance Option"......................     8.01
              "Notice of Default"............................     6.01
              "Participants".................................     2.15
              "Paying Agent".................................     2.03
              "Payment Restriction"..........................     4.09
              "Permitted Indebtedness".......................     4.07
              "Permitted Payments"...........................     4.05
              "Purchase Date"................................     3.08
              "Refinancing Indebtedness".....................     4.07
              "Registrar"....................................     2.03
              "Required Filing Dates"........................     4.02
              "Special Offer"................................     4.12
              "Special Offer Price"..........................     4.12
              "Special Offer Purchase Date"..................     4.12

<PAGE>   25
                                      -18-


              "Trustee Expenses".............................    6.08
              "Trust Funds"..................................    4.18


SECTION 1.03.   Incorporation by Reference of TIA.

                  Whenever this Indenture refers to a provision of the Trust
Indenture Act of 1939, as amended, the provision is incorporated by reference
in, and made a part of, this Indenture. Any terms incorporated by reference in
this Indenture that are defined by the TIA, defined by the TIA's reference to
another statute or defined by Commission rule under the TIA have the meanings so
assigned to them therein.


SECTION 1.04.   Rules of Construction.

                  Unless the context otherwise requires: (1) a term has the
meaning assigned to it in this Indenture; (2) an accounting term not otherwise
defined herein has the meaning assigned to it under GAAP; (3) "or" is not
exclusive; (4) words in the singular include the plural, and in the plural
include the singular; (5) provisions apply to successive events and
transactions; and (6) unless otherwise specified, any reference to a Section or
Article refers to such Section or Article of this Indenture.


                                   ARTICLE II
                                    THE NOTES


SECTION 2.01.   Form and Dating.

                  The Notes and the Trustee's certificate of authentication
shall be substantially in the form of Exhibit A, and the notation thereon
relating to the Subsidiary Guarantees shall be substantially in the form of
Exhibit A-1. The Notes may have notations, legends or endorsements required by
law, stock exchange rule or usage. The Company and the Trustee shall approve the
form of the Notes and any notation, legend or endorsement on them. Each Note
shall be dated the date of its issuance and shall show the date of its
authentication. Each Note shall bear the corporate seal of the Company which
shall be attested by the Secretary or an assistant secretary.

                  The terms and provisions contained in the Notes and the
Subsidiary Guarantees shall constitute, and are hereby expressly made, a part of
this Indenture and, to the extent applicable, the Company, the Subsidiary
Guarantors and the Trustee, by their execution and
<PAGE>   26
                                      -19-


delivery of this Indenture, expressly agree to such terms and provisions and to
be bound thereby.


SECTION 2.02.   Execution and Authentication.

                  Two Officers of the Company shall sign each Note for the
Company by manual or facsimile signature. If an Officer whose signature is on a
Note no longer holds that office at the time the Note is authenticated, the Note
shall nevertheless be valid. Each Subsidiary Guarantor shall execute the
Subsidiary Guarantee in the manner set forth in Section 10.04.

                  A Note shall not be valid until authenticated by the manual
signature of the Trustee, and the Trustee's signature shall be conclusive
evidence that the Note has been authenticated under this Indenture. The form of
Trustee's certificate of authentication to be borne by the Notes shall be
substantially as set forth in Exhibit A. The Trustee may appoint an
authenticating agent acceptable to the Company to authenticate Notes. Unless
limited by the terms of such appointment, an authenticating agent may
authenticate Notes whenever the Trustee may do so. Each reference in this
Indenture to authentication by the Trustee includes authentication by such
agent. An authenticating agent has the same rights as an Agent to deal with the
Company or any of its Affiliates.

                  The Trustee shall authenticate Notes for original issue in the
aggregate principal amount of $110,000,000 upon receipt of (i) a written order
of the Company specifying the amount of Notes to be authenticated and the date
on which the Notes are to be authenticated and (ii) an Officers' Certificate and
an Opinion of Counsel, each complying with Section 314(c) of the TIA. The
aggregate principal amount of Notes outstanding at any time may not exceed
$110,000,000, except as provided in Section 2.07. Upon receipt of a written
order of the Company, the Trustee shall authenticate Notes in substitution of
Notes originally issued to reflect any name change of the Company.

                  The Notes shall initially be issued in the form of one or more
permanent Global Notes, substantially in the form set forth in Exhibit A. Global
Notes shall be registered in the name of a nominee of the Depositary and
deposited with the Trustee, at its New York office, in its capacity as Notes
Custodian, duly executed by the Company and authenticated by the Trustee as
hereinafter provided. Each Global Note shall evidence such of the outstanding
Notes as shall be specified therein and each shall provide that it shall
evidence the aggregate principal amount of outstanding Notes from time to time
endorsed thereon, and that the aggregate principal amount of outstanding Notes
represented thereby may from time to time be reduced or increased, as
applicable, to reflect exchanges, redemptions, and other similar transactions.
Any endorsement of a Global Note to reflect the amount of any increase or
decrease in the amount
<PAGE>   27
                                      -20-


of outstanding Notes represented thereby shall be made by the Trustee or the
Notes Custodian, at the direction of the Trustee, in accordance with
instructions given by the Holder thereof.

                  The Notes shall be issuable only in registered form without
coupons in denominations of $1,000 and any integral multiple thereof.


SECTION 2.03.   Registrar; Paying Agent; Depositary.

                  The Company shall maintain an office or agency (the
"Registrar") where Notes may be presented for registration of transfer or for
exchange and an office or agency (the "Paying Agent") where Notes may be
presented for payment. The Registrar shall keep a register of the Notes and of
their transfer and exchange. The Company may appoint one or more co-registrars
and one or more additional paying agents. The term "Paying Agent" includes any
additional paying agent. The Company may change the Paying Agent, Registrar or
co-registrar without prior notice to any Holder. The Company shall notify the
Trustee and the Trustee shall notify the Holders of the name and address of any
Agent not a party to this Indenture. The Company shall enter into an appropriate
agency agreement with any Agent not a party to this Indenture, and such
agreement shall incorporate the provisions of the TIA and implement the
provisions of this Indenture that relate to such Agent.

                  The Company initially appoints the Trustee as Registrar,
Paying Agent and agent for service of notices and demands in connection with the
Notes. If the Company fails to appoint or maintain a Registrar and/or Paying
Agent, the Trustee shall act as such, and shall be entitled to appropriate
compensation in accordance with Section 7.07.

                  The Company initially appoints DTC to act as Depositary with
respect to any Global Notes and initially appoints the Trustee to act as Notes
Custodian with respect to any Global Notes.


SECTION 2.04.   Paying Agent to Hold Money in Trust.

                  The Company shall require each Paying Agent other than the
Trustee to agree in writing that the Paying Agent will hold in trust for the
benefit of the Holders or the Trustee all money the Paying Agent holds for the
redemption or purchase of the Notes or for the payment of principal of, or
premium, if any, or interest on, the Notes, and will notify the Trustee of any
default by the Company in providing the Paying Agent with sufficient funds to
redeem or purchase Notes or make any payment on the Notes as and to the extent
required to be redeemed, purchased or paid under the terms of this Indenture.
While any such default continues, the Trustee may require the Paying Agent to
pay all money it holds to the Trustee.
<PAGE>   28
                                      -21-


The Company at any time may require the Paying Agent to pay all money it holds
to the Trustee. Upon payment over to the Trustee, the Paying Agent (if other
than the Company or any of its Affiliates) shall have no further liability for
the money it delivered to the Trustee. If the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
acts as Paying Agent, it shall segregate and hold in a separate trust fund for
the Holders' benefit all money it holds as Paying Agent.


SECTION 2.05.   Holder Lists.

                  The Trustee shall preserve in as current a form as is
reasonably practicable the most recent list available to it of the names and
addresses of Holders and shall otherwise comply with Section 312(a) of the TIA.
If the Trustee is not the Registrar, the Company shall furnish to the Trustee,
semiannually at least fifteen Business Days before each interest payment date
and at such other times as the Trustee may request in writing, within 30 days
after receipt by the Company of any such request, a list in such form and as of
such date as the Trustee may reasonably require that sets forth the names and
addresses of, and the aggregate principal amount of Notes held by, each Holder,
and the Company shall otherwise comply with Section 312(a) of the TIA.


SECTION 2.06.   Transfer and Exchange.

                  Subject to the provisions of Section 2.15, when Notes are
presented to the Registrar or a co-registrar with a request to register a
transfer or to exchange them for an equal principal amount of Notes of other
denominations, the Registrar shall register the transfer or make the exchange if
its requirements for such transaction are met; provided, however, that any Note
presented or surrendered for registration of transfer or exchange shall be duly
endorsed or accompanied by a written instruction of transfer in form
satisfactory to the Registrar and the Trustee duly executed by the Holder of
such Note or by its attorney duly authorized in writing. To permit registrations
of transfers and exchanges, the Company shall Issue (and the Subsidiary
Guarantors shall execute the Subsidiary Guarantee endorsed thereon), and the
Trustee shall authenticate, Notes at the Registrar's request. The Trustee shall
notify the Company of all such registered transfers and exchanges within five
Business Days of the occurrence of such transfer or exchange.

                  Neither the Company nor the Registrar shall be required to
issue, register the transfer of or exchange any Note (i) during a period
beginning at the opening of business 15 days before the day of the mailing of
notice of any redemption from the Company and ending at the close of business on
the day the notice of redemption is sent to Holders, (ii) selected for
redemption, in whole or in part, except the unredeemed portion of any Note being
redeemed in part may be transferred or exchanged, and (iii) during any Change of
Control Offer or Special
<PAGE>   29
                                      -22-


Offer or Asset Sale Offer if such Note is tendered pursuant to such Change of
Control Offer or Special Offer or Asset Sale Offer and not withdrawn.

                  No service charge shall be made for any registration of
transfer or exchange (except as otherwise expressly permitted herein), but the
Company may require payment of a sum sufficient to cover any transfer tax or
similar governmental charge payable in connection therewith (other than any such
transfer tax or similar governmental charge payable upon exchange pursuant to
Section 2.10, 3.07 or 9.05, which the Company shall pay).

                  Prior to due presentment for registration of transfer of any
Note, the Trustee, any Agent and the Company may deem and treat the Person in
whose name any Note is registered as the absolute owner of such Note (whether or
not such Note shall be overdue and notwithstanding any notation of ownership or
other writing on such Note made by anyone other than the Company, the Registrar
or any co-registrar) for the purpose of receiving payment of principal of, and
premium, if any, and interest on, such Note and for all other purposes, and
notice to the contrary shall not affect the Trustee, any Agent or the Company.

                  Any Holder of the Global Note shall, by acceptance of such
Global Note, agree that transfers of beneficial interests in such Global Note
may be effected only through a book-entry system (as described in Section 2.15)
maintained by the Depositary (or its agent), and that ownership of a beneficial
interest in the Global Note shall be required to be reflected in a book entry.


SECTION 2.07.   Replacement Notes.

                  If any mutilated Note is surrendered to the Trustee, or if the
Company and the Trustee receive evidence to their satisfaction of the
destruction, loss or theft of any Note, the Company shall issue and the Trustee
shall, upon receipt of a written order signed by two Officers of the Company,
authenticate a replacement Note if the Trustee's requirements are met, and each
such replacement Note shall be an additional obligation of the Company. If the
Trustee or the Company requires, the Holder must supply an indemnity bond that
is sufficient in the judgment of the Trustee and the Company to protect the
Company, the Trustee, any Agent or any authenticating agent from any loss that
any of them may suffer if a Note is replaced. The Company and the Trustee may
charge for its reasonable expenses in replacing a Note.


SECTION 2.08.   Outstanding Notes.

                  The Notes outstanding at any time are all the Notes the
Trustee has authenticated except those it has cancelled, those delivered to it
for cancellation, and those described in this
<PAGE>   30
                                      -23-


Section 2.08 as not outstanding. If a Note is replaced pursuant to Section 2.07,
it ceases to be outstanding unless the Trustee receives proof satisfactory to it
that a bona fide purchaser holds the replaced Note. If the entire principal of,
and premium, if any, and accrued interest on, any Note is considered paid under
Section 4.01, it ceases to be outstanding and interest on it ceases to accrue.
Subject to Section 2.09, a Note does not cease to be outstanding because the
Company or any Affiliate of the Company holds such Note.


SECTION 2.09.   Treasury Notes.

                  In determining whether the Holders of the required principal
amount of Notes have concurred in any direction, waiver or consent, Notes owned
by the Company or any Affiliate of the Company shall be considered as though
they are not outstanding; provided, however, that for the purpose of determining
whether the Trustee shall be protected in relying on any such direction, waiver
or consent, only Notes that the Trustee knows are so owned shall be so
disregarded. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Notes that the Company or any
Affiliate of the Company offers to purchase or acquires pursuant to an exchange
offer, tender offer or otherwise shall not be deemed to be owned by the Company
or any Affiliate of the Company until legal title to such Notes passes to the
Company or such Affiliate, as the case may be.


SECTION 2.10.   Temporary Notes.

                  Until definitive Notes are ready for delivery, the Company may
prepare and the Trustee shall authenticate temporary Notes. Temporary Notes
shall be substantially in the form of definitive Notes but may have variations
that the Company considers appropriate for temporary Notes. Without unreasonable
delay, the Company shall prepare and the Trustee, upon receipt of a written
order signed by two Officers of the Company, shall authenticate definitive Notes
in exchange for temporary Notes. Until such exchange, temporary Notes shall be
entitled to the same rights, benefits and privileges as definitive Notes.


SECTION 2.11.   Cancellation.

                  The Company at any time may deliver Notes to the Trustee for
cancellation. The Registrar, any co-registrar, the Paying Agent, the Company and
its Subsidiaries shall forward to the Trustee any Notes surrendered to them for
registration of transfer, exchange, replacement, payment (including all Notes
called for redemption and all Notes accepted for payment pursuant to an Offer)
or cancellation, and the Trustee shall cancel all such Notes and shall destroy
all cancelled Notes (subject to the record retention requirements of the
Exchange Act) and deliver a certificate of their destruction to the Company
unless, by written order signed by two Officers
<PAGE>   31
                                      -24-


of the Company, the Company shall direct that cancelled Notes be returned to it.
The Company may not issue new Notes to replace any Notes that have been
cancelled by the Trustee or that have been delivered to the Trustee for
cancellation. If the Company or any Affiliate of the Company acquires any Notes
(other than by redemption pursuant to Section 3.01 or an Offer pursuant to
Section 4.11, 4.12 or 4.13), such acquisition shall not operate as a redemption
or satisfaction of the Indebtedness represented by such Notes unless and until
such Notes are delivered to the Trustee for cancellation.


SECTION 2.12.   Defaulted Interest.

                  If the Company defaults in a payment of interest on the Notes,
it shall pay the defaulted interest in any lawful manner plus, to the extent
lawful, interest payable on the defaulted interest, to Holders on a subsequent
special record date, in each case at the rate provided in the Notes and Section
4.01. The Company shall, with the Trustee's consent, fix or cause to be fixed
each such special record date and payment date. At least 15 days before the
special record date, the Company (or, at the request of the Company, the Trustee
in the name of, and at the expense of, the Company) shall mail a notice that
states the special record date, the related payment date and the amount of
interest to be paid.


SECTION 2.13.   Record Date

                  The record date for purposes of determining the identity of
holders of Notes entitled to vote or consent to any action by vote or consent
authorized or permitted under this Indenture shall be determined as provided for
in Section 316(c) of the TIA.


SECTION 2.14.   CUSIP Number.

                  A "CUSIP" number will be printed on the Notes, and the Trustee
shall use the CUSIP number in notices of redemption, purchase or exchange as a
convenience to Holders; provided that any such notice may state that no
representation is made as to the correctness or accuracy of the CUSIP number
printed in the notice or on the Notes and that reliance may be placed only on
the other identification numbers printed on the Notes. The Company will promptly
notify the Trustee of any change in the CUSIP number.
<PAGE>   32
                                      -25-




SECTION 2.15.  Book-Entry Provisions for Global Notes.

                  (a) The Global Notes initially shall (i) be registered in the
name of the Depositary or the nominee of such Depositary, (ii) be delivered to
the Trustee as custodian for such Depositary and (iii) bear legends as set forth
in Exhibit B.

                  Members of, or participants in, the Depositary
("Participants") shall have no rights under this Indenture with respect to any
Global Note held on their behalf by the Depositary, or the Trustee as its
custodian, or under the Global Note, and the Depositary may be treated by the
Company, the Trustee and any agent of the Company or the Trustee as the absolute
owner of the Global Note for all purposes whatsoever. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, nothing herein shall prevent the Company, the Trustee or any agent of
the Company or the Trustee from giving effect to any written certification,
proxy or other authorization furnished by the Depositary or impair, as between
the Depositary and its Participants, the operation of customary practices
governing the exercise of the rights of a Holder of any Note.

                  (b) Transfers of Global Notes shall be limited to transfers in
whole, but not in part, to the Depositary, its successors or their respective
nominees. Interests of beneficial owners in the Global Notes may be transferred
or exchanged for certificated notes ("Physical Notes") in accordance with the
rules and procedures of the Depositary. In addition, Physical Notes shall be
transferred to all beneficial owners in exchange for their beneficial interests
in Global Notes if (i) the Depositary notifies the Company that it is unwilling
or unable to continue as Depositary for any Global Note and a successor
depositary is not appointed by the Company within 30 days of such notice or (ii)
an Event of Default has occurred and is continuing and the Registrar has
received a request from the Depositary to issue Physical Notes.

                  (c) In connection with any transfer or exchange of a portion
of the beneficial interest in any Global Note to beneficial owners pursuant to
paragraph (b), the Registrar shall (if one or more Physical Notes are to be
issued) reflect on its books and records the date and a decrease in the
principal amount of the Global Note in an amount equal to the principal amount
of the beneficial interest in the Global Note to be transferred or exchanged,
and the Company shall execute (and the Subsidiary Guarantors shall execute the
Subsidiary Guarantee endorsed thereon), and the Trustee, pursuant to
instructions set forth in an Officers' Certificate from the Company, shall
authenticate and deliver, one or more Physical Notes of like tenor and amount.

                  (d) In connection with the transfer or exchange of Global
Notes as an entirety to beneficial owners pursuant to paragraph (b), the Global
Notes shall be deemed to be surrendered to the Trustee for cancellation, and the
Company shall execute (and the Subsidiary Guarantors shall execute the
Subsidiary Guarantee endorsed thereon), and the Trustee, pursuant to
instructions set forth in an Officers' Certificate from the Company, shall
authenticate and
<PAGE>   33
                                      -26-


deliver, to each beneficial owner identified by the Depositary in exchange for
its beneficial interest in the Global Notes, an equal aggregate principal amount
of Physical Notes of authorized denominations.

                  (e) Upon consummation of any redemption pursuant to Section
3.01 or any Offer pursuant to Sections 4.11, 4.12 or 4.13, the Registrar shall
reflect on its book and records the date and a decrease in the principal amount
of the Global Note in an amount equal to the aggregate principal amount being
redeemed or purchased by the Company. The Global Note shall be deemed to be
surrendered to the Trustee by the Notes Custodian and the Company shall execute
(and the Subsidiary Guarantors shall execute the Subsidiary Guarantee endorsed
thereon), and the Trustee, pursuant to instructions set forth in an Officers'
Certificate from the Company, shall authenticate and deliver to the Notes
Custodian, a new Global Note reflecting such reduction in principal amount
outstanding.

                  (f) The Holder of any Global Note may grant proxies and
otherwise authorize any person, including Participants and persons that may hold
interests through Participants, to take any action which a Holder is entitled to
take under this Indenture or the Notes.


                                   ARTICLE III
                                   REDEMPTION


SECTION 3.01.   Redemption Provisions.

                  The Notes are not redeemable at the Company's option prior to
            , 2001. On and after such date, the Notes will be subject to
redemption at the option of the Company, in whole or in part, at the redemption
prices (expressed as percentages of the principal amount of the Notes) set forth
below, plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date fixed for redemption, if
redeemed during the twelve-month period beginning on [      ] of the years
indicated below.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      Year                               Percentage
                      ----                               ----------
<S>                                                      <C>
       2001........................................               %
       2002........................................               %
       2003........................................               %
       2004 and thereafter.........................           100%
</TABLE>

                  Notwithstanding the foregoing, at any time prior to        ,
1999, the Company, at its option, may redeem from time to time up to [ ]% of the
aggregate principal amount of
<PAGE>   34
                                      -27-


the Notes originally issued with the net cash proceeds of one or more Public
Equity Offerings, other than the Concurrent Offering at a redemption price equal
to [ ]% of the principal amount thereof, together with accrued and unpaid
interest to the date fixed for redemption; provided, however, that at least $75
million in aggregate principal amount of the Notes remains outstanding
immediately after any such redemption.


SECTION 3.02.   Notice to Trustee.

                  If the Company elects to redeem Notes pursuant to Section
3.01, it shall furnish to the Trustee, at least 30 but not more than 60 days
before notice of any redemption is to be mailed to Holders, an Officers'
Certificate stating that the Company is redeeming Notes pursuant to Section
3.01, the date notice of redemption is to be mailed to Holders, the redemption
date, the aggregate principal amount of Notes to be redeemed, the redemption
price for such Notes, the amount of accrued and unpaid interest on such Notes as
of the redemption date and, if applicable, the manner in which Notes are to be
selected for redemption, in accordance with Section 3.03, if less than all
outstanding Notes are to be redeemed. If the Trustee is not the Registrar, the
Company shall, concurrently with delivery of its notice to the Trustee of a
redemption, cause the Registrar to deliver to the Trustee a certificate (upon
which the Trustee may rely) setting forth the name of, and the aggregate
principal amount of Notes held by each Holder.

                  The Company will also provide the Trustee with any additional
information that the Trustee reasonably requests in connection with any
redemption.


SECTION 3.03.   Selection of Notes to Be Redeemed.

                  If less than all outstanding Notes are to be redeemed by the
Company, the Trustee, on behalf of the Company, shall select the outstanding
Notes to be redeemed in compliance with the requirements of the principal
national securities exchange, if any, on which the Notes are listed or, if the
Notes are not listed on such an exchange the Trustee, on behalf of the Company,
shall select the outstanding Notes to be redeemed on a pro rata basis, by lot or
by any other method that the Trustee deems fair and appropriate; provided, that
a redemption pursuant to the provisions relating to Public Equity Offerings will
be on a pro rata basis. Notes redeemed in part shall only be redeemed in
integral multiples of $1,000. If the Company elects to mail notice of a
redemption to Holders, the Trustee shall at least five days prior to the date
notice of redemption is to be mailed, (i) select, on behalf of the Company, the
Notes to be redeemed from Notes outstanding not previously called for
redemption, and (ii) notify the Company of the names of each Holder of Notes
selected for redemption, the principal amount of Notes held by each such Holder
and the principal amount of such Holder's Notes that are to
<PAGE>   35
                                      -28-


be redeemed. The Trustee shall select for redemption Notes or portions of Notes
in principal amounts of $1,000 or integral multiples of $1,000. Except as
provided in the preceding sentence, provisions of this Indenture that apply to
Notes called for redemption also apply to portions of Notes called for
redemption. The Trustee shall notify the Company promptly of the Notes or
portions of Notes to be called for redemption. The Company shall notify the
Trustee of its acceptance for payment of the Notes selected for redemption.


SECTION 3.04.   Notice of Redemption.

                  (a) At least 30 days but not more than 60 days before any
redemption date, the Company shall mail by first class mail a notice of
redemption to each Holder of Notes that are to be redeemed. With respect to any
redemption of Notes, the notice shall identify the Notes or portions thereof, if
applicable, to be redeemed and shall state: (1) the redemption date; (2) the
redemption price for the Notes and the amount of unpaid and accrued interest on
such Notes as of the date of redemption; (3) the paragraph of the Notes pursuant
to which the Notes called for redemption are being redeemed; (4) if any Note is
being redeemed in part, the portion of the principal amount of such Note to be
redeemed and that, after the redemption date, upon surrender of such Note, a new
Note or Notes in principal amount equal to the unredeemed portion will be
issued; (5) the name and address of the Paying Agent; (6) that Notes called for
redemption must be surrendered to the Paying Agent to collect the redemption
price for, and any accrued and unpaid interest on, such Notes; (7) that, unless
the Company defaults in making such redemption payment, interest on Notes called
for redemption ceases to accrue on and after the redemption date; and (8) that
no representation is made as to the correctness or accuracy of the CUSIP number
listed in such notice and printed on the Notes.

                  (b) At the Company's request, the Trustee shall (at the
Company's expense) give the notice of any redemption to Holders; provided,
however, that the Company shall deliver to the Trustee, at least 45 days prior
to the date of any optional redemption and at least 10 days prior to the date
that notice of such redemption is to be mailed to Holders, an Officers'
Certificate that (i) requests the Trustee to give notice of the redemption to
Holders, (ii) sets forth the information to be provided to Holders in the notice
of redemption, as set forth in the preceding paragraph, and (iii) sets forth the
aggregate principal amount of Notes to be redeemed and the amount of accrued and
unpaid interest thereon as of the redemption date. If the Trustee is not a
Registrar, the Company shall, concurrently with any such request, cause the
Registrar to deliver to the Trustee a certificate (upon which the Trustee may
rely) setting forth the name of, the address of, and the aggregate principal
amount of Notes held by, each Holder.
<PAGE>   36
                                      -29-




SECTION 3.05.   Effect of Notice of Redemption.

                  Once notice of redemption is mailed, Notes called for
redemption become due and payable on the redemption date at the price set forth
in the Note.


SECTION 3.06.   Deposit of Redemption Price.

                  (a) On or prior to any redemption date, the Company shall
deposit with the Trustee or with the Paying Agent money sufficient to pay the
redemption price of, and accrued interest on, all Notes to be redeemed on that
date. The Trustee or the Paying Agent shall return to the Company, no later than
five days after any redemption date, any money (including accrued interest) that
exceeds the amount necessary to pay the redemption price of, and accrued
interest on, all Notes redeemed.

                  (b) If the Company complies with Section 3.06(a), interest on
the Notes to be redeemed will cease to accrue on such Notes on the applicable
redemption date, whether or not such Notes are presented for payment. If a Note
is redeemed on or after an interest record date but on or prior to the related
interest payment date, then any accrued and unpaid interest shall be paid to the
Person in whose name such Note was registered at the close of business of such
record date. If any Note called for redemption shall not be so paid upon
surrender for redemption because of the failure of the Company to comply with
the preceding paragraph, to the extent lawful, the Company shall pay interest
(including Post-Petition Interest) on the overdue principal, premium, if any,
and interest from the redemption date until such principal, premium and interest
are paid, at a rate equal to 2% per annum in excess of the then applicable
interest rate on the Notes compounded semi-annually as provided in the Notes and
Section 4.01.


SECTION 3.07.   Notes Redeemed in Part.

                  Subject to Section 2.15, upon surrender of a Note that is
redeemed in part, the Company shall issue and the Trustee shall authenticate for
the Holder at the Company's expense a new Note equal in principal amount to the
unredeemed portion of the Note surrendered.
<PAGE>   37
                                      -30-


                                   ARTICLE IV
                                    COVENANTS


SECTION 4.01.  Payment of Principal, Premium and Interest.

                  The Company shall pay the principal of, and premium, if any,
and interest on, the Notes on the dates and in the manner provided in the Notes.
Holders must surrender their Notes to the Paying Agent to collect principal
payments. Principal, premium, or interest shall be considered paid on the date
due if, by 11 a.m. Eastern Standard Time on such date, the Company has deposited
with the Paying Agent money in immediately available funds designated for and
sufficient to pay such principal, premium or interest. The Paying Agent shall
return to the Company, no later than five days following the date of payment,
any money (including accrued interest) that exceeds the amount then due and
payable on the Notes.

                  The Company shall pay interest (including Post-Petition
Interest) on overdue principal, premium and interest (without regard to any
applicable grace period) at a rate equal to 2% per annum in excess of the then
applicable interest rate on the Notes, compounded semiannually.

                  Payments of the principal of, premium (if any) and interest on
any Global Notes will be made to the Depositary or its nominee, as the case may
be, as the registered owner thereof. None of the Company, the Trustee nor any
Paying Agent will have any responsibility or liability for any aspect of the
records relating to or payments made on account of beneficial ownership
interests in any Global Notes or for maintaining, supervising or reviewing any
records relating to such beneficial ownership interest.


SECTION 4.02.   Provision of Financial Statements.

                  Whether or not the Company is then subject to Section 13(a) or
15(d) of the Exchange Act, the Company will file with the Commission, so long as
any Notes are outstanding, the annual reports, quarterly reports and other
periodic reports which the Company would have been required to file with the
Commission pursuant to such Section 13(a) or 15(d) if the Company were so
subject, and such documents shall be filed with the Commission on or prior to
the respective dates (the "Required Filing Dates") by which the Company would
have been required so to file such documents if the Company were so subject. The
Company will also, in any event, (i) within 15 days of each Required Filing
Date, (a) transmit by mail to all holders of Notes, as their names and addresses
appear in the Note register, without cost to such holders and (b) file with the
Trustee copies of the annual reports, quarterly reports and other
<PAGE>   38
                                      -31-


periodic reports which the Company would have been required to file with the
Commission pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act if the Company
were subject to such Sections and (ii) if filing such documents by the Company
with the Commission is prohibited under the Exchange Act, promptly upon written
request and payment of the reasonable cost of duplication and delivery, supply
copies of such documents to any prospective Holder at the Company's cost. In
addition, the Company will file with the Commission and with the Trustee, in
accordance with rules and regulations prescribed by the Commission, such
additional information, documents and reports with respect to compliance with
the conditions and covenants provided for herein as may be required by such
rules and regulations.


SECTION 4.03.   Compliance Certificate.

                  The Company shall deliver to the Trustee, within 135 days
after the end of each fiscal year of the Company, an officers' certificate,
which shall be executed, on behalf of the Company by two Officers, at least one
of which shall be the principal executive officer, principal financial officer
or principal accounting officer of the Company, stating that (i) a review of the
activities of the Company and its Subsidiaries during the preceding fiscal year
has been made to determine whether the Company has kept, observed, performed and
fulfilled all of its obligations under this Indenture and the Notes, (ii) such
review was supervised by the Officers of the Company signing such certificate,
and (iii) that to the best knowledge of each Officer signing such certificate,
(a) the Company has kept, observed, performed and fulfilled each and every
condition and covenant contained in this Indenture and is not in default in the
performance or observance of any of the terms, provisions and conditions of this
Indenture (or, if a Default or Event of Default occurred, describing all such
Defaults or Events of Default of which each such Officer may have knowledge and
what action the Company has taken or proposes to take with respect thereto), and
(b) no event has occurred and remains in existence by reason of which payments
on account of the principal of, or premium, if any, or interest on, the Notes
are prohibited or if such event has occurred, a description of the event and
what action the Company is taking or proposes to take with respect thereto. For
purposes of this paragraph, such compliance shall be determined without regard
to any period of grace or requirement of notice provided hereunder.

                  So long as not contrary to the then current recommendations of
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the annual financial
statements delivered pursuant to Section 4.02 shall be accompanied by a written
statement of the Company's independent public accountants (who shall be a firm
of established national reputation reasonably satisfactory to the Trustee) that
in making the examination necessary for certification of such financial
statements nothing has come to their attention that would lead them to believe
that the Company has violated any provision of Section 4.01, 4.05, 4.07, 4.08,
4.09, 4.11, 4.12, 4.13, 4.14, 4.15, 4.16, 4.17 or 4.18 or Article V or, if any
such violation has occurred, specifying the nature and
<PAGE>   39
                                      -32-


period of existence thereof, it being understood that such accountants shall not
be liable directly or indirectly to any Person for any failure to obtain
knowledge of any such violation.

                  The Company will, so long as any of the Notes are outstanding,
deliver to the Trustee, promptly after any Officer of the Company becomes aware
of any Default or Event of Default, an Officers' Certificate specifying such
Default or Event of Default and what action the Company is taking or proposes to
take with respect thereto.

                  The Company shall deliver to the Trustee such other
information or documents reasonably requested by the Trustee in connection with
the compliance by the Trustee or the Company with the TIA.


SECTION 4.04.   Stay, Extension and Usury Laws.

                  The Company covenants (to the extent that it may lawfully do
so) that it will not at any time insist upon, plead, or in any manner whatsoever
claim or take the benefit or advantage of, any stay, extension or usury law
wherever enacted, now or at any time hereafter in force, that might affect the
covenants or the performance of its obligations under this Indenture and the
Notes; and the Company (to the extent it may lawfully do so) hereby expressly
waives all benefit or advantage of any such law, and covenants that it will not,
by resort to any such law, hinder, delay or impede the execution of any power
granted to the Trustee pursuant to this Indenture, but will suffer and permit
the execution of every such power as though no such law has been enacted.


SECTION 4.05.   Limitation on Restricted Payments.

                  (a) The Company will not, and will not permit any of its
Subsidiaries to, directly or indirectly, make any Restricted Payment, unless at
the time of and immediately after giving effect to the proposed Restricted
Payment (with the value of any such Restricted Payment, if other than cash, to
be determined by the Board of Directors in good faith and which determination
shall be conclusive and evidenced by a board resolution), (i) no Default or
Event of Default (and no event that, after notice or lapse of time, or both,
would become an "event of default" under the terms of any Indebtedness of the
Company or its Subsidiaries) shall have occurred and be continuing or would
occur as a consequence thereof, (ii) the Company could incur at least $1.00 of
additional Indebtedness pursuant to the provisions of Section 4.07(a) and (iii)
the aggregate amount of all Restricted Payments made after the Issue Date shall
not exceed the sum of (a) 50% of Cumulative Consolidated Net Income of the
Company (or, in the case such Cumulative Consolidated Net Income shall be
negative, less 100% of such deficit) since the end of the fiscal quarter in
which the Issue Date occurs through the last day of the
<PAGE>   40
                                      -33-


most recent fiscal quarter, plus (b) the aggregate amount of all net cash
proceeds received after the Issue Date by the Company (but excluding the net
cash proceeds received by the Company from the Concurrent Offering) from the
issuance and sale (other than to a Subsidiary of the Company) of Capital Stock
of the Company (other than Disqualified Stock) and the principal amount of
Indebtedness of the Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor that had been converted
into or exchanged for Capital Stock of the Company and, in either case, to the
extent that such proceeds are not used to redeem, repurchase, retire or
otherwise acquire Capital Stock or any Indebtedness of the Company or any
Subsidiary pursuant to clause (ii) of Section 4.05(b), plus (c) in the case of
the disposition or repayment of any Investment for cash, which Investment
constituted a Restricted Payment made after the Issue Date, an amount equal to
the lesser of the return of capital with respect to such Investment and the cost
of such Investment, in either case, reduced (but not below zero) by the excess,
if any, of the cost of the disposition of such Investment over the gain, if any,
realized by the Company or such Subsidiary in respect of such disposition.

                  (b) The provisions of Section 4.05(a) will not prohibit, so
long as there is no Default or Event of Default continuing, the following
actions (collectively, "Permitted Payments"):

                    (i) the payment of any dividend within 60 days after the
         date of declaration thereof, if at such declaration date such payment
         would have been permitted under this Indenture, and such payment shall
         be deemed to have been paid on such date of declaration for purposes of
         clause (iii) of Section 4.05(a);

                   (ii) the redemption, repurchase, retirement, defeasance or
         other acquisition of any Capital Stock or any Indebtedness of the
         Company in exchange for, or out of the proceeds of, the substantially
         concurrent sale (other than to a Subsidiary of the Company) of Capital
         Stock of the Company (other than any Disqualified Stock);

                  (iii) the repurchase, redemption or other repayment of any
         Subordinated Debt of the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor in exchange
         for, by conversion into or solely out of the proceeds of the
         substantially concurrent sale (other than to a Subsidiary of the
         Company) of Subordinated Debt of the Company or such Subsidiary
         Guarantor with a Weighted Average Life to Maturity equal to or greater
         than the then remaining Weighted Average Life to Maturity of the
         Subordinated Debt repurchased, redeemed or repaid;

                   (iv) the redemption, repurchase, retirement, defeasance or
         other acquisition of Capital Stock of the Company or any options or
         stock appreciation rights related to Capital Stock of the Company held
         by officers or employees (or their estates or beneficiaries of estates)
         upon death, disability, retirement or termination of employment;
<PAGE>   41
                                      -34-


         provided that the amount of Permitted Payments made under this clause
         (iv) shall not exceed $1 million per annum;

                    (v) any redemption of the Company's 14% Cumulative
         Redeemable Convertible Preferred Stock (i) having an aggregate stated
         value of $5.5 million out of the proceeds of the issuance of the Notes
         or the Concurrent Offering or (ii) at its stated maturity out of the
         proceeds of a concurrent issuance of Capital Stock (other than
         Disqualified Stock); and

                   (vi) Restricted Investments received as consideration in
         connection with an Asset Sale made in compliance with the Indenture.

                   (c) In computing the amount of Restricted Payments for
purposes of Section 4.05(a)(iii), Restricted Payments made under Sections
4.05(b)(iv) and 4.05(b)(vi) shall be included and Restricted Payments made under
Sections 4.05(b)(i), 4.05(b)(ii), 4.05(b)(iii) and Section 4.05(b)(v) shall be
excluded.


SECTION 4.06.  Corporate Existence.

                   The Company will do or cause to be done all things necessary
to preserve and keep in full force and effect its corporate existence and the
corporate, partnership or other existence of each of its Subsidiaries in
accordance with the respective organizational documents of each of its
Subsidiaries and the rights (charter and statutory), licenses and franchises of
the Company and each of its Subsidiaries; provided, however, that the Company
shall not be required to preserve any such right, license or franchise, or the
corporate, partnership or other existence of any Subsidiary, if the Board of
Directors shall determine that the preservation thereof is no longer desirable
in the conduct of the business of the Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a
whole, and that the loss thereof is not adverse in any material respect to the
Holders.


SECTION 4.07.  Limitation on Incurrence of Indebtedness.

                   (a) The Company will not, and will not permit any of its
Subsidiaries to, create, incur, assume or directly or indirectly guarantee or in
any other manner become directly or indirectly liable for ("Incur") any
Indebtedness (including Acquired Debt), except for Permitted Indebtedness unless
at the time of and immediately after giving pro forma effect to such incurrence,
the Consolidated Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio of the Company and its Subsidiaries
would be greater than (x) 1.5 to 1.0 if the Indebtedness is incurred prior to
          , 1997, (y) 2.25 to 1.0 if the Indebtedness is incurred prior to
        , 1998 or (z) 2.5 to 1.0 of the Indebtedness is incurred on or
after            , 1998.
<PAGE>   42
                                      -35-


                  (b) Section 4.07(a) will not apply to the incurrence of any of
the following (collectively, "Permitted Indebtedness"):

                    (i) Indebtedness of the Company incurred under the Credit
         Facility in an aggregate principal amount at any time outstanding not
         to exceed the sum of (1) 80% of the net amount of accounts receivable
         (as determined under GAAP) of the Company and the Subsidiaries plus (2)
         an amount equal to $1,300 multiplied by the number of Eligible Pay
         Telephones (as defined in the Credit Facility as in effect on the Issue
         Date), in each case as determined in good faith by the Company at the
         time of each incurrence of Indebtedness under the Credit Facility;
         provided that in no event shall the aggregate principal amount of
         Indebtedness outstanding at any one time under the Credit Facility
         permitted pursuant to this clause (i) exceed $25 million less the
         aggregate amount of any principal payments thereunder constituting
         permanent reductions of such Indebtedness pursuant to and in accordance
         with the covenant described under Section 4.13; and provided, further,
         that in no event shall the aggregate principal amount of Indebtedness
         outstanding at any one time under the Credit Facility pursuant to this
         Section 4.07(b)(i) which was incurred for working capital purposes
         exceed $15 million;

                   (ii) Indebtedness of the Company under the Notes and the
         Indenture and of any Subsidiary Guarantor represented by a Subsidiary
         Guarantee and other Indebtedness of the Company and the Subsidiary
         Guarantors outstanding on the Issue Date;

                  (iii) Indebtedness owed by any Subsidiary to the Company or to
         a Subsidiary Guarantor, or owed by the Company to any Subsidiary
         Guarantor; provided that any such Indebtedness shall be held by a
         Person which is either the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor and
         provided, further, that (A) any such Indebtedness of a Subsidiary shall
         not be subordinated to any other Indebtedness of such Subsidiary and
         (B) any such Indebtedness owed to a Subsidiary Guarantor shall be
         unsecured and shall be subordinated to the payment when due of the
         Notes and, provided, further, that an incurrence of additional
         Indebtedness which is not permitted under this clause (iii) shall be
         deemed to have occurred upon either (a) the transfer or other
         disposition of any such Indebtedness to a Person other than the Company
         or a Subsidiary or (b) the sale, lease, transfer or other disposition
         of shares of Capital Stock (including by consolidation or merger) of
         any such Subsidiary to a Person other than the Company or a Subsidiary
         Guarantor such that such Subsidiary ceases to be a Subsidiary
         Guarantor;
<PAGE>   43
                                      -36-


                   (iv) Indebtedness of the Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor
         consisting of guarantees of any Indebtedness of the Company or any
         Subsidiary Guarantor which Indebtedness has been incurred in accordance
         with the provisions of the Indenture;

                    (v) Indebtedness arising with respect to Interest Rate
         Agreement Obligations incurred for the purpose of fixing or hedging
         interest rate risk with respect to any floating rate Indebtedness that
         is permitted by the terms of the Indenture to be outstanding; provided,
         however, that the notional principal amount of such Interest Rate
         Agreement Obligation does not exceed the principal amount of the
         Indebtedness to which such Interest Rate Agreement Obligation relates;
         and

                   (vi) Indebtedness of the Company or a Subsidiary incurred in
         connection with or given in exchange for the renewal, extension,
         substitution, refunding, defeasance, refinancing or replacement of any
         Indebtedness permitted to be incurred or outstanding under the
         Consolidated Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio of the first paragraph of this
         covenant or pursuant to clause (ii) above ("Refinancing Indebtedness");
         provided that (a) the principal amount of such Refinancing Indebtedness
         shall not exceed the principal amount of the Indebtedness so renewed,
         extended, substituted, refunded, defeased, refinanced or replaced (plus
         the premiums or other payments paid in connection therewith (which
         shall not exceed the stated amount of any premium or other payments
         required to be paid in connection with such a refinancing pursuant to
         the terms of the Indebtedness being renewed, extended, substituted,
         refunded, defeased, refinanced or replaced) and the expenses incurred
         in connection therewith); (b) the Refinancing Indebtedness shall have a
         Weighted Average Life to Maturity equal to or greater than the Weighted
         Average Life to Maturity of the Indebtedness being renewed, extended,
         substituted, refunded, defeased, refinanced or replaced; and (c) such
         Refinancing Indebtedness shall not rank senior to, and shall be at
         least as subordinated, in right of payment to the Notes or the
         Subsidiary Guarantees, as the case may be, as the Indebtedness being
         renewed, extended, substituted, refunded, defeased, refinanced or
         replaced.


SECTION 4.08.      Taxes.

                   The Company shall, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries
to, pay prior to delinquency all taxes, assessments and governmental levies the
failure of which to pay could reasonably be expected to result in a material
adverse effect on the condition (financial or otherwise), business or results of
operations of the Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, except for
those taxes contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings.
<PAGE>   44
                                      -37-




SECTION 4.09.   Limitation on Dividends and Other Payment Restrictions Affecting
                Subsidiaries.

                   The Company will not, and will not permit any of its
Subsidiaries to, directly or indirectly, create or otherwise cause or suffer to
exist or become effective any encumbrance or restriction on the ability of any
Subsidiary to (i) pay dividends or make any other distributions to the Company
or any other Subsidiary of the Company on its Capital Stock or with respect to
any other interest or participation in, or measured by, its profits, or pay any
Indebtedness owed to the Company or any other Subsidiary of the Company, (ii)
make loans or advances to the Company or any other Subsidiary of the Company, or
(iii) transfer any of its properties or assets to the Company or any other
Subsidiary of the Company (collectively, "Payment Restrictions"), except for
such encumbrances or restrictions existing under or by reason of (a) the Credit
Facility as in effect on the Issue Date and any amendments, restatements,
renewals, replacements or refinancings thereof; provided that such amendments,
restatements, renewals, replacements or refinancings are no more restrictive in
the aggregate with respect to such dividend and other payment restrictions than
those contained in the Credit Facility immediately prior to any such amendment,
restatement, renewal, replacement or refinancing, (b) applicable law, (c) any
instrument governing Indebtedness or Capital Stock of an Acquired Person
acquired by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries as in effect at the time of
such acquisition (except to the extent such Indebtedness was incurred in
connection with such acquisition); provided that such restriction is not
applicable to any Person, or the properties or assets of any Person, other than
the Acquired Person, (d) customary non-assignment provisions in leases entered
into in the ordinary course of business and consistent with past practices, (e)
Purchase Money Indebtedness for property acquired in the ordinary course of
business that only impose restrictions on the property so acquired, (f) an
agreement for the sale or disposition of the Capital Stock or assets of such
Subsidiary; provided that such restriction is only applicable to such Subsidiary
or assets, as applicable, and such sale or disposition otherwise is permitted
under the covenant described under Section 4.13; and provided, further, that
such restriction or encumbrance shall be effective only for a period from the
execution and delivery of such agreement through a termination date not later
than 270 days after such execution and delivery, (g) Refinancing Indebtedness
permitted under this Indenture; provided that the restrictions contained in the
agreements governing such Refinancing Indebtedness are no more restrictive in
the aggregate than those contained in the agreements governing the Indebtedness
being refinanced immediately prior to such refinancing, (h) any agreement in
effect on the Issue Date and (i) provisions in security agreements relating to
secured Indebtedness of a Subsidiary to the extent such provisions restrict the
transfer of the property that is the subject of such security agreements.
<PAGE>   45
                                      -38-




SECTION 4.10.   Maintenance of Office or Agency.

                   The Company will maintain in the Borough of Manhattan, the
City of New York, an office or an agency (which may be an office of any Agent)
where Notes may be surrendered for registration of transfer or exchange and
where notices and demands to or upon the Company in respect of the Notes and
this Indenture may be served. The Company will give prompt written notice to the
Trustee of any change in the location of such office or agency. If at any time
the Company shall fail to furnish the Trustee with the address thereof, such
presentations, surrenders, notices and demands may be made or served at the
Corporate Trust Office.

                   The Company may also from time to time designate one or more
other offices or agencies where the Notes may be presented or surrendered for
any or all such purposes and may from time to time rescind such designations;
provided, however, that no such designation or rescission shall in any matter
relieve the Company of its obligations to maintain an office or agency in the
Borough of Manhattan, the City of New York, for such purposes. The Company will
give prompt written notice to the Trustee of any such designation or rescission
and of any change in the location of any such other office or agency.

                   The Company hereby designates the Corporate Trust Office of
the Trustee as one such office or agency of the Company in accordance with
Section 2.03.


SECTION 4.11.   Change of Control.

                   (a) In the event of a Change of Control, Company will make an
offer to purchase all of the then outstanding Notes at a purchase price in cash
equal to 101% of the aggregate principal amount thereof, plus accrued and unpaid
interest to the date of purchase, in accordance with the terms set forth below
in Section 4.11(b)-(e) (a "Change of Control Offer").

                   (b) Within 30 days following the occurrence of any Change of
Control, the Company shall mail to each Holder at such Holder's registered
address a notice stating: (i) that a Change of Control has occurred and that
such Holder has the right to require the Company to repurchase all or a portion
(equal to $1,000 or an integral multiple thereof) of such Holder's Notes at a
purchase price in cash equal to 101% of the aggregate principal amount thereof,
plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of purchase (the "Change of Control
Purchase Date"), which shall be a Business Day, specified in such notice, that
is not earlier than 30 days or later than 60 days from the date such notice is
mailed, (ii) the amount of accrued and unpaid interest as of the Change of
Control Purchase Date, (iii) that any Note not tendered will continue to accrue
interest, (iv) that, unless the Company defaults in the payment of the purchase
price for
<PAGE>   46
                                      -39-


the Notes payable pursuant to the Change of Control Offer, any Notes accepted
for payment pursuant to the Change of Control Offer shall cease to accrue
interest after the Change of Control Purchase Date, (v) that Holders electing to
tender any Note or portion thereof will be required to surrender their Note,
with a form entitled "Option of Holder to Elect Purchase" completed, to the
Paying Agent at the address specified in the notice prior to the close of
business on the Business Day preceding the Change of Control Purchase Date,
provided, that, Holders electing to tender only a portion of any Note must
tender a principal amount of $1,000 or integral multiples thereof; (vi) that
Holders will be entitled to withdraw their election to tender Notes if the
Paying Agent receives, not later than the close of business on the third
Business Day preceding the Change of Control Purchase Date, a telegram, telex,
facsimile transmission or letter setting forth the name of the Holder, the
principal amount of Notes delivered for purchase, and a statement that such
Holder is withdrawing his election to have such Notes purchased; and (vii) that,
subject to Section 2.15, Holders whose Notes are accepted for payment in part
will be issued new Notes equal in principal amount to the unpurchased portion of
Notes surrendered, provided, that, only Notes in a principal amount of $1,000 or
integral multiples thereof will be accepted for payment in part.

                   (c) The Company shall furnish to the Trustee, at least seven
Business Days before notice of the corresponding Change of Control Offer is to
be mailed to Holders, an Officers' Certificate setting forth that the Change of
Control Offer is being made pursuant to Section 4.11, the Change of Control
Purchase Date, the maximum principal amount of Notes the Company is offering to
purchase pursuant to such Change of Control Offer, the purchase price for such
Notes, the amount of accrued and unpaid interest on such Notes as of the Change
of Control Purchase Date and, the manner in which Notes are to be selected for
purchase, in accordance with Section 4.11(d), in the event less than all Notes
tendered are to be purchased.

                   The Company will also provide the Trustee with any additional
information that the Trustee reasonably requests in connection with any Change
of Control Offer.

                   (d) On the Change of Control Purchase Date, the Company will
(i) accept for payment all Notes or portions thereof tendered pursuant to the
Change of Control Offer, (ii) deposit with the Paying Agent the aggregate
purchase price of all Notes or portions thereof accepted for payment and any
accrued and unpaid interest on such Notes as of the Change of Control Purchase
Date, and (iii) deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee all Notes
tendered pursuant to the Change of Control Offer. The Paying Agent shall
promptly mail to each Holder of Notes or portions thereof accepted for payment
an amount equal to the purchase price for such Notes plus any accrued and unpaid
interest thereon, and the Trustee shall promptly authenticate and mail to such
Holder of Notes accepted for payment in part a new Note equal in principal
amount to any unpurchased portion of the Notes, and any Note not accepted for
payment in whole or in part for any reason consistent with this Indenture shall
be promptly returned to the Holder of such Note. On and after a Change of
Control Purchase
<PAGE>   47
                                      -40-


Date, interest will cease to accrue on the Notes or portions thereof accepted
for payment, unless the Company defaults in the payment of the purchase price
therefor. The Company will announce the results of the Change of Control Offer
to Holders of the Notes on or as soon as practicable after the Change of Control
Purchase Date.

                   (e) The Company will comply with the applicable tender offer
rules, including the requirements of Rule 14e-1 under the Exchange Act, and all
other applicable securities laws and regulations in connection with any Change
of Control Offer.

SECTION 4.12.   Special Offer upon Failure to Consummate Cherokee Acquisition.

                   (a) In the event the Cherokee Acquisition is not consummated
prior to the Special Offer Notice Date, the Company will be obligated to make an
offer to purchase up to $35 million in Notes at a price equal to 101% of such
principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of purchase, in
accordance with the terms set forth below in Section 4.12(b)-(e) (a "Special
Offer").

                   (b) On the Special Offer Notice Date, the Company shall mail
to each Holder, at such Holder's registered address, a notice stating: (i) that
the Cherokee Acquisition has not occurred and the Company is offering to
purchase $35 million aggregate principal amount of Notes at a purchase price
(the "Special Offer Price") in cash equal to 101% of the aggregate principal
amount thereof plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of purchase (the
"Special Offer Purchase Date"), which shall be a Business Day, specified in such
notice, that is not earlier than 30 days or later than 60 days (the "Final
Special Offer Purchase Date") from the date such notice is mailed, (ii) the
amount of accrued interest as of the specified Special Offer Purchase Date,
(iii) that any Note not tendered will continue to accrue interest, (iv) that
unless the Company defaults in the payment of the price for the Notes payable
pursuant to the Special Offer, any Notes accepted for payment pursuant to the
Special Offer shall cease to accrue interest after the Special Offer Purchase
Date, (v) that Holders electing to tender any Note or portion thereof will be
required to surrender their Note with a form entitled "Option of Holder to Elect
Purchase" completed, to the Paying Agent at the address specified in the notice
prior to the close of business on the Business Day preceding the Special Offer
Purchase Date, provided, that, Holders electing to tender only a portion of any
Note must tender a principal amount of $1,000 or integral multiples thereof;
(vi) that Holders will be entitled to withdraw their election to tender Notes if
the Paying Agent receives, not later than the close of business on the third
Business Day preceding the Special Offer Purchase Date, a telegram, telex,
facsimile transmission or letter setting forth the name of the Holder, the
principal amount of Notes delivered for purchase, and a statement that such
Holder is withdrawing his election to have such Notes purchased; and (vii) that,
subject to Section 2.15, Holders whose Notes are accepted for payment in part
will be issued new Notes equal in principal amount to the unpurchased
<PAGE>   48
                                      -41-


portion of Notes surrendered, provided, that, only Notes in principal amount of
$1,000 or integral multiples thereof will be accepted for payment in part.

                   (c) The Company shall furnish to the Trustee, at least seven
Business Days before notice of the corresponding Special Offer is to be mailed
to Holders, an Officers' Certificate setting forth that the Special Offer is
being made pursuant to Section 4.12, the Special Offer Purchase Date, that the
Company is offering to purchase $35 million principal amount of Notes pursuant
to such Special Offer, the Special Offer Purchase Price for such Notes, the
amount of accrued and unpaid interest on such Notes as of the Special Offer
Purchase Date and, the manner in which Notes are to be selected for purchase, in
accordance with Section 4.12(d).

                   The Company will also provide the Trustee with any additional
information that the Trustee reasonably requests in connection with any Special
Offer.

                   (d) On the Special Offer Purchase Date, the Company will (i)
accept for payment $35 million aggregate principal amount of Notes or such
lesser amount as is tendered pursuant to the Special Offer and (ii) deliver or
cause to be delivered to the Trustee all Notes tendered pursuant to the Special
Offer and the Trustee will apply the Trust Funds to consummate the Special
Offer. If less than all Notes tendered pursuant to the Special Offer are
accepted for payment by the Company for any reason consistent with the
Indenture, selection of the Notes to be purchased by the Company shall be in
compliance with the requirements of the principal national securities exchange,
if any, on which the Notes are listed or, if the Notes are not so listed, on a
pro rata basis, by lot or by such method as the Trustee shall deem fair and
appropriate; provided that Notes accepted for payment in part shall only be
purchased in integral multiples of $1,000. The Paying Agent shall promptly mail
to each holder of Notes or portions thereof accepted for payment an amount equal
to the purchase price for such Notes plus any accrued and unpaid interest
thereon, and, subject to Section 2.15, the Trustee shall promptly authenticate
and mail to such holder of Notes accepted for payment in part a new Note equal
in principal amount to any unpurchased portion of the Notes, and any Note not
accepted for payment in whole or in part for any reason consistent with the
Indenture shall be promptly returned to the holder of such Note. On and after
the Special Offer Purchase Date, interest will cease to accrue on the Notes or
portions thereof accepted for payment, unless the Company defaults in the
payment of the purchase price therefor. The Company will announce the results of
the Special Offer to holders of the Notes on or as soon as practicable after the
Special Offer Purchase Date.

                   (e) The Company will comply with the applicable tender offer
rules, including the requirements of Rule 14e-1 under the Exchange Act, and all
other applicable securities laws and regulations in connection with any Special
Offer.
<PAGE>   49
                                      -42-


SECTION 4.13.   Limitation on Asset Sales.

                   (a) The Company will not, and will not permit any of its
Subsidiaries to, make any Asset Sale unless (i) the Company or such Subsidiary,
as the case may be, receives consideration at the time of such Asset Sale at
least equal to the fair market value (determined by the Board of Directors in
good faith, which determination shall be evidenced by a board resolution) of the
assets or other property sold or disposed of in the Asset Sale, and (ii) at
least 75% of such consideration is in the form of cash or Cash Equivalents;
provided that for purposes of this covenant "cash" shall include the amount of
any liabilities (other than liabilities that are by their terms subordinated to
the Notes or any Subsidiary Guarantee) of the Company or such Subsidiary (as
shown on the Company's or such Subsidiary's most recent balance sheet or in the
notes thereto) that are assumed by the transferee of any such assets or other
property in such Asset Sale (and excluding any liabilities that are incurred in
connection with or in anticipation of such Asset Sale), but only to the extent
that such assumption is effected on a basis under which there is no further
recourse to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries with respect to such
liabilities.

                   (b) Within 270 days after any Asset Sale, the Company may
elect to apply or cause to be applied the Net Proceeds from such Asset Sale to
(a) repay amounts outstanding under the Credit Facility, and permanently reduce
the commitments or amounts available to be borrowed thereunder by the same
amount, (b) repay amounts outstanding under Other Senior Debt that is secured by
the asset being sold, to the extent repayment is required by the terms of the
agreement governing the same, (c) use no more than the Other Senior Debt Pro
Rata Share of such Net Cash Proceeds to repay amounts outstanding under Other
Senior Debt and/or (d) make an investment in, or acquire assets directly or
reasonably related to, the business of the Company and its Subsidiaries existing
on the Issue Date. Pending the final application of any such Net Proceeds, the
Company may temporarily reduce amounts outstanding under the Credit Facility or
temporarily invest such Net Proceeds in any manner permitted by the Indenture.
Any Net Proceeds from an Asset Sale not applied or invested as provided in the
first sentence of this paragraph within 270 days of such Asset Sale will be
deemed to constitute "Excess Proceeds" on the 271st day after such Asset Sale.

                   (c) Not later than 10 Business Days after any date (an "Asset
Sale Offer Trigger Date") that the aggregate amount of Excess Proceeds exceeds
$10,000,000, the Company shall commence an offer to purchase the maximum
principal amount of Notes that may be purchased out of all such Excess Proceeds
(an "Asset Sale Offer") at a price in cash equal to 100% of the principal amount
thereof, plus accrued and unpaid interest to the date of purchase (the "Asset
Sale Offer Purchase Date"). The offer to purchase shall remain open for a
minimum of 20 business days or such longer period as is required by law. To the
extent that any Excess Proceeds remain after completion of an Asset Sale Offer,
the Company may use the
<PAGE>   50
                                      -43-


remaining amount for general corporate purposes and such amount shall no longer
constitute "Excess Proceeds."

                   (d) Within 10 days following any Asset Sale Offer Trigger
Date, the Company shall mail to each holder of Notes at such holder's registered
address a notice stating: (i) that an Asset Sale Offer Trigger Date has occurred
and that the Company is offering to purchase the maximum principal amount of
Notes that may be purchased out of the Excess Proceeds at an offer price in cash
equal to 100% of the principal amount thereof, plus accrued and unpaid interest
to the Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date, which shall be a Business Day, specified
in such notice, that is not earlier than 30 days or later than 60 days from the
date such notice is mailed, (ii) the amount of accrued and unpaid interest as of
the Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date, (iii) that any Note not tendered will
continue to accrue interest, (iv) that, unless the Company defaults in the
payment of the purchase price for the Notes payable pursuant to the Asset Sale
Offer, any Notes accepted for payment pursuant to the Asset Sale Offer shall
cease to accrue interest after the Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date, (v) that
Holders electing to tender any Note or portion thereof will be required to
surrender their Note, with a form entitled "Option of Holder to Elect Purchase"
completed, to the Paying Agent at the address specified in the notice prior to
the close of business on the Business Day preceding the Asset Sale Offer
Purchase Date; provided that Holders electing to tender only a portion of any
Note must tender a principal amount of $1,000 or integral multiples thereof;
(vi) that Holders will be entitled to withdraw their election to tender Notes if
the Paying Agent receives, not later than the close of business on the third
Business Day preceding the Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date, a telegram, telex,
facsimile transmission or letter setting forth the name of the Holder, the
principal amount of Notes delivered for purchase, and a statement that such
Holder is withdrawing his election to have such Notes purchased; and (vii) that,
subject to Section 2.15, Holders whose Notes are accepted for payment in part
will be issued new Notes equal in principal amount to the unpurchased portion of
Notes surrendered; provided that only Notes in a principal amount of $1,000 or
integral multiples thereof will be accepted for payment in part.

                   (e) The Company shall furnish to the Trustee, at least seven
Business Days before notice of the corresponding Asset Sale Offer is to be
mailed to Holders, an Officers' Certificate setting forth that the Asset Sale
Offer is being made pursuant to Section 4.13, the Asset Sale Offer Purchase
Date, the maximum principal amount of Notes the Company is offering to purchase
pursuant to such Asset Sale Offer, the purchase price for such Notes, the amount
of accrued and unpaid interest on such Notes as of the Asset Sale Offer Purchase
Date and, the manner in which Notes are to be selected for purchase, in
accordance with Section 4.13(f), in the event less than all Notes tendered are
to be purchased.

                   The Company will also provide the Trustee with any additional
information that the Trustee reasonably requests in connection with any Asset
Sale Offer.
<PAGE>   51
                                      -44-


                   (f) On the Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date, the Company will
(i) accept for payment the maximum principal amount of Notes or portions thereof
tendered pursuant to the Asset Sale Offer that can be purchased out of Excess
Proceeds from such Asset Sale, (ii) deposit with the Paying Agent the aggregate
purchase price of all Notes or portions thereof accepted for payment and any
accrued and unpaid interest on such Notes as of the Asset Sale Offer Purchase
Date, and (iii) deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee all Notes
tendered pursuant to the Asset Sale Offer. If less than all Notes tendered
pursuant to the Asset Sale Offer are to be purchased by the Company for any
reason consistent with this Indenture, the Trustee, on behalf of the Company,
shall select the outstanding Notes to be purchased by the Company in compliance
with the requirements of the principal national securities exchange, if any, on
which the Notes are listed or, if the Notes are not listed on such an exchange,
the Trustee on behalf of the Company, shall select the outstanding Notes to be
purchased, on a pro rata basis, by lot or by such method as the Trustee deems
fair and appropriate; provided that Notes purchased in part shall only be
purchased in integral multiples of $1,000. The Company shall notify the Trustee
of its acceptance for payment of Notes selected for purchase. The Paying Agent
shall promptly mail to each holder of Notes or portions thereof accepted for
payment an amount equal to the purchase price for such Notes plus any accrued
and unpaid interest thereon, and the Trustee shall promptly authenticate and
mail to such Holder of Notes accepted for payment in part a new Note equal in
principal amount to any unpurchased portion of the Notes, and any Note not
accepted for payment in whole or in part shall be promptly returned to the
Holder of such Note. On and after an Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date, interest
will cease to accrue on the Notes or portions thereof accepted for payment,
unless the Company defaults in the payment of the purchase price therefor. The
Company will announce the results of the Asset Sale Offer to Holders on or as
soon as practicable after the Asset Sale Offer Purchase Date.

                   (g) The Company will comply with the applicable tender offer
rules, including the requirements of Rule 14e-1 under the Exchange Act, and all
other applicable securities laws and regulations in connection with any Asset
Sale Offer.


SECTION 4.14.   Limitation on Issuance and Sale of Preferred Stock of
                Subsidiaries.

                   The Company (a) will not, and will not permit any Subsidiary
of the Company to, transfer, convey, sell or otherwise dispose of any shares of
Preferred Stock of such Subsidiary or any other Subsidiary (other than to the
Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor) and (b) will not permit any Subsidiary of the
Company to issue shares of its Preferred Stock, or securities convertible into,
or warrants, rights or options to subscribe for or purchase shares of, its
Capital Stock to any person other than to the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor.
<PAGE>   52
                                      -45-




SECTION 4.15.   Future Subsidiary Guarantors.

                   The Company shall cause each Subsidiary of the Company formed
or acquired after the Issue Date to issue a Subsidiary Guarantee and execute and
deliver an indenture supplemental to this Indenture as a Subsidiary Guarantor.


SECTION 4.16.   Maintenance of Properties.

                   The Company will cause all properties used in the conduct of
its business or the business of any Subsidiary of the Company to be maintained
and kept in good condition, repair and working order and supplied with all
necessary equipment and will cause to be made all necessary repairs, renewals,
replacements, betterments and improvements thereof, all as in the judgment of
the Company advantageously conducted at all times; provided, however, that
nothing in this Section shall prevent the Company or any Subsidiary of the
Company from discontinuing the operation or maintenance of any of such
properties if such discontinuance is, as determined by the Board of Directors in
good faith, desirable in the conduct of the business of the Company or of any of
its Subsidiaries.

SECTION 4.17.   Maintenance of Insurance.

                   The Company shall, and shall cause each of its Subsidiaries
to, keep at all times all of their properties which are of an insurable nature
insured against loss or damage with insurers believed by the Company to be
responsible to the extent that property of similar character usually is so
insured by corporations similarly situated and owning like properties in
accordance with good business practice.

SECTION 4.18.   Deposit of Trust Funds with Trustee Pending Consummation of
                Cherokee Acquisition.

                   (a) On the Issue Date, the Company shall deposit with the
Trustee in the account specified in Section 4.18(b), in the form of cash or Cash
Equivalents, $35 million plus an additional amount sufficient to consummate the
Special Offer on the Final Special Offer Purchase Date at the Special Offer
Price (such deposited amounts collectively, the "Trust Funds").

                   (b) The Company shall deposit the Trust Funds into, and shall
maintain with the Trustee, an account (the "Collateral Account") designated
"Marine Midland Bank, as
<PAGE>   53
                                      -46-


Trustee," which account shall be under the sole dominion and control of the
Trustee. Amounts on deposit in the Collateral Account shall be held as cash or
shall be invested and reinvested from time to time, as directed in writing by
the Company, in Cash Equivalents, which shall be held in the Collateral Account.
Any income, including any interest or capital gains received with respect to the
balance from time to time standing to the credit of the Collateral Account,
shall remain, or be deposited, in the Collateral Account. The Trustee shall have
the power to sell or liquidate the investments in the Collateral Account
whenever the Trustee shall be required pursuant to Section 4.18(d) to release
all or any portion of the amounts in the Collateral Account to permit the
consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition or to employ such amounts to effect a
Special Offer with respect to of the Notes. Subject to Article VII hereof, the
Trustee, solely in its individual capacity, hereby waives any rights it may have
in such individual capacity to the Collateral Account and all rights and
interest therein, including, without limitation, any such rights arising through
counterclaim, defense, recoupment, charge, lien or right of set-off. The Trustee
shall not have any liability for any loss suffered as a result of any investment
made as provided above, any liquidation of any such investment prior to its
maturity, or the failure of any authorized person of the Company to give the
Trustee written instruction to invest or reinvest the amounts in the Collateral
Account or any earnings thereon.

                   (c) In order to secure the full and punctual payment and
performance of the Company's obligation to offer to purchase Notes in the event
the Cherokee Acquisition is not consummated on or prior to the Special Offer
Notice Date, the Company hereby grants to the Trustee, for the benefit of the
Holders, a continuing security interest in and to the Trust Funds, whether now
owned or existing or hereafter acquired or arising.

                  (d) The Trustee shall hold the Trust Funds, for the benefit of
the Holders, until the earliest to occur of:

                   (A) (x) the date of consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition
          as specified in an Officers' Certificate from the Company to the
          Trustee (1) stating that the Cherokee Acquisition is to be consummated
          on a date specified therein, which shall be at least two Business Days
          (or such shorter period as the Company and the Trustee shall mutually
          agree) after the date of such Officers' Certificate, (2) stating that
          such consummation will be, in all material respects, in accordance
          with the terms and conditions described in the Prospectus, and (3)
          requesting the Trustee to release the Trust Funds on the date of such
          consummation to the order of the Company or its assignee for
          application to the concurrent consummation of the Cherokee
          Acquisition; and (y) receipt by the Trustee of an Opinion of Counsel
          to the effect that all conditions precedent described in the preceding
          clause (x) have been satisfied; or

                   (B) the Special Offer Purchase Date, as specified in an
          Officers' Certificate from the Company to the Trustee in accordance
          with Section 4.12(c).
<PAGE>   54
                                      -47-



                   (e) On the date of consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition,
and following such acquisition, the Holders' security interest in the Collateral
Account shall terminate and the Trustee shall release the Trust Funds in
immediately available funds to the order of the Company or its assigns, as
specified in the Officers' Certificate delivered pursuant to Section 4.18(d)(A).

                   (f) On the Special Offer Purchase Date as specified in an
Officers' Certificate delivered pursuant to Section 4.12(c), the Trustee shall
apply the Trust Funds to fund such Special Offer and the Holders' security
interest in the Collateral Account shall terminate on and as of such Special
Offer Purchase Date.

                   (g) Any amounts remaining in the Collateral Account after the
Special Offer Purchase Date shall be paid by the Trustee to the Company.

                   (h) The Company will comply with Sections 314(b) and 314(d)
of the TIA, as applicable, including, without limitation, providing an Opinion
of Counsel with respect to Section 3.14(b) and the certificates or opinions of
counsel with respect to Section 3.14(d), in connection with the deposit and
release of the Trust Funds.


SECTION 4.19.   Limitation on Transactions with Interested Persons.

                   The Company will not, and will not permit any of its
Subsidiaries to, directly or indirectly, enter into or suffer to exist any
transaction or series of related transactions (including, without limitation,
the sale, purchase, exchange or lease of assets, property or services) with any
Affiliate of the Company or any beneficial owner of five percent or more of any
class of Capital Stock of the Company or any Subsidiary or any officer or
director of the foregoing (each, an "Interested Person") unless (i) such
transaction or series of transactions is on terms that are no less favorable to
the Company or such Subsidiary as the case may be, than would be available in a
comparable transaction in arm's-length dealings with an unrelated third party,
and (ii) (a) with respect to any transaction or series of transactions involving
aggregate payments in excess of $100,000, the Company delivers an Officers'
Certificate to the Trustee certifying that such transaction or series of related
transactions complies with clause (i) above and such transaction or series of
related transactions has been approved by a majority of the members of the Board
of Directors of the Company (and approved by a majority of the Independent
Directors or, in the event there is only one Independent Director, by such
Independent Director, and (b) with respect to any transaction or series of
transactions involving aggregate payments in excess of $2 million, the Company
delivers to the Trustee an opinion to the effect that such transaction or series
of transactions is fair to the Company or such Subsidiary from a financial point
of view issued by an investment banking firm of national standing.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, this provision will not apply to (i) employment
<PAGE>   55
                                      -48-


agreements or compensation or employee benefit arrangements with (including,
without limitation, any stock options granted to) any officer, director or
employee of the Company entered into in the ordinary course of business
(including customary benefits thereunder), (ii) any transaction entered into by
or among the Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor and one or more Subsidiary
Guarantors, (iii) transactions pursuant to agreements existing on the Issue
Date, including, without limitation, the Credit Facility and (iv) loans or
advances to officers of the Company for bona fide business purposes of the
Company in the ordinary course of business not in the excess of $500,000 in the
aggregate at any one time outstanding.

SECTION 4.20.   Limitation on Lines of Business.

                   The Company will not, and will not permit any Subsidiary to,
engage in or conduct any business other than the ownership and operation of
public pay telephones and lines of business integral or ancillary thereto;
provided, that, the primary business of the Company and its Subsidiaries shall
continue to be the ownership and operation of public pay telephones.

                                    ARTICLE V
                                   SUCCESSORS

SECTION 5.01.   Merger, Consolidation and Sale of Assets.

                  (a) The Company shall not consolidate or merge with or into
(whether or not the Company is the Surviving Person), or, directly or indirectly
through one or more Subsidiaries, sell, assign, transfer, lease, convey or
otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of its properties or assets in one
or more related transactions, to another Person or Persons (other than a
Subsidiary Guarantor) unless (i) the Surviving Person is a corporation organized
or existing under the laws of the United States, any state thereof or the
District of Columbia; (ii) the Surviving Person (if other than the Company)
assumes all the obligations of the Company under this Indenture and the Notes
pursuant to a supplemental indenture in a form reasonably satisfactory to the
Trustee; (iii) at the time of and immediately after such Disposition, no Default
or Event of Default shall have occurred and be continuing; and (iv) the
Surviving Person will (A) have Consolidated Net Worth (immediately after giving
effect to the Disposition on a pro forma basis) equal to or greater than the
Consolidated Net Worth of the Company immediately preceding the transaction, and
(B) at the time of such Disposition and after giving pro forma effect thereto,
the Surviving Person would be permitted to issue at least $1.00 of additional
Indebtedness pursuant to Section 4.07(a).

                  (b) Prior to the consummation of any proposed Disposition,
merger or consolidation of the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor or the sale of
all or substantially all of
<PAGE>   56
                                      -49-


the assets of the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor, the Company shall deliver
to the Trustee an Officers Certificate stating that such transaction complies
with Article V of this Indenture and an Opinion of Counsel stating that such
transaction and the supplemental indenture, if required, comply with Article V
of this Indenture.


SECTION 5.02.   Surviving Person Substituted.

                  In the event of any transaction (other than a lease) described
in and complying with the conditions listed in Section 5.01(a) in which the
Company or the Subsidiary Guarantor, as the case may be, is not the Surviving
Person and the Surviving Person is to assume all the obligations of the Company
or the Subsidiary Guarantor under the Notes, the Subsidiary Guarantee, as
applicable, and this Indenture pursuant to a supplemental indenture, such
Surviving Person shall succeed to, and be substituted for, and may exercise
every right and power of, the Company or the Subsidiary Guarantor, and the
Company or the Subsidiary Guarantor would be discharged from its obligations
under this Indenture, the Notes or its Subsidiary Guarantee, as the case may be,
provided, that solely for the purpose of calculating amounts described in clause
(iii) of Section 4.05(a), any such Surviving Person shall only be deemed to have
succeeded to and be substituted for the Company with respect to the period
subsequent to the effective time of such transaction (and the Company (before
giving effect to such transaction) shall be deemed to be the "Company" for such
purposes for all prior periods).

                                   ARTICLE VI
                              DEFAULTS AND REMEDIES

SECTION 6.01.   Events of Default.

                  (a) Each of the following constitutes an "Event of Default":

                      (i) a default for 30 days in the payment when due of
         interest on any Note (whether or not prohibited by the subordination
         provisions of this Indenture);

                      (ii) a default in the payment when due of principal on any
         Note (whether or not prohibited by the subordination provisions of this
         Indenture), whether upon maturity, acceleration, optional or mandatory
         redemption, required repurchase or otherwise;

                      (iii) failure to perform or comply with any covenant,
         agreement or warranty in this Indenture (other than the defaults
         specified in clauses (i) and (ii) above) which failure continues for 30
         days after written notice thereof has been given to the Company
<PAGE>   57
                                      -50-


         by the Trustee or to the Company and the Trustee by the Holders of at
         least 25% in aggregate principal amount of the then outstanding Notes;

                      (iv) except as permitted by this Indenture, any Subsidiary
         Guarantee shall for any reason cease to be, or be asserted in writing
         by any Subsidiary Guarantor or the Company not to be, in full force and
         effect, and enforceable in accordance with its terms;

                      (v) the occurrence of one or more defaults under any
         agreements, indentures or instruments under which the Company or any
         Subsidiary of the Company then has outstanding Indebtedness in excess
         of $5 million in the aggregate and, if not already matured at its final
         maturity in accordance with its terms, such Indebtedness shall have
         been accelerated;

                      (vi) one or more judgments, orders or decrees for the
         payment of money in excess of $5 million, either individually or in the
         aggregate shall be entered against the Company or any Subsidiary of the
         Company or any of their respective properties and which judgments,
         orders or decrees are not paid, discharged, bonded or stayed for a
         period of 60 days after their entry;

                      (vii) any holder or holders of at least $5 million in
         aggregate principal amount of Indebtedness of the Company or any
         Subsidiary of the Company, after a default under such Indebtedness, (a)
         shall notify the Company or the Trustee of the intended sale or
         disposition of any assets of the Company or any Subsidiary of the
         Company with an aggregate fair market value (as determined in good
         faith by the Board of Directors, which determination shall be evidenced
         by a board resolution), individually or in the aggregate, of at least
         $5 million that have been pledged to or for the benefit of such holder
         or holders to secure such Indebtedness or (b) shall commence
         proceedings, or take any action (including by way of set off), to
         retain in satisfaction of such Indebtedness or to collect on, seize,
         dispose of or apply in satisfaction of such Indebtedness, such assets
         of the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company (including funds on
         deposit or held pursuant to lock-box and other similar arrangements);

                      (viii) there shall have been the entry by a court of
         competent jurisdiction of (a) a decree or order for relief in respect
         of the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company in an involuntary case
         or proceeding under any applicable Bankruptcy Law or (b) a decree or
         order adjudging the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company bankrupt
         or insolvent, or seeking reorganization, arrangement, adjustment or
         composition of or in respect of the Company or any Subsidiary of the
         Company under any applicable federal or state law, or appointing a
         custodian, receiver, liquidator, assignee, trustee, sequestrator (or
         other similar official) of the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company
<PAGE>   58
                                      -51-


         or of any substantial part of their respective properties, or ordering
         the winding up or liquidation of their affairs, and any such decree or
         order for relief shall continue to be in effect, or any such other
         decree or order shall be unstayed and in effect, for a period of 60
         days; or

                      (ix) (a) the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company
         commences a voluntary case or proceeding under any applicable
         Bankruptcy Law or any other case or proceeding to be adjudicated
         bankrupt or insolvent, (b) the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company
         consents to the entry of a decree or order for relief in respect of the
         Company or such Subsidiary of the Company in an involuntary case or
         proceeding under any applicable Bankruptcy Law or to the commencement
         of any bankruptcy or insolvency case or proceeding against it, (c) the
         Company or any Subsidiary of the Company files a petition or answer or
         consent seeking reorganization or relief under any applicable federal
         or state law, (d) the Company or any Subsidiary of the Company (x)
         consents to the filing of such petition or the appointment of or taking
         possession by, a custodian, receiver, liquidator, assignee, trustee,
         sequestrator or other similar official of the Company or such
         Subsidiary of the Company or of any substantial part of their
         respective property, (y) makes an assignment for the benefit of
         creditors or (z) admits in writing its inability to pay its debts
         generally as they become due or (e) the Company or any Subsidiary of
         the Company takes any corporate action in furtherance of any such
         actions in this paragraph (ix).

                  (b) Any notice of default delivered to the Company by the
Trustee or by Holders of Notes with a copy to the Trustee must specify the
Default, demand that it be remedied and state that the notice is a "Notice of
Default."


SECTION 6.02.   Acceleration.

                  If any Event of Default (other than an Event of Default
specified under Section 6.01(a)(viii) or (ix) with respect to the Company or any
Subsidiary Guarantor) occurs and is continuing, the Trustee or the Holders of at
least 25% in aggregate principal amount of the then outstanding Notes may, and
the Trustee at the request of such Holders shall, declare all the Notes to be
due and payable immediately. In the case of an Event of Default arising from the
events specified in Sections 6.01(a)(viii) or (ix) with respect to the Company
or any Subsidiary Guarantor, the principal of, premium, if any, and any accrued
and unpaid interest on all outstanding Notes shall ipso facto become immediately
due and payable without further action or notice.



<PAGE>   59
                                      -52-



SECTION 6.03.   Other Remedies.

                  If an Event of Default occurs and is continuing, the Trustee
may pursue any available remedy to collect the payment of principal of, or
premium, if any, or interest on, the Notes or to enforce the performance of any
provision of the Notes or this Indenture. The Trustee may maintain a proceeding
even if it does not possess any of the Notes or does not produce any of them in
the proceeding. A delay or omission by the Trustee or any Holder in exercising
any right or remedy accruing upon an Event of Default shall not impair the right
or remedy or constitute a waiver of or acquiescence in the Event of Default. All
remedies are cumulative to the extent permitted by law.


SECTION 6.04.   Waiver of Past Defaults.

                  The Holders of a majority in aggregate principal amount of the
Notes then outstanding by notice to the Trustee may on behalf of the Holders of
all of the Notes waive any existing Default or Event of Default and its
consequences under this Indenture except (i) a continuing Default or Event of
Default in the payment of the principal of, or premium, if any, or interest on,
the Notes (which may only be waived with the consent of each Holder of Notes
affected), or (ii) in respect of a covenant or provision which under this
Indenture cannot be modified or amended without the consent of each Holder of
Notes affected. Subject to certain limitations, holders of a majority in
principal amount of the then outstanding Notes may direct the Trustee in its
exercise of any trust or power. The Trustee may withhold from holders of the
Notes notice of any continuing Default or Event of Default (except a Default or
Event of Default relating to the payment of principal, premium or interest) if
it determines that withholding notice is in their interest.


SECTION 6.05.   Control by Majority of Holders.

                  Subject to Section 7.01(e), the Holders of a majority in
aggregate principal amount of the then outstanding Notes may direct the time,
method and place of conducting any proceeding for any remedy available to the
Trustee or exercising any trust or power conferred on it by this Indenture.
However, the Trustee may refuse to follow any direction that conflicts with law
or this Indenture, that the Trustee determines may be unduly prejudicial to the
rights of other Holders, or would involve the Trustee in personal liability.



<PAGE>   60


                                      -53-




SECTION 6.06.     Limitation of Suits by Holders.

                  A Holder may pursue a remedy with respect to this Indenture or
the Notes only if: (1) the Holder gives to the Trustee notice of a continuing
Event of Default; (2) the Holders of at least 25% in principal amount of the
then outstanding Notes make a request to the Trustee to pursue the remedy; (3)
such Holder or Holders offer to the Trustee indemnity satisfactory to the
Trustee against any loss, liability or expense; (4) the Trustee does not comply
with the request within 60 days after receipt of the request and the offer of
indemnity; and (5) during such 60-day period the Holders of a majority in
aggregate principal amount of the then outstanding Notes do not give the Trustee
a direction inconsistent with the request. A Holder may not use this Indenture
to prejudice the rights of another Holder or to obtain a preference or priority
over another Holder. Holders of the Notes may not enforce this Indenture, except
as provided herein.


SECTION 6.07.     Rights of Holders to Receive Payment.

                  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Indenture, the
right of any Holder to receive payment of principal of, and premium, if any, and
interest on, a Note, on or after a respective due date expressed in the Note, or
to bring suit for the enforcement of any such payment on or after such
respective date, shall not be impaired or affected without the consent of the
Holder.


SECTION 6.08.     Collection Suit by Trustee.

                  If an Event of Default specified in Section 6.01(a)(i) or
(a)(ii) occurs and is continuing, the Trustee is authorized to recover judgment
in its own name and as trustee of an express trust against the Company for (i)
the principal, premium, if any, and interest remaining unpaid on the Notes, (ii)
interest on overdue principal and premium, if any, and, to the extent lawful,
interest, and (iii) such further amount as shall be sufficient to cover the
costs and expenses of collection, including the reasonable compensation,
expenses, disbursements and advances of the Trustee, its agents and counsel
("Trustee Expenses").


SECTION 6.09.     Trustee May File Proofs of Claim.

                  The Trustee may file such proofs of claim and other papers or
documents as may be necessary or advisable to have the claims of the Trustee
(including any claim for Trustee Expenses and for amounts due under Section
7.07) and the Holders allowed in any Insolvency



<PAGE>   61


                                      -54-


or Liquidation Proceeding relative to the Company (or any other obligor upon the
Notes), its creditors or its property and shall be entitled and empowered to
collect, receive and distribute to Holders any money or other property payable
or deliverable on any such claims and each Holder authorizes any Custodian in
any such Insolvency or Liquidation Proceeding to make such payments to the
Trustee, and if the Trustee shall consent to the making of such payments
directly to the Holders any such Custodian is hereby authorized to make such
payments directly to the Holders, and to pay to the Trustee any amount due to it
hereunder for Trustee Expenses, and any other amounts due the Trustee under
Section 7.07; provided, however, that the Trustee shall not be authorized to (i)
consent to, accept or adopt on behalf of any Holder any plan of reorganization,
arrangement, adjustment or composition affecting the Notes or the rights of any
Holder, or (ii) vote in respect of the claim of any Holder in any such
Insolvency or Liquidation Proceeding. To the extent that the payment of any such
Trustee Expenses, and any other amounts due the Trustee under Section 7.07 out
of the estate in any such proceeding, shall be denied for any reason, payment of
the same shall be secured by a Lien on, and shall be paid out of, any and all
distributions, dividends, money, securities and other properties which the
Holders may be entitled to receive in such proceeding, whether in liquidation or
under any plan of reorganization or arrangement or otherwise.


SECTION 6.10.   Priorities.

                  If the Trustee collects any money pursuant to this Article VI,
it shall pay out the money in the following order:

                  First:   to the Trustee for Trustee Expenses for amounts due
                           under Section 7.07;

                  Second:  to Holders for amounts due and unpaid on the Notes
                           for principal, premium, if any, and interest,
                           ratably, without preference or priority of any kind,
                           according to the amounts due and payable on the Notes
                           for principal, premium, if any, and interest,
                           respectively; and

                  Third:   to the Company or to such party as a court of
                           competent jurisdiction shall direct.

                  The Trustee may fix a record date and payment date for any
payment to Holders.



<PAGE>   62


                                      -55-




SECTION 6.11.     Undertaking for Costs.

                  In any suit for the enforcement of any right or remedy under
this Indenture or in any suit against the Trustee for any action taken or
omitted by it as a Trustee, a court in its discretion may require the filing by
any party litigant in the suit of an undertaking to pay the costs of the suit,
and the court in its discretion may assess reasonable costs, including
reasonable attorneys' fees, against any party litigant in the suit, having due
regard to the merits and good faith of the claims or defenses made by the party
litigant. This Section 6.11 does not apply to a suit by the Trustee, a suit by a
Holder pursuant to Section 6.07, or a suit by Holders of more than 10% in
principal amount of the then outstanding Notes.


                                   ARTICLE VII
                                     TRUSTEE


SECTION 7.01.      Duties of Trustee.

                  (a) If an Event of Default occurs (and has not been cured) the
Trustee shall (i) exercise the rights and powers vested in it by this Indenture,
and (ii) use the same degree of care and skill in exercising such rights and
powers as a prudent man would exercise or use under the circumstances in the
conduct of his own affairs.

                  (b) Except during the continuance of an Event of Default: (i)
the Trustee's duties shall be determined solely by the express provisions of
this Indenture and the Trustee need perform only those duties that are
specifically set forth in this Indenture and no others, and no implied covenants
or obligations shall be read into this Indenture against the Trustee; and (ii)
in the absence of bad faith on its part, the Trustee may conclusively rely, as
to the truth of the statements and the correctness of the opinions expressed
therein, upon certificates or opinions furnished to the Trustee and conforming
to the requirements of this Indenture. However, the Trustee shall examine the
certificates and opinions to determine whether they conform to this Indenture's
requirements.

                  (c) The Trustee shall not be relieved from liability for its
own negligent action, its own negligent failure to act, or its own willful
misconduct, except, that: (i) this Section 7.01(c) does not limit the effect of
Section 7.01(b); (ii) the Trustee shall not be liable for any error of judgment
made in good faith by a Trust Officer, unless it is proved that the Trustee was
negligent in ascertaining the pertinent facts; and (iii) the Trustee shall not
be liable with respect to any action it takes or omits to take in good faith in
accordance with a direction it receives pursuant to Section 6.05.



<PAGE>   63


                                      -56-



                  (d) Every provision of this Indenture that in any way relates
to the Trustee shall be subject to paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this Section.

                  (e) No provision of this Indenture shall require the Trustee
to expend or risk its own funds or incur any liability. The Trustee shall be
under no obligation to exercise any of its rights and powers under this
Indenture at the request of any Holders unless such Holders shall have offered
to the Trustee security and indemnity satisfactory to it against any loss,
liability or expense.

                  (f) The Trustee shall not be liable for interest on any money
received by it except as it may agree in writing with the Company. Money held in
trust by the Trustee need not be segregated from other funds except to the
extent required by law.


SECTION 7.02.   Rights of Trustee.

                  (a) The Trustee may rely on any document it believes to be
genuine and to have been signed or presented by the proper Person. The Trustee
need not investigate any fact or matter stated in any such document.

                  (b) Before the Trustee acts or refrains from acting, it may
require an Officers' Certificate or an Opinion of Counsel, or both. The Trustee
shall not be liable for any action it takes or omits to take in good faith in
reliance on such Officers' Certificate or Opinion of Counsel; provided that such
action or omission does not constitute gross negligence. The Trustee may consult
with counsel and advice of such counsel or any Opinion of Counsel shall be full
and complete authorization and protection in respect of any action taken,
suffered or omitted by it under this Indenture in good faith and in reliance on
such advice or opinion.

                  (c) The Trustee may act through agents and shall not be
responsible for the misconduct or negligence of any agent appointed with due
care.

                  (d) The Trustee shall not be liable for any action it takes or
omits in good faith that it believes to be authorized or within its rights or
powers.

                  (e) Unless otherwise specifically provided in this Indenture,
any demand, request, direction or notice from the Company shall be sufficient if
signed by an Officer of the Company.



<PAGE>   64


                                      -57-




SECTION 7.03.     Individual Rights of Trustee.

                  The Trustee in its individual or any other capacity may become
the owner or pledgee of Notes and may otherwise deal with the Company or any of
its Affiliates with the same rights it would have if it were not Trustee.
However, if the Trustee acquires any conflicting interest it must eliminate such
conflict within 90 days, apply to the Commission for permission to continue as
Trustee, or resign. Each Agent shall have the same rights as the Trustee under
this Section 7.03.


SECTION 7.04.     Trustee's Disclaimer.

                  The Trustee shall not be responsible for and makes no
representation as to the validity or adequacy of this Indenture, the Notes or
the Prospectus; it shall not be accountable for the Company's use of the
proceeds from the Notes or for any money paid to the Company or upon the
Company's direction under any provisions of this Indenture; it shall not be
responsible for the use or application of any money that any Paying Agent other
than the Trustee receives; and, it shall not be responsible for any statement or
recital in this Indenture or any statement in the Notes or any other document
executed in connection with the sale of the Notes or pursuant to this Indenture
other than its certificate of authentication.


SECTION 7.05.     Notice to Holders of Defaults and Events of Default.

                  If a Default or Event of Default occurs and is continuing and
if it is known to the Trustee, the Trustee shall mail to Holders a notice of the
Default or Event of Default within 90 days after it occurs. Except in the case
of a Default or Event of Default in payment on any Note (including any failure
to redeem Notes called for redemption or any failure to purchase Notes tendered
pursuant to an Offer that are required to be purchased by the terms of this
Indenture), the Trustee may withhold the notice if and so long as the board of
directors, the executive committee or a committee of its Trust Officers
determines in good faith that withholding such notice is in the Holders'
interests.


SECTION 7.06.    Reports by Trustee to Holders.

                  On or before June 15 in each year following the date hereof,
so long as any Notes are outstanding hereunder, the Trustee shall mail to
Holders a brief report dated as of such reporting date that complies with
Section 313(a) of the TIA (but if no event described in Section 313(a) of the
TIA has occurred within the twelve months preceding the reporting date,



<PAGE>   65


                                      -58-


no report need be transmitted). The Trustee also shall comply with Section
313(b)(2) of the TIA. The Trustee shall also transmit by mail all reports as
required by Section 313(c) of the TIA.

                  Within 90 days after any Special Offer, or after the
consummation of the Cherokee Acquisition, if applicable, the Trustee shall mail
to Holders a brief report with respect to the release of the Trust Funds that
complies with Section 313(b) of the TIA.

                  A copy of each report at the time of its mailing to Holders
shall be filed with the Commission and each stock exchange, if any, on which the
Notes are listed. The Company shall notify the Trustee when the Notes are listed
on any stock exchange.


SECTION 7.07.     Compensation and Indemnity.

                  The Company shall pay to the Trustee from time to time
reasonable compensation for its services hereunder, as mutually agreed upon by
the Company and the Trustee. The Trustee's compensation shall not be limited by
any law on compensation of a trustee of an express trust. The Company shall
reimburse the Trustee upon request for all reasonable disbursements, advances
and expenses it incurs or makes in addition to the compensation for its
services. Such expenses shall include the reasonable compensation, disbursements
and expenses of the Trustee's agents and counsel.

                  The Company shall indemnify the Trustee and each of its
directors, officers, employees, agents, representatives and counsel against any
and all losses, liabilities or expenses the Trustee incurs arising out of or in
connection with the acceptance or administration of its duties under this
Indenture, except as set forth below. The Trustee shall notify the Company
promptly of any claim for which it may seek indemnity; provided, however, that
failure by the Trustee to provide the Company with any such notice shall not
relieve the Company of any of its obligations under this Section 7.07. The
Trustee shall cooperate in the defense of any such claim. The Trustee may have
separate counsel and the Company shall pay the reasonable fees and expenses of
such counsel. The Company need not pay for any settlement made without its
consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld.

                  The Company's obligations under this Section 7.07 shall
survive the satisfaction and discharge of this Indenture. The Company need not
reimburse any expense or indemnify against any loss or liability the Trustee
incurs as a result of its negligence or willful misconduct.

                  To secure payment of the Company's obligations under this
Section 7.07, the Trustee shall have a Lien prior to the Notes on all money or
property the Trustee holds or collects, except the Trust Funds and any other
funds from time to time held in trust or as



<PAGE>   66


                                      -59-


security to pay principal of, and premium, if any, and interest on, particular
Notes. Such Lien shall survive the satisfaction and discharge of this Indenture.

                  When the Trustee incurs expenses or renders services after an
Event of Default specified in Section 6.01(a)(viii) or (ix) occurs, the expenses
and the compensation for the services (including the fees and expenses of its
agents and counsel) are intended to constitute administrative expenses under any
Bankruptcy Law without any need to demonstrate substantial contribution under
Bankruptcy Law.


SECTION 7.08.     Replacement of Trustee.

                  A resignation or removal of the Trustee and appointment of a
successor Trustee shall become effective only upon the successor Trustee's
acceptance of appointment as provided in this Section 7.08.

                  The Trustee may resign and be discharged from the trust hereby
created by so notifying the Company. The Holders of a majority in aggregate
principal amount of the then outstanding Notes may remove the Trustee by so
notifying the Trustee and the Company. The Company may remove the Trustee if:
(i) the Trustee fails to comply with Section 7.10; (ii) the Trustee is adjudged
a bankrupt or an insolvent or an order for relief is entered with respect to the
Trustee under any Bankruptcy Law; (iii) a Custodian or public officer takes
charge of the Trustee or its property; or (iv) the Trustee becomes incapable of
performing the services of the Trustee hereunder.

                  If the Trustee resigns or is removed or if a vacancy exists in
the office of Trustee for any reason, the Company shall promptly appoint a
successor Trustee; provided that the Holders of a majority in aggregate
principal amount of the then outstanding Notes may appoint a successor Trustee
to replace any successor Trustee appointed by Company.

                  If a successor Trustee does not take office within 60 days
after the retiring Trustee resigns or is removed, the retiring Trustee, the
Company or the Holders of at least 10% in principal amount of the then
outstanding Notes may petition any court of competent jurisdiction for the
appointment of a successor Trustee.

                  If the Trustee fails to comply with Section 7.10, any Holder
may petition any court of competent jurisdiction for the removal of the Trustee
and the appointment of a successor Trustee.

                  A successor Trustee shall deliver a written acceptance of its
appointment to the retiring Trustee and to the Company. Thereupon, the
resignation or removal of the retiring



<PAGE>   67


                                      -60-


Trustee shall become effective and the successor Trustee shall have all the
rights, powers and duties of the Trustee under this Indenture. The successor
Trustee shall mail a notice of its appointment to Holders. The retiring Trustee
shall promptly transfer all property it holds as Trustee to the successor
Trustee; provided that all sums owing to the retiring Trustee hereunder have
been paid. Notwithstanding replacement of the Trustee pursuant to this Section
7.08, the Company's obligations under Section 7.07 shall continue for the
retiring Trustee's benefit with respect to expenses and liabilities relating to
the retiring Trustee's activities prior to being replaced.


SECTION 7.09.     Successor Trustee by Merger, Etc.

                  If the Trustee consolidates, merges or converts into, or
transfers all or substantially all of its corporate trust business to another
corporation, the successor corporation without any further act shall be the
successor Trustee.


SECTION 7.10.     Eligibility; Disqualification.

                  The Trustee shall at all times (i) be a corporation organized
and doing business under the laws of the United States of America, of any state
thereof, or the District of Columbia authorized under such laws to exercise
corporate trust powers, (ii) be subject to supervision or examination by federal
or state authority, (iii) have a combined capital and surplus of at least $100
million as set forth in its most recently published annual report of condition,
and (iv) satisfy the requirements of Sections 310(a)(1),(2) and (5) of the TIA.
The Trustee is subject to Section 310(b) of the TIA.


SECTION 7.11.     Preferential Collection of Claims Against Company.

                  The Trustee is subject to Section 311(a) of the TIA, excluding
any creditor relationship listed in Section 311(b) of the TIA. A Trustee who has
resigned or been removed shall be subject to Section 311(a) of the TIA to the
extent indicated therein.




<PAGE>   68


                                      -61-



                                  ARTICLE VIII
                             DISCHARGE OF INDENTURE


SECTION 8.01.     Discharge of Liability on Notes; Defeasance.

                  (a) Subject to Sections 8.01(c), 8.02 and 8.06, this Indenture
shall cease to be of any further effect as to all outstanding Notes and
Subsidiary Guarantees after (i) either (a) all Notes heretofore authenticated
and delivered (other than Notes replaced pursuant to Section 2.07) have been
delivered to the Trustee for cancellation or (b) all Notes not previously
delivered for cancellation have become due and payable and the Company has
irrevocably deposited or caused to be deposited with the Trustee an amount in
United States dollars sufficient to pay and discharge the entire indebtedness on
such Notes not previously delivered to the Trustee for cancellation, for the
principal of, premium, if any, and interest to the date of repayment, (ii) the
Company has paid or caused to be paid all other sums payable under this
Indenture and (iii) the Company has delivered to the Trustee an Officers'
Certificate and an Opinion of Counsel each stating that all conditions precedent
under this Indenture relating to the satisfaction and discharge of this
Indenture have been complied with.

                  (b) Subject to Sections 8.01(c), 8.02, and 8.06, the Company
at any time may terminate (i) all its obligations under this Indenture and the
Notes ("Legal Defeasance Option"), or (ii) its obligations under Sections 4.02,
4.03, 4.05, 4.06, 4.07, 4.08, 4.09, 4.11, 4.12, 4.13, 4.14, 4.15, 4.16, 4.17,
4.18 and Article V ("Covenant Defeasance Option"). The Company may exercise its
Legal Defeasance Option notwithstanding its prior exercise of its Covenant
Defeasance Option.

                  If the Company exercises its Legal Defeasance Option, payment
of the Notes may not be accelerated because of an Event of Default. If the
Company exercises its Covenant Defeasance Option, payment of the Notes may not
be accelerated because of an Event of Default specified in Section 6.01(a)(iii).

                  Upon satisfaction of the conditions set forth in Section 8.02
and upon the Company's request (and at the Company's expense), the Trustee shall
acknowledge in writing the discharge of those obligations that the Company has
terminated.

                  (c) Notwithstanding Sections 8.01(a) and (b), the Company's
obligations under Sections 2.03, 2.04, 2.05, 2.06, 2.07, 4.01, 4.04, 4.10, 7.07,
7.08, 8.04, 8.05, and 8.06, and the obligations of the Trustee and the Paying
Agent under Section 8.04 shall survive until the Notes have been paid in full.
Thereafter, the Company's obligations under Sections 7.07 and 8.05 and the
obligations of the Company, Trustee and Paying Agent under Section 8.04 shall
survive.



<PAGE>   69


                                      -62-




SECTION 8.02.     Conditions to Defeasance.

                  In order to exercise either its Legal Defeasance Option and
give effect thereto ("Legal Defeasance") or its Covenant Defeasance Option and
give effect thereto ("Covenant Defeasance"), (i) the Company shall irrevocably
deposit with the Trustee, as trust funds in trust, for the benefit of the
Holders, cash in United States dollars, U.S. Government Obligations, or a
combination thereof, maturing as to principal and interest in such amounts as
will be sufficient, without consideration of any reinvestment of such interest,
in the opinion of a nationally recognized firm of independent public accountants
or a nationally recognized investment banking firm, to pay and discharge the
principal of, premium, if any, and interest on the outstanding Notes on the
stated maturity of such principal or installment of principal or interest; (ii)
in the case of Legal Defeasance, the Company shall have delivered to the Trustee
an Opinion of Counsel confirming that (A) the Company has received from, or
there has been published by, the Internal Revenue Service a ruling or (B) since
the date of this Indenture, there has been a change in the applicable federal
income tax law, in either case to the effect that, and based thereon such
Opinion of Counsel shall confirm that, the Holders will not recognize income,
gain or loss for federal income tax purposes as a result of such Legal
Defeasance and will be subject to federal income tax on the same amounts, in the
same manner and at the same times as would have been the case if such Legal
Defeasance had not occurred; (iii) in the case of Covenant Defeasance, the
Company shall have delivered to the Trustee an Opinion of Counsel confirming
that the Holders will not recognize income, gain or loss for federal income tax
purposes as a result of such Covenant Defeasance and will be subject to federal
income tax on the same amounts, in the same manner and at the same times as
would have been the case if such Covenant Defeasance had not occurred; (iv) no
Default or Event of Default shall have occurred and be continuing on the date of
such deposit or insofar as clauses (viii) and (ix) under Section 6.01 are
concerned, at any time during the period ending on the 91st day after the date
of deposit; (v) such Legal Defeasance or Covenant Defeasance shall not result in
a breach or violation of, or constitute a Default under, this Indenture or any
other material agreement or instrument to which the Company is a party or by
which it is bound; (vi) the Company shall have delivered to the Trustee an
Opinion of Counsel to the effect that (A) the trust funds will not be subject to
any rights of holders of Senior Debt or Guarantor Senior Debt of any Subsidiary
Guarantor, including, without limitation, those arising under this Indenture,
after the 91st day following the deposit and (B) after the 91st day following
the deposit, the trust funds will not be subject to the effect of any applicable
bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization or similar laws affecting creditors'
rights generally; (vii) the Company shall have delivered to the Trustee an
Officers' Certificate stating that the deposit was not made by the Company with
the intent of preferring the Holders of the Notes over the other creditors of
the Company or with the intent of defeating, hindering, delaying or defrauding
creditors of the Company or others; (viii) no event or condition shall exist
that would prevent the Company from making payments of the principal of,
premium, if any, and interest on the Notes on the date of such deposit or at



<PAGE>   70


                                      -63-


any time ending on the 91st day after the date of such deposit; and (ix) the
Company shall have delivered to the Trustee an Officers' Certificate and an
Opinion of Counsel, each stating that all conditions precedent provided for
relating to either the Legal Defeasance or the Covenant Defeasance, as the case
may be, have been complied with.


SECTION 8.03.     Application of Trust Money.

                  The Trustee or Paying Agent shall hold in trust money and/or
U.S. Government Obligations deposited with it pursuant to this Article VIII. The
Trustee or Paying Agent shall apply the deposited money and the money from U.S.
Government Obligations in accordance with this Indenture to the payment of
principal of, and premium, if any, and interest on, the Notes.


SECTION 8.04.     Repayment to Company.

                  After the Notes have been paid in full, the Trustee and the
Paying Agent shall promptly turn over to the Company any excess money or
securities held by them upon the written direction of the Company.

                  Any money deposited with the Trustee or a Paying Agent
pursuant to this Article VIII for the payment of the principal of, premium, if
any, or interest on, any Note that remains unclaimed for two years after
becoming due and payable shall be paid to the Company on its request; and the
Holder of such Note shall thereafter, as an unsecured general creditor, look
only to the Company for payment thereof, and all liability of the Trustee or
such Paying Agent with respect to such money shall cease; provided, however,
that the Trustee or such Paying Agent, before being required to make any such
repayment, shall at the expense of the Company cause to be published once, in
The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal (national edition), notice that
such money remains unclaimed and that, after a date specified therein, which
shall not be less than 30 days from the date of such notification or
publication, any unclaimed balance of such money then remaining will be repaid
to the Company.


SECTION 8.05.     Indemnity for U.S. Government Obligations.

                  The Company shall pay and shall indemnify the Trustee and any
Paying Agent against any tax, fee or other charge imposed on or assessed against
cash and/or U.S. Government Obligations deposited with it pursuant to Section
4.18 or this Article VIII or imposed on or assessed against the principal and
interest received on such cash and/or U.S.
Government Obligations.



<PAGE>   71


                                      -64-




SECTION 8.06.     Reinstatement.

                  If the Trustee or Paying Agent is unable to apply any money or
U.S. Government Obligations in accordance with this Article VIII by reason of
any legal proceeding or by reason of any order or judgment of any court or
governmental authority enjoining, restraining or otherwise prohibiting such
application, the Company's obligations under this Indenture and the Notes shall
be revived and reinstated as though no deposit had occurred pursuant to this
Article VIII until such time as the Trustee or Paying Agent is permitted to
apply all such money or U.S. Government Obligations in accordance with this
Article VIII; provided, however, that if the Company has made any payment of
principal of, or premium, if any, or interest on, any Notes because of the
reinstatement of its obligations under this Indenture and the Notes, the Company
shall be subrogated to the Holders' rights to receive such payment from the
money or U.S. Government Obligations held by the Trustee or Paying Agent.


                                   ARTICLE IX
                                   AMENDMENTS


SECTION 9.01.         Amendments and Supplements Permitted
                      Without Consent of Holders.

                  (a) Notwithstanding Section 9.02, the Company, the Subsidiary
Guarantors and the Trustee may amend or supplement this Indenture or the Notes
without the consent of any Holder to: (i) cure any ambiguity, defect or
inconsistency; (ii) provide for uncertificated Notes in addition to or in place
of certificated Notes; (iii) provide for the assumption of the Company's
obligations to the Holders in the event of any Disposition involving the Company
that is permitted under Article V in which the Company is not the Surviving
Person; (iv) make any change that would provide any additional rights or
benefits to Holders or does not adversely affect the interests of any Holder;
(v) comply with the requirements of the Commission in order to effect or
maintain the qualification of this Indenture under the TIA; or (vi) add
additional Subsidiary Guarantors pursuant to Section 4.15.

                  (b) Upon the Company's request, after receipt by the Trustee
of a resolution of the Board of Directors authorizing the execution of any
amended or supplemental indenture, the Trustee shall join with the Company and
the Subsidiary Guarantors in the execution of any amended or supplemental
indenture authorized or permitted by the terms of this Indenture and to make any
future appropriate agreements and stipulations that may be contained in any such
amended or supplemental indenture, but the Trustee shall not be obligated to
enter into an



<PAGE>   72


                                      -65-


amended or supplemental indenture that affects its own rights, duties, or
immunities under this Indenture or otherwise.


SECTION 9.02.          Amendments and Supplements Requiring
                       Consent of Holders.

                  (a) Except as otherwise provided in Sections 6.04, 9.01(a) and
9.02(c), this Indenture and the Notes may be amended or supplemented with the
written consent of the Holders of at least a majority in aggregate principal
amount of the then outstanding Notes (including consents obtained in connection
with a tender offer or exchange offer for the Notes), and any existing Default
or Event of Default or compliance with any provision of this Indenture or the
Notes may be waived with the consent of Holders of at least a majority in
principal amount of the then outstanding Notes (including consents obtained in
connection with a tender offer or exchange offer for the Notes).

                  (b) Upon the Company's request and after receipt by the
Trustee of a resolution of the Board of Directors authorizing the execution of
any supplemental indenture, evidence of the Holders' consent, and the documents
described in Section 9.06, the Trustee shall join with the Company and the
Subsidiary Guarantors in the execution of such amended or supplemental indenture
unless such amended or supplemental indenture affects the Trustee's own rights,
duties, or immunities under this Indenture or otherwise, in which case the
Trustee may in its discretion, but not be obligated to, enter into such amended
or supplemental indenture.

                  (c) No such modification or amendment may, without the consent
of the Holder of each outstanding Note affected thereby: (i) change the stated
maturity of the principal of, or any installment of interest on, any Note, or
reduce the principal amount thereof or the rate of interest thereon or any
premium payable upon the redemption thereof, or change the coin or currency or
the manner in which the principal of any Note or any premium or the interest
thereon is payable, or impair the right to institute suit for the enforcement of
any such payment after the stated maturity thereof (or, in the case of
redemption, on or after the redemption date); (ii) extend the time for payment
of interest on the Notes; (iii) alter the redemption provisions in the Notes or
this Indenture in a manner adverse to any Holder of the Notes; (iv) amend,
change or modify the obligation of the Company to make and consummate a Change
of Control Offer in the event of a Change of Control or modify any of the
provisions or definitions with respect thereto; (v) reduce the percentage in
principal amount of outstanding Notes, the consent of whose holders is required
for any amended or supplemental indenture or the consent of whose holders is
required for any waiver of compliance with any provision of this Indenture or
any Default hereunder and the consequences provided for hereunder; (vi) modify
any of the provisions of this Indenture relating to any amended or supplemental



<PAGE>   73


                                      -66-


indentures requiring the consent of Holders or relating to the waiver of past
defaults or relating to the waiver of any covenant, except to increase the
percentage of outstanding Notes required for such actions or to provide that any
other provision of this Indenture cannot be modified or waived without the
consent of the Holder of each Note affected thereby; (vii) except as otherwise
permitted under Section 5.01, consent to the assignment or transfer by the
Company of any of its rights and obligations under this Indenture; (viii) alter
the ranking of the Notes or the Subsidiary Guarantees in a manner adverse to
holders of the Notes; or (ix) amend, change or modify the obligation of the
Company to make and consummate a Special Offer or any of the definitions related
thereto in a manner adverse to any holder of Notes.

                  (d) It shall not be necessary for the consent of the Holders
under this Section 9.02 to approve the particular form of any proposed amendment
or waiver, but it shall be sufficient if such consent approves the substance
thereof. After an amendment, supplement or waiver under this Section 9.02
becomes effective, the Company shall mail to each Holder affected thereby a
notice briefly describing the amendment, supplement or waiver. Any failure of
the Company to mail such notice, or any defect therein, shall not, however, in
any way impair or affect the validity of any such amended or supplemental
indenture or waiver.


SECTION 9.03.     Compliance with TIA.

                  Every amendment or supplement to this Indenture or the Notes
shall be set forth in an amended supplemental indenture that complies with the
TIA as then in effect.


SECTION 9.04.     Revocation and Effect of Consents.

                  (a) Until an amendment, supplement or waiver becomes
effective, a consent to it by a Holder is a continuing consent by the Holder and
every subsequent Holder of a Note or portion of a Note that evidences the same
Indebtedness as the consenting Holder's Note, even if notation of the consent is
not made on any Note. However, any such Holder or subsequent Holder may revoke
the consent as to his or her Note or portion of a Note if the Trustee receives
the notice of revocation before the date on which the Trustee receives an
Officers' Certificate certifying that the Holders of the requisite principal
amount of Notes have consented to the amendment or waiver.

                  (b) The Company may, but shall not be obligated to, fix a
record date for the purpose of determining the Holders of Notes entitled to
consent to any amendment or waiver. If a record date is fixed, then
notwithstanding the provisions of the immediately preceding paragraph, those
Persons who were Holders of Notes at such record date (or their duly designated
proxies), and only those Persons, shall be entitled to consent to such amendment
or



<PAGE>   74


                                      -67-


waiver or to revoke any consent previously given, whether or not such Persons
continue to be Holders of Notes after such record date. No consent shall be
valid or effective for more than 90 days after such record date unless consents
from Holders of the principal amount of Notes required hereunder for such
amendment or waiver to be effective shall have also been given and not revoked
within such 90-day period.

                  (c) After an amendment or waiver becomes effective it shall
bind every Holder, unless it is of the type described in Section 9.02(c), in
which case the amendment or waiver shall only bind each Holder that consented to
it and every subsequent Holder of a Note that evidences the same debt as the
consenting Holder's Note.


SECTION 9.05.     Notation on or Exchange of Notes.

                  The Trustee may place an appropriate notation about an
amendment, supplement or waiver on any Note thereafter authenticated. The
Company in exchange for all Notes may issue and the Trustee shall authenticate
new Notes that reflect the amendment, supplement or waiver. Failure to make the
appropriate notation or issue a new Note shall not affect the validity and
effect of such amendment, supplement or waiver.


SECTION 9.06.     Trustee Protected.

                  The Trustee shall sign any amendment or supplemental indenture
authorized pursuant to this Article IX if the amendment does not adversely
affect the rights, duties, liabilities or immunities of the Trustee. If it does,
the Trustee may, but need not, sign it. In signing such amendment or
supplemental indenture, the Trustee shall be entitled to receive and, subject to
Section 7.01, shall be fully protected in relying upon, an Officers' Certificate
and Opinion of Counsel pursuant to Sections 11.04 and 11.05 as conclusive
evidence that such amendment or supplemental indenture is authorized or
permitted by this Indenture, that it is not inconsistent herewith, and that it
will be valid and binding upon the Company in accordance with its terms.



<PAGE>   75


                                      -68-




                                    ARTICLE X
                              SUBSIDIARY GUARANTEES


SECTION 10.01.    Subsidiary Guarantees.

                  (a) Each Subsidiary Guarantor hereby, jointly and severally,
unconditionally guarantees, on a senior unsecured basis, to each Holder of a
Note authenticated and delivered by the Trustee that: (i) the principal of,
premium, if any, and interest on the Notes will be promptly paid in full when
due, whether at maturity, by acceleration, redemption or otherwise, and interest
on the overdue principal of and interest on the Notes, if any, to the extent
lawful, and all other Obligations of the Company to the Holders or the Trustee
under this Indenture and the Notes will be promptly paid in full, all in
accordance with the terms of this Indenture and the Notes; and (ii) in case of
any extension of time of payment or renewal of any Notes or any of such other
Obligations, that the Notes will be promptly paid in full when due in accordance
with the terms of such extension or renewal, whether at stated maturity, by
acceleration or otherwise. In the event that the Company fails to pay any amount
guaranteed by the Subsidiary Guarantors for any reason whatsoever, the
Subsidiary Guarantors will be jointly and severally obligated to pay such amount
immediately. The Subsidiary Guarantors hereby further agree that their
Obligations under this Indenture and the Notes shall be unconditional and
absolute, regardless of the validity, regularity or enforceability of this
Indenture or the Notes, the absence of any action to enforce this Indenture or
the Notes, any waiver or consent by any Holder with respect to any provisions of
this Indenture or the Notes, any modification or amendment of, or supplement to,
this Indenture or the Notes, the recovery of any judgment against the Company or
any action to enforce any such judgment, or any other circumstance that might
otherwise constitute a legal or equitable discharge or defense of a Subsidiary
Guarantor. Each Subsidiary Guarantor hereby waives diligence, presentment,
demand of payment, filing of claims with a court in the event of insolvency or
bankruptcy of the Company, any right to require a proceeding first against the
Company, protest, notice and all demands whatsoever and covenants that its
Subsidiary Guarantee of the Company's Obligations under this Indenture and the
Notes will not be discharged except by complete performance by the Company or
another Guarantor of such Obligations. If any Holder or the Trustee is required
by any court or otherwise to return to the Company, any Subsidiary Guarantor or
a Custodian of the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor any amount paid by the
Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor to the Trustee or such Holder, the
Subsidiary Guarantee of the Company's Obligations under this Indenture and the
Notes by each Subsidiary Guarantor shall, to the extent previously discharged as
a result of any such payment, be immediately reinstated and be in full force and
effect. Each Subsidiary Guarantor hereby acknowledges and agrees that, as
between the Subsidiary Guarantors, on the one hand, and the Holders and the
Trustee, on the other hand, (x) the maturity of the Company's Obligations under
this Indenture and the Notes may be accelerated



<PAGE>   76


                                      -69-


as provided in Article VI for purposes of the Subsidiary Guarantees
notwithstanding any stay, injunction or other prohibition preventing such
acceleration, and (y) in the event of any declaration of acceleration of the
Company's Obligations under this Indenture and the Notes as provided in Article
VI, such Obligations (whether or not due and payable) shall forthwith become due
and payable by the Subsidiary Guarantors for the purpose of the Subsidiary
Guarantees.

                  (b) Each Subsidiary Guarantor hereby waives all rights of
subrogation, contribution, reimbursement and indemnity, and all other rights,
that such Subsidiary Guarantor would have against the Company at any time as a
result of any payment in respect of its Subsidiary Guarantee (whether
contractual, under section 509 of the Bankruptcy Code, or otherwise).

                  (c) Each Subsidiary Guarantor that makes or is required to
make any payment in respect of its Subsidiary Guarantee shall be entitled to
seek contribution from the other Subsidiary Guarantors to the extent permitted
by applicable law; provided that each Subsidiary Guarantor agrees that any such
claim for contribution that such Subsidiary Guarantor may have against any other
Subsidiary Guarantor shall be subrogated to the prior payment in full in cash of
all Obligations owed to Holders under or in respect of the Notes.

                  (d) Upon the sale or disposition (whether by merger, stock
purchase, asset sale or otherwise) of a Subsidiary Guarantor (or substantially
all of its assets) to an entity which is not a Subsidiary of the Company, which
is otherwise in compliance with this Indenture, such Subsidiary Guarantor shall
be deemed released from all its obligations under its Subsidiary Guarantee;
provided that any such termination shall occur only to the extent that all
obligations of such Subsidiary Guarantor under all of its guarantees of, and
under all of its pledges of assets or other security interests which secure,
other Indebtedness of the Company shall also terminate upon such release, sale
or transfer.

                  (e) Each Subsidiary Guarantor may consolidate with or merge
into or sell its assets to the Company or another Subsidiary Guarantor without
limitation. A Subsidiary Guarantor may consolidate with or merge into or sell
its assets to a corporation other than the Company or another Subsidiary
Guarantor (whether or not affiliated with such Subsidiary Guarantor, but subject
to the provisions described in Section 10.01(d)), provided that (a) if the
Surviving Person is not the Subsidiary Guarantor, the Surviving Person agrees to
assume such Subsidiary Guarantor's obligations under its Subsidiary Guarantee
and all its obligations under this Indenture and (b) such transaction does not
(i) violate any covenants set forth in this Indenture or (ii) result in a
Default or Event of Default under this Indenture immediately thereafter that is
continuing.



<PAGE>   77


                                      -70-




SECTION 10.02.    Trustee to Include Paying Agents.

                  In case at any time any Paying Agent other than the Trustee
shall have been appointed by the Company, the term "Trustee" as used in this
Article X shall (unless the context shall otherwise require) be construed as
extending to and including such Paying Agent within its meaning as fully and for
all intents and purposes as if such Paying Agent were named in this Article X in
place of the Trustee.


SECTION 10.03.    Limits on Subsidiary Guarantees.

                  Each Subsidiary Guarantor, and by its acceptance hereof each
Holder, hereby confirms that it is the intention of all such parties that the
guarantee by each Subsidiary Guarantor pursuant to its Subsidiary Guarantee not
constitute a fraudulent transfer or conveyance for purposes of the Bankruptcy
Law, the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act, the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act
or any similar Federal or state law. To effectuate the foregoing intention, the
Holders and each Subsidiary Guarantor hereby irrevocably agree that the
obligations of each Subsidiary Guarantor under the Subsidiary Guarantees shall
be limited to the maximum amount as will, after giving effect to all other
contingent and fixed liabilities of each Subsidiary Guarantor, result in the
obligations of each Subsidiary Guarantor under the Subsidiary Guarantees not
constituting such fraudulent transfer or conveyance.


SECTION 10.04.    Execution of Subsidiary Guarantee.

                  To evidence its Subsidiary Guarantee set forth in this Article
X, each Subsidiary Guarantor hereby agrees to execute the Subsidiary Guarantee
in substantially the form included in Exhibit A, which shall be endorsed on each
Note ordered to be authenticated and delivered by the Trustee. Each Subsidiary
Guarantor hereby agrees that its Subsidiary Guarantee set forth in this Article
X shall remain in full force and effect notwithstanding any failure to endorse
on each Note a notation of such Subsidiary Guarantee. Each such Subsidiary
Guarantee shall be signed on behalf of each Subsidiary Guarantor by an Officer
(who shall have been duly authorized by all requisite corporate actions), and
the delivery of such Note by the Trustee, after the authentication thereof
hereunder, shall constitute due delivery of such Subsidiary Guarantee on behalf
of such Subsidiary Guarantor. Such signatures upon the Subsidiary Guarantee may
be by manual or facsimile signature of such Officer and may be imprinted or
otherwise reproduced on the Subsidiary Guarantee, and in case any such Officer
who shall have signed the Subsidiary Guarantee shall cease to be such Officer
before the Note on which such Subsidiary Guarantee is endorsed shall have been
authenticated and delivered by the Trustee or disposed of by the Company, such
Note nevertheless may be authenticated and delivered or



<PAGE>   78


                                      -71-


disposed of as though the person who signed the Subsidiary Guarantee had not
ceased to be such Officer of the Subsidiary Guarantor.


SECTION 10.05.    Stay, Extension and Usury Laws.

                  Each Subsidiary Guarantor covenants (to the extent that it may
lawfully do so) that it will not at any time insist upon, plead, or in any
manner whatsoever claim or take the benefit or advantage of, any stay, extension
or usury law wherever enacted, now or at any time hereafter in force, that would
prohibit or forgive each Subsidiary Guarantor from performing its Subsidiary
Guarantee as contemplated herein or which might affect the covenants or the
performance of this Indenture and Notes; and each such Subsidiary Guarantor (to
the extent it may lawfully do so) hereby expressly waives all benefit or
advantage of any such law, and covenants that it will not, by resort to any such
law, hinder, delay or impede the execution of any power granted to the Trustee
pursuant to this Indenture, but will suffer and permit the execution of every
such power as though no such law has been enacted.


SECTION 10.06.    Payment.

                  A payment on account of or with respect to any Subsidiary
Guarantee shall include, without limitation, any direct or indirect payment of
principal, premium or interest with respect to or in connection with any
optional redemption or purchase provisions, any direct or indirect payment
payable by reason of any other Indebtedness or Obligation being subordinated to
the Subsidiary Guarantees, and any direct or indirect payment or recovery on any
claim as a Holder relating to or arising out of this Indenture or any Subsidiary
Guarantee, or the issuance of any Subsidiary Guarantee, or the transactions
contemplated by this Indenture or referred to herein.


                                   ARTICLE XI
                                  MISCELLANEOUS


SECTION 11.01.    Trust Indenture Act Controls.

                  If any provisions of this Indenture limits, qualifies, or
conflicts with the duties imposed by operation of Section 318(c) of the TIA, the
imposed duties shall control.



<PAGE>   79


                                      -72-




SECTION 11.02.  Notices.

                  Any notice or communication by the Company, any Subsidiary
Guarantor or the Trustee to the other is duly given if in writing and delivered
in person, mailed by registered or certified mail, postage prepaid, return
receipt requested or delivered by telecopier or overnight air courier
guaranteeing next day delivery to the other's address:

                  If to the Company or to any Subsidiary Guarantor:

                                    PhoneTel Technologies, Inc.
                                    1127 Euclid Avenue
                                    Suite 650
                                    Cleveland, Ohio  44115-1601
                                    Attention:  Tammy Martin
                                    Telephone:  (216) 623-2588
                                    Facsimile:  (216)

                  With a copy to:

                                    Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
                                    919 Third Avenue
                                    New York, New York  10022
                                    Attention:  Stephen Banker
                                    Telephone:  (212) 735-3000
                                    Facsimile:  (212)

                  If to the Trustee:

                                    [


                                                        ]
                                    Attention:
                                    Telephone:
                                    Facsimile:



<PAGE>   80


                                      -73-



                  With a copy to:

                                    [


                                                        ]
                                    Attention:
                                    Telephone:
                                    Facsimile:

                  The Company or the Trustee by notice to the other may
designate additional or different addresses for subsequent notices or
communications.

                  All notices and communications (other than those sent to
Holders) shall be deemed to have been duly given: at the time delivered by hand,
if personally delivered; the date receipt is acknowledged, if mailed by
registered or certified mail; when answered back, if telecopied; and the next
Business Day after timely delivery to the courier, if sent by overnight air
courier guaranteeing next day delivery.

                  Any notice or communication to a Holder shall be mailed by
first-class mail to his or her address shown on the register maintained by the
Registrar. Failure to mail a notice or communication to a Holder or any defect
in it shall not affect its sufficiency with respect to other Holders. If a
notice or communication is mailed in the manner provided above within the time
prescribed, it is duly given, whether or not the addressee receives it. If the
Company mails a notice or communication to Holders, it shall mail a copy to the
Trustee and each Agent at the same time.


SECTION 11.03.    Communication by Holders with Other Holders.

                  Holders may communicate pursuant to Section 312(b) of the TIA
with other Holders with respect to their rights under this Indenture or the
Notes. The Company, the Trustee, the Registrar and any other Person shall have
the protection of Section 312(c) of the TIA.





<PAGE>   81


                                      -74-


SECTION 11.04.    Certificate and Opinion as to Conditions Precedent.

                  Upon any request or application by the Company to the Trustee
to take any action under this Indenture, the Company shall furnish to the
Trustee: (a) an Officers Certificate (which shall include the statements set
forth in Section 11.05) stating that, in the opinion of the signers, all
conditions precedent and covenants, if any, provided for in this Indenture
relating to the proposed action have been complied with; and (b) an Opinion of
Counsel (which shall include the statements set forth in Section 11.05) stating
that, in the opinion of such counsel, all such conditions precedent provided for
in this Indenture relating to the proposed action have been complied with.


SECTION 11.05.    Statements Required in Certificate or Opinion.

                  Each certificate or opinion with respect to compliance with a
condition or covenant provided for in this Indenture (other than a certificate
provided pursuant to Section 314(a)(4) of the TIA) shall include: (1) a
statement that the Person making such certificate or opinion has read such
covenant or condition; (2) a brief statement as to the nature and scope of the
examination or investigation upon which the statements or opinions contained in
such certificate or opinion are based; (3) a statement that, in the opinion of
such Person, he has made such examination or investigation as is necessary to
enable him to express an informed opinion as to whether or not such covenant or
condition has been complied with; and (4) a statement as to whether, in such
Person's opinion, such condition or covenant has been complied with.


SECTION 11.06.    Rules by Trustee and Agents.

                  The Trustee may make reasonable rules for action by or at a
meeting of Holders. The Registrar or Paying Agent may make reasonable rules and
set reasonable requirements for its functions.


SECTION 11.07.    Legal Holidays.

                  If a payment date is a Legal Holiday, payment may be made at
that place on the next succeeding day that is not a Legal Holiday, and no
interest shall accrue for the intervening period.





<PAGE>   82


                                      -75-


SECTION 11.08.    No Recourse Against Others.

                  No director, officer, employee, incorporator or stockholder of
the Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor shall have any liability for any
obligation of the Company or any Subsidiary Guarantor under this Indenture, the
Notes or the Subsidiary Guarantees. Each Holder by accepting a Note (including
Subsidiary Guarantees) waives and releases such Persons from all such liability
and such waiver and release is part of the consideration for the issuance of the
Notes.


SECTION 11.09.    Counterparts.

                  This Indenture may be executed in any number of counterparts
and by the parties hereto in separate counterparts, each of which when so
executed shall be deemed to be an original and all of which taken together shall
constitute one and the same agreement.


SECTION 11.10.    Initial Appointments, Compliance Certificates.

                  The Company initially appoints the Trustee as Paying Agent,
Registrar and authenticating agent. The first compliance certificate to be
delivered by the Company to the Trustee pursuant to Section 4.03 shall be for
the fiscal year ending on December 31, 1996.


SECTION 11.11.    Governing Law.

                  The laws of the State of New York shall govern this Indenture
and the Notes, without regard to the conflict of laws provisions thereof.


SECTION 11.12.    No Adverse Interpretation of Other Agreements.

                  This Indenture may not be used to interpret another indenture,
loan or debt agreement of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, and no other
indenture, loan or debt agreement may be used to interpret this Indenture.



<PAGE>   83


                                      -76-




SECTION 11.13.    Successors.

                  All agreements of the Company in this Indenture and the Notes
shall bind any successor of the Company. All agreements of the Trustee in this
Indenture shall bind its successor.


SECTION 11.14.    Severability.

                  If any provision in this Indenture or in the Notes shall be
invalid, illegal or unenforceable, the validity, legality and enforceability of
the remaining provisions shall not in any way be affected or impaired thereby.


SECTION 11.15.    Third Party Beneficiaries.

                  Holders of Senior Debt of the Company and Guarantor Senior
Debt of the Subsidiary Guarantors are third party beneficiaries of, and any of
them (or their Representative) shall have the right to enforce the provisions of
this Indenture that benefit such holders.


SECTION 11.16.    Table of Contents, Headings, Etc.

                  The Table of Contents, Cross-Reference Table, and headings of
the Articles and Sections of this Indenture have been inserted for convenience
of reference only, are not to be considered a part of this Indenture, and shall
in no way modify or restrict any of the terms or provisions of this Indenture.



<PAGE>   84



                                   SIGNATURES


                                  THE COMPANY:

                                  PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.


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




<PAGE>   85



                                      THE SUBSIDIARY GUARANTORS:

                                      PUBLIC TELEPHONE CORPORATION
                                      WORLD COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
                                      PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS,
                                        INC.
                                        NORTHERN FLORIDA TELEPHONE
                                        CORPORATION
                                        PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC.



                                      For each of the above:


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





<PAGE>   86



                                                              ,
                                               as Trustee


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





<PAGE>   87



                                   Schedule I

                Subsidiary Guarantors Existing on the Issue Date

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                  Name of Subsidiary                        Jurisdiction of Incorporation
                  ------------------                        -----------------------------

<S>                                                                    <C>
         1.       Public Telephone Corporation                         Indiana

         2.       World Communications, Inc.                           Missouri

         3.       Paramount Communications
                    Systems, Inc.                                      Florida

         4.       Northern Florida Telephone
                    Corporation                                        Florida

         5.       Payphones of America, Inc.                           Ohio
</TABLE>



<PAGE>   88



                                 [FORM OF NOTE]
                                                                       EXHIBIT A
                                 (Face of Note)

                               CUSIP No. [     ]

                           PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.

                             % Senior Note due 2006

No. ____________                                               $__________

                  PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., an Ohio corporation (hereinafter
called the "Company," which term includes any successor entity under the
Indenture hereinafter referred to), for value received, hereby promises to pay
to ________________ or registered assigns, the principal sum of
_______________________ Dollars on , 2006.

                  Interest Payment Dates:       , and       , commencing      ,
1997

                  Record Dates:

                  Reference is hereby made to the further provisions of this
Note set forth on the reverse hereof, which further provisions shall for all
purposes have the same effect as if set forth at this place.

                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Company has caused this Note to be
signed manually or by facsimile by its duly authorized officers and a facsimile
of its seal to be affixed hereto or imprinted hereon.

[SEAL]                                      PHONETEL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.


                                            By:
                                                -------------------------------

                                            By:
                                                -------------------------------




<PAGE>   89




CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICATION

This is one of the    % Senior Notes due 2006 referred to in the within 
mentioned Indenture.

                   , as Trustee


By:  ______________________
     Authorized Signatory



<PAGE>   90



                                 (Back of Note)

                             % SENIOR NOTE DUE 2006


                  1. INTEREST. PhoneTel Technologies, Inc. (the "Company")
promises to pay interest on the principal amount of this Note at the rate and in
the manner specified below. Interest on this Note will accrue at    % per annum
from the date this Note is issued until maturity and will be payable
semiannually in cash on               and            of each year, or if any
such day is not a Business Day on the next succeeding Business Day (each an
"Interest Payment Date"). Interest on this Note will accrue from the most recent
date on which interest has been paid or, if no interest has been paid, from the
date of original issuance; provided that the first Interest Payment Date shall
be                 , 1997. The Company shall pay interest on overdue principal
and premium, if any, from time to time on demand at the rate of 2% per annum in
excess of the interest rate then in effect and shall pay interest on overdue
installments of interest (without regard to any applicable grace periods) from
time to time on demand at the same rate to the extent lawful. Interest will be
computed on the basis of a 360-day year of twelve 30-day months.

                  2. METHOD OF PAYMENT. The Company will pay interest on this
Note (except defaulted interest) to the Person who is the registered Holder of
this Note at the close of business on the record date for the next Interest
Payment Date even if such Note is cancelled after such record date and on or
before such Interest Payment Date. Holders must surrender Notes to a Paying
Agent to collect principal payments on such Notes. The Company will pay
principal, premium, if any, and interest in money of the United States that at
the time of payment is legal tender for payment of public and private debts.
However, the Company may pay principal, premium, if any, and interest by check
payable in such money, and any such check may be mailed to a Holder's registered
address.

                  3. PAYING AGENT AND REGISTRAR. Marine Midland Bank (the
"Trustee") will initially act as the Paying Agent and Registrar. The Company may
appoint additional paying agents or co-registrars, and change the Paying Agent,
any additional paying agent, the Registrar or any co-registrar without prior
notice to any Holder. The Company or any of its Affiliates may act in any such
capacity.

                  4. INDENTURE. The Company issued the Notes under an Indenture,
dated as of             , 1996 (the "Indenture"), by and among the Company, as
issuer of the Notes, each Subsidiary of the Company existing on the Issue Date
as set forth in Schedule I to the Indenture, each of the Company's Subsidiaries
which becomes a guarantor of the Notes in compliance with the provisions set
forth under Section 4.15 of the Indenture, and each of the Company's
Subsidiaries executing a supplemental indenture in which such Subsidiary agrees
to be bound by the terms of the Indenture as guarantors of the Company's
obligations under the Indenture and the Notes (each a "Subsidiary



<PAGE>   91


                                       -2-


Guarantor") and the Trustee. The terms of the Notes include those stated in the
Indenture and those made part of the Indenture by reference to the Trust
Indenture Act of 1939 (15 U.S. Code Sections 77aaa-77bbbb) as in effect on
the date of the original issuance of the Notes (the "Trust Indenture Act"). The
Notes are subject to, and qualified by, all such terms, certain of which are
summarized herein, and Holders are referred to the Indenture and the Trust
Indenture Act for a statement of such terms (all capitalized terms not defined
herein shall have the meanings assigned them in the Indenture). The Notes are
unsecured general obligations of the Company limited to $      in aggregate 
principal amount.

                  5. REDEMPTION PROVISIONS. The Notes are not redeemable at the
Company's option prior to         , 2001. On and after such date, the Notes will
be subject to redemption at the option of the Company, in whole or in part, at
the redemption prices (expressed as percentages of the principal amount of the
Notes) set forth below, plus any accrued and unpaid interest to the date of
redemption, if redeemed during the twelve-month period beginning on [ ] of the
years indicated below:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 Year                          Percentage

<S>                                                                   <C>
                  2001......................................              %
                  2002......................................              %
                  2003......................................              %
                  2004 and thereafter.......................           100%
</TABLE>

                  Notwithstanding the foregoing, at any time prior to         ,
1999, the Company, at its option, may redeem up to [ ]% of the aggregate
principal amount of the Notes originally issued with the net cash proceeds of
one or more Public Equity Offerings, other than the Concurrent Offering, at a
redemption price equal to [ ]% of the principal amount thereof, together with
accrued and unpaid interest to the date of redemption; provided, however, that
at least $75 million in aggregate principal amount of the Notes remains
outstanding immediately after any such redemption.

                  6.       MANDATORY OFFERS.

                           (a) Within 30 days after any Change of Control or any
Asset Sale Trigger Date, or on the Special Offer Notice Date, as the case may
be, the Company shall mail a notice to each Holder stating a number of items as
set forth in Sections 4.11 (with respect to Change of Control Offers) or 4.12
(with respect to a Special Offer) or 4.13 (with respect to Asset Sale Offers) of
the Indenture.


<PAGE>   92


                                       -3-


                           (b) Holders may tender all or, subject to Section 8
below, any portion of their Notes in an Offer by completing the form below
entitled "OPTION OF HOLDER TO ELECT PURCHASE."

                           (c) Promptly after consummation of an Offer, (i) the
Paying Agent shall mail to each Holder of Notes or portions thereof accepted for
payment an amount equal to the purchase price for, plus any accrued and unpaid
interest on, such Notes, (ii) with respect to any tendered Note not accepted for
payment in whole or in part, the Trustee shall return such Note to the Holder
thereof, and (iii) with respect to any Note accepted for payment in part, the
Trustee shall authenticate and mail to each such Holder a new Note equal in
principal amount to the unpurchased portion of the tendered Note.

                           (d) The Company will (i) announce the results of the
Offer to Holders on or as soon as practicable after the Purchase Date, and (ii)
comply with the applicable tender offer rules, including the requirements of
Rule 14e-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and all other
applicable securities laws and regulations in connection with any Offer.

                  7. NOTICE OF REDEMPTION. At least 30 days but not more than 60
days before any redemption date, the Company shall mail by first class mail a
notice of redemption to each Holder of Notes or portions thereof that are to be
redeemed.

                  8. NOTES TO BE REDEEMED OR PURCHASED. The Notes may be
redeemed or purchased in part, but only in whole multiples of $1,000 unless all
Notes held by a Holder are to be redeemed or purchased. On or after any date on
which Notes are redeemed or purchased, interest ceases to accrue on the Notes or
portions thereof called for redemption or accepted for purchase on such date.

                  9. DENOMINATIONS, TRANSFER, EXCHANGE. The Notes are in
registered form without coupons in denominations of $1,000 and integral
multiples thereof. The transfer of Notes may be registered and Notes may be
exchanged as provided in the Indenture. Holders seeking to transfer or exchange
their Notes may be required, among other things, to furnish appropriate
endorsements and transfer documents and to pay any taxes and fees required by
law or permitted by the Indenture.

                  Neither the Company nor the Registrar shall be required to
issue, register the transfer of or exchange any Note (i) during a period
beginning at the opening of business 15 days before the day of the mailing of
notice of any redemption from the Company and ending at the close of business on
the day the notice of redemption is sent to Holders, (ii) selected for
redemption, in whole or in part, except the unredeemed



<PAGE>   93


                                       -4-


portion of any Note being redeemed in part may be transferred or exchanged, and
(iii) during any Change of Control Offer or Special Offer or Asset Sale Offer if
such Note is tendered pursuant to such Change of Control Offer or Special Offer
or Asset Sale Offer and not withdrawn.

                  10. PERSONS DEEMED OWNERS. The registered holder of a Note may
be treated as its owner for all purposes.

                  11. AMENDMENTS AND WAIVERS.

                           (a) Subject to certain exceptions, the Indenture and
the Notes may be amended or supplemented with the written consent of the Holders
of at least a majority in aggregate principal amount of the then outstanding
Notes, and any existing Default or Event of Default or compliance with any
provision of the Indenture or the Notes may be waived with the consent of the
Holders of at least a majority in principal amount of the then outstanding
Notes.

                           (b) Notwithstanding Section 11(a) above, the Company
and the Trustee may amend or supplement the Indenture or the Notes without the
consent of any Holder to: cure any ambiguity, defect or inconsistency; provide
for uncertificated Notes in addition to or in place of certificated Notes;
provide for the assumption of the Company's obligations to the Holders in the
event of any Disposition involving the Company that is permitted under Article V
and in which the Company is not the Surviving Person; make any change that would
provide any additional rights or benefits to Holders or not adversely affect the
interests of any Holder; comply with the requirements of the Commission in order
to effect or maintain the qualification of the Indenture under the Trust
Indenture Act; or provide for additional Subsidiary Guarantors.

                           (c) Certain provisions of the Indenture cannot be
amended, supplemented or waived without the consent of each Holder of Notes
affected.

                  12. DEFAULTS AND REMEDIES. Events of Default include: default
for 30 days in the payment when due of interest on the Notes; default in the
payment when due of principal on the Notes; failure to perform or comply with
certain covenants, agreements or warranties in the Indenture which failure
continues for 30 days after receipt of notice from the Trustee or Holders of at
least 25% of the outstanding Notes; defaults under and acceleration prior to
maturity, or failure to pay at maturity, of certain other Indebtedness; except
as permitted under the Indenture, any Subsidiary Guarantee shall cease for any
reason to be in full force and effect; certain judgments that remain
undischarged for a period of 60 days after their entry; dispositions by holders
of certain Indebtedness following a default under such Indebtedness of assets of
the Company or any Subsidiary



<PAGE>   94


                                       -5-


pledged to secure such Indebtedness and certain events of bankruptcy or
insolvency involving the Company, any Subsidiary Guarantor or any other
Subsidiary. If an Event of Default occurs and is continuing, the Trustee or the
Holders of at least 25% in principal amount of the Notes may declare all
outstanding Notes to be due and payable immediately in an amount equal to the
principal amount of and premium on, if any, such Notes, plus any accrued and
unpaid interest; provided, however, that in the case of an Event of Default
arising from certain events of bankruptcy or insolvency involving the Company or
any Subsidiary Guarantor, the principal amount of and premium on, if any, and
any accrued and unpaid interest on, the Notes becomes due and payable
immediately without further action or notice. Subject to certain exceptions,
Holders of a majority in aggregate principal amount of the then outstanding
Notes may direct the time, method and place of conducting any proceeding for any
remedy available to the Trustee or exercising any trust or power conferred on it
by the Indenture; provided that the Trustee may refuse to follow any direction
that conflicts with law or the Indenture, that the Trustee determines may be
unduly prejudicial to the rights of other Holders, or would involve the Trustee
in personal liability. The Trustee may withhold from Holders notice of any
continuing default (except a payment Default) if it determines that such
withholding is in their interests.

                  13. SUBSIDIARY GUARANTEES. Payment of principal, premium, if
any, and interest (including interest on overdue principal and overdue interest,
to the extent lawful) on the Notes and all other Obligations of the Company to
the Holders or the Trustee under the Indenture and the Notes is, jointly and
severally, unconditionally guaranteed by each of the Subsidiary Guarantors
pursuant to and subject to the terms of Article X of the Indenture.

                  14. TRUSTEE DEALINGS WITH COMPANY. The Trustee in its
individual or any other capacity may become the owner or pledgee of Notes and
may otherwise deal with the Company or any of its Affiliates with the same
rights it would have if it were not Trustee.

                  15. NO RECOURSE AGAINST OTHERS. No director, officer,
employee, incorporator or stockholder of the Company shall have any liability
for any obligation of the Company under the Indenture or the Notes. Each Holder
by accepting a Note waives and releases such Persons from all such liability,
and such waiver and release is part of the consideration for the issuance of the
Notes.

                  16. SUCCESSOR SUBSTITUTED. Upon the merger, consolidation or
other business combination involving the Company or one or more Subsidiary
Guarantors of the Company, or upon the sale, assignment, transfer, conveyance or
other disposition of all or substantially all of the Company's or a Subsidiary
Guarantor's properties and assets, the Surviving Person (if other than the
Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor, as the case may



<PAGE>   95


                                       -6-


be) resulting from such disposition shall assume all of the obligations of the
Company or the Subsidiary Guarantor under the Notes, the Subsidiary Guarantee,
as applicable, and the Indenture and shall succeed to, and be substituted for,
and may exercise every right and power of, the Company or the Subsidiary
Guarantor under the Indenture with the same effect as if such Surviving Person
had been named as the Company or a Subsidiary Guarantor in the Indenture.

                  17. GOVERNING LAW. This Note shall be governed by and
construed in accordance with the laws of the State of New York, without regard
to the conflict of laws provisions thereof.

                  18. AUTHENTICATION. This Note shall not be valid until
authenticated by the manual signature of the Trustee or an authenticating agent.

                  19. ABBREVIATIONS. Customary abbreviations may be used in the
name of a Holder or an assignee, such as TEN COM (= tenants in common), TEN ENT
(= tenants by the entireties), JT TEN (= joint tenants with right of
survivorship and not as tenants in common), CUST (= Custodian), and U/G/M/A (=
Uniform Gifts to Minors Act).

                  20. CUSIP NUMBERS. Pursuant to a recommendation promulgated by
the Committee on Uniform Note Identification Procedures, the Company has caused
CUSIP numbers to be printed on the Notes and has directed the Trustee to use
CUSIP numbers in notices of redemption as a convenience to Holders. No
representation is made as to the accuracy of such numbers either as printed on
the Notes or as contained in any notice of redemption and reliance may be placed
only on the other identification numbers printed on the securities.

                  The Company will furnish to any Holder upon written request
and without charge a copy of the Indenture, which has in it the text of this
Note in larger type. Request may be made to: PhoneTel Technologies, Inc., 1127
Euclid Avenue, Suite 650, Cleveland, Ohio 44115-1601, Attention: [Investor
Relations].



<PAGE>   96



                                 ASSIGNMENT FORM


                  To assign this Note, fill in the form below:

                  FOR VALUE RECEIVED the undersigned hereby sell(s), assigns(s)
and transfer(s) unto



________________________________________________________________________________
      Please insert social security or other identifying number of assignee


________________________________________________________________________________
              Please print or typewrite name and address including
                              zip code of assignee


________________________________________________________________________________

the within Note and all rights thereunder, hereby irrevocably constituting and
appointing ______________________________ to transfer said Note on the books of
the Company.
The Agent may substitute another to act for him.

Date:  ______________               Your Signature: ____________________________
                                    (Sign exactly as your name appears
                                    on the other side of this Note)

                                    Signature Guarantee*:_______________________

- --------
*        The Holder's signature must be guaranteed by an eligible guarantor that
         is a member of one of the following recognized signature guarantee
         programs: (A) The SECURITIES TRANSFER AGENTS MEDALLION PROGRAM; (B) The
         NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE MEDALLION SIGNATURE PROGRAM; or (C) The STOCK
         EXCHANGES MEDALLION PROGRAM.



<PAGE>   97



                                                                     EXHIBIT A-1


                            FORM OF NOTATION ON NOTE
                              RELATING TO GUARANTEE


                  Each Subsidiary Guarantor, jointly and severally,
unconditionally guarantees, to the extent set forth in the Indenture and subject
to the provisions of the Indenture that: (i) the principal of, premium, if any,
and interest on the Notes will be promptly paid in full when due, whether at
maturity, by acceleration, redemption or otherwise, and interest on the overdue
principal of and interest on the Notes, if any, to the extent lawful, and all
other Obligations of the Company to the Holders or the Trustee under the
Indenture and the Notes will be promptly paid in full, all in accordance with
the terms of the Indenture and the Notes; and (ii) in case of any extension of
time of payment or renewal of any Notes or any of such other Obligations, that
the Notes will be promptly paid in full when due in accordance with the terms of
such extension or renewal, whether at stated maturity, by acceleration or
otherwise.

                  The obligations of each Subsidiary Guarantor to the Holders of
Notes and the Trustee pursuant to this guarantee and the Indenture are set forth
in Article X of the Indenture, to which reference is hereby made.


                                      Subsidiary Guarantors:

                                       PUBLIC TELEPHONE CORPORATION
                                       WORLD COMMUNICATIONS, INC.
                                       PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS
                                         INC.
                                       NORTHERN FLORIDA TELEPHONE
                                       CORPORATION
                                       PAYPHONES OF AMERICA, INC.



                                       For each of the above:


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




<PAGE>   98



                       OPTION OF HOLDER TO ELECT PURCHASE


                  If you elect to have this Note purchased by the Company
pursuant to Section 4.11 of the Indenture, check the box: / /



                  If you elect to have this Note purchased by the Company
pursuant to Section 4.12 of the Indenture, check the box: / /



                  If you elect to have this Note purchased by the Company
pursuant to Section 4.13 of the Indenture, check the box: / /



                  If you elect to have only part of this Note purchased by the
Company pursuant to Section 4.11 or 4.12 or 4.13 of the Indenture, state the
amount (multiples of $1,000 only):

$_________________


Date: _________________           Your Signature: _____________________________
                                  (Sign exactly as your name appears
                                  on the other side of this Note)


                                  Signature Guarantee:* _______________________


                                  Your Signature: _____________________________
                                  (Sign exactly as your name appears
                                  on the other side of this Note)


                                  Signature Guarantee: ________________________
- --------

*        The Holder's signature must be guaranteed by an eligible guarantor that
         is a member of one of the following recognized signature guarantee
         programs: (A) The SECURITIES TRANSFER AGENTS MEDALLION PROGRAM; (B) The
         NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE MEDALLION SIGNATURE PROGRAM; or (C) The STOCK
         EXCHANGES MEDALLION PROGRAM.



<PAGE>   99



                                                                       EXHIBIT B



                       FORM OF LEGEND FOR BOOK-ENTRY NOTES



                  Any Global Note authenticated and delivered hereunder shall
bear a legend in substantially the following form:

                  THIS SECURITY IS A GLOBAL NOTE WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE
         INDENTURE HEREINAFTER REFERRED TO AND IS REGISTERED IN THE NAME OF A
         DEPOSITORY OR A NOMINEE OF A DEPOSITORY OR A SUCCESSOR DEPOSITORY. THIS
         SECURITY IS NOT EXCHANGEABLE FOR SECURITIES REGISTERED IN THE NAME OF A
         PERSON OTHER THAN THE DEPOSITORY OR ITS NOMINEE EXCEPT IN THE LIMITED
         CIRCUMSTANCES DESCRIBED IN THE INDENTURE, AND NO TRANSFER OF THIS
         SECURITY (OTHER THAN A TRANSFER OF THIS SECURITY AS A WHOLE BY THE
         DEPOSITORY TO A NOMINEE OF THE DEPOSITORY OR BY A NOMINEE OF THE
         DEPOSITORY TO THE DEPOSITORY OR ANOTHER NOMINEE OF THE DEPOSITORY) MAY
         BE REGISTERED EXCEPT IN THE LIMITED CIRCUMSTANCES DESCRIBED IN THE
         INDENTURE.

                  UNLESS THIS CERTIFICATE IS PRESENTED BY AN AUTHORIZED
         REPRESENTATIVE OF THE DEPOSITORY TRUST COMPANY, A NEW YORK CORPORATION
         ("DTC"), TO ISSUER OR ITS AGENT FOR REGISTRATION OF TRANSFER, EXCHANGE,
         OR PAYMENT, AND ANY CERTIFICATE ISSUED IS REGISTERED IN THE NAME OF
         CEDE & CO. OR IN SUCH OTHER NAME AS IS REQUESTED BY AN AUTHORIZED
         REPRESENTATIVE OF DTC (AND ANY PAYMENT IS MADE TO CEDE & CO. OR TO SUCH
         OTHER ENTITY AS IS REQUESTED BY AN AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE OF DTC),
         ANY TRANSFER, PLEDGE OR OTHER USE HEREOF FOR VALUE OR OTHERWISE BY OR
         TO ANY PERSON IS WRONGFUL INASMUCH AS THE REGISTERED OWNER HEREOF, CEDE
         & CO., HAS AN INTEREST HEREIN.




<PAGE>   100


                              SCHEDULE OF EXCHANGES


         The following exchanges of a part of this Global Notes for Physical
Note have been made:



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      Amount of increase      Principal Amount of           Signature of
            Amount of decrease        in Principal            this Global Note              authorized officer
Date of     in Principal Amount       Amount of this          following such                of Trustee or Note
Exchange    of this Global Note       Global Note             decrease (or increase)        Custodian
- --------    -------------------       -----------             ----------------------        ---------
<S>         <C>                       <C>                     <C>                           <C>

</TABLE>







<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.1
    
 
   
                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
We hereby consent to the use in the Prospectus constituting part of this
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on Form SB-2 (No. 333-13767) of
our report dated March 29, 1996 relating to the financial statements of PhoneTel
Technologies, Inc., which appears in such Prospectus. We also consent to the
references to us under the headings "Experts" in such Prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/ Price Waterhouse LLP
    
   
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
    
 
   
Cleveland, Ohio
    
   
November 15, 1996
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.2
    
 
   
                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
We hereby consent to the use in the Prospectus constituting part of this
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on Form SB-2 (No. 333-13767) of
our report dated May 17, 1996 relating to the financial statements of Paramount
Communications Systems, Inc., which appears in such Prospectus. We also consent
to the references to us under the headings "Experts" in such Prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/  Price Waterhouse LLP
    
   
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
    
 
   
Cleveland, Ohio
    
   
November 15, 1996
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.3
    
 
   
                   CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
We hereby consent to the use in Amendment No. 1 to Form SB-2 in the Prospectus
constituting part of this Stock Registration Statement of our reports dated
August 23, 1996 relating to the financial statements of Amtel Communications,
Inc. and Combined Companies, which appears in such Prospectus. We also consent
to the references to us under the headings "Experts" in such Prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/ Harlan & Boettger
    
 
   
San Diego, California
    
   
November 15, 1996
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.4
    
 
   
The Board of Directors
    
   
Paramount Communications Systems, Inc.:
    
 
   
We consent to the use of our report included in the prospectus constituting part
of this registration statement on Form SB-2 of our report dated March 10, 1995,
with respect to the balance sheet of Paramount Communications Systems, Inc. as
of December 31, 1994, and the related statements of income, shareholders'
equity, and cash flows for the year then ended, and to the reference to our firm
under the heading "Experts" in the prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/ KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
    
 
   
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
    
   
November 15, 1996
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.5
    
 
   
November 15, 1996
    
 
   
                   CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
Richard P. Kerbert
    
   
Chief Financial Officer
    
   
Phonetel Technologies, Inc.
    
   
1127 Euclid Avenue, Suite 650
    
   
Cleveland, Ohio 44115-1601
    
 
   
Dear Richard:
    
 
   
     I hereby consent to the use by Phonetel Technologies, Inc. in the
Prospectus constituting a part of its Form SB-2 registration statement of my
audit report dated April 24, 1996 relating to the financial statements of
International Payphones, Inc. (a Tennessee Corporation) as of and for the years
ended December 31, 1995 and 1994.
    
 
   
     I also consent to the reference to our firm as "experts" in accounting and
auditing.
    
 
   
Sincerely yours,
    
 
   
/s/  ERNEST M. SEWELL, CPA
    
   
Ernest M. Sewell, CPA
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.6
    
 
   
                   CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
We hereby consent to the use in the Prospectus constituting part of this
Registration Statement on Form SB-2 of our reports dated January 17, 1996, and
May 21, 1996, relating to the financial statements of International Pay Phones,
Inc., which appears in such Prospectus. We also consent to the references to us
under the headings "Experts" in such Prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/  Miller Sherrill Blake CPA PA
    
   
MILLER SHERRILL BLAKE CPA PA
    
 
   
November 15, 1996
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.7
    
 
   
                   CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
    
 
   
We hereby consent to the use in the Prospectus constituting part of this
Registration Statement on Amendment No. 1 to Form SB-2 of our reports dated
January 30, 1996 and October 16, 1996 relating to the financial statements of
December 31, 1995 and 1994 and June 30, 1996 and 1995, respectively, which
appear in such Prospectus. We also consent to the references to us under the
headings "Experts" in such Prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/  Kerber, Eck & Braeckel LLP
    
 
   
St. Louis, Missouri
    
   
November 15, 1996
    

<PAGE>   1
 
   
                                                                    EXHIBIT 23.8
    
 
   
                         INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' CONSENT
    
 
   
We consent to the use in this Registration Statement of PhoneTel Technologies,
Inc. on Form SB-2 of our report dated November 17, 1995, relating to the
financial statements of Cherokee Communications, Inc., appearing in the
Prospectus, which is part of this Registration Statement.
    
 
   
We also consent to the reference to us under the heading "Experts" in such
Prospectus.
    
 
   
/s/  Deloitte & Touche, LLP
    
 
   
Dallas, Texas
    
   
November 14, 1996
    


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