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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
 
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
 
                            ------------------------
 
                                 SCHEDULE 14D-9
 
                     SOLICITATION/RECOMMENDATION STATEMENT
                          PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(d)(4)
                     OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
                         GROUND ROUND RESTAURANTS, INC.
                           (NAME OF SUBJECT COMPANY)
 
                         GROUND ROUND RESTAURANTS, INC.
                      (NAME OF PERSON(S) FILING STATEMENT)
 
                   COMMON STOCK, PAR VALUE $.16 2/3 PER SHARE
                         (TITLE OF CLASS OF SECURITIES)
 
                                  399427 10 3
                     (CUSIP NUMBER OF CLASS OF SECURITIES)
 
                               DANIEL R. SCOGGIN
                CHAIRMAN, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND PRESIDENT
                         GROUND ROUND RESTAURANTS, INC.
                         35 BRAINTREE HILL OFFICE PARK
                         BRAINTREE, MASSACHUSETTS 02184
                                 (617) 380-3100
 (NAME, ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE NUMBER OF PERSON AUTHORIZED TO RECEIVE NOTICE AND
          COMMUNICATIONS ON BEHALF OF THE PERSON(S) FILING STATEMENT)
 
                                WITH A COPY TO:
                            JEFFREY S. TULLMAN, ESQ.
                               KANE KESSLER, P.C.
                   1350 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS -- 26TH FLOOR
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019
                                 (212) 541-6222
 
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ITEM 1.  SECURITY AND SUBJECT COMPANY.
 
     The name of the subject company is Ground Round Restaurants, Inc., a New
York corporation ("Ground Round" or the "Company"), and the address of its
principal executive offices is 35 Braintree Hill Office Park, Braintree
Massachusetts 02184. The title of the class of equity securities to which this
statement relates is the Common Stock, par value $.16 2/3 per share, of the
Company (the "Shares").
 
ITEM 2.  TENDER OFFER OF THE BIDDER.
 
     This statement relates to the tender offer disclosed in a Tender Offer
Statement on Schedule 14D-1, dated September 8, 1997 (the "Schedule 14D-1"), of
GRR Merger Corp., a New York corporation (the "Purchaser"), a wholly-owned
subsidiary of GRR Holdings, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
("Parent"), companies formed by Boston Ventures Management, Inc. ("Boston
Ventures") to purchase all outstanding Shares at a price of $1.65 per Share net
to the seller in cash, upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in
the Offer to Purchase dated September 8, 1997 (the "Offer to Purchase"), and the
related Letter of Transmittal (which together constitute the "Offer").
 
     The Offer is being made pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger among
Parent, the Purchaser and the Company dated as of August 29, 1997 (the "Merger
Agreement"). The Merger Agreement provides, among other things, that upon the
terms and subject to the conditions contained therein, and in accordance with
the Business Corporation Law of the State of New York (the "NYBCL"), after the
satisfaction or waiver of the conditions contained therein, and the purchase of
Shares pursuant to the Offer, the Purchaser will be merged with and into the
Company (the "Merger").
 
     According to the Schedule 14D-1, the address of the principal executive
offices of the Purchaser and Parent are 21 Custom House Street, Boston, MA
02110.
 
ITEM 3.  IDENTITY AND BACKGROUND.
 
     (a) The name and address of Ground Round Restaurants, Inc., which is the
person filing this Statement, are set forth in Item 1 above.
 
     (b) Except as described in this Schedule and on Annex I attached hereto
which is incorporated herein by reference, there are, to the knowledge of the
Company, no material contracts, agreements, arrangements or understandings or
any actual or potential conflicts of interest between the Company or its
affiliates and (i) its executive officers, directors or affiliates or (ii)
Parent, Purchaser, their respective executive officers, directors or affiliates.
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                          AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER
 
     The following is a summary of the Merger Agreement. Defined terms used
below and not defined herein have the respective meanings assigned to those
terms in the Merger Agreement. Such summary is qualified in its entirety by
reference to the Merger Agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 1 hereto
and is incorporated herein by reference.
 
     THE OFFER.  In the Merger Agreement, the Purchaser has agreed, subject to
certain conditions, among other things, (i) to pay a purchase price of $1.65 per
offered Share, net to the seller in cash, and (ii) to accept for payment and pay
for all Shares validly tendered and not withdrawn pursuant to the Offer at the
earliest time following expiration of the Offer provided that all conditions to
the Offer shall have been satisfied or waived by the Purchaser. "Expiration
Date" means the latest time and date at which the Offer, as may be extended from
time to time by the Purchaser, shall expire. The Purchaser has expressly
reserved the right to waive any condition to the Offer, to increase the purchase
price payable pursuant to the Offer or make any other changes in the terms and
conditions of the Offer, provided, however, that unless previously approved by
the Company in writing, no change may be made that (i) decreases the price per
Share payable in the Offer, (ii) changes the form of consideration to be paid in
the Offer, (iii) imposes additional conditions to the Offer, (iv) increases the
minimum number of Shares that must be tendered as a condition to the acceptance
for payment and payment for Shares in the Offer, (v) waives the Minimum
Condition if such waiver would result in the purchase pursuant to the Offer of
less than the number of Shares which, together with the Contributed Shares,
would constitute less than 50.1% of the outstanding Shares, or (vi) extends the
Offer, provided, however, that the Purchaser may, without the consent of the
Company, extend the Offer (A) from time to time but not beyond 12 midnight, New
York City time, on October 22, 1997 if, at the scheduled expiration date of the
Offer, any of the conditions to the Purchaser's obligation to purchase Shares
are not satisfied or waived until such time as such conditions are satisfied or
(B) as provided in Section 9.03(a) of the Merger Agreement. The Purchaser agreed
to extend the Offer for a period of up to ten further Business Days, in the
event that the Minimum Condition is not satisfied or waived at the initial
expiration date of the Offer.
 
     RECOMMENDATION.  Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, the Company has approved
of and consented to the Offer and represented, among other things, that its
Board of Directors, at a meeting duly called and held on August 29, 1997 has,
among other things, unanimously (A) determined that the Merger Agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, including each of the Offer and the Merger,
are fair to, and in the best interests of, the shareholders of the Company, (B)
approved and adopted the Merger Agreement and the transactions contemplated
thereby, including the Offer and the Merger and the transactions contemplated
thereby, in all respects and that such approval constitutes approval of the
Offer, the Merger Agreement and the Merger and the transactions contemplated
thereby, for purposes of Sections 902 and 912 of the NYBCL, (C) recommended that
the Shareholders of the Company accept the Offer, tender their Shares thereunder
to the Purchaser and approve and adopt the Merger Agreement and the Merger and
(D) provided for the cancellation of all Options.
 
     THE MERGER.  The Merger Agreement provides that, subject to the terms and
conditions thereof and in accordance with New York Law, at the Effective Time,
Parent shall cause the Purchaser to merge with and into the Company. Upon
surrender of the stock certificate that, immediately prior to the Effective
Time, represented an issued and outstanding Share, by virtue of the Merger, at
the Effective Time, each Share issued and outstanding immediately prior to the
Effective Time (other than any Shares owned by Parent, the Purchaser or any
other wholly-owned subsidiary of Parent, Dissenting Shares and any Shares held
in the treasury of the Company or by any subsidiary of the Company), shall be
converted into a certificate (a "Certificate") that represents the right to
receive an amount in cash equal to the greater of $1.65 or any greater amount
per Share paid pursuant to the Offer as it may be amended, without interest (the
"Merger Consideration"). Each Share issued and outstanding immediately prior to
the Effective Time and owned by Parent, the Purchaser or any other wholly-owned
subsidiary of Parent or held in the Company's treasury or by any subsidiary of
the Company, shall be canceled without payment of any consideration therefor.
Each share of Common Stock, $0.01 par value, of the Purchaser issued and
outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into and
become that number of fully-paid and non-assessable shares of Common
 
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Stock, par value $.16 2/3 per share, of the Surviving Corporation as shall equal
the quotient of the number of Shares issued and outstanding at the Effective
Time divided by 1,000.
 
     AGREEMENTS OF THE COMPANY, THE PURCHASER AND THE PARENT.  In the Merger
Agreement, the Company has covenanted and agreed that, it shall, and shall cause
each of its subsidiaries to, use its reasonable efforts in light of the
Company's present financial condition to preserve intact the business
organization of the Company and each of its subsidiaries, to keep available,
consistent with the Merger Agreement, the services of their respective operating
personnel and to preserve the goodwill of the Company and its subsidiaries with
respect to third parties having a business relationship with each of them,
including, without limitation, suppliers. Except as contemplated by the Merger
Agreement, during the period from the date of the Merger Agreement to the
Effective Time, the Company and each of its subsidiaries will conduct their
respective businesses and operations only in the ordinary and usual course of
business consistent with past practice.
 
     Without limiting the generality of the provisions described in the
preceding paragraph, the Merger Agreement provides that prior to the Effective
Time, without the written Consent of Parent, the Company will not and will cause
each of its subsidiaries not to:
 
          (a) amend its certificate of incorporation or by-laws or similar
     governing documents;
 
          (b) (i) create, incur or assume any indebtedness for borrowed money,
     except indebtedness for borrowed money incurred under the Credit Agreement
     or pursuant to a new credit agreement refinancing such borrowing in
     conformity with the terms of the Bank Letter of Intent, or the Bank
     Standstill Agreement, or (ii) assume, guarantee, endorse or otherwise
     become liable or responsible for the obligations of any other person other
     than any subsidiaries of the Company;
 
          (c) declare, set aside or pay any dividend or other distribution in
     respect of its capital stock;
 
          (d) issue, sell, grant purchase or redeem, whether by dividend or
     otherwise, any shares of its capital stock or securities convertible into
     or exercisable for, or options with respect to, or warrants to purchase or
     rights to subscribe to or otherwise purchase, or subdivide or in any way
     reclassify, any shares of its capital stock, except for the issuance of
     Shares issuable upon conversion of the Convertible Loan Notes in accordance
     with their terms or the exercise of Options outstanding on the date of the
     Merger Agreement;
 
          (e) except in respect of regularly scheduled raises or raises which
     have been approved by the compensation committee of the Board prior to the
     date of the Merger Agreement in the ordinary course of business consistent
     with past practice: (i) increase the aggregate amount of compensation
     payable or to become payable to any of its directors, officers or certain
     employees of the Company, whether by salary or bonus, (ii) increase the
     rate or term of, or otherwise alter, amend or nullify any, or enter into
     any new, employment agreement bonuses, insurance, pension, severance or
     other Company Benefit Plan, payment or arrangement made to, for or with any
     such directors, officers or employees;
 
          (f) enter into any agreement, commitment or transaction, which, if
     entered into prior to the date of the Merger Agreement, would have been
     required to be disclosed in the Company Disclosure Letter, with certain
     exceptions;
 
          (g) sell, transfer, mortgage, pledge, grant any security interest in,
     or permit the imposition of any lien or other encumbrance on, any asset
     other than in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice
     and except (i) pursuant to the Credit Agreement, or (ii) pursuant to the
     refinancing of borrowings under the Credit Agreement pursuant to a new
     credit agreement in conformity with the terms set forth in the Bank Letter
     of Intent or (iii) pursuant to the Sale and Leaseback Letter of Intent;
 
          (h) waive any material right under any material agreement;
 
          (i) other than as required by any change in GAAP, make any material
     change in its accounting methods or practices or make any material change
     in depreciation or amortization policies or rates
 
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     adopted by it for accounting purposes or, other than normal writedowns or
     writeoffs consistent with past practice, make any writeoffs of notes or
     accounts receivable;
 
          (j) make any loan or advance to any of its shareholders, officers,
     directors, employees, with certain exceptions, or make any other loan or
     advance to any other person (other than any subsidiary of the Company) or
     group otherwise than in the ordinary course of business consistent with
     past practice;
 
          (k) terminate or fail to renew, where such renewal is at the Company's
     or a subsidiary's option, or replace on substantially similar or more
     favorable terms any contract or other agreement other than in the ordinary
     course of business, which termination or failure to renew, individually or
     in the aggregate, could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse
     Effect;
 
          (l) fail to maintain all Insurance Policies in full force and effect
     or fail to renew or replace with equivalent coverage any Insurance Policy
     which has expired;
 
          (m) take any action which constitutes a violation of any Liquor
     License which violation individually or in the aggregate would, in the
     reasonable judgment of the Company, be likely to result in the termination
     of any one or more Liquor Licenses covering operations generating,
     individually or in the aggregate for the three months ended June 30, 1997,
     average weekly gross food and beverage revenues in excess of $300,000;
 
          (n) fail to operate, maintain, repair or otherwise preserve the Real
     Property substantially in accordance with current practice in light of the
     Company's present financial condition and not to exceed the capital
     expenditure budget of the Company previously disclosed to Parent;
 
          (o) fail to comply with all applicable filings, payment and
     withholding obligations under all applicable federal, state, local and
     foreign tax laws except where such failure to comply would not have a
     Material Adverse Effect;
 
          (p) breach, terminate or amend the Bank Standstill Agreement or
     terminate or amend either the Bank Letter of Intent or the Sale and
     Leaseback Letter of Intent or take any action not otherwise permitted or
     required pursuant to such agreements that directly results in the
     counterparty to the Bank Letter of Intent or the Sale and Leaseback Letter
     of Intent terminating or stating an intention to terminate the same; or
 
          (q) agree in writing to, or otherwise take or authorize, any of the
     foregoing actions.
 
     The Merger Agreement provides that if required by applicable law in order
to consummate the Merger following expiration of the Offer and acceptance for
payment and purchase of Shares by the Purchaser pursuant to the terms of the
Offer, the Company shall (and Parent and the Purchaser shall use all reasonable
efforts to cause the Company to) take all action to the extent necessary to
consummate the Merger in accordance with applicable law, its Certificate of
Incorporation and By-Laws, including (i) duly call, give notice of, convene and
hold an annual or special meeting of its shareholders (the "Shareholders'
Meeting"), to be held as soon as practicable, for the purpose of approving the
Merger Agreement, the Merger and the transactions contemplated thereby; (ii)
include in a proxy statement the recommendation of the Board that shareholders
of the Company vote in favor of the approval and adoption of the Merger
Agreement and the Merger and the other transactions contemplated thereby and the
determination of the Board that the Merger Agreement and the transactions
contemplated thereby, including the Offer and the Merger, are fair to, and in
the best interests of, the shareholders of the Company; and (iii) prepare and
file a preliminary Proxy Statement with the SEC and, after consultation with
Parent and the Purchase, respond promptly to any comments made by the SEC with
respect to the Proxy Statement and any preliminary version thereof and cause the
Proxy Statement to be mailed to its shareholders at the earliest practicable
time after responding to all such comments to the satisfaction of the Staff of
the SEC and to obtain the necessary approvals by its shareholders of this
Agreement.
 
     The Merger Agreement provides that the Company, Parent and the Purchaser,
as the case may be, shall promptly prepare and file any other filings required
under the Exchange Act or any other Federal or state
 
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securities or corporate laws relating to the Merger and the transactions
contemplated thereby (the "Other Filings").
 
     The Merger Agreement provides that at the Shareholders' Meeting, Parent,
the Purchaser, their affiliates and Permitted Assigns will vote all Shares owned
by them in favor of approval and adoption of the Merger Agreement, the Merger,
and the transactions contemplated thereby.
 
     The Merger Agreement provides that in the event that the Purchaser or any
Permitted Assigns shall acquire at least 90 percent of the outstanding Shares
pursuant to the Offer or otherwise, the parties agree, at the request of the
Purchaser, to take all necessary and appropriate action to cause the Merger to
become effective, in accordance with Section 905 of the NYBCL, as soon as
reasonably practicable after such acquisition and the satisfaction or waiver of
the conditions of the Merger Agreement, without a meeting of the shareholders of
the Company.
 
     Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, promptly upon the acceptance for payment
of, and payment by the Purchaser in accordance with the Offer for, Shares
pursuant to the Offer, provided the Purchaser shall have purchased not less than
50.1% of the outstanding Shares, the Purchaser shall be entitled to designate
such number of directors, rounded up to the next whole number, equal to that
number of directors which equals the product of the total number of directors on
the Board (giving effect to the directors elected pursuant to this sentence)
multiplied by the percentage that such number of Shares owned in the aggregate
by the Purchaser or Parent, upon such acceptance for payment, bears to the
number of Shares outstanding; provided, however, that until the Effective Time
there shall be at least three Continuing Directors. The Company shall upon the
written request of the Purchaser, use its best efforts to cause the Purchaser's
designees to be so elected. Notwithstanding the foregoing, it is the parties
present intention to have a Board of seven directors following consummation of
the Offer and prior to the Effective Time, the Board to consist of four
designees of the Purchaser and three Continuing Directors, and the Company
shall, upon the written request of the Purchaser, use its best efforts to cause
the resignation of such current directors as necessary, and the election of the
Purchaser's designees, to result in such seven member Board.
 
     The Company has agreed to take all actions required pursuant to Section
14(f) of the Exchange Act and Rule 14f-1 promulgated thereunder in order to
fulfill its obligations under the Merger Agreement described in the preceding
paragraph. Annex I to this Schedule 14D-9 fulfills the Company's obligations in
this regard under the Merger Agreement. Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, Parent
and the Purchaser will supply to the Company any information with respect to any
of them and their nominees, officers, directors and affiliates required by
Section 14(f) and Rule 14f-1 and such other rules and regulations as are
applicable.
 
     After the time that the Purchaser's designees constitute at least a
majority of the Board and until the Effective Time, any amendment or termination
of the Merger Agreement or the Certificate of Incorporation or By-laws of the
Company and any extension for the performance or waiver of the obligations or
other acts of Parent or the Purchaser or waiver of the Company's rights
hereunder shall also require the approval of a majority of the then serving
directors, if any, who are directors as of the date hereof (the "Continuing
Directors" who shall include each member of the Special Committee of the Board
formed to consider the Merger for so long as he wishes to serve) except to the
extent that applicable law requires that such action be acted upon by the full
Board, in which case such action will require the concurrence of a majority of
the Board, which majority shall include each of the Continuing Directors. If the
number of Continuing Directors prior to the Effective Time is reduced below
three for any reason, the remaining Continuing Directors or Director shall be
entitled to designate persons to fill such vacancies who shall be deemed
Continuing Directors for all purposes of this Agreement. The Board shall not
delegate any matter set forth in this paragraph to any committee of the Board.
 
     Under the Merger Agreement, the directors of the Purchaser immediately
prior to the Effective Time shall be the initial directors of the Surviving
Corporation and the officers of the Company immediately prior to the Effective
Time shall be the initial officers of the Surviving Corporation, in each case
until their respective successors are duly elected or appointed and qualified.
 
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     Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, from the date of the Merger Agreement to
the Effective Time, subject to appropriate provisions regarding confidentiality,
the Company shall, during ordinary business hours and upon reasonable advance
notice, (i) give Parent and Parent's authorized representatives all access
Parent shall reasonably request to all of its and each of its subsidiaries
books, records, contracts, commitments, restaurants, offices and other
facilities and properties, and its and each of its subsidiaries' personnel,
representatives, accountants and agents; (ii) permit Parent to make such
inspections thereof, except as limited by the Merger Agreement with respect to
environmental investigations, as it may reasonably request during normal
business hours, and (iii) cause its and each of its subsidiaries' officers and
advisors to furnish to Parent its financial and operating data and such other
existing information with respect to its business, properties, assets,
liabilities and personnel, as Parent may from time to time reasonably request,
provided, however, that any such investigation shall be conducted in such a
manner as not to interfere unreasonably with the operation of the business of
the Company.
 
     DISSENTERS' RIGHTS.  Notwithstanding any other provision of the Merger
Agreement to the contrary, Shares that have not been voted in favor of the
approval and adoption of the Merger and with respect to which dissenters' rights
shall have been demanded and perfected in accordance with Sections 623 and 910
of the NYBCL (the "Dissenting Shares") and not withdrawn shall not be converted
into the right to receive cash at or after the Effective Time, but such Shares
shall become the right to receive such consideration as may be determined to be
due to holders of Dissenting Shares pursuant to the laws of the State of New
York unless and until the holder of such Dissenting Shares withdraws his or her
demand for such appraisal or becomes ineligible for such appraisal. If a holder
of Dissenting Shares shall withdraw his or her demand for such appraisal or
shall become ineligible for such appraisal under applicable law (through failure
to perfect or otherwise), then, as of the Effective Time or the occurrence of
such event, whichever last occurs, such holder's Dissenting Shares shall
automatically be converted into and represent the right to receive the Merger
Consideration, without interest.
 
     NO SOLICITATION.  In accordance with the terms of the Merger Agreement, the
Company has agreed that it will not, and will not permit any of its officers,
directors, advisors, agents or representatives to, directly or indirectly,
solicit or encourage the initiation or submission of any inquiries, proposals or
offers regarding any acquisition, merger, tender offer, exchange offer,
recapitalization (involving an equity investment other than solely from existing
shareholders) or similar transaction involving, sale of all or a substantial
portion of the assets of, or sale of shares of capital stock or securities
convertible into capital stock, (other than a sale only to existing lenders in
connection with a refinancing of debt) of the Company, whether or not in writing
and whether or not delivered to the shareholders of the Company, or similar
transactions involving the Company (any of the foregoing inquires, proposals or
offers being referred to herein as an "Acquisition Proposal"); provided however,
that nothing contained in the Merger Agreement shall prevent the Company's Board
from (i) referring any third party to this provision, (ii) considering
negotiating or participating in discussions regarding an unsolicited bona fide
written Acquisition Proposal or (iii) complying with Rule 14e-2(a) or Rule 14d-9
promulgated under the Exchange Act, if applicable, with regard to an Acquisition
Proposal made in the form of a tender offer by a third party. If the Board of
the Company after duly considering advice written or otherwise, of the Company's
outside counsel and financial advisor, determines in good faith that it would be
consistent with its fiduciary responsibilities to approve or recommend a
Superior Proposal, then (A) the Company shall not enter into any agreement with
respect to the Superior Proposal and (B) any other obligation of the Company
under the Merger Agreement shall not be affected unless the Merger Agreement is
terminated and fees and/or expenses are paid in accordance with the terms of the
Merger Agreement. As used in the Merger Agreement, the term "Superior Proposal"
means a bona fide proposal made by a third party to acquire the Company pursuant
to a tender or exchange offer, a merger, a sale of all or substantially all of
its assets or otherwise that the Board determines in its good faith judgment to
be more favorable to the Company's shareholders than the Offer and the Merger
(after considering the advice, written or otherwise, of its outside counsel and
financial advisor).
 
     HSR FILINGS.  The Merger Agreement provides that, upon the terms and
subject to the conditions thereof, each of the parties thereto shall file, or
cause to be filed, as promptly as possible and in no event later than ten
Business Days after the execution date of the Merger Agreement, with the United
States Federal
 
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Trade Commission and the Antitrust Division of the United States Department of
Justice pursuant to the HSR Act, the notification required by the HSR Act,
including all requisite documents, materials and information therefor, and
request early termination of the waiting period under the HSR Act.
 
     EMPLOYEE BENEFITS MATTERS.  Under the Merger Agreement (a) from and after
the date of purchase of Shares pursuant to the Offer, the Company or the
Surviving Corporation will, and Parent will cause the Company or the Surviving
Corporation to honor, in accordance with their terms, all individual employment,
severance and change of control agreements between the Company and any officer,
director or employee of the Company including, without limitation, bonuses,
incentive or deferred compensation in existence on the date of the Merger
Agreement, (b) from and after the date of purchase of Shares pursuant to the
Offer, the Company or the Surviving Corporation, as applicable, will, and Parent
will, or will cause the Company, the Surviving Corporation or the Company to,
provide or pay when due to employees and former employees of the Company all
benefits and compensation pursuant to the Company Benefit Plans, policies and
arrangements in effect on the date of the Merger Agreement (other than with
respect to stock and stock-based plans or programs, including stock grants,
options to purchase stock, stock investment alternatives, or other stock-based
benefits or awards) earned or accrued through, and to which such individuals are
entitled as of, the Effective Time (or such later time as such Company Benefit
Plans as in effect at the Effective Time or terminated or canceled by the
Surviving Corporation in the manner and subject to the conditions of the Merger
Agreement); (c) for a period ending two (2) years after the Effective Time, the
Company or the Surviving Corporation, as applicable, will, and Parent, will
cause the Company or the Surviving Corporation to, provide to Company employees
and former employees benefits under all Company Benefit Plans, programs and
arrangements that provide benefits which are no less favorable in the aggregate
than those provided to such persons under the Company Benefit Plans, programs
and arrangements of the Company in effect on the date (other than with respect
to the agreements subject to subsection (a) above and other than with respect to
stock and stock-based plans or programs, including stock grants, options to
purchase stock, stock investment, alternatives, other stock based benefits or
awards; and (d) nothing in the Merger Agreement shall require the continued
employment of any person, and except as expressly set forth in the Merger
Agreement no provision therein shall prevent Parent or Surviving Corporation
from amending or terminating any Company Benefit Plan.
 
     Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, Parent shall cause the Company to pay, in
accordance with their respective terms all bonuses, payments of incentive
compensation pursuant to the Company's incentive compensation plans, severance
payments and other payments as disclosed on the Company Disclosure Letter in
accordance with the terms of the Merger Agreement.
 
     DIRECTORS' AND OFFICERS' INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE.  The Merger
Agreement provides that the Certificate of Incorporation of the Surviving
Corporation shall, for a period of six years from the Effective Time, contain
provisions no less favorable with respect to indemnification than are set forth
in such Certificate of Incorporation of the Company, as amended as set forth in
Exhibit A to the Merger Agreement, to provide that officers and directors shall
be indemnified to the fullest extent permitted under New York law, which
provisions shall not be amended, repealed or otherwise modified for a period of
six years from the Effective Time in any manner that would adversely affect the
rights thereunder of individuals who at any time prior to the Effective Time
were directors, officers, agents or employees of the Company, unless such
modification shall be required by law.
 
     Under the Merger Agreement, the Company shall, to the fullest extent
permitted under New York law and regardless of whether the Merger becomes
effective, indemnify and hold harmless, and, after the Effective Time the
Surviving Corporation shall, to the fullest extent permitted under New York law,
indemnify and hold harmless, each present and former director and officer of the
Company and each of its Subsidiaries (collectively, the "Indemnified Parties")
against judgments, fines, reasonable amounts paid in settlement and reasonable
expenses (including attorneys' fees, costs and charges) incurred as a result of
any action or proceeding (whether arising before or after the Effective Time),
or any appeal therefrom whether civil or criminal, arising out of or pertaining
to any action or omission in their capacity as an officer or director, prior to
or at the Effective Time, for a period of six years after the Effective Time (or
with respect to claims arising from service as an officer or director prior to
the Effective Time and asserted or made prior to such sixth
 
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anniversary which have not been resolved prior to such sixth anniversary, until
the time such matters are finally resolved). In the event of any such action or
proceeding (i) the Company or the Surviving Corporation, as the case may be,
shall pay the reasonable fees and expenses of counsel selected by the
Indemnified Parties, which counsel shall be reasonably satisfactory to the
Company or the Surviving Corporation, promptly after statements therefor are
received provided that an agreement has been entered into by such Indemnified
Party agreeing to repay such amounts to the Company if the Indemnified Party is
ultimately found not to be entitled to indemnification, by a final judgment (not
subject to further appeal) of a court of competent jurisdiction, or to the
extent such amount exceeds the indemnification to which such Indemnified Party
is entitled, under New York law, and (ii) the Company and the Surviving
Corporation shall cooperate and provide access to all documents necessary or
beneficial to the defense of any such matter; provided, however, that neither
the Company nor the Surviving Corporation shall be liable for any settlement
effected without its written consent (which consent shall not be unreasonably
withheld, delayed or conditioned); and provided further that neither the Company
nor the Surviving Corporation shall be obligated to pay the fees and expenses of
more than one counsel for all Indemnified Parties in any single action except to
the extent that two or more of such Indemnified Parties shall have conflicting
interests in the outcome of such action.
 
     Under the Merger Agreement, the Surviving Corporation has agreed to use its
best efforts to maintain in effect for six years from the Effective Time, if
available, the current directors' and officers' liability insurance policies
maintained by the Company (provided that the Surviving Corporation may
substitute therefor policies of at least the same coverage containing terms and
conditions which are not materially less favorable) with respect to matters
occurring prior to the Effective Time; provided, however, that the Surviving
Corporation shall not be required to maintain such insurance to the extent that
the annual premiums therefor exceed 120% of the annual premiums currently paid
by the company in respect of the current policy or policies (the "Maximum
Amount"), but in such case shall purchase as much comparable coverage as
available for the Maximum Amount.
 
     The Merger Agreement further provides that in the event the Company or the
Surviving Corporation or any of their respective successors (i) is consolidated
with or merges into another person and shall not be the continuing or surviving
corporation or entity of such consolidation or merger or (ii) transfers all or
substantially all of its properties and assets to any person in a single
transaction or a series of transactions, then, and in each such case, the Parent
shall make or cause to be made proper provision so that the successors or
transferees of the Company or the Surviving Corporation, as the case may be,
shall comply in all material respects with the indemnification and insurance
provisions provided in the Merger Agreement.
 
     CANCELLATION OF OPTIONS.  Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, the Company
agreed that at or immediately prior to the Effective Time, each outstanding
option (an "Option") to purchase shares of Common Stock of the Company pursuant
to the Company's 1989 Amended and Restated Stock Option Plan (the "Stock Option
Plan"), the Company's 1992 Equity Incentive Plan (the "Equity Incentive Plan")
or otherwise (collectively, the "Stock Plans"), whether or not then exercisable,
shall be cancelled by the Company, and each holder of a cancelled Option shall
have the right to receive at the Effective Time from the Company, in
consideration for the cancellation of such Option (i) in the case of Options
that are "in the money", an amount in cash equal to the product of (A) the
number of Shares previously subject to such Option and (B) the excess, if any,
of the Merger Consideration over the exercise price per Share previously subject
to such Option and (ii) in the case of Options that are not "in the money", an
amount of cash set forth on the Schedule of Option Payments authorized and
approved by the Compensation Committee of the Board.
 
     (b) Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, the Company has agreed to terminate
all Stock Plans as of the Effective Time, and the Company shall ensure that
following the Effective Time no holder of an Option or any participant in any
Stock Plans shall have any right thereunder to acquire any capital stock of the
Company, Parent or the Surviving Corporation.
 
     REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES.  The Merger Agreement contains customary
representations and warranties with respect to the Company, including, but not
limited to, (i) the Company's organization and capitalization, (ii) that the
Board of Directors of the Company has approved the Merger Agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby (including the Offer and the Merger) so as to
render the prohibitions of
 
                                        8
   10
 
Section 912 of the NYBCL to be inapplicable to the Merger Agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, (iii) relating to required consents,
approvals and governmental filings (iv) the accuracy of the Company's documents
and reports filed with the SEC, the Company's financial statements and financial
condition, (v) the absence of certain changes or events which, in the reasonable
opinion of the Company, are likely, individually or in the aggregate, to have a
Material Adverse Effect or adversely affect the ability of the Company to
consummate the transactions contemplated by the Merger Agreement, (vi) the
absence of certain litigation, (vii) the Company's employee benefit plans, (vii)
real property matters, (viii) tax matters, (ix) environmental matters, and (x)
intellectual property matters.
 
     In the Merger Agreement, Parent and the Purchaser have made customary
representations and warranties, including without limitation, relating to their
respective corporate organization, authority to execute, deliver and perform the
Merger Agreement, and that Parent has or will have and will make available to
the Purchaser or the Paying Agent, as applicable, sufficient funds in sufficient
time to consummate the Offer and the Merger in accordance with the terms of the
Merger Agreement.
 
     CONDITIONS TO MERGER.  The respective obligations of each party to the
Merger Agreement to effect the Merger are subject to the satisfaction at or
prior to the Effective Time of the following conditions: (a) the Purchaser shall
have accepted for payment, and paid for, Shares validly tendered and not
withdrawn pursuant to the Offer representing (together with Shares otherwise
owned by Parent or the Purchaser) not less than 50.1% of the then outstanding
Shares; (b) the Merger Agreement and the Merger shall have been approved and
adopted by the requisite vote or consent, if any, of the shareholders of the
Company required by the NYBCL; and (c) no order, statute, rule, regulation,
execution order, stay, decree, judgment, or injunction shall have been enacted,
entered issued, promulgated or enforced by any court or governmental authority
which prohibits or restricts the consummator of the Merger. The Merger Agreement
provides that the obligations of Parent and the Purchaser to effect the Merger
shall be further subject to satisfaction of the condition, unless waived by
Parent, that all outstanding Options shall have been surrendered prior to or
simultaneously with the Effective Time.
 
     TERMINATION.  The Merger Agreement may be terminated and the Offer and the
Merger may be abandoned at any time prior to the Effective Time, whether prior
to or after approval of the Merger by the shareholders of the Company, if
required:
 
          (a) by mutual written consent of Parent, the Purchaser and the
     Company;
 
          (b) by the Company if: (i) the Purchaser shall fail to commerce the
     Offer within five Business Days of the public announcement thereof unless
     the failure to commence the Offer shall be due to (A) the failure of the
     Company (or any of its subsidiaries) to perform in any material respect any
     of its obligations under the Merger Agreement then required to be performed
     or (B) any occurrence or circumstance which would result in the failure of
     any condition to the Offer set forth in the Merger Agreement; (ii) the
     Purchaser shall have (A) terminated the Offer, (B) allowed the Offer to
     expire without the purchase of any Shares thereunder in accordance with the
     terms of the Merger Agreement, or (C) failed to accept Shares for payment
     pursuant to the Offer on or prior to October 22, 1997 unless (I) such
     termination or expiration or failure shall be due to the failure of any
     condition set forth in (i) subsections (iv), (vii), (viii) or (ix) of this
     paragraph (with respect to any consent or approval required to be obtained
     by the Company) of Annex A of the Merger Agreement or paragraph (ii) of
     Annex A (otherwise than in circumstances that would entitle the Company to
     terminate the Merger Agreement pursuant to Section 9.01(d) of the Merger
     Agreement or (2) paragraph (i) of Annex A, unless the Purchaser shall have
     failed to accept Shares for payment on or prior to October 31, 1997 or (II)
     the provisions of the proviso in Section 9.03(a) of the Merger Agreement
     are applicable, unless the Purchaser shall have failed to accept Shares for
     payment on or prior to October 31, 1997; (iii) prior to the purchase of
     Shares pursuant to the Offer, the Purchaser shall have breached or failed
     to perform in any material respect any of its obligations under the Merger
     Agreement which is required to be performed at such time and such breach or
     failure materially delays consummation of the Offer, or materially and
     adversely affects the ability of the Purchaser and Parent to consummate the
     Offer and the Merger on substantially the terms set forth in the Merger
     Agreement; (iv) if the representations and warranties of
 
                                        9
   11
 
     the Purchaser set forth in the Merger Agreement are not true and correct in
     all material respects at any time prior to the expiration of termination of
     the Offer (except as to those representations and warranties which are made
     as of a specified date, which shall be true and correct as of such date)
     and such failure materially delays consummation of the Offer, or materially
     and adversely affects the ability of the Purchaser and Parent to consummate
     the Offer and the Merger on substantially the terms set forth in the Merger
     Agreement; (v) prior to the purchase of Shares pursuant to the Offer, a
     corporation, partnership, person or other entity or group (each a "Person")
     shall have made a Superior Proposal and the Board, after duly considering
     advice written or otherwise of the Company's outside counsel and financial
     advisors, determines in good faith that it would be consistent with its
     fiduciary responsibilities to approve or recommend such Superior Proposal
     provided that such termination shall not be effective until payment of the
     Termination Fee and Expenses in the manner required by the Merger
     Agreement; or (vi) the Minimum Condition is not satisfied or waived as
     permitted by the Merger Agreement upon final expiration of the Offer.
 
          (c) by Parent and the Purchaser if (i) due to any occurrence or
     circumstances which would result in a failure to satisfy any of the
     conditions set forth in Annex A to the Merger Agreement, the Purchaser
     shall have failed to commence the Offer within five Business Days of the
     public announcement thereof; (ii) as a result of a failure to satisfy any
     of the conditions set forth in Annex A to the Merger Agreement, the
     Purchaser shall have (A) terminated the Offer or (B) failed to accept
     Shares for payment pursuant to the Offer on or prior to October 22, 1997;
     (iii) the Effective Time shall not have occurred on or prior to November
     30, 1997, due to a failure of the Company obtaining the requisite
     Shareholder approval for the Merger or the cancellation of options pursuant
     to the Merger Agreement or an intervening law or statute. Otherwise than as
     a result of a breach or default by Parent or the Purchaser hereunder; (iv)
     the Company shall have breached its obligations regarding solicitation
     restrictions contained in the Merger Agreement; (v) the Board shall have
     withdrawn or modified (including by amendment of this Schedule 14D-9), in a
     manner adverse to the Purchaser, its approval or recommendation of the
     Offer, this Agreement or the Merger or shall have recommended or approved
     another tender or exchange offer or Acquisition Proposal (whether or not a
     Superior Proposal), or shall have adopted any resolution to effect any of
     the foregoing;
 
          (d) by Parent and the Purchaser or the Company if any court of
     competent jurisdiction in the United States or other United States
     governmental body shall have issued an order, decree or ruling or taken any
     other action restraining, enjoining or otherwise prohibiting the Merger or
     the acceptance for payment and payment for the Shares in the Offer and such
     order, decree, ruling or other action is or shall have become
     nonappealable.
 
     In the event of the termination of the Merger Agreement and the abandonment
of the Offer and the Merger pursuant to the terms of the Merger Agreement, the
Merger Agreement shall forthwith become void and have no effect, without any
liability on the part of any party hereto or its affiliates, directors, officers
or shareholders, provided that no such termination shall relieve any of the
Company, Parent or the Purchaser, as the case may be, from liability for damages
arising (a) from any willful or intentional breach of the Merger Agreement or
(b) from certain obligations regarding fees and expenses.
 
     FEES AND EXPENSES.  In accordance with the terms of the Merger Agreement,
in the event that : (i) the Company terminates the Merger Agreement due to the
acceptance of the board of a Superior Proposal, pursuant to Section 9.01(b)(v)
or (ii) prior to the final expiration date ("Expiration Date") of the Offer, (A)
an Acquisition Proposal, or interest in or intention to pursue an Acquisition
Proposal has been publicly announced or publicly confirmed by any person (other
than Parent or the Purchaser) (whether by press release Exchange Act filing or
otherwise), and (B) on or prior to the 180th day following the initial
expiration date of the Offer (I) the Company enters into any agreement with
respect to any Acquisition Proposal or (II) any Acquisition Proposal is
commenced by way of tender offer or exchange offer: then, in either such event,
the Company shall pay to Parent a fee in the amount of $1,100,000 (the
"Termination Fee"), plus Expenses. Notwithstanding the foregoing, no Termination
Fee will be payable in the case of clause (ii) above if the Purchaser has not,
prior to the Expiration Date, waived the Minimum Condition so as to provide that
the minimum number of Shares that must be validly tendered as a condition to the
Purchaser's acceptance for payment of Shares pursuant to the Offer, together
with the Contributed Shares, shall be no greater than 66 2/3%
 
                                       10
   12
 
of the outstanding Shares; provided, however, that in event of such reduction in
the Minimum Condition, the Purchaser shall be entitled to extend the Offer from
time to time, but in no event beyond October 31, 1997, until Shares validly
tendered (and not withdrawn) in the Offer, together with the Contributed Shares,
represent at least 90% of the outstanding Shares.
 
     If (i) the Merger Agreement is terminated by the Purchaser and Parent
pursuant to Section 9.01(c)(i) of the Merger Agreement or as a result of the
Company's failure to satisfy the condition set forth in paragraph (iv) of Annex
A thereto and (ii) the Company's breach of any of its representations and
warranties under the Merger Agreement and/or its failure to perform its material
obligations, covenants or agreements under the Merger Agreement resulting in the
failure to satisfy such condition set forth in paragraph (iv) of Annex A,
individually or in the aggregate, has had or is reasonably likely to have a
Material Adverse Effect, the Company shall reimburse Parent and Purchaser for
all Expenses.
 
     AMENDMENTS.  The Merger Agreement may be amended, modified or supplemented
only by written agreement of Parent (for itself and the Purchaser) and the
Company at any time prior to the Effective Time with respect to any of the terms
contained herein executed by duly authorized officers of the respective parties,
except that after the earlier of (a) the purchase by the Purchaser of a majority
of the Shares on a fully diluted basis, and (b) the meeting of shareholders to
approve the Merger contemplated by the Merger Agreement, the price per Share to
be paid pursuant to the Merger Agreement to the holders of Shares shall in no
event be decreased and the form of consideration to be received by the holders
of such Shares in the Merger shall in no event be altered without the approval
of such holders.
 
     CERTAIN CONDITIONS OF THE OFFER.  Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, the
Minimum Condition and other conditions to the Offer are as follows:
 
          Notwithstanding any other provision of the Merger Agreement or the
     Offer, the Purchaser shall not be required to accept for payment, purchase
     or pay for any Shares tendered pursuant to the Offer, may postpone the
     acceptance for payment of and payment for any tendered Shares and may
     terminate or subject to the terms of the Merger Agreement, amend the Offer
     if (a) there shall not have been validly tendered to the Purchaser (and not
     withdrawn) that number of Shares which, when aggregated with the
     Contributed Shares, represents at least 90% of the Shares outstanding (the
     "Minimum Condition"); or (b) on or after the date of the Merger Agreement
     and at or before the time of acceptance for payment of any such Shares
     (whether or not any Shares have theretofore been accepted for payment or
     paid for pursuant to the Offer) any of the following shall occur (each of
     paragraphs (i) through (ix) providing a separate and independent condition
     to the Purchaser's obligation pursuant to the Offer):
 
             (i) any waiting period applicable to the Offer and the Merger
        pursuant to the HSR Act shall not have expired or been terminated; or
 
             (ii) there shall have been instituted or be pending any action,
        proceeding, application, claim or counterclaim by any government or
        governmental authority or agency, domestic or foreign, before any court
        or governmental regulatory or administrative agency, authority or
        tribunal, domestic or foreign (a "Claim"), challenging the acquisition
        by Parent or the Purchaser of the Shares, restraining or prohibiting the
        making or consummation of the Offer or the Merger or seeking to obtain
        from Parent or the Purchaser any damages that would result in a Material
        Adverse Effect if such were assessed against the Company restraining or
        prohibiting, or limiting in any material respect, the ownership or
        operation by Parent or the Purchaser of any material portion of the
        business or assets of the Company or any of its subsidiaries or to
        compel Parent or the Purchaser to dispose of or forfeit material
        incidents of control of all or any material portion of the business or
        assets of the Company or any of its subsidiaries or imposing limitations
        on the ability of Parent or the Purchaser of effectively to exercise
        full rights of ownership of the Shares, including without limitation,
        the right to vote any Shares acquired or owned by Parent or the
        Purchaser on all matters properly presented, to the Company's
        shareholders; or seeking to require divestiture by Parent or the
        Purchaser of any Shares; or
 
                                       11
   13
 
             (iii) there shall be any statute, rule, regulation, judgment, order
        or injunction, enacted, promulgated, entered, enforced or deemed
        applicable to the Offer, the Merger or the Merger Agreement, or any
        other action shall have been taken by any government, governmental
        authority or court, domestic or foreign,and other than relating to
        Liquor License Approvals, which are addressed in paragraph (ix) below,
        other than the routine application to the Offer or the Merger of waiting
        periods under the HSR Act, that has, or has a substantial likelihood of
        resulting in, any of the consequences referred to in paragraph (ii)
        above; or
 
             (iv) the Company shall have breached or failed to perform in any
        material respect any of its material obligations, covenants or
        agreements contained in the Merger Agreement, or any of the
        representations and warranties of the Company set forth in the Merger
        Agreement shall not have been true and correct in any material respect
        when made or, except for any representations and warranties made as of a
        specific date, shall have ceased to be true and correct in any material
        respect (or, in the case of representations and warranties that are
        specifically qualified as to materiality, shall not have been true and
        correct when made or shall have ceased to be true and correct) and if
        curable, the Company shall have failed to cure such breach within three
        (3) Business Days after written notice from Purchaser of such failure;
        or
 
             (v) there shall have occurred (A) (1) any general suspension of
        trading in, or limitation on prices for, securities on the New York
        Stock Exchange, Inc, any other national securities exchange or NASDAQ,
        (2) the declaration of a banking moratorium or any mandatory suspension
        of payments in respect of banks in the United States (3) the
        commencement of or escalation of a war, armed hostilities or other
        international or national calamity directly or indirectly involving the
        Untied States, (4) in the case of any of the foregoing existing on
        August 29, 1997, a material acceleration or worsening thereof, and (B)
        such occurrence has a Material Adverse Effect; or
 
             (vi) the Merger Agreement shall have been terminated in accordance
        with its terms; or
 
             (vii) the Company's Board of Directors shall have withdrawn or
        modified (including by amendment of the Schedule 14D-9) its approval or
        recommendation of the Offer, the Merger Agreement or the Merger or shall
        have approved or recommended any other tender or exchange offer or
        Acquisition Proposal, which, in the sole judgment of Parent in any such
        case, and regardless of the circumstances (including any action or
        omission by Parent) giving rise to such condition, makes it inadvisable
        to proceed with such acceptance for payment, except where as a result of
        the Company's receipt of an unsolicited Acquisition Proposal from, or
        commencement of an unsolicited tender or exchange offer by, a third
        party (A) the Company issues to its shareholders a communication that
        contains only the statements permitted by Rule 14d-9(e) under the
        Exchange Act (and does not otherwise withdraw, modify or amend its
        approval or recommendation of the Offer, the Merger or the Merger
        Agreement) and (B) within five Business Days of issuing such
        communication the Company publicly reconfirms its approval and
        recommendation of the Offer the Merger and the Merger Agreement; or
 
             (viii) either (A) any change or development, outside of the
        ordinary course of business consistent with past practice of the
        Company, not disclosed in the Company Disclosure Letter shall have
        occurred in the financial condition, assets, capitalization, prospects,
        shareholders' equity, licenses, permits, business or results of
        operations of the Company and its subsidiaries which in the reasonable
        judgment of the Purchaser is or is likely, individually or in the
        aggregate, to be materially adverse to the Company or any of its
        subsidiaries taken as a whole, or the Purchaser shall become aware of
        any fact (including, but not limited to, any such change or development)
        which is likely to have materially adverse significance with respect to
        the Company and its subsidiaries taken as a whole; provided, however,
        that no change, development or fact shall be deemed to be materially
        adverse for the purpose of this clause (A) unless, individually or when
        combined with all other changes, developments or facts, it is, in the
        reasonable judgment of the Purchaser, likely to result in losses (after
        taking into account any amounts recovered or insurance proceeds
        receivable by the Company in compensation for such losses) in excess of
        $4,500,000, or (B) the average gross sales of
 
                                       12
   14
 
        the Company as reported by the Company in any 21 day period after the
        date of the Merger Agreement shall be less than $3,000,000 per week; or
 
             (ix) the Company and/or the Purchaser shall not have obtained (1)
        any Liquor License Approval required to be obtained prior to Parent's
        and the Purchaser's obtaining control of the Company through the
        Purchaser's acceptance for payment of Shares pursuant to the Offer (or
        Parent and the Purchaser shall not have made arrangements reasonably
        satisfactory to them to allow any Liquor License subject to any such
        Liquor License Approval to continue in full force and effect following
        consummation of the Offer and the Merger pending receipt of such Liquor
        License Approval), other than any Liquor License Approvals with respect
        to Liquor Licenses that, individually or in the aggregate, cover
        restaurant operations (I) generating, individually or in the aggregate,
        for the three months ended June 30, 1997, average weekly gross food and
        beverage revenue of less than $300,000 and (II) with average profit
        after controllables in any 21 day period after the date of the Merger
        Agreement which, when deducted from the average profit after
        controllables of the Company in the same 21 day period, would not result
        in such average profit after controllables of the Company totaling less
        than $540,000 per week, or (2) any consent or approval which is legally
        required to be obtained prior to consummation of the Offer and the
        Merger and was not disclosed in the Company Disclosure Letter which, if
        not obtained would, individually or in the aggregate, have a Material
        Adverse Effect, or (B) Parent and the Purchaser shall not have obtained
        continuing assurances from the appropriate authority in any of the
        Commonwealth of Massachusetts, State of New York or State of Ohio, or
        otherwise made arrangements with such authority, satisfactory to Parent
        and the Purchaser in their sole discretion, that there is no legal
        impediment to their obtaining control of the Company under such
        Commonwealth's or State's tied-house statute.
 
                             SHAREHOLDER AGREEMENT
 
     The following is a summary of the Shareholder Agreement (the "Shareholder
Agreement"), dated as of August 29, 1997, between the Purchaser, Parent, and
each of Christian R. Guntner and David T. DiPasquale. Parent and the Purchaser
have required Christian R. Guntner and David T. DiPasquale (collectively, the
"Significant Shareholders") to enter into the Shareholder Agreement as a
condition to their entering into the Merger Agreement. Defined Terms used below
and not defined herein have the respective meanings assigned to them in the
Merger Agreement. Such summary is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
Shareholder Agreement, a copy of which is filed as Exhibit 5 hereto and is
incorporated herein by reference.
 
     Pursuant to the Shareholder Agreement, each Significant Shareholder has
agreed to validly tender all of the shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by
them or which may subsequently be acquired by them after the date of the
Shareholder Agreement and prior to the termination of the Offer. In addition,
each of the Significant Shareholders agreed that, during the term of the
Shareholder Agreement, at any meeting of the shareholders of the Company, they
shall (a) vote their respective shares of the Common Stock in favor of the
Merger; (b) vote their respective shares of Common Stock against any action or
agreement that would result in a breach in any material respect of any covenant,
representation or warranty or any other obligation or agreement of the Company
under the Merger Agreement and (c) vote their respective shares of Common Stock
against any action or agreement that would impede, interfere with, delay,
postpone or attempt to discourage the Merger or the Offer.
 
     The Shareholder Agreement and the obligations of each of the Significant
Shareholder to tender his shares of Common Stock shall terminate on the earlier
of the (a) consummation of the purchase of such shares or (b) the termination of
the Merger Agreement in accordance with its terms.
 
     In addition, each Significant Shareholders agreed, while the Shareholder
Agreement is in effect, except as contemplated thereby, not to (i) sell,
transfer, pledge, encumber, assign or otherwise dispose of, or enter into any
contract, option or other arrangement or understanding with respect to the sale,
transfer pledge, encumbrance, assignment or other disposition of, any of their
respective shares of Common Stock (ii) grant any proxies, deposit any shares of
Common Stock into a voting trust or enter into a voting agreement with respect
to any such shares or (iii) take any action that would make any representation
or warranty of such
 
                                       13
   15
 
Significant Shareholders contained in the Shareholder Agreement untrue or
incorrect or have the effect of preventing or disabling such Significant
Shareholders from performing his obligations under the Shareholder Agreement.
 
     Reference is hereby made to the information contained in Annex I under the
heading "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION" for a description of certain arrangements
relating to the occurrence of a "Change in Control" of the Company and the
Amendment dated August 29, 1997 to the Employment Agreement between the Company
and Daniel R. Scoggin, and by such reference, such information is incorporated
herein as though fully set forth herein.
 
     THE BANK STANDSTILL AGREEMENT.  The following is a summary of the Bank
Standstill Agreement (as defined below). Such summary is qualified in its
entirety by reference to the Bank Standstill Agreement, a copy of which is filed
as Exhibit 6 hereto and is incorporated herein by reference.
 
     The Company currently is a guarantor under an Amended and Restated Credit
Agreement (as amended, the "Existing Credit Agreement"), dated as of September
12, 1996, among its direct and indirect subsidiaries The Ground Round, Inc.
("GRI"), and GR of Minn., Inc. (together with GRI, the "Borrowers"), each of the
financial institutions party thereto (the "Lenders"), The Bank of New York, as
agent for the Lenders (the "Agent"), and The Chase Manhattan Bank, as co-agent
for the Lenders. In connection with and as a condition to Parent and the
Purchaser's execution of the Merger Agreement, the Lenders have agreed, pursuant
to a letter agreement (the "Bank Standstill Agreement"), dated as of August 29,
1997, among the parties to the Existing Credit Agreement, to waive the
Borrowers' and their subsidiary guarantors' compliance with the EBITDA
maintenance covenant contained in the Existing Credit Agreement for the fiscal
months ended July, August and September, 1997. Pursuant to the Bank Standstill
Agreement, the Borrowers (i) have deposited into an interest-bearing account
(the "Account") (a) $235,000, representing accrued and unpaid interest on the
term loans under the Existing Credit Agreement and (b) $50,000, representing the
net cash proceeds from the sale of one of the Borrower's Liquor Licenses and
(ii) will deposit into the Account (a) certain insurance proceeds and (b) an
amount equal to interest on the term loans under the Existing Credit Agreement
which became and will become due and payable on August 23, 1997 and September
30, 1997. The Borrowers will be permitted to withdraw such funds from the
Account, so long as, among other things, (i) on the date of each withdrawal (a)
the Borrowers shall have demonstrated to the Agent that a cash deficiency exists
in their business and that such funds will be used in the ordinary course of
their business and (b) no default or event of default under the Existing Credit
Agreement shall have occurred and be continuing (other than events of default
occurring prior to the date of the Bank Standstill Agreement and disclosed in
writing to the Agent), (ii) neither the Purchaser nor the Company shall have
announced that the Offer has been terminated and (iii) the Borrowers shall have
retained Zolpho Cooper, LLC or such other firm mutually satisfactory to the
Borrowers, the Agent and the Lenders under the Existing Credit Agreement to
assist the Company by analyzing the Company's cash, operating and financial
plans, actions and results and to report its observations and any issues that
are identified which could potentially impact the Company's strategic and
financial restructuring initiatives. In consideration for executing the Bank
Standstill Agreement, the Borrowers have agreed that, so long as the Bank
Standstill Agreement is in effect, (x) each Eurodollar Rate Loan (as defined in
the Existing Credit Agreement) will convert automatically, on the last day of
the then-existing interest period therefor, into an Alternate Base Rate Loan (as
defined in the Existing Credit Agreement) and (y) the obligation of the Lenders
to make, or convert term loans into, Eurodollar Rate Loans, shall be suspended.
 
     THE BANK LETTER OF INTENT.  The consummation of the Offer would constitute
an event of default under the Existing Credit Agreement. Pursuant to a letter of
intent, dated August 29, 1997 among the parties to the Existing Credit
Agreement, in connection with the execution of the Merger Agreement, each of the
parties to the Existing Credit Agreement has agreed, subject to certain
conditions, to proceed in good faith to amend the Existing Credit Agreement (as
amended, the "New Credit Agreement") upon consummation of the Offer and the
Merger, and which requires, among other things, that the Parent will make an
equity infusion for working capital purposes of not less than $7,500,000.
 
                                       14
   16
 
     PROPOSED SALE AND LEASEBACK TRANSACTION.  In connection with the efforts of
the Company to transact a sale-leaseback of at least 18 fee properties (the
"Sales Leaseback Transaction"), the Company has with the assistance of Jones
Lang Wooton, U.S.A. (as Broker) entered into negotiations with CNL Fund
Advisors, Inc. ("CNL") of Orlando, Florida to sell up to 20 fee properties owned
by the Company. The Company is currently negotiating the terms of a commitment
letter relating to such Sales Leaseback Transaction containing the following
material terms: (i) CNL agreeing to enter into a sale-leaseback transaction with
the Company for a purchase price not to exceed Twenty Million Dollars
($20,000,000), plus certain transactional costs, for properties to be operated
as Ground Round, Gold Fork or other entities of the Company by September 30,
1997, (ii) that up to Two Million Dollars ($2,000,000) of the sale plus costs is
to be funded upon the renovation or rebuilding of either or both of the fire
damaged properties located in Coon Rapids, Minnesota and Bridgeton, Missouri by
September 4, 1998 and (iii) a minimum condition to the transaction that at least
fifteen (15) properties are accepted for purchase following environmental,
appraisal and title due diligence. There can be no assurance that such
commitment letter or the Sale-leaseback Transaction will be entered into or
consummated.
 
ITEM 4.  THE SOLICITATION OR RECOMMENDATION.
 
     (a) The Board of Directors of the Company (the "Board") has unanimously
approved the Offer and the Merger Agreement and the transactions contemplated
thereby and determined that the Offer and the Merger are fair to, and in the
best interests of, the shareholders of the Company. The Board of Directors
unanimously recommends that all shareholders accept the Offer and tender their
Shares pursuant to the Offer.
 
     (b) The Company has not been successful in consummating a transaction to
raise investment funds for working capital and refurbishment purposes. Since
August 1994, USI, the Company's principal shareholder until July 9, 1997, was
seeking to sell its approximately 33% interest in the Company and in 1996 had
caused the Company to register its Shares under the Securities Act of 1933 in
accordance with certain registration rights granted to USI with a view to
selling them in the market.
 
     On May 27, 1997, Boston Ventures sent a letter to the Board offering to
purchase 549,000 Shares of the Company's common stock from USI upon the
conditions that (a) the Company allow Boston Ventures an exclusive period of
three weeks to conduct a due diligence review of the Company and (b) the parties
enter a confidentiality agreement precluding the Company from disclosing the
purchase of the USI Shares or Boston Ventures' interest in acquiring the
Company. On May 28, 1997 the Board authorized Boston Ventures to conduct a due
diligence investigation, subject to execution of a confidentiality agreement for
a three week exclusive period.
 
     On June 3, 1997, the Company and Boston Ventures executed a confidentiality
agreement containing customary confidentiality and stand still provisions and
USI sold an aggregate of 540,000 Shares of the Company's common stock to an
affiliate of Boston Ventures and Mr. Thomas J. Russo at a price of $1.25 per
share. Mr. Russo had served as President of Howard Johnson's Restaurants and
Motor Lodge Group, including the Ground Round restaurants and as a director of
the Company from 1991 to 1995. On June 3, Boston Ventures commenced its due
diligence investigation of the Company. Subsequently, the 540,000 shares and
14,900 shares previously purchased by Mr. Russo's spouse were transferred to
Parent.
 
     On June 26, 1997, at the request of Boston Ventures, after consideration by
the Board, the exclusivity period for Boston Ventures to complete its due
diligence was extended to July 1.
 
     On July 1, 1997, the Company received a letter from Boston Ventures, which
expressed an interest in pursuing an acquisition of all the outstanding stock of
the Company for a premium to the then current market price of the Shares,
subject to the execution of a definitive agreement and numerous other
conditions. On July 2, 1997 the Board met to consider Boston Ventures' letter
and concluded that the letter failed to make a firm financial offer and the
numerous conditions to which any such offer would be subject were unacceptable,
but that representatives of the Company would be willing to meet with
representatives of Boston Ventures after the July 4th holiday, on a
non-exclusive basis, to continue discussions with respect to a possible
transaction.
 
                                       15
   17
 
     On July 9, 1997, USI sold all its remaining 3,092,100 Shares to two
investors, David DiPasquale and Christian R. Guntner, who prior to that day had
been executives of USI, for an aggregate cash purchase price of $4.08 million.
See Item 6 below. On July 10, 1997 at a meeting of the Board, Mr. DiPasquale was
elected as a director. During the Board meeting, the Board reviewed a letter
received by the Company earlier that day from Boston Ventures which recited its
interest in continuing negotiations with respect to an acquisition of all
outstanding Shares at a price of approximately $1.65 per Share, subject to
certain conditions set forth in their letter of July 1, 1997. In addition, the
letter stated Boston Ventures willingness to make an additional equity
investment in the Company following such acquisition, and also stated that, if
the Board was not interested in a sale of the Company at that time, Boston
Ventures would be prepared to negotiate the purchase of newly issued equity,
alone or in combination with a purchase of the Shares owned by Messrs. Guntner
and DiPasquale, in a transaction resulting in Boston Ventures obtaining voting
control of the Company. Messrs. Guntner and DiPasquale indicated that they had
no interest in selling their Shares except in conjunction with an offer for all
of the Company's outstanding Shares. The Board concluded that although the
letter lacked a firm price and was subject to numerous conditions, and therefore
did not constitute a firm offer, it was nonetheless worth further consideration
by the Company. The Board then discussed the growing concerns of the Company's
Lenders regarding the Company's liquidity and compliance with its obligations
under the Existing Credit Agreement. To address these matters, the Board
designated the following two committees of the Board of Directors: (i) the
"Special Committee" was empowered to review, negotiate and make recommendations
to the Board with respect to investment and acquisition proposals ("Investment
Proposals") including an Investment Proposal from Boston Ventures and (ii) the
"Banking Committee" was empowered to negotiate and make recommendations to the
Board concerning revisions to the Existing Credit Agreement and other financial
accommodations with the Lenders. Messrs. Guntner, Alan D. Weingarten and Fred H.
(Fritz) Beaumont, Jr., comprised the Special Committee with Mr. Guntner serving
as chairman. Messrs. DiPasquale, Scoggin and Guntner comprised the Banking
Committee, with Mr. DiPasquale serving as chairman. The full Board of Directors
retained the exclusive authority to enter into any transaction or agreement on
behalf of the Company recommended by either Committee.
 
     Later on July 10, 1997, a representative of the Lenders called Mr.
DiPasquale, as chairman of the Banking Committee, urging that members of the
Board meet with Boston Ventures as soon as possible. A meeting was arranged that
evening for the following morning July 11, 1997 between representatives of
Boston Ventures, Messrs. Guntner and DiPasquale, as representatives of the
Board, and their respective counsel.
 
     At that meeting, Boston Ventures proposed a possible acquisition of all of
the outstanding Shares, or, in the alternative, a sale by Messrs. Guntner and
DiPasquale of their Shares in the Company, together with an investment by Boston
Ventures in newly issued equity of the Company. Messrs. Guntner and DiPasquale
indicated they would not discuss a sale of their Shares except in conjunction
with an acquisition of all outstanding Shares by merger or otherwise. During
lengthy discussions concerning the structure and conditions of any proposal it
might make, Boston Ventures indicated that any proposal it might make would be
at a price of $1.65 per Share, which price was not negotiable, and in response
to a request by Messrs. Guntner and DiPasquale, that it would not fund any
working capital requirements of the Company pending consummation of a
transaction by Boston Ventures. Following the meeting, Mr. Guntner requested
that Mr. Scoggin, as Chairman of the Board of Directors, call a meeting of the
Board to discuss the results of the meeting with Boston Ventures.
 
     On July 16, 1997 a meeting of the Board was held to hear a report on the
Company's financial condition from Stephen Kiel, the Company's Chief Financial
Officer, and to discuss Boston Ventures Investment Proposal. During the meeting
the Board considered concerns that had been raised by the Company's Lenders with
respect to the Company's liquidity and its ability to meet its obligations under
the Existing Credit Agreement. In addition, the Board discussed the suggestion
of the Lenders that they would be willing to enter into a credit support
agreement (the "Bank Standstill Agreement") if the Company entered into the
definitive merger agreement with Boston Ventures. Although the Board did not
accept the price of $1.65 contemplated by Boston Ventures, the Board directed
the Special Committee to continue negotiations with Boston Ventures and retained
Rothschild Inc. ("Rothschild") to act as financial advisor to the Special
Committee and the Company for the purpose of rendering an opinion to the Board,
as to whether the terms of the transaction
 
                                       16
   18
 
contemplated by the Merger Agreement are fair, from a financial standpoint, to
the shareholders of the Company.
 
     On July 22, 1997 the Board met to review the status of the on-going
negotiations with Boston Ventures and the Company's financial condition, as well
as the Company's strategic and financial options, including a proposed Sale and
Leaseback Transaction of up to 20 Company owned restaurants. See Item 3(b)
above. Mr. Guntner advised the Board that following a review of the Company's
short-term cash flow projections, the Lenders sought a commitment from Mr.
Guntner, which request was supported by Boston Ventures, for a $1,000,000 letter
of credit to enhance the Company's liquidity. Mr. Guntner advised the Board that
he had declined to provide such unilateral credit support to the Company and
expressed his belief that such request had irreparably compromised his ability
to effectively serve as a member of the Special Committee. He thereupon resigned
from the Special Committee. The Board then elected Mr. DiPasquale to replace Mr.
Guntner as a member of the Special Committee. As a result of the Board's
interest in considering a sale of the entire Company, on July 23, 1997, Boston
Ventures' counsel delivered the initial draft of the merger agreement to the
Company and its counsel. Counsel for the respective parties met on July 25 and
29, 1997 to discuss points of principle of the merger agreement, after which a
revised draft was circulated.
 
     On July 28, 1997, a meeting of the Special Committee was held to discuss
the principal points of the initial draft of the merger agreement with counsel.
At the meeting, Rothschild delivered a preliminary presentation to the Special
Committee regarding the Company and the proposed transaction with Boston
Ventures.
 
     During the week of August 3, 1997, the Special Committee and counsel
engaged in intensive negotiations with representatives of Boston Ventures and
its counsel regarding the terms and conditions of the merger agreement. Boston
Ventures also engaged in negotiations with Mr. Scoggin with respect to a
proposed amendment to his employment agreement to clarify the terms of the
restrictive covenant upon a change of control (see Annex I) and with Messrs.
Guntner and DiPasquale with respect to the terms of a Shareholder Agreement. See
Item 3 -- Shareholder Agreement. Execution of such agreements were conditions of
Boston Ventures to its entering into a merger agreement.
 
     On August 7, 1997, the Board met to review the terms of the current drafts
of the Merger Agreement, the Shareholder Agreement, the Amendment to Mr.
Scoggin's Employment Agreement, the Bank Standstill Agreement and related bank
documents and to receive Rothschild's analysis of the Investment Proposal.
Following a detailed presentation by Rothschild with respect to its evaluation
of the Investment Proposal being negotiated with Boston Ventures. Rothschild
orally confirmed to the Board that the proposed offer of $1.65 per Share was
fair from a financial point of view to the Company's shareholders, subject to
confirmation of the final terms and conditions of the Merger Agreement being
negotiated. The Board then engaged in a lengthy discussion concerning the terms
and conditions of the draft merger agreement. Following such discussion the
Board directed the Special Committee to resolve certain outstanding issues,
including Boston Ventures' proposed condition to the transaction that certain
liquor license approvals be obtained. Pending resolution of those issues, the
Board adjourned its meeting to be reconvened on August 8, 1997.
 
     On August 8, 1997, immediately prior to reconvening the Board meeting,
Company counsel was advised by representatives of Boston Ventures, that it was
not willing to proceed with an acquisition until Boston Ventures resolved its
concern over the possible applicability of certain "tied-house" statutes to the
proposed transaction as described in Section 16 of the Offer to Purchase. The
Board thereupon reconvened its meeting, was apprised of such development and
adjourned without taking further action with respect to the proposed merger
agreement.
 
     During the ensuing three weeks, Boston Ventures periodically advised the
Special Committee and Company counsel as to its progress in resolving its
concerns over the tied-house statutes and in obtaining requisite liquor license
approvals. During this time, the parties and their counsel continued to
negotiate the remaining open terms of the merger agreement and discuss with the
Lenders a possible extension of the expiration date of the proposed Bank
Standstill Agreement from September 30, 1997 to October 22, 1997. The
 
                                       17
   19
 
Company, Boston Ventures and Mr. Scoggins continued their negotiations to
finalize the Amendment to Mr. Scoggins' Employment Agreement.
 
     On August 25, 1997 and August 27, 1997 the Special Committee met to hear
reports by Company counsel as to the status of Boston Ventures' progress in
resolving the tied-house issues and as to the status of the negotiations of the
remaining issues concerning the merger agreement. In addition, Company counsel
provided the Special Committee with an update of the status of discussion with
the Lenders concerning certain revisions to and the extension of the term of the
draft Bank Standstill Agreement. From August 27, 1997 through August 29, 1997,
counsel to the Company and Boston Ventures engaged in intensive negotiations
regarding the final unresolved issues concerning the Merger Agreement, including
the tied-house statutes.
 
     On August 29, 1997, Boston Ventures notified the Company and its counsel
that it was prepared to enter into a Merger Agreement, subject to approval of
the Merger Agreement by the Board.
 
     On August 29, 1997, the Special Committee met and, after receiving the
opinion of Rothschild that the offer price of $1.65 per Share pursuant to the
Merger Agreement was fair to shareholders from a financial point of view,
recommended to the Board that the Offer and the Merger Agreement be approved.
The Compensation Committee thereupon approved the Amendment to Mr. Scoggin's
Employment Agreement. The Board of Directors then convened to consider the
recommendation of the Special Committee and to review the written fairness
opinion from Rothschild. After extensive discussion of the terms of the Offer
and Merger contemplated by the Merger Agreement involving the Company's legal
and financial advisors, the Board unanimously approved the Offer and the Merger
and determined that they are fair to, and in the best interest of, the Company
and its shareholders. The Board thereupon authorized the execution and delivery
of the Merger Agreement and approved the Shareholder Agreement (Messrs. Guntner
and DiPasquale abstaining), the Bank Standstill Agrement and related documents,
and ratified the Amendment to Mr. Scoggin's Employment Agreement (Mr. Scoggin
abstaining). The Board unanimously voted to recommend that shareholders accept
the Offer and tender their shares pursuant to the Offer. Following such actions,
the Merger Agreement, the Bank Standstill Agreement, and the Amendment to Mr.
Scoggin's Employment Agreement were executed and delivered by the parties
thereto. A public announcement regarding the Merger Agreement was made on
Tuesday, September 2, 1997 prior to the opening of NASDAQ Stock Market.
 
     In making the determinations and recommendations set forth in Item 4(a)
above, the Board considered a number of factors, including, without limitations,
the following:
 
          (i) The terms and conditions of the Offer and the Merger Agreement.
 
          (ii) Presentations by management at Board meetings and Board committee
     meetings held on and before August 29, 1997 and the knowledge of the Board
     of Directors with respect to the financial condition, results of
     operations, business and prospects of the Company and limited alternative
     strategic transactions.
 
          (iii) Since August 1994, when the Company announced it had entered
     into a definitive merger agreement to be acquired by a new company formed
     by the then management and 399 Ventures, Inc., a venture capital company,
     which agreement was subsequently terminated by the potential purchaser due
     to lack of financing, the Company has been unsuccessful in consumating a
     transaction to raise investment funds for working capital and investment
     capital needed to refurbish and upgrade the Company's restaurants in order
     to enable the Company to remain viable in the highly competitive mid-price
     family restaurant market. Despite such efforts of Company management, no
     person has made a cash offer for the whole Company on terms superior to
     those contained in the Offer, nor has the Company been able to consummate a
     significant investment transaction.
 
          (iv) The Offer price of $1.65 net in cash for each of the Company's
     Shares constitutes an approximate 10% premium to the closing market price
     for the Company's Shares on the NASDAQ Stock Market on August 29, 1997, the
     date the Merger Agreement was approved by the Company's Board of Directors.
 
                                       18
   20
 
          (v) The recent historical market prices for the Shares.
 
          (vi) The presentations of Rothschild at the Special Committee meeting
     on July 28, 1997 and at each of the August 7, 1997 and the August 29, 1997
     Board meetings of the Company and the written opinion of Rothschild,
     delivered to the Board at a meeting held on August 29, 1997 that, as of the
     date of such opinion and based upon factors set forth therein, the
     consideration of $1.65 per share net in cash to be received by the
     Company's shareholders pursuant to the Offer and the Merger is fair, from a
     financial point of view, to such shareholders. The full text of such
     opinion, dated August 29, 1997, which sets forth the assumptions made, the
     matters considered and the limitations on the review undertaken by
     Rothschild, is attached as an Exhibit hereto and is incorporated herein by
     reference. Such opinion should be read carefully in its entirety by
     shareholders in conjunction with the foregoing matters.
 
          (vii) The agreement of the Lenders to enter into the Bank Standstill
     Agreement only upon the Company's execution of the Merger Agreement,
     thereby providing the Company with additional liquidity through October 22,
     1997 subject to certain conditions and waiving certain financial covenants
     under the Existing Credit Agreement for the months of July, August and
     September.
 
          (viii) That under the terms of the Merger Agreement the Board is not
     prohibited from (a) furnishing information in response to certain
     unsolicited requests, and (b) considering, negotiating or participating in
     discussions regarding an unsolicited bonafide written Acquisition Proposal
     (as defined in the Merger Agreement), and upon advice of outside counsel
     that it would be consistent with the Board's fiduciary responsibility to
     approve or recommend a Superior Proposal, the Board may terminate the
     Merger Agreement upon payment of fees and expenses to the Parent.
 
          (ix) Under the terms of the Shareholder Agreement, the Significant
     Shareholders, who collectively own approximately 28% of the outstanding
     Shares, may terminate such Shareholder Agreement if the Board of Directors
     of the Company exercises its fiduciary responsibility and terminates the
     Merger Agreement in order to recommend a Superior Proposal.
 
     The Board did not assign relative weights to the foregoing factors or
determine that any factor was of particular importance. Rather, the Board of
Directors viewed its position and recommendations as being based on the totality
of the information presented to and considered by it.
 
ITEM 5.  PERSONS RETAINED, EMPLOYED OR TO BE COMPENSATED.
 
     Pursuant to the terms of an Engagement Letter (the "Rothschild Engagement
Letter"), dated as of July 14, 1997, between Rothschild and the Company, the
Company has retained Rothschild to render financial advisory services to the
Company for the purpose of rendering a written opinion (the "Opinion"),
addressed to the Board, as to whether the terms of the transaction contemplated
by the Merger Agreement are fair, from a financial standpoint, to the
shareholders of the Company. Pursuant to the terms of the Rothschild Engagement
Letter, the Company agreed to pay Rothschild cash fees of (a) $25,000, payable
upon the Company's execution of the Rothschild Engagement Letter, and (b)
$175,000, payable upon Rothschild's delivery of the Opinion to the Company.
 
     The Company has also agreed to reimburse Rothschild for all of Rothschild's
reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with its engagement
thereunder, including, but not limited to, all travel, telephone,
computer-related data retrieval and courier expenses and all reasonable fees and
expenses of Rothschild's counsel. Rothschild agreed that it shall, for no
additional fee, make appropriate personnel available at reasonable times to
testify in proceedings (including depositions) in respect of which the Company
is a party and relating to the provision of Rothchild's services provided
thereunder.
 
     The Company agreed to indemnify Rothschild and to hold it harmless against
any losses, claims, damages or liabilities to which Rothschild may become
subject rising in any matter or in connection with Rothschild's rendering of
services under the Engagement Letter, subject to the provisions as more fully
described in the Indemnity Agreement attached to the Rothschild Engagement
Letter.
 
                                       19
   21
 
     Except as set forth above, neither the Company nor any person acting on its
behalf has employed, retained or compensated any person to make solicitations or
recommendations to shareholders with respect to the Offer or the Merger.
 
ITEM 6.  RECENT TRANSACTIONS AND INTENT WITH RESPECT TO SECURITIES.
 
     (a) Except as set forth below, there have been no transactions in Shares
which were effected during the past sixty (60) days by the Company, or to the
best knowledge of the Company, by any executive officer, director, affiliate or
subsidiary of the Company.
 
     On June 3, 1997, JUSI Holdings, Inc. ("JUSI"), an indirect wholly-owned
subsidiary of U.S. Industries, Inc. ("USI"), sold 540,000 shares for $1.25 per
share in negotiated transactions effected on NASDAQ to Boston Ventures, Inc., an
affiliate of Parent and Purchaser.
 
     On July 9, 1997, JUSI sold 1,892,100 shares to Mr. Christian R. Guntner at
$1.32 per share for an aggregate purchase price of $2,497,572 and 1,200,000
shares to Mr. David T. DiPasquale at $1.32 per share for an aggregate purchase
price of $1,584,000, pursuant to a Stock Purchase Agreement (the "Stock Purchase
Agreement"), dated July 9, 1997, among JUSI, USI, Christian R. Guntner and David
T. DiPasquale. The Stock Purchase Agreement provides, among other things, that
if, within one year of the date of the Stock Purchase Agreement, Messrs. Guntner
or DiPasquale sell, transfer or assign (collectively, a "Sale") any shares of
Common Stock, Messrs. Guntner or DiPasquale, as the case may be, shall pay to
JUSI (i) 100% of the profit if the Sale occurs within 90 days of the date of the
Stock Purchase Agreement, (ii) 50% of the profit if the Sale occurs within 91 to
270 days of the date of the Stock Purchase Agreement and (iii) 25% of the profit
if the Sale occurs within 271 to 365 days of the date of the Stock Purchase
Agreement; provided that no profit need be paid to JUSI for certain Sales of up
to 309,210 shares after the 90th day.
 
     (b) To the best knowledge of the Company, all of its executive officers,
directors, affiliates or subsidiaries presently intend to tender all Shares to
Parent pursuant to the Offer, which are owned beneficially by such persons,
subject to and consistent with any fiduciary obligations in the case of Shares
held by fiduciaries. In addition, Messrs. Guntner and DiPasquale entered into
the Shareholder Agreement, which is described in Item 3 above.
 
ITEM 7.  CERTAIN NEGOTIATIONS AND TRANSACTIONS BY THE SUBJECT COMPANY.
 
     (a) Except as set forth above in Item 3 or in Item 4(b) above, or below,
the Company is not engaged in any negotiations in response to the Offer which
relates to or would result in (i) an extraordinary transaction, such as a merger
or reorganization, involving the Company or any subsidiary of the Company; (ii)
a purchase, sale or transfer of a material amount of assets by the Company or
any subsidiary of the Company; (iii) a tender offer for or other acquisition of
securities by or of the Company, or (iv) any material change in the present
capitalization or dividend policy of the Company.
 
     (b) Except as described in Item 3(b) above, there are no transactions,
Board of Directors resolutions, agreements in principle or signed contracts in
response to the Offer that relate to or would result in one or more of the
events referred to in Item 7(a) above.
 
ITEM 8.  ADDITIONAL INFORMATION TO BE FURNISHED
 
     The Information Statement attached hereto as Annex I is being furnished in
connection with the contemplated designation by the Purchaser, pursuant to the
Merger Agreement, of certain persons to be appointed to the Board of Directors
of the Company other than at a meeting of the Company's shareholders, following
the acceptance for payment of, and payment by the Purchaser in accordance with
the Offer for, Shares pursuant to the Offer provided the Purchaser shall have
purchased not less than 50.1% of the outstanding Shares.
 
     NYBCL 912.  Section 912 of the NYBCL regulates certain business
combinations, including mergers, of a New York corporation, such as the Company,
with a shareholder that beneficially owns 20% or more of
 
                                       20
   22
 
the outstanding voting stock of such corporation. Because the Board has approved
the Merger Agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby, Section 912 of
the NYBCL will not apply to the Merger.
 
     VOTE REQUIRED TO APPROVE MERGER.  New York law provides that the adoption
of any plan of merger or consolidation by the Company requires the approval of
the Board and the affirmative vote of at least 66 2/3% of all outstanding shares
entitled to vote thereon (including the votes of any Shares owned by Parent and
Purchaser that have voting rights at such time), if the "short form" merger
procedure described below is not available. The Board has authorized and
approved the Offer and the Merger; consequently, an additional action of the
Company that may be necessary to effect the Merger is approval by such
shareholders at a meeting of the Company's shareholders convened for that
purpose (the "Shareholders Meeting") if the "short form" merger procedure
described below is not available. New York law also provides that the Merger
will not require the approval of the Company's shareholders, and can be adopted
by Purchaser's Board of Directors, if Purchaser owns at least 90% of the
outstanding Shares. Accordingly, if, as a result of the Offer or otherwise,
Purchaser acquires or controls the voting power of at least 90% of the
outstanding Shares, Purchaser could, and intends to, effect the Merger without
the Shareholders Meeting and without approval by shareholders of the Company.
If, however, Purchaser waives the Minimum Condition and does not acquire at
least 90% of the then outstanding Shares pursuant to the Offer or otherwise and
a vote of the Company's shareholders is required under New York law, a
significantly longer period of time will be required to effect the Merger.
 
     TAX MATTERS.  Each shareholder of the Company should consult with such
shareholder's own tax advisor to determine the particular tax effects of the
Offer and the Merger, including the application and effect of state, local,
foreign and other income tax laws.
 
     APPRAISAL RIGHTS.  No appraisal rights are available in connection with the
Offer. However, if the Merger is consummated, shareholders of the Company may
have certain rights under the NYBCL to dissent and demand appraisal of, and
payment in cash for the fair value of, the Shares. Such rights, if the statutory
procedures are complied with, could lead to a judicial determination of fair
value (excluding any element of value arising from accomplishment or expectation
of the Merger) required to be paid in cash to such dissenting holders for their
Shares. Any such judicial determination of the fair value of Shares could be
based upon considerations other than or in addition to the price paid in the
Offer and the market value of the Shares, including asset values and the
investment value of the Shares. The value so determined could be more or less
than the purchase price per Share pursuant to the Offer or the consideration per
Share to be paid in the Merger.
 
ITEM 9.  MATERIAL TO BE FILED AS EXHIBITS.
 
     The following Exhibits are filed herewith:
 
Exhibit 1 -- Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of August 29, 1997, among
             the Company, Parent and the Purchaser
 
Exhibit 2 -- Opinion of Rothschild, dated August 29, 1997.*
 
Exhibit 3 -- Letter to Shareholders of the Company.*
 
Exhibit 4 -- Press Release of the Company, dated September 2, 1997.
 
Exhibit 5 -- Shareholder Agreement, dated August 29, 1997 among Parent,
             Purchaser and Christian R. Guntner and David T. DiPasquale.
 
Exhibit 6 -- Bank Standstill Letter.
 
Exhibit 7 -- Clarification to Employment Agreement and Amendment dated as of
             August 29, 1997 between the Company and Daniel R. Scoggin.
 
- ---------------
* Included in copies of the Schedule 14D-9 mailed to shareholders.
 
                                       21
   23
 
                                   SIGNATURE
 
     After reasonable inquiry and to the best of my knowledge and belief, I
certify that the information set forth in this Statement is true, complete and
correct.
 
                                          GROUND ROUND RESTAURANTS, INC.
 
                                          By:     /s/ DANIEL R. SCOGGIN
                                            ------------------------------------
                                            Name: Daniel R. Scoggin
                                              Title: Chairman and Chief
                                                     Executive Officer
                                                 and President
Dated: September 8, 1997
 
                                       22
   24
 
                                                                         ANNEX I
 
                         GROUND ROUND RESTAURANTS, INC.
                         35 BRAINTREE HILL OFFICE PARK
                         BRAINTREE, MASSACHUSETTS 02184
 
                             INFORMATION STATEMENT
                        PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(F) OF THE
                        SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                           AND RULE 14F-1 THEREUNDER
 
     This Information Statement is being mailed on or about September 8, 1997 as
part of the Ground Round Restaurants, Inc. (the "Company")
Solicitation/Recommendation Statement on Schedule 14D-9 (the "Schedule 14D-9")
with respect to the tender offer by GRR Merger Corp. ("Purchaser") to the
holders of record of the Company's Common Stock, $0.16 2/3 par value per share
("Common Stock"). Capitalized terms used and not otherwise defined herein shall
have the meanings set forth in the Schedule 14D-9. You are receiving this
Information Statement in connection with the possible election of persons
designated by Purchaser to a majority of the seats on the Board of Directors of
the Company (the "Board") pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger among GRR
Holdings, Inc., LLC, ("Parent"), Purchaser and the Company dated as of August
29, 1997 (the "Merger Agreement"). The Merger Agreement provides, among other
things, that promptly upon the acceptance for payment of, and payment by the
Purchaser in accordance with the Offer for, Shares pursuant to the Offer,
provided the Purchaser shall have purchased not less than 50.1% of the
outstanding Shares, the Purchaser shall be entitled to designate such number of
directors, rounded up to the next whole number, equal to that number of
directors which equals the product of the total number of directors on the Board
(giving effect to the directors elected pursuant to this sentence) multiplied by
the percentage that such number of Shares owned in the aggregate by the
Purchaser or Parent, upon such acceptance for payment, bears to the number of
Shares outstanding; provided, however, that until the Effective Time there shall
be at least three Continuing Directors. The Company, shall upon the written
request of the Purchaser, use its best efforts to cause the Purchaser's
designees to be so elected. Notwithstanding the foregoing, pursuant to the
Merger Agreement it is the present intention of the parties to the Merger
Agreement to have a Board of seven directors following consummation of the Offer
and prior to the Effective Time, the Board to consist of four designees of the
Purchaser and three Continuing Directors, and the Company shall, upon the
written request of the Purchaser, use its best efforts to cause the resignation
of such current directors as necessary, and the election of the Purchaser's
designees, to result in such seven member Board.
 
     The Merger Agreement further provides that after the time that the
Purchaser's designees constitute at least a majority of the Board and until the
Effective Time, any amendment or termination of the Merger Agreement or the
Certificate of Incorporation or By-laws of the Company and any extension for the
performance or waiver of the obligations or other acts of Parent or the
Purchaser or waiver of the Company's rights under the Merger Agreement shall
also require the approval of a majority of the then serving directors, if any,
who are directors as of the date hereof (the "Continuing Directors", who shall
include each member of the Special Committee of the Board formed to consider the
Merger for so long as he wishes to serve) except to the extent that applicable
law requires that such action be acted upon by the full Board, in which case
such action will require the concurrence of a majority of the Board, which
majority shall include each of the Continuing Directors. Pursuant to the Merger
Agreement the number of Continuing Directors prior to the Effective Time is
reduced below three for any reason, the remaining Continuing Directors or
Director shall be entitled to designate persons to fill such vacancies who shall
be deemed Continuing Directors for all purposes of the Merger Agreement.
Furthermore, the Merger Agreement also provides that the Board shall not
delegate any matter set forth above to any committee of the Board. To assist the
Board in consummating this transaction, the Board has formed a Special Committee
of the Board authorized, among other things, to enter into negotiations and
discussions with BV or any other interested party and make recommendation to the
Board. The current members of the Special Committee of the Board are Fred H.
Beaumont, Jr., David T.
   25
 
DiPasquale and Allan D. Weingarten. This Information Statement is required by
Section 14(f) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and Rule 14F-1
promulgated thereunder.
 
     You are urged to read this Information Statement carefully. You are not,
however, required to take any action.
 
     WE ARE NOT NOW ASKING YOU FOR A PROXY AND YOU ARE REQUESTED NOT TO SEND US
A PROXY AT THIS TIME.
 
     Purchaser commenced the Offer on September 8, 1997. The Offer is scheduled
to expire at 12:00 midnight, New York City time, on October 3, 1997. However,
the Purchaser may, without the consent of the Company, extend the Offer (A) from
time to time but not beyond 12 midnight, New York City time, on October 22,
1997, if, on the Expiration Date, any of the conditions to the Purchaser's
obligation to purchase Shares are not satisfied or waived, until such time as
such conditions are satisfied, or (B) for so long as the Bank Standstill Letter
remains in effect, but in no event beyond October 31, 1997, until Shares validly
tendered (and not withdrawn) in the Offer, together with the Contributed Shares,
represent at least 90% of the outstanding Shares but only in the event that the
Purchaser reduces the Minimum Condition so as to provide that the minimum number
of Shares that must be validly tendered as a condition to the Purchaser's
acceptance for payment of Shares pursuant to the Offer, together with the
Contributed Shares, shall be no greater than 66- 2/3% of the outstanding Shares.
The Purchaser also agreed that, in the event that the Minimum Condition is not
satisfied or waived at the initial expiration date of the Offer, the Purchaser
will, upon written request of the Company, extend the Offer for a period of up
to ten further Business Days. If all conditions to the Offer have been satisfied
or waived, Purchaser shall purchase all of the Shares validly tendered pursuant
to the Offer prior to the "Expiration Date" and not properly withdrawn. The term
"Expiration Date" means 12:00 midnight, New York City time, on October 3, 1997
or the latest time and date which the Offer, as so extended by Purchaser, shall
expire.
 
     The information contained in this Information Statement concerning
Purchaser and Parent has been furnished to the Company by Parent and the Company
assumes no responsibility for the accuracy, completeness or fairness of any such
information.
 
     Purchaser has informed the Company that it currently intends to designate
the following persons (the "Acquisition Designees") for election.
 


                                          PRESENT PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION OR EMPLOYMENT
              NAME                             AND FIVE YEAR EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
- --------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------
                               
Martha H.W. Crowninshield
  (57)..........................  Director, Boston Ventures, for more than the past five
                                  years; Director, the Purchaser, since August 1997.
Barbara M. Ginader(41)..........  1993 -- present, Director, Boston Ventures; prior thereto,
                                  Managing Director, Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc.; Director,
                                  President and Secretary, the Purchaser, since August 1997.
Thomas J. Russo(55).............  1994 through February 1997, Chairman, President and Chief
                                  Executive Officer, Miami Subs Corp. (develops, owns and
                                  franchises fast food restaurants); 1987 to 1994, Group
                                  Chairman and CEO, Housewares Group of Hanson Industries
                                  PLC.
Neil A. Wallack (30)............  1996 -- present, Associate Director, Boston Ventures;
                                  1993 -- 1996, Associate, Boston Ventures; 1991 -- 1993,
                                  Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration; Vice
                                  President and Treasurer, the Purchaser, since August 1997

 
     The business address of each of such persons is 21 Custom House Street,
Boston, MA 02110. All such persons are United States citizens.
 
     It is expected that the Acquisition Designees may assume office at any time
following the purchase by Purchaser of a majority of Shares pursuant to the
Offer, and that, upon assuming office, the Acquisition Designees will thereafter
constitute at least a majority of the Board. Purchaser has informed the Company
that each of the Acquisition Designees has consented to act as a director of the
Company, if so designated.
 
                                        2
   26
 
     Except as provided in the Merger Agreement, the Shareholder Agreement and
as otherwise described in the Offer to Purchase, the Company has been advised
that to the best knowledge of Purchaser and Parent, none of the Acquisition
Designees has any contract, arrangement, understanding or relationship with any
other person with respect to any securities of the Company, including, but not
limited to, any contract, arrangement, understanding or relationship concerning
the transfer or voting of such securities, finder's fees, joint ventures, loan
or option arrangements, puts or calls, guaranties of loans, guaranties against
loss, guarantees of profits, division of profits or loss or giving or
withholding of proxies. Except as set forth in the Offer to Purchase, the
Company has been advised that since January 1, 1996, to the best knowledge of
Purchaser and Parent, none of the Acquisition Designees has had any business
relationship or transaction with the Company or any of its executive officers,
directors or affiliates that is required to be reported under the rules and
regulations of the Commission applicable to the Offer. Except as set forth in
the Offer to Purchase, since January 1, 1996, the Company has been advised that
there have been no contacts, negotiations or transactions, to the best knowledge
of Purchaser and Parent, between any of the Acquisition Designees, on the one
hand, and the Company or its affiliates, on the other hand, concerning a merger,
consolidation or acquisition, tender offer or other acquisition of securities,
an election of directors or a sale or other transfer of a material amount of
assets.
 
                    INFORMATION WITH RESPECT TO THE COMPANY
 
     As of August 29, 1997, there were 11,173,421 shares of Common Stock
outstanding and entitled to vote, with each share entitled to one vote. The
Common Stock is the only class of voting securities of the Company which are
outstanding.
 
                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
GENERAL
 
     The Company's By-laws provide that the number of directors that shall
constitute the Board of Directors shall be determined by the Board of Directors
from time to time, but in no event shall the number of directors be less than
three. The Company's Board of Directors has currently set the number of
directors at seven.
 
ACQUISITION DESIGNEES
 
     It is expected that the Acquisition Designees may assume office at any time
promptly upon the acceptance for payment of, and payment by the Purchaser in
accordance with the Offer for, Shares pursuant to the Offer, provided the
Purchaser shall have purchased not less than 50.1% of the outstanding Shares,
and that, upon assuming office, the Acquisition Designees will thereafter
constitute at least a majority of the Board of Directors.
 
CURRENT DIRECTORS
 
     The persons named below are the current members of the Board. The following
sets forth as to each director, his age and principal occupation and business
experience, and the period during which each has served as a director of the
Company. See "SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT"
for information regarding the beneficial ownership of Common Stock of each of
the directors.
 


                                  NAME                            AGE      DIRECTOR SINCE
        --------------------------------------------------------  ----     --------------
                                                                     
        Daniel R. Scoggin.......................................   60           1991
        Christian R. Guntner(1).................................   43           1995
        Joseph Schollenberger...................................   71           1995
        James R. Olson..........................................   56           1995
        Fred H. Beaumont, Jr....................................   60           1996
        Allan D. Weingarten.....................................   59           1996
        David T. DiPasquale(1)..................................   43           1997

 
                                        3
   27
 
- ---------------
(1) Mr. Christian Guntner was nominated to serve as a director by the Company
    under the terms of a Stockholder Agreement dated August 1, 1991, as amended,
    between the Company and JUSI Holdings, Inc. ("JUSI"). On July 9, 1997, JUSI
    sold 1,892,100 shares to Mr. Guntner and 1,200,000 shares to David T.
    DiPasquale, comprising all of JUSI's shares of the Company. Mr. DiPasquale
    was elected to serve as a member of the Board on July 10, 1997. See
    "SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT" and
    "CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS."
 
     MR. SCOGGIN has been the Chairman of the Board, President and Chief
Executive Officer of the Company since July 21, 1995 and prior thereto was
interim Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of the
Company from April 1, 1995. He was the founder and former President and Chief
Executive Officer of TGI Friday's, Inc., a multi-unit restaurant company, until
November 1986, and prior to joining the Company, served as a consultant for
several restaurant concepts and founded Bison Group, a developer of foodservice
and entertainment concepts. Mr. Scoggin was a director of Roasters Corp. and
Harvest Buffet Restaurants, Inc.
 
     MR. GUNTNER was Senior Vice President of Corporate Development of U.S.
Industries, Inc., a company engaged in the manufacture and distribution of
consumer, building and industrial products, from May 1995 through July 1997, and
since that time has been a private investor. He was Executive Vice President and
Chief Operating Officer of Publicker Industries, Inc. from July 1990 through
March 1995 and Vice President of Vornado, Inc. from February 1990 to July 1990.
 
     MR. SCHOLLENBERGER has been Vice President of each of GSB Holdings, Inc.
and GSB, Inc. and Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of their
parent company, Great South Beach Improvement Co., a corporation principally
engaged in real estate development, since January 1994. From 1980 to 1994, he
was associated with Able Fab Co. in various executive capacities.
 
     MR. OLSON was President of PDQ Car Wash, Inc. from March of 1996 to
December of 1996 and since that time has been a private investor. He was
President of the Transportation Sector from December 1992 to July 1995 and
President of the Van Group from March 1987 to December 1992 of Schneider
National, Inc.
 
     MR. BEAUMONT became a principal of Balukoff, Lindstrom & Co., P.A. in July
1995 and was the President, Director and sole shareholder of Fritz Beaumont, CPA
firm, from September 1971 to July 1995.
 
     MR. WEINGARTEN was a Partner of Ernst & Young, LLP in New Jersey from 1972
through September of 1995 and since that time has been a business consultant and
private investor. Since April 1997, Mr. Weingarten has been a director of
Programmers Paradise, Inc.
 
     MR. DIPASQUALE has been a private investor since July 1997. From May 1995
through July 1997 he was a Group Chairman of U.S. Industries. From July 1993
through May 1995 he was Chairman of the Recreation/Leisure Group of Hanson
Industries. From September 1990 through July 1993, he was Chairman, CEO and
President of Endicott Johnson Footwear Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Hanson
Industries. Mr. DiPasquale is also Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Two
Ten International Footwear Foundation, a non-profit organization serving the
members of the Footwear and allied industries.
 
                                        4
   28
 
         SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
 
     The following table sets forth to the knowledge of the Company certain
information, as of August 29, 1997, regarding the beneficial ownership of Common
Stock, which is the Company's only class of voting securities, by shareholders
who own more than 5% of the outstanding shares, by each director of the Company,
by each of the five named executive officers of the Company and by all directors
and executive officers of the Company as a group. Substantially all the
information set forth in the following table has been furnished by the persons
listed in the table. Unless otherwise indicated, each person holds sole voting
and investment power with respect to shares shown opposite their name.
 


                                                                AMOUNT AND NATURE OF         PERCENT
            NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER               BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP(1)       OF CLASS
- -------------------------------------------------------------  -----------------------       --------
                                                                                       
Christian R. Guntner.........................................         1,902,100(2)             17.0%
  44 Front Street
  Suite 770
  Worcester, MA 01608
David DiPasquale.............................................         1,202,000(2)             10.7%
  44 Front Street
  Suite 770
  Worcester, MA 01608
Wellington Management Company, LLP...........................           905,300(3)              8.1%
  75 State Street
  Boston, MA 02109
Dimensional Fund Advisors, Inc. .............................           640,900(4)              5.7%
  1299 Ocean Ave.
  Santa Monica, CA 90401
GSB Holdings, Inc............................................           503,300(5)              4.5%
  One Bethany Road at Rt. 35
  Building 6, Suite 94
  Hazlet, NJ 07730
Daniel R. Scoggin............................................           119,667                 1.0%
Joseph Schollenberger........................................             4,000(5)(6)              *
James R. Olson...............................................             4,000                    *
Fred H. Beaumont, Jr. .......................................             3,000                    *
Allan D. Weingarten..........................................             5,000                    *
Stephen J. Kiel..............................................            16,667                    *
Anthony E. Bezsylko..........................................            13,333                    *
A. Gerald Leneweaver.........................................             6,667                    *
David L. Dobbs...............................................                 0                    *
Michael R. Jorgensen.........................................                 0                    *
All executive officers and directors as a group (14
  persons)...................................................         3,325,830                29.2%

 
- ---------------
* Less than 1%
 
(1) Shares not outstanding but deemed beneficially owned by virtue of the right
    of an individual to acquire them within 60 days upon the exercise of an
    option are treated as outstanding for purposes of determining beneficial
    ownership and the percent beneficially owned by such person.
 
(2) These shares were acquired from JUSI Holdings, Inc. ("JUSI"), a wholly-owned
    subsidiary of U.S. Industries, Inc. ("USI"), in a privately negotiated
    transaction on July 9, 1997. Messrs Guntner and DiPasquale are deemed to be
    a group for purposes of the Exchange Act.
 
(3) Wellington Management Company, LLP, ("WMC") is an investment advisor
    registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment
    Advisers Act of 1940, as amended. As of January 24, 1997 WMC, in its
    capacity as investment adviser, may be deemed to have beneficial ownership
    of 905,300 shares of Company common stock that are owned by numerous
    investment advisory
 
                                        5
   29
 
    clients, none of which is known to have such interest with respect to more
    than five percent of the class. As of January 24, 1997, WMC had voting power
    and dispositive power as follows:
 

                                                         
                        Sole Voting Power         =     0         Shares
                        Shared Voting Power       =     163,300   Shares
                        Sole Dispositive Power    =     0         Shares
                        Shared dispositive Power  =     905,300   Shares

 
(4) Dimensional Fund Advisors Inc. ("Dimensional"), a registered investment
    advisor, ia deemed to have beneficial ownership of 640,900 shares of Company
    common stock as of December 31, 1996, all of which shares are held in
    portfolios of DFA Investment Dimensions Group Inc., a registered open-end
    investment company (the "Fund"), or in series of the DFA Investment Trust
    Company, a Delaware business trust (the "Trust"), or the DFA Group Trust and
    DFA Participation Group Trust, investment vehicles for qualified employee
    benefit plans, all of which Dimensional serves as investment manager.
    Dimensional disclaims beneficial ownership of all such shares.
 

                                                        
                        Sole Voting Power        =     469,850   Shares*
                        Shared Voting Power      =     0
                        Sole Dispositive Power   =     640,900
                        Shared Dispositive
                          Power                  =     0

 
    * Persons who are officers of Dimensional also serve as officers of the Fund
      and the Trust, each an open-end management investment company registered
      under the Investment Company Act of 1940. In their capacity of officers of
      the Fund and the Trust, these persons vote 87,950 additional shares which
      are owned by the Fund and 83,100 shares which are owned by the Trust (both
      included in Sole Dispositive Power above).
 
(5) GSB Holdings, Inc. ("GSB Holdings"), which is the record holder of 503,300
    shares of Company Common Stock, is engaged principally in the business of
    holding investments and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Great South Beach
    Improvement Co. ("GSB Improvement"), a corporation principally engaged in
    real estate development. The address of GSB Holdings is One Bethany Road at
    Route 35, Building 6, Suite 94, Hazlet, New Jersey 07730. Mr. Clarke is a
    director and officer of GSB Holdings and a director, officer and controlling
    shareholder of GSB Improvement and may, therefore, be deemed to own
    beneficially the shares of Common Stock owned by GSB Holdings. David H.
    Clarke, who is the Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of U.S.
    Industries, Inc., is a director and officer of GSB Holdings and a director,
    officer and controlling shareholder of GSB Holdings' parent corporation, GSB
    Improvement. Also excludes 4,000 shares of the Company Common Stock subject
    to options granted to Mr. Schollenberger, a director of the Company, who is
    a Vice President of GSB Holdings, as to which beneficial ownership is
    disclaimed.
 
(6) Excludes 503,300 shares of Common stock owned directly by GSB Holdings, as
    to which beneficial ownership is disclaimed.
 
                               CHANGE OF CONTROL
 
     On July 9, 1997, JUSI sold 3,092,100 shares of Common Stock, being all of
JUSI's shares of Common Stock. Such shares, representing approximately 27.7% of
the outstanding shares of Common Stock, were purchased as follows: 1,892,100
shares of Common Stock by Christian R. Guntner for $2,497,572 and 1,200,000
shares of Common Stock by David T. DiPasquale for $1,584,000. Mr. Guntner and
Mr. DiPasquale purchased the Shares utilizing their personal funds. Messrs.
Guntner and DiPasquale filed a Form 13-D with the Securities and Exchange
Commission in connection with their purchase of the Shares, in which they
affirmed that they are holding such Shares as a group. Mr. Guntner and Mr.
DiPasquale hold, in the aggregate, 3,102,100 shares of Common Stock,
representing approximately 27.7% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.
Messrs. Guntner and DiPasquale were executives of USI until they resigned their
positions with USI at the closing of their purchase of the Shares. Mr. Guntner,
who has been a director of the Company
 
                                        6
   30
 
since 1995, remains a director of the Company's Board of Directors. Mr. David
DiPasquale was elected by the Company's Board of Directors as a director on the
Company's Board of Directors on July 10, 1997.
 
     On July 21, 1997, Mr. John A. Mistretta resigned as a member of the Board
of Directors of the Company. Mr. Mistretta had been nominated by JUSI to serve
as a director of the Company pursuant to the terms of the Stockholder Agreement
dated August 1, 1991, as amended, between the Company and JUSI.
 
                INFORMATION CONCERNING MEETINGS OF THE BOARD OF
            DIRECTORS AND BOARD COMMITTEES AND DIRECTOR COMPENSATION
 
     The Board of Directors currently has formed the following committees of the
Company:
 
          (a) Compensation Committee, presently consisting of James R. Olson,
     Allan D. Weingarten and Fred H. Beaumont, Jr. The function of the
     Compensation Committee is to review compensation paid to the Company's
     officers and employees and administer the Company's stock option and equity
     incentive plans.
 
          (b) Audit Committee, presently consisting of Christian R. Guntner,
     James R. Olson and Allan D. Weingarten. The function of the Audit Committee
     is to provide assistance to the Company's directors in fulfilling their
     responsibility to the Company's shareholders, potential shareholders and
     the investment community relating to corporate accounting, audit
     procedures, reporting practices of the Company and the quality and
     integrity of the Company's financial reports, and to facilitate the
     maintenance of free and open means of communication between the Company's
     directors, independent auditors, internal auditors and financial
     management.
 
          (c) Nominating Committee, presently consisting of Daniel R. Scoggin,
     Christian R. Guntner and Allan D. Weingarten, whose function is to nominate
     candidates for election to the Board of Directors. In carrying out its
     responsibilities, the Nominating Committee will consider only candidates
     nominated in accordance with the procedures set forth in Article II,
     Section 9 of the Company's By-laws. Nominations of persons to serve on the
     Company's Board of Directors may be made at a Special Meeting by or at the
     direction of the Board of Directors or by any shareholder of record as of
     the date such shareholder gives a Nomination Notice (as hereinafter
     defined) to the Company who is entitled to vote in the election of
     directors and who complies with the notice procedures contained in Article
     II, Section 9 of the Company's By-laws. Nominations by a shareholder must
     be in writing (a "Nomination Notice") and delivered to or mailed and
     received by the Company's Secretary not less than 60 and not more than 90
     days prior to the Special Meeting if at least 70 days' notice or prior
     public disclosure of the date of the Special Meeting is given or made to
     the Company's shareholders, or not later than the close of business on the
     tenth day following the day on which such notice or disclosure was given or
     made if less than 70 days' notice or disclosure was provided. Any
     Nomination Notice must provide the information concerning the nominee or
     nominees and the shareholder required by the By-laws. A shareholder may
     obtain a copy of the Company's By-laws by making a written request to the
     Company's Secretary, 35 Braintree Hill Office Park, Braintree, MA
     02184-9078.
 
     During fiscal year 1996, the Board of Directors of the Company met eight
times, the Compensation Committee met five times, the Audit Committee met five
times and the Nominating Committee did not meet. Each of the directors attended
at least 75 percent of the meetings of the Board of Directors held during the
period that he served during fiscal 1996, except for Christian R. Guntner who
has an attendance average of 63%. Each of the directors attended at least 75
percent of the meetings of all committees on which he served that were held in
fiscal 1996 during the period that he served, except for Christian R. Guntner
and Joseph Schollenberger who had attendance averages of 50% and Fred H.
Beaumont, Jr. who did not attend the Committee meetings due to extended travel.
 
                                        7
   31
 
                           COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS
 
     Each of the directors of the Company, other than directors who are officers
or employees of the Company or The Ground Round, Inc. ("Ground Round") or of USI
or its affiliates, received an annual fee of $12,000 for serving as a director.
In addition, under the Company's 1992 Equity Incentive Plan, each director of
the Company, excepting any officer or employee of the Company or Ground Round
and any director who is an officer or an employee of USI or its affiliates,
received an option to purchase 2,000 shares of Common Stock of the Company when
he is first elected as director of the Company and an option to purchase 1,000
shares of Common Stock of the Company as of the date of each meeting of
shareholders at which the director is re-elected. These options are immediately
exercisable at a purchase price equal to the closing price of a share of the
Company's Common Stock on the NASDAQ/NMS on the date the option is granted and
have a five-year term. During fiscal year 1996, during the time that each was a
director, Messrs. Olson and Schollenberger each received an option to purchase
1,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price of $3.50 per share upon the
date of re-election as a director and, Messrs. Beaumont and Weingarten, each
received an option to purchase 2,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price
of $3.50 per share upon their election of the Board of Directors on January 23,
1996.
 
                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
 
     Certain information is set forth below concerning the executive officers of
the Company who have been elected to hold office for such terms as may be
prescribed by the Board, and unless sooner removed in accordance with the Bylaws
of the Company, or until their successors are duly elected and qualified. The
executive officers of the Company are as follows:
 


                     NAME                AGE                    POSITION
        -------------------------------  ---   -------------------------------------------
                                         
        Daniel R. Scoggin..............  60    Chairman of the Board, President and Chief
                                                 Executive Officer
        Stephen J. Kiel................  44    Senior Vice President, Chief Financial
                                                 Officer and Treasurer
        Anthony E. Bezsylko............  49    Senior Vice President -- Operations
        Warren C. Hutchins.............  53    Vice President -- Purchasing & Distribution
        Robin L. Moroz.................  40    Vice President -- General Counsel
        A. Gerald Leneweaver...........  51    Vice President -- Human Resources

 
     Daniel R. Scoggin's business experience and current position with the
Company are described above. See "BOARD OF DIRECTORS."
 
     Stephen J. Kiel has served as Sr. Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
and Treasurer of the Company and Ground Round since September 1996. He was
President of the Hudson Consulting Group, an Ohio based financial consulting
group, from September 1993 to August of 1996. Prior to that, Mr. Kiel was a
Partner with Lakewest, L.P. from June 1992 to September 1993. Prior thereto, he
was President of Craft 'N Flower, L.P. from June 1990 to June 1992 and a partner
with Deloitte & Touche from 1987 to 1990.
 
     Anthony E. Bezsylko has served as Sr. Vice President of Operations for the
Company and Ground Round since February of 1996. Mr. Bezsylko was Director of
Operations for the Company and Ground Round since May of 1995. Before joining
Ground Round, Mr. Bezsylko was the Group General Manager of Knotsberry Farms
Restaurants out of California from 1994 to 1995. Prior thereto, he was a
Regional Manager for C.A. Muer from June 1991 to June 1994.
 
     Warren C. Hutchins has served as Vice President, Purchasing and
Distribution of the Company and Ground Round since September 1991 and August
1986, respectively. He was Secretary of Ground Round from March 1990 through
February 1991.
 
                                        8
   32
 
     Robin L. Moroz has served as Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
of the Company since December 1994. Prior thereto, Ms. Moroz served as a
corporate attorney to Ground Round from August 1989 and since October 1991 as
Assistant General Counsel of the Company.
 
     A. Gerald Leneweaver has served as the Vice President of Human Resources of
the Company and Ground Round since January 1996. From August 1991 to January
1996, Mr. Leneweaver was the Executive Vice President and Founder of Travis,
Wolff Consulting, Inc., a Human Resource consulting practice located in Dallas,
Texas.
 
     There is no family relationship among any of the Officers and Directors of
the Company.
 
                                        9
   33
 
                 EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS
 
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
 
     The following Table sets forth all compensation paid to, deferred or
accrued for the benefit of the Company's Chief Executive Officer during fiscal
year 1996 and all other executive officers of the Company (the "named executive
officers") who earned a total annual salary and compensation for fiscal year
1996 exceeding $100,000, as well as named executive officers who had a salary
above $100,000 but received less than such due to employment at the Company for
less than the full fiscal year of 1996. Except as disclosed below, no executive
officer of the Company earned a total annual salary and bonus for fiscal year
1996 exceeding $100,000.
 


                                                                             LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                                                          -----------------------------
                                            ANNUAL COMPENSATION            SECURITIES
                                      -------------------------------      UNDERLYING       ALL OTHER
                                      FISCAL      SALARY       BONUS      OPTIONS/SARS     COMPENSATION
    NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION        YEAR        ($)          ($)           (#)              ($)
- ------------------------------------  ------     --------     -------     ------------     ------------
                                                                            
Daniel R. Scoggin...................   1996      $350,000     $     0              0         $      0
  Chairman of the Board,               1995       152,083(1)        0        176,000(5)             0
  President and Chief                  1994             0           0          1,000(5)             0
  Executive Officer
Stephen J. Kiel.....................   1996        14,583(2)        0         50,000                0
  Senior Vice-President, Chief         1995             0           0              0                0
  Financial Officer and Treasurer      1994             0           0              0                0
Anthony Bezsylko....................   1996       109,167(2)        0         20,000            3,275(6)
  Senior Vice-President,               1995        38,335(3)        0              0              950(6)
  Operations                           1994             0           0              0                0
Gerry Leneweaver....................   1996        93,750(2)        0         20,000            2,830(6)
  Vice-President,                      1995             0           0              0                0
  Human Resources                      1995             0           0              0                0
David Dobbs.........................   1996        11,667(2)        0         30,000              350(6)
  Senior Vice President,               1995             0           0              0               40
  Business Development                 1994             0           0              0                0
Michael R. Jorgensen................   1996       124,167(4)        0              0           45,575(7)
  Senior Vice-President,               1995       130,000           0              0            5,716(6)
  Chief Financial Officer              1994       130,000      69,033              0            4,642(6)

 
- ---------------
Notes:
 
(1) Includes compensation received by Mr. Scoggin from April 1, 1995 through
    July 20, 1995 as interim Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer.
    Commencing July 21, 1995, Mr. Scoggin was elected to serve as Chairman,
    President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company and received
    compensation pursuant to the terms of his employment agreement with the
    Company. See "Employment Agreements".
 
(2) Messrs. Kiel, Bezsylko, Leneweaver and Dobbs were employed or promoted by
    the Company commencing in September 1996, February 1996, January 1996 and
    September 1996, respectively.
 
(3) Mr. Bezsylko was hired by the Company commencing April 10, 1995.
 
(4) Mr. Jorgensen resigned as Senior Vice-President, Chief Financial Officer and
    as an employee of the Company effective August 26, 1996. Mr. Jorgensen was
    employed by the Company commencing in June 1993.
 
(5) Includes 175,000 options Mr. Scoggin received pursuant to the terms of his
    employment agreement with the Company and 1,000 shares of stock options
    received on March 31, 1995 for regular service as a director, prior to
    becoming Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. See "Employment
    Agreements."
 
(6) Represents the amount of the Company's contributions to the non-qualified
    Deferred Compensation Plan made on behalf of the named executive officers.
 
                                       10
   34
 
(7) Represents the amount of the Company's contributions to the non-qualified
    Deferred Compensation Plan of $3,575 plus $40,000 in severance compensation.
    See "Severance Agreements."
 
EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS, TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT AND CHANGE IN CONTROL
ARRANGEMENTS
 
     Employment Agreements.  The company has entered into an employment
agreement (the "Agreement") with Daniel R. Scoggin, effective July 21, 1995 and
amended effective August 18, 1995 and August 29, 1997 under which Mr. Scoggin
has agreed to serve the Company as Chairman of the Board, President and Chief
Executive Officer for a term commencing on July 21, 1995 and extending until
July 20, 1998. The agreement is automatically renewable on each July 21
thereafter for an additional year, unless, not later than 90 days prior to each
July 21, either party gives notice to the other to terminate the agreement.
 
     Under the agreement, Mr. Scoggin is entitled to compensation consisting of
(i) a base salary of $350,000 per annum, and (ii) an annual bonus commencing in
the Company's 1996 fiscal year. Mr. Scoggin was granted on July 21, 1995 stock
options to purchase 175,000 shares of Common Stock of the Company in accordance
with the terms of the Company's 1992 Equity Incentive Plan. The option shall be
exercisable in equal installments over a three-year period, with the first
installment being exercisable on July 20, 1996. Mr. Scoggin is also entitled to
receive certain benefits, including but not limited to, insurance, participation
in the Company's deferred compensation plan and retirement plan, and stock
option and equity incentive plans, use of a Company car or a car allowance, and
payment of an annual country club membership fee. The Company may terminate the
agreement at any time whether for "cause" or for "disability" (as defined in the
agreement). Mr. Scoggin may terminate the agreement at any time if the Company
is in breach of any of its obligations to him under the agreement; if he is not
re-elected to serve as both Chairman and Chief Executive Officer or is removed
from any of such positions, in each case other than for cause; if the Company
assigns him duties which are inconsistent with his position or if the Company
requires him to relocate more than 50 miles away from the current corporate
office. In the event Mr. Scoggin's employment is terminated by him pursuant to
the terms of the agreement or by the Company (other than for "cause", death or
"disability"), Mr. Scoggin will be entitled to receive a lump sum payment equal
to 2.99 times his highest annual base salary at any time in effect. In the event
Mr. Scoggin's employment terminates because of death, disability or expiration
of his agreement without renewal, he will receive his base salary through the
end of the calendar month of such termination or non-renewal. For fiscal year
1996 and future years under the agreement, Mr. Scoggin shall be entitled to a
bonus comprised of two components based on audited figures. The first component
of the bonus ranges from 0% to 80% of Mr. Scoggin's base salary for the
preceding fiscal year and is based one earnings before interest and taxes,
excluding any profit or loss from the sale of restaurants or nonrecurring items
("EBIT") as part of the budget process of the Company. The second component of
the bonus ranges from 0% to 20% of Mr. Scoggin's base salary for the preceding
fiscal year and is based on a range of cash flow as part of the budget process
of the Company. For fiscal year 1996, Mr. Scoggin did not receive a bonus. In
the event Mr. Scoggin's employment terminates because of death, disability,
termination without cause, or by expiration of his agreement without renewal, he
will receive his bonus pro-rated based upon the number of days during the fiscal
year he was employed. If his employment is terminated for cause or Mr. Scoggin
resigns, he shall not receive any bonus for that year.
 
     Pursuant to the Clarification to Employment Agreement and Amendment dated
August 29, 1997 (the "Clarification Agreement"), Mr. Scoggin agreed, upon
termination of the Agreement and payment upon a change of control, that he will
not, for a period of two (2) years following termination, either directly or
indirectly, as a director, officer, employee, agent, consultant or owner, in
whole or in part, engage in competition with any restaurant owned or operated by
the Company or any of its subsidiaries or franchisees (each a "Ground Round
Restaurant") on the date of such termination, if such competition takes place
within a specified area. For purposes of the Clarification Agreement,
competition is activity in connection with a restaurant or restaurants which
meet all of the following criteria: (1) restaurant size between 2,500 and 7,000
square feet; (2) average check amount of between $8 and $11 per person; and (3)
orientation toward serving families including children in a casual-theme
setting.
 
     The Company has entered into an employment agreement (the "employment
agreement") with Stephen J. Kiel, effective September 1, 1996, under which Mr.
Kiel has agreed to serve the Company as Senior Vice
 
                                       11
   35
 
President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer for a term commencing upon
September 1, 1996, which term shall automatically extend for successive one-year
terms, until September 30, 1999, unless at least ninety (90) days prior to the
expiration of the original or extended term, either party gives notice to
terminate the employment agreement as of the end of the original or extended
term. Under the agreement, Mr. Kiel is entitled to compensation consisting of
(i) a base salary of $175,000 per annum, and (ii) an annual bonus commencing in
the Company's 1996 fiscal year, which, if earned in accordance with the
Company's Corporate Office Incentive Plan, shall be paid within thirty (30) days
of the annual audit of the Company. For fiscal 1996, Mr. Kiel is eligible to
receive a pro rata share of any bonus earned to reflect the number of days
worked by him in such year. For fiscal year 1996, Mr. Kiel did not receive a
bonus. Pursuant to such employment agreement, for fiscal 1997 only, if the
applicable Corporate Office Incentive Plan does not compensate Mr. Kiel with at
least $75,000 (the "1997 guaranteed minimum bonus"), the Company agreed to pay
Mr. Kiel an additional amount in order that the total bonus received by him is
not less than the 1997 guaranteed minimum bonus. Mr. Kiel was granted on
September 1, 1996 stock options to purchase 50,000 shares of common stock of the
Company. The option shall become exercisable in equal installments over a
three-year period, with the first installment being exercisable on August 29,
1997. Mr. Kiel is also entitled to receive certain benefits, including but not
limited to medical and dental insurance plans, disability and life insurance
plans, a Company car or a car allowance, and participation in the Company's
deferred compensation plan, retirement plan and stock option and equity
incentive plans. On May 15, 1997, the Company entered into an Amendment to the
Employment Agreement dated September 1, 1996 with Stephen J. Kiel, which
provides, among other things, for a severance payment equivalent to twice his
salary, if his employment is terminated under certain circumstances following a
"change of control" of the Company, as defined in such Amendment to the
Employment Agreement.
 
     On May 15, 1997, the Company entered into an employment agreement (the
"Bezsylko Employment Agreement") with Anthony E. Bezsylko, pursuant to which Mr.
Bezsylko will serve as Senior Vice President of Operations of the Company for an
initial term of one (1) year commencing May 15, 1997. Such term shall be
automatically extended for additional one-year term unless, at least ninety (90)
days prior to the expiration of the original or any extended term, either party
shall notify the other in writing that it intends to terminate the Bezsylko
Employment Agreement as of the end of such term. As compensation for his
services pursuant to the Bezsylko Employment Agreement, Mr. Bezsylko shall
receive a base salary of One Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000) per year,
be eligible to participate in the Company's Office Incentive Plan and insurance
programs and other fringe benefits customarily provided to Company executives.
The Bezsylko Employment Agreement further provides that Mr. Bezsylko may be
entitled to receive a severance payment equivalent to twice his base salary if
his employment is terminated under certain circumstances following a "change of
control" of the Company, as defined in the Bezsylko Employment Agreement.
 
     On May 15, 1997, the Company entered into an employment agreement (the
"Evans Employment Agreement") with Henri R. Evans, pursuant to which Mr. Evans
will serve as Vice President of Marketing of the Company for an initial term of
one (1) year, commencing May 15, 1997. Such term shall be automatically extended
for additional one-year terms unless, at least ninety (90) days prior to the
expiration of the original or any extended term, either party shall notify the
other in writing that it intends to terminate the Evans Employment Agreement as
of the end of such term. As compensation for his services pursuant to the Evans
Employment Agreement, Mr. Evans shall receive a base salary of One Hundred
Thirty Thousand Dollars ($130,000) per year, be eligible to participate in the
Company's Office Incentive Plan and insurance programs and other fringe benefits
customarily provided to Company executives. The Evans Employment Agreement
further provides that Mr. Evans may be entitled to receive a severance payment
equivalent to twice his base salary if his employment is terminated under
certain circumstances following a "change of control" of the Company, as defined
in the Evans Employment Agreement.
 
     Severance Agreements.  The Company currently has severance agreements (the
"Severance Agreements") with Daniel R. Scoggin, Stephen J. Kiel, Anthony E.
Bezsylko, and Henri R. Evans which are contained within their respective
employment agreements, and Robin L. Moroz, Vice President and General Counsel.
The Severance Agreements provide benefits in the event of a "change in control"
of the Company as defined therein.
 
                                       12
   36
 
     Mr. Scoggin's Severance Agreement is contained within his Employment
Agreement, as amended, and provides that he will receive a lump sum payment in
the event that within 24 months after a change of control (i) Mr. Scoggin
terminates employment with the Company for Good Reason (as defined in the
Severance Agreement) within 90 days after the event which constitutes Good
Reason or (ii) Mr. Scoggin's employment with the Company is terminated by the
Company for any reason other than "cause", death or "disability" (such quoted
words as defined in his Employment Agreement). The lump sum payment will be
equal to 2.99 times Mr. Scoggin's highest annual base salary at any time in
effect and the Company shall pay any bonus due Mr. Scoggin in accordance with
his Employment Agreement. In addition, for a period of two years after the
termination date resulting from a change of control, Mr. Scoggin will be
entitled to the benefit of all employee welfare benefit plans and arrangements
in which he is entitled to participate immediately prior to the change of
control (including, without limitation, medical and dental insurance plans,
disability and life insurance plans, and car allowance programs).
 
     The Severance Agreement for Ms. Moroz provides for a bonus (a "Bonus
Payment") to be received within five days after the expiration of a period of
120 days after a change of control of the Company has occurred (the "Stay
Period"), if (i) during the Stay Period she terminates employment for Good
Reason (as defined in the Severance Agreement) or (ii) during the Stay Period
her employment is terminated by the Company for any reason other than cause or
(iii) she does not voluntarily terminate her employment during the Stay Period
other than for Good Reason. The Bonus Payment will be equal to one-half of the
employee's highest annual base salary at any time on or after the date of the
Severance Agreement. Such Severance Agreement also provides for an additional
payment (a "Severance Payment") to be received, if (i) within 24 months after a
change in control of the Company, the employee terminates her employment with
the Company for Good Reason within 90 days after the event which constitutes
Good Reason or (ii) within such 24-month period, the Company terminates her
employment for any reason other than cause. The Severance Payment will be equal
to two times the sum of (i) the employee's highest annual base salary at any
time on or after the date of the Severance Agreement and (ii) the employee's
highest targeted bonus under the Company's incentive bonus plan at any time on
or after the date of the Severance Agreement. In addition, Ms. Moroz will be
entitled for a period of 24 months after the date of termination of employment
to the benefit of all employee welfare benefit plans and arrangements in which
she is entitled to participate immediately prior to the change of control
(including, without limitation, medical and dental insurance plans, disability
and life insurance plans, and car allowance programs).
 
     Each Severance Agreement provides that all outstanding Company Options (as
defined below) shall vest immediately upon a change of control.
 
     Michael R. Jorgensen, former Chief Financial Officer, also had a Severance
Agreement identical to the Severance Agreement for Ms. Moroz. In addition, the
terms of his Severance Agreement were amended in August 1995 to also include one
additional year of his highest annual base salary at any time in effect, if he
used his best efforts to cooperate and assist with any transaction resulting
from a change of control. Michael Jorgensen's agreement became null and void
when he resigned from the Company on August 26, 1996.
 
                                       13
   37
 
                     OPTION/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
 
     The following table provides information on options granted to the named
executive officers during fiscal year 1996. No stock appreciation rights were
granted in fiscal year 1996.
 


                                                                                                 POTENTIAL
                                                                                                REALIZABLE
                                                                                             VALUE AT ASSUMED
                                                                                              RATES OF STOCK
                                                                                                   PRICE
                                                                                             APPRECIATION FOR
                                # OF SHARES       % OF TOTAL      EXERCISE OR                   OPTION TERM
                                UNDERLYING      OPTIONS GRANTED   BASE PRICE    EXPIRATION   -----------------
            NAME              OPTIONS GRANTED    TO EMPLOYEES      PER SHARE       DATE       5%($)    10%($)
- ----------------------------  ---------------   ---------------   -----------   ----------   -------   -------
                                                                                     
Stephen J. Kiel.............       15,500(1)          4.1%          $  2.50        8/29/06   $24,370   $61,758
                                   34,500(1)          9.2%          $  2.50        8/29/06   $29,333   $66,547
Anthony E. Bezsylko.........        6,200(1)          1.6%          $3.1875       10/10/05   $12,429   $31,496
                                                      3.7%          $3.1875       10/10/01   $14,960   $33,939
A. Gerald Leneweaver........        5,600(1)          1.5%          $2.1875       12/10/05   $ 7,704   $19,523
                                                      3.8%          $2.1875       12/10/01   $10,713   $24,304
David L. Dobbs..............        9,300(1)          2.5%          $  2.50        8/29/06   $14,622   $37,055
                                   20,700(1)          5.5%          $  2.50        8/29/06   $17,600   $39,928
Michael J. Jorgensen........       10,850(1)          2.9%          $3.1875       10/10/05   $21,750   $55,119
                                   24,150(2)          6.4%          $3.1875       10/10/01   $26,180   $59,393

 
- ---------------
Notes:
 
(1) The per share option exercise price for the grant is the per share fair
    market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. All options are
    exercisable in equal installments over a three year period and have a ten
    year term.
 
(2) The per share option exercise price for the grant is the per share fair
    market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. All options are
    exercisable in equal installments over a three year period and have a six
    year term.
 
         AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES AND FISCAL YEAR END OPTION VALUES
 
     The following table shows certain information as of September 29, 1996
concerning unexercised stock options held by the named executive officers that
were granted under the Company's Amended and Restated 1989 Stock Option Plan and
1992 Equity Incentive Plan. The Company has not granted any SARs. None of the
name executive officers exercised any stock options during fiscal 1996.
 


                                               NUMBER OF SECURITIES
                                              UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED       VALUE OF UNEXERCISED IN-THE-MONEY
                                           OPTIONS AT FISCAL YEAR END(#)     OPTIONS AT FISCAL YEAR END($)
                                           -----------------------------   ---------------------------------
                  NAME                       EXERCISABLE/UNEXERCISABLE       EXERCISABLE/UNEXERCISABLE(1)
- -----------------------------------------  -----------------------------   ---------------------------------
                                                                     
Daniel R. Scoggin........................      63,333/116,667                      0/0
Stephen J. Kiel..........................         0/50,000                         0/0
Anthony E. Bezsylko......................         0/20,000                         0/0
A. Gerald Leneweaver.....................         0/20,000                       0/2,500
David L. Dobbs...........................         0/30,000                         0/0
Michael R. Jorgensen.....................      47,500/35,000     (2)               0/0

 
- ---------------
Notes:
 
(1) Valuation is based on fair market value of the Company's common stock on
    September 29, 1996 (the last day of the 1996 fiscal year) which was $2.3125
    per share based upon the last reported sale price for a share on the NASDAQ
    National Market System on September 27, 1996.
 
(2) Options expired on November 24, 1996 due to resignation of employment.
 
                                       14
   38
 
                           DEFINED BENEFIT PLAN TABLE
 
     The following is a pension plan table showing estimated annual benefits
(exclusive of Social Security benefits) payable upon normal retirement to
persons in specified compensation and years of service classifications under the
Company's unfunded, non-qualified retirement plan (the "Retirement Plan"), based
on final average salary for various years of service, assuming the employee
would retire at age 65 in 1996. Officers of the Company who hold the title of
President, Senior Vice President, Vice President or General Counsel are entitled
to participation in the Retirement Plan. The Company pays the full cost of the
Plan.
 


                                YEARS OF SERVICE
FINAL AVERAGE     ---------------------------------------------
   SALARY           10          15           20           25
- -------------     -------     -------     --------     --------
                                           
  $ 100,000       $20,000     $20,000     $ 35,000     $ 50,000
    120,000        24,000      24,000       42,000       60,000
    140,000        28,000      28,000       49,000       70,000
    160,000        32,000      32,000       56,000       80,000
    200,000        40,000      40,000       70,000      100,000
    250,000        50,000      50,000       87,500      125,000
    300,000        60,000      60,000      105,000      150,000
    350,000        70,000      70,000      122,500      175,000
    400,000        80,000      80,000      140,000      200,000
    450,000        90,000      90,000      157,000      225,000

 
     The compensation covered by the Retirement Plan is the base salary of
individual participants as shown in the Summary Compensation Table. Final
average salary is the highest five-year average of consecutive years' salary
over an employee's career with the Company. Participants in the Retirement Plan
are entitled to monthly benefit upon retirement after attaining the age of 65
equal to 50% of final average compensation, reduced by 1/2 of 1% of final
average compensation of each month (not in excess of 120 months) by which the
participant's credited service with the Company is less than 300 months, less
the amount of the participant's primary Social Security benefit. Early
retirement benefits are also available for participants who are 55 and have
completed 15 years of service. The benefit is equal to the participant's normal
retirement benefit reduced for early commencement by 5/9 of 1% for each of the
first 60 months plus 5/18 of 1% for each month in excess of 60 months by which
the benefit commencement date precedes a participant's normal retirement date,
and increased by 148 of 1% of the participant's final average compensation times
months of projected credit service over 25 years, not to exceed 120 months, less
the amount of the participant's primary Social Security benefit. Projected
credit service indicates that period of time which commences on the participants
date of hire and ends on the participant's normal retirement date. Benefits are
payable for the life of the retiree only, and would be reduced on an actuarial
basis if survivor options were chosen. In addition, benefits are subject to a
100% deduction for Social Security amounts.
 
     The years of service at October 1, 1996, under the plan for the named
executive officers were as follows: Mr. Scoggin, 1 year, 3 months; Mr. Kiel, 0
Years, 1 month; Mr. Dobbs, 0 years, 1 month; Mr. Bezsylko, 1 year, 6 months; Mr.
Leneweaver, 0 years, 9 months.
 
          COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
 
     During fiscal 1996 each of the following directors served as a member of
the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors: Messrs. Meachin (former
director), Olson, Mistretta and Beaumont. None of these individuals has served
as an officer or employee of the company or any of its subsidiaries. Mr.
Mistretta, who is an executive officer of U.S. Industries, Inc., was one of the
directors of the Company designated by JUSI Holdings, Inc. pursuant to the terms
of the 1991 Stockholder Agreement (hereinafter defined). See "CERTAIN
RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS".
 
                                       15
   39
 
            COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
     The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors is comprised of three
non-employee directors. The Committee is responsible for administering,
reviewing and making recommendations to the Board of Directors with respect to
executive compensation, which includes base salaries, annual incentives and
long-term equity incentive plans as well as any executive benefits and/or
perquisites. In addition, the Compensation Committee is responsible for the
granting of awards and administration of the 1989 Amended and Restated Stock
Option Plan and the 1992 Equity incentive Plan (collectively, the "Plans"). The
Committee ensures that executive compensation is at a level such that the
Company can attract, retain, motivate and reward its executives for contributing
toward the Company's short- and long-term financial and non-financial goals, and
places the most emphasis on long-term incentives. By emphasizing long-term
incentive compensation, the Committee creates a link between the Company's
executives and the shareholders' interests.
 
COMPLIANCE WITH INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 162(M)
 
     Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code generally disallows a tax
deduction to publicly held companies for annual compensation in excess of one
million dollars earned by the Chief Executive Officer or any of the four highest
compensated officers. The deduction limit does not apply, however, to
performance-based compensation that satisfies certain requirements. Although no
named executives in the Company have or are expected to earn annual compensation
in excess of one million dollars, the Committee will continue to monitor and
review the implication of Section 162(m) with respect to the Company's executive
compensation policies.
 
BASE SALARIES
 
     The Compensation Committee believes that a substantial portion of the Chief
Executive Officer's and all other executives' compensation should be tied to the
performance of the company and therefore at risk. This is accomplished by a
compensation plan that includes a base salary which is intentionally set at or
below competitive market data, and increasing bonus opportunities through an
annual incentive plan. Should the Company meet its financial goals, the
executives combined salary and bonus is intended to meet competitive market
levels and if the Company exceeds those goals, total compensation will exceed
competitive market levels.
 
     The Committee periodically reviews the base salary of the executives and
makes pay increase recommendations to the Board of Directors in accordance with
the above philosophy. These recommendations are predicated upon external market
data, changes in the duties and responsibilities assigned to each position
and/or each executive's individual performance. In making salary determinations,
the Committee reviews various industry sources, including the current year's
Chain Restaurant Compensation Association Survey prepared by Towers Perrin, a
compensation consultant. Companies included in this survey are generally the
same as those included in the Performance Graph.
 
     In addition, the Committee receives information and recommendations from
professional consulting organizations which have conducted various compensation
studies on the Chief Executive Officer and other selected senior executive
positions of the Company.
 
     Based upon the above-mentioned information, The Board of Directors, upon
the recommendation of the Committee, employed or promoted the following
executive officers:
 


       EXECUTIVE OFFICER                   POSITION               SALARY       ACTION       DATE
- -------------------------------  ----------------------------    --------     ---------    -------
                                                                               
A. Gerald Leneweaver...........  VP, Human Resources             $125,000     Employed      1/2/96
Anthony E. Bezsylko............  SVP, Operations                 $125,000     Promoted      2/1/96
David L. Dobbs.................  SVP, Business Development       $140,000     Employed      9/3/96
Stephen J. Kiel................  SVP, CFO & Treasurer            $175,000     Employed      9/3/96

 
                                       16
   40
 
BONUS PLAN
 
     The Company had in effect in fiscal 1996, the 1996 Corporate Executive
Incentive Plan (the "Incentive Plan") under which the Company's Chief Executive
Officer, executive officers, department directors and field operations
executives were eligible to receive cash bonuses based upon the Company's
Earnings before interest and taxes ("EBIT") and Cash Flow for the period from
October 2, 1995 through September 29, 1996.
 
     The objective of the Incentive Plan was to ensure the Company met or
exceeded the Board of Director's expected earnings growth rate by motivating and
rewarding the Incentive Plan participants for achieving or exceeding these
expectations.
 
     Participants in the Incentive Plan were eligible based on the following
criteria:
 
     - Eighty percent (80%) of an executive's bonus award was to be based upon
the level of EBIT, excluding gains or losses from the sale of assets, achieved
by the Company; and
 
     - Twenty percent (20%) of the bonus award was to be based upon the level of
achievement of net cash provided by operating activities minus net cash used in
investing activities ("Cash Flow") for the fiscal year.
 
     The maximum amount of any bonus opportunity under the Incentive Plan varies
from 50% to 100% of a participant's annualized base salary. The Chief Executive
Officer's maximum bonus potential is 100% of his annualized base salary.
 
     According to the Incentive Plan, the Company had to be profitable during
each of the last two quarters of the fiscal year, and the Company had to have a
1996 fiscal year loss of no more than $.10 per share for any bonus to be paid
out under this Incentive Plan.
 
     For fiscal year 1996, the Company was not profitable during each of the
last two quarters of the fiscal year and suffered a loss greater than $.10 per
share. Therefore, the Incentive Plan did not pay the Chief Executive Officer or
any of the other Incentive Plan participants a bonus for fiscal year 1996.
 
STOCK OPTION AND EQUITY INCENTIVE PLANS
 
     The Company has in effect two Plans, the 1989 Amended and Restated Stock
Option Plan and the 1992 Equity Incentive Plan (the "Plans"), which authorize
the Compensation Committee to grant; options to purchase shares of Common Stock
including both Incentive Stock Option and Non-Qualified Stock Options; stock
appreciation rights; performance stock units and restricted stock to qualified
officers and key employees of the Company.
 
     The purpose of these Plans is to enable the Company to attract, retain and
motivate its executives and other key employees and to enable them to
participate in the long-term growth of the Company by providing for or
increasing their proprietary interests in the Company and to help the Company
achieve its long-range goals by aligning the interests of the Company's
executives and the other key employees with its shareholders.
 
     The Compensation Committee determines the individuals who participate in
the Plans, the price and terms upon which awards shall be made including the
number of shares or units subject to each award, all subject to the terms and
conditions of the Plans.
 
     Stock Options were awarded to the named executive officers below the Chief
Executive Officer. See "OPTIONS/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR".
 
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER AND COMPENSATION
 
     There was no change in compensation for Daniel R. Scoggin, Chief Executive
Officer during fiscal year 1996. Mr. Scoggin, who previously held a position on
the Board of Directors with the Company, and served as interim Chairman,
President and Chief Executive Officer from April 1, 1995 through July 20, 1995,
became Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company as of July
21, 1995, at an annual salary of $350,000. In addition, Mr. Scoggin is entitled
to participate in the Corporate Executive Incentive Plan (described above). As
with the other eligible officers, Mr. Scoggin did not receive a bonus under the
Incentive
 
                                       17
   41
 
Plan for fiscal year 1996. Mr. Scoggin also participates in the Stock Option and
Equity Incentive Plans. Mr. Scoggin did not receive any additional stock options
during fiscal year 1996.
 
OTHER COMPENSATION
 
     The Company provides certain other benefits such as health, dental and
long-term disability insurance to the Chief Executive Officer and other
executive officers that are generally available to Company employees. The Chief
Executive Officer along with the other key management employees who earn more
than $66,000 participate in the Company's non-qualified deferred compensation
plan. In addition, executive officers of the Company are eligible to receive an
automobile allowance or Company leased automobile. For the fiscal year ended
September 29, 1996, the amount of additional benefits to each of the named
executive officers of the Company did not exceed 10% of the total annual salary
and bonus for each named executive officer.
 
                                          Respectfully submitted,
 
                                          James R. Olson, Chairman
                                          John A. Mistretta
                                          Fred H. Beaumont, Jr.
 
                                       18
   42
 
PERFORMANCE GRAPH
 
                         GROUND ROUND RESTAURANTS, INC.
                   COMPARISON OF CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN VS.
                S&P 500 AND VALUE LINE RESTAURANT INDUSTRY GROUP
 
TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURNS YEARS ENDING
 
     The graph assumes that $100 was invested on December 31, 1989 in Common
Stock of the Company, the S&P 500 and the Value Line Restaurant Group. Total
return assumes quarterly reinvestment of dividends and includes reinvestment of
the cash equivalent of the special dividend made by the Company to all of its
shareholders of record on September 11, 1991, of one share of MariFarms, Inc.
for each share of Common Stock of the Company.
 


                                    BASE       9/30/91     9/28/92      10/4/93      10/3/94      10/2/95
                                   PERIOD        TO           TO           TO           TO           TO
         COMPANY/INDEX            12/31/90     9/28/92     10/4/93      10/3/94      10/2/95      9/29/96
- --------------------------------  --------     -------     --------     --------     --------     --------
                                                                                
Ground Round Restaurants,
  Inc...........................               110.87       121.74       145.65        60.87        41.30
Peer Group......................               123.11       148.23       145.19       186.99       226.35
S&P 500.........................               111.29       126.78       130.33       168.41       202.05

 
                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
 
     SALE OF SHARES BY JUSI.  On July 9, 1997, JUSI sold 3,092,100 shares of
Common Stock, being all of JUSI's shares of Common Stock, to Christian R.
Guntner and David T. DiPasquale. See "CHANGE OF CONTROL and "SECURITY OWNERSHIP
OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT"
 
     JUSI AND THE AMENDED CREDIT AGREEMENT.  The Amended Credit Agreement
provided that upon delivery by JUSI, to the Company's Lenders of an aggregate of
100,000 shares of the Company's Common Stock, it shall no longer constitute an
event of default under the Amended Credit Agreement if USI and its affiliates
(i) cease to be the legal and beneficial owners of at least 25% of the
outstanding shares of capital
 
                                       19
   43
 
stock of the Company, or (ii) shall fail to have two nominees serving on the
Company's board of directors while USI owns 20% or more of the capital stock of
the Company, and one nominee serving on the Company's board of directors so long
as USI owns 10% or more but less than 20% of the outstanding capital stock of
the Company (the events listed in clauses (i) and (ii) being hereinafter
referred to as the "Prohibited Actions"). On October 1, 1996, JUSI transferred
100,000 shares of Common Stock to the Lenders, whereupon the Prohibited Actions
ceased to constitute events of default under the Amended Credit Agreement.
 
     1991 SHAREHOLDER AGREEMENT.  Pursuant to the terms of an Agreement dated
June 5, 1995, between HM Holdings, Inc., a Delaware corporation ("HM Holdings")
and JUSI, HM Holdings assigned and JUSI assumed all of HM Holdings' rights and
obligations under a shareholder agreement, dated as of August 1, 1991 between HM
Holdings and the Company (the "1991 Shareholder Agreement"). The 1991
Shareholder Agreement provided for certain rights and restrictions with respect
to JUSI's ownership of the Common Stock of the Company. Under the 1991
Shareholder Agreement, the Company agreed that, upon JUSI's request, it will use
its best efforts to nominate and cause to be elected to the Company's Board of
Directors two persons designated by JUSI as long as JUSI and its corporate
affiliates beneficially own 20% or more of the outstanding shares of Common
Stock, and one person designated by JUSI as long as JUSI and its corporate
affiliates beneficially own less than 20% but more than 10% of the outstanding
shares of Common Stock.
 
     In its original form, the 1991 Shareholder Agreement provided that, except
in certain limited circumstances, so long as JUSI or its affiliates own 20% or
more of the outstanding shares of Common Stock, so long as JUSI or any such
affiliates seek to sell or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of the
shares of Common Stock owned by it to a third party, except as may be otherwise
approved by a majority of the members of the Board of Directors not designated
by JUSI, JUSI or such affiliate would use it best efforts to cause such third
party to offer to purchase all other outstanding shares of Common Stock upon
substantially the same terms and conditions. The 1991 Shareholder Agreement
provided that, if such third party fails to make such offer, JUSI or such
affiliates would not so sell or otherwise dispose of such shares unless such
third party agrees to be subject to the same limitation on its ability to sell
and to the requirements applicable to JUSI with respect to the acquisition of
50% or more of the outstanding shares of common stock. In addition, in the 1991
Shareholders Agreement the Company agreed that, if at any time when JUSI or its
affiliates own 25% or more of the outstanding shares of common stock, the
Company shall propose to sell any shares of common stock or any warrants or
rights therefor or securities convertible into or exchangeable therefor, to any
person or entity other than JUSI or its affiliates, it shall give JUSI the
opportunity to purchase such number of shares or other securities as will permit
JUSI and its corporate affiliates to retain their percentage of the Company's
voting power. All of the restrictions placed on JUSI which are set forth above
in this paragraph, were eliminated in connection with the execution of the
Amended 1991 Shareholders Agreement (described below).
 
     Pursuant to the 1991 Shareholder Agreement, the Company also agreed that,
so long as JUSI owns 5% or more of the outstanding shares of Common Stock, upon
JUSI's request, the Company will cause up to four registration statements to be
filed with the Commission in order to permit JUSI or a corporate affiliate to
sell all or a portion of its shares of Common Stock. In addition the Company
agreed, if requested, to include some or all shares of Common Stock owned by
JUSI or an affiliate in any registration statement it otherwise files (other
than registration statements relating to employee stock options). The Company
and JUSI also agreed to indemnify each other for certain liabilities that may
arise in connection with any such registration statements. On September 30,
1996, JUSI exercised one of its demand registration rights by giving written
notice to the Company to register its Shares.
 
     AMENDMENT OF 1991 SHAREHOLDER AGREEMENT.  In connection with the execution
of the Amended Credit Agreement, the Company and JUSI entered into an Amendment,
dated as of September 12, 1996, to the 1991 Shareholder Agreement (the "Amended
1991 Shareholder Agreement"), providing, among other things, that upon delivery
by JUSI to the Lenders of the 100,000 shares of common stock of the Company
described above, (x) JUSI would no longer be restricted from engaging in any of
the Prohibited Actions, (y) the restrictions relating to the sale, transfer or
disposal of the shares of common stock held by JUSI, and certain of its
affiliates described above, would lapse, and (z) JUSI consented to the Company
entering into the Lenders Registration Rights Agreement and agreed that the
number of shares that JUSI would otherwise be entitled to
 
                                       20
   44
 
sell pursuant to its demand registration rights may be reduced, in certain
circumstances, if any of the Lenders exercised their "piggy-back" registration
rights.
 
     1991 REGISTRATION RIGHTS AGREEMENT WITH GSB HOLDINGS.  GSB Holdings, Inc.
("GSB Holdings") and the Company are parties to a Registration Rights Agreement,
dated as of August 20, 1991 (the "GSB Registration Rights Agreement"), which
allows GSB Holdings certain "piggy-back" registration rights with respect to its
shares of common stock. The Company agreed, if requested, to include no less
than 50,000 shares of common stock owned by GSB Holdings in any registration
statement it otherwise files (other than registration statements relating to
employee stock options). On November 11, 1996, GSB exercised it piggy-back
registration rights by delivering written notice to the Company to register its
Shares. GSB Holdings agreed to observe the same lock-ups with regard to the sale
of the shares of common stock owned by it as the Company agrees to, if any, in
connection with such registration statement if so requested by the managing
underwriter. The Company and GSB Holdings also agreed to indemnify each other
for certain liabilities that may arise in connection with any such registration
statement.
 
     DIRECTORS' AND OFFICERS' INDEMNIFICATION AND INSURANCE.  The Merger
Agreement provides, among other things, that the certificate of incorporation of
the Surviving Corporation shall, for a period of six years from the Effective
Time (as defined in the Merger Agreement), contain provisions no less favorable
with respect to indemnification than are set forth in the Certificate of
Incorporation, in the forms to be amended as set forth in Exhibit A to the
Merger Agreement, which provisions shall not be amended, repealed or otherwise
modified for such period in any manner that would affect adversely the rights
thereunder of individuals who at any time prior to the Effective Time were
directors, officers, employees or agents of the Company, unless such
modification shall be required by law. Pursuant to the terms of the Merger
Agreement, the Company shall, to the fullest extent permitted under New York law
and regardless of whether the Merger becomes effective, indemnify and hold
harmless and after the Effective Time the Surviving Corporation shall, to the
fullest extent permitted under New York law, indemnify and hold harmless, each
present and former director and officer of the Company and each of its
subsidiaries (collectively, the "Indemnified parties") against judgments, fines,
reasonable amounts paid in settlement and reasonable expenses, including
attorneys' fees, costs and charges incurred as a result of any action or
proceeding (whether arising before or after the Effective Time), or any appeal
therefrom, whether civil or criminal, arising out of or pertaining to any action
or omission in their capacity as an officer or director prior to or at the
Effective Time, for a period of six years after the Effective Time (or with
respect to claims arising from service as an officer or director prior to the
Effective Time and asserted or made prior to such sixth anniversary which have
not been resolved prior to such sixth anniversary, until the time such matters
are finally resolved). In the event of any such action or proceeding (i) the
Company or the Surviving Corporation, as the case may be, shall pay the
reasonable fees and expenses of counsel selected by the Indemnified Parties,
which counsel shall be reasonably satisfactory to the Company or the Surviving
Corporation, promptly after statements therefor are received, provided that an
agreement has been entered into by such Indemnified Party agreeing to repay such
amounts to the Company if the Indemnified Party is ultimately found by a final
judgment (not subject to further appeal) of a court of competent jurisdiction
not to be entitled to indemnification, or to the extent such amount exceeds the
indemnification to which such Indemnified Party is entitled, under New York law,
and (ii) the Company and the surviving Corporation shall cooperate and provide
access to all documents necessary beneficial to the defense of any such matter;
provided, however, that neither the Company nor the Surviving Corporation shall
be liable for any settlement effected without its written consent (which consent
shall not be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned); and provided,
further that neither the Company nor the Surviving Corporation shall be
obligated pursuant to the Merger Agreement to pay the fees and expenses of more
than one counsel for all Indemnified Parties in any single action except to the
extent that two or more of such Indemnified Parties shall have conflicting
interests in the outcome of such action.
 
     The Merger Agreement also provides that, in the event the Company or the
Surviving Corporation or any of their respective successors (i) is consolidated
with or merges into another person and shall not be the continuing or surviving
corporation or entity of such consolidation or merger or (ii) transfers all or
substantially all of its properties and assets to any other person in a single
transaction or a series of related transactions, then in each such case the
Parent shall make or cause to be made proper provision so that the
 
                                       21
   45
 
successor or transferee of the Company or the Surviving Corporation, as the case
may be, shall comply in all material respect with the foregoing terms.
 
     Under the Merger Agreement, the Surviving Corporation has agreed to use its
best efforts to maintain in effect for six years from the Effective Time, if
available, the current directors' and officers' liability insurance policies
maintained by the Company (provided that the Surviving Corporation may
substitute therefor policies of at least the same coverage containing terms and
conditions which are not materially less favorable) with respect to matters
occurring prior to the Effective Time; provided, however, that the Surviving
Corporation shall not be required to maintain such insurance to the extent the
annual premium therefor exceeds 120% of the annual premiums currently paid by
the Company in respect of the current policy or policies (the "Maximum Amount")
but in such case shall purchase as much comparable coverage as available for the
Maximum Amount.
 
     For a discussion concerning Directors' and Officers' Indemnification and
Insurance, see the information contained in Item 3(b) in the Schedule 14D-9,
which is incorporated herein by reference.
 
COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(A) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
     Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires the Company's directors and
executive officers and persons who own more than ten percent of the Company's
Common Stock to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") reports
as to ownership and changes in ownership in respect of the Company's Common
Stock. Such persons are required by SEC regulations to furnish the Company with
copies of all Section 16(a) forms they file.
 
     Based solely on the Company's review of the copies of such forms it has
received and written representations of certain of its officers and directors,
the Company believes that during fiscal year 1996 all persons subject to the
reporting requirements of Section 16(a) filed the required reports on a timely
basis.
 
                                       22
   46
 
                               INDEX TO EXHIBITS
 


EXHIBIT
NUMBER                                         EXHIBIT
- -------       -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                
   1       -- Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of August 29, 1997, among the
                Company, Parent and the Purchaser......................................
   2       -- Opinion of Rothschild, Inc. dated August 29, 1997........................
   3       -- Letter to Shareholders of the Company....................................
   4       -- Press Release of the Company, dated September 2, 1997....................
   5       -- Shareholder Agreement, dated August 29, 1997 among Parent, Purchaser and
                Christian R. Guntner and David T. DiPasquale...........................
   6       -- Bank Standstill Letter...................................................
   7       -- Clarification to Employment Agreement and Amendment dated as of August
                29, 1997 between the Company and Daniel R. Scoggin.....................