SCHEDULE 14A
                               (RULE 14a-101)

                  INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                          SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

  PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(a) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT
                                  OF 1934

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]

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


                              COMMSCOPE, INC.
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              (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

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                 (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
[X] No fee required.
[ ] Fee computed on the table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and
    0-11.

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

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     pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the
     filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

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                              COMMSCOPE, INC.

                                                               March 27, 2002

Dear Stockholder:

     You are cordially  invited to the Annual Meeting of Stockholders  (the
"Annual  Meeting")  of  CommScope,   Inc.,  a  Delaware   corporation  (the
"Company"),  to be held on May 3, 2002 at 1:30 p.m.,  local time, at the JP
MorganChase Bank, 270 Park Avenue - 11th Floor, New York, New York 10017.

     At the Annual Meeting we will review the Company's activities in 2001,
as well as the outlook for 2002.  Details of the  business to be  conducted
and the  matters to be  considered  at the Annual  Meeting are given in the
attached Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement.

     It is important that your shares be represented at the Annual Meeting,
whether or not you are able to attend  personally.  You are therefore urged
to complete,  sign, date and return the enclosed proxy card promptly in the
accompanying  envelope,  which  requires no postage if mailed in the United
States.  This  year,  if your  shares are held in a  participating  bank or
brokerage  account,  you may be eligible to vote over the  Internet,  or by
telephone,  as an alternative to mailing the traditional proxy card. Please
see "Voting  Electronically  via the  Internet or  Telephone"  in the Proxy
Statement for further details.

     You are, of course,  welcome to attend the Annual  Meeting and vote in
person,  even if you have  previously  returned your proxy card or voted by
Internet or telephone.

                                           Sincerely,




                                           /s/ Frank M. Drendel
                                           Frank M. Drendel
                                           Chairman of the Board and
                                           Chief Executive Officer













                              COMMSCOPE, INC.

                  NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

     The  Annual  Meeting  of  Stockholders   (the  "Annual   Meeting")  of
CommScope,  Inc. (the "Company") will be held on May 3, 2002, at 1:30 p.m.,
local time, at the JP MorganChase  Bank, 270 Park Avenue - 11th Floor,  New
York, New York 10017.

         The Annual Meeting will be conducted:

      1. To consider and act on the following proposals, which are described
         in the accompanying Proxy Statement:

         Proposal One:         To elect two Class II  directors  for terms
                               ending at the 2005  Annual  Meeting  of
                               Stockholders;

         Proposal Two:         To approve an amendment  and  restatement  of
                               the Amended and Restated CommScope, Inc. 1997
                               Long-Term  Incentive  Plan  to,  among  other
                               things,  increase  the  shares  reserved  for
                               issuance   thereunder   by  an  additional  3
                               million shares.

         Proposal Three:       To ratify  the  appointment  by the Board  of
                               Directors of the Company of Deloitte & Touche
                               LLP  as  independent  auditor for the Company
                               for the 2002 fiscal year.

      2. To transact such other business as may properly come before the
         Annual Meeting.

         Stockholders of record at the close of business on March 22, 2002
will be entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.

                                          BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,




                                          /s/ Frank B. Wyatt, II
                                          Frank B. Wyatt, II
March 27, 2002                            Secretary

     WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING, PLEASE COMPLETE,
SIGN AND DATE THE ENCLOSED PROXY AND PROMPTLY RETURN IT IN THE ACCOMPANYING
ENVELOPE WHICH  REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.  If you
elected  to  receive  the  2002  Proxy  Statement  and 2001  Annual  Report
electronically over the Internet you will not receive a paper proxy and YOU
should vote online,  unless you cancel your enrollment.  If your shares are
held in a PARTICIPATING  bank or brokerage account and you did not elect to
receive  materials  through the Internet,  you may be eligible to vote your
proxy over the Internet or by telephone.  Please SEE "VOTING ELECTRONICALLY
VIA THE INTERNET OR TELEPHONE" IN THE PROXY STATEMENT FOR FURTHER  DETAILS.
YOU MAY REVOKE YOUR PROXY AT ANY TIME BEFORE IT IS VOTED BY DELIVERY TO THE
COMPANY OF A SUBSEQUENTLY  EXECUTED PROXY OR A WRITTEN NOTICE OF REVOCATION
OR BY VOTING IN PERSON AT THE ANNUAL MEETING.








                              COMMSCOPE, INC.

                  1100 COMMSCOPE PLACE, S.E., P.O. BOX 339
                       HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA 28602

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

                              PROXY STATEMENT

     This Proxy Statement (the "Proxy Statement") is being furnished to the
stockholders of CommScope, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the "Company"), in
connection  with the  solicitation  of proxies by the Board of Directors of
the  Company for use at the Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  (the  "Annual
Meeting")  of the  Company  to be held on May 3, 2002 at 1:30  p.m.,  local
time, at the JP MorganChase  Bank, 270 Park Avenue - 11th Floor,  New York,
New York 10017, and any adjournment or postponement thereof.

     At the Annual Meeting, stockholders will be asked to consider and vote
upon the following proposals: Proposal One: To elect two Class II directors
for terms ending at the 2005 Annual Meeting of Stockholders;  Proposal Two:
To approve  an  amendment  and  restatement  of the  Amended  and  Restated
CommScope,  Inc.  1997  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan to, among other  things,
increase the shares  reserved for issuance  thereunder  by an  additional 3
million shares;  and Proposal Three: To ratify the appointment by the Board
of Directors of the Company of Deloitte & Touche LLP as independent auditor
for the Company for the 2002 fiscal year.

     The Board of Directors  of the Company  recommends a vote FOR approval
of each of the proposals.

     The Board of  Directors of the Company has fixed the close of business
on March 22, 2002 (the "Annual Meeting Record Date") as the record date for
determining  the holders of outstanding  shares of common stock,  par value
$0.01 per share (the "Common Stock"), entitled to receive notice of, and to
vote at, the Annual Meeting or any adjournment thereof. On that date, there
were 61,717,159  shares of Common Stock issued and outstanding and entitled
to vote at the Annual Meeting,  each entitled to one vote on all matters to
be acted upon.  The Notice of Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders,  this Proxy
Statement   and  the  form  of  proxy  are  first  being   mailed  or  sent
electronically  to each stockholder  entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting
on or about April 1, 2002.

     On July 28, 1997,  the Company  became an  independent  public company
when it was spun off (the  "Spin-off")  from its  parent  company,  General
Instrument Corporation (subsequently renamed General Semiconductor, Inc.).

                      VOTING AND REVOCATION OF PROXIES

VOTING

     Only  holders  of record of shares of Common  Stock as of the close of
business  on the Annual  Meeting  Record Date will be entitled to notice of
and to vote at the Annual Meeting or any adjournment thereof. The presence,
either  in  person or by  properly  executed  proxy,  of the  holders  of a
majority  of the  outstanding  shares  of  Common  Stock  is  necessary  to
constitute a quorum at the Annual  Meeting and to permit action to be taken
by the stockholders at the Annual Meeting.

     The  affirmative  vote of a  plurality  of the shares of Common  Stock
entitled to vote thereon, and present in person or represented by proxy, at
the Annual Meeting is required to elect the directors nominated pursuant to
Proposal  One.  The  affirmative  vote of a  majority  of the votes cast on
Proposal


                                     1


Two is required to approve  such  proposal,  provided  that the total votes
cast on such proposal  represents a majority of the shares entitled to vote
thereon.  The affirmative  vote of a majority of the shares of Common Stock
entitled to vote thereon, and present in person or represented by proxy, is
required to approve Proposal Three.

     For purposes of  determining  the number of votes cast with respect to
any  voting  matter,  only  those cast  "for" or  "against"  are  included;
abstentions and broker non-votes are excluded.  For purposes of determining
whether  the  affirmative  vote of the  holders of a majority of the shares
entitled to vote on a proposal  and present at the Annual  Meeting has been
obtained,  abstentions  will be included in, and broker  non-votes  will be
excluded  from,  the  number  of  shares  present  and  entitled  to  vote.
Accordingly,  abstentions  will  have the  effect of a vote  "against"  the
matter (other than the election of  directors)  and broker  non-votes  will
have the effect of reducing  the number of  affirmative  votes  required to
achieve the majority vote.

     All shares of Common Stock that are  represented at the Annual Meeting
by properly executed proxies received prior to or at the Annual Meeting and
not  revoked  will be voted at the Annual  Meeting in  accordance  with the
instructions  indicated in such proxies.  If no instructions  are indicated
for a  particular  proposal  on a  proxy,  such  proxy  will  be  voted  in
accordance with the Board of Directors' recommendations as set forth herein
with respect to such proposal(s).

     In the  event  that a quorum  is not  present  at the time the  Annual
Meeting is convened,  or if for any other reason the Company  believes that
additional  time should be allowed  for the  solicitation  of proxies,  the
stockholders  entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting,  present in person or
represented by proxy,  will have the power to adjourn the meeting from time
to time,  without  notice other than  announcement  at the meeting.  If the
Company   proposes  to  adjourn  the  Annual  Meeting  by  a  vote  of  the
stockholders, the persons named in the enclosed form of proxy will vote all
shares of Common  Stock for which they have  voting  authority  in favor of
such adjournment.

VOTING ELECTRONICALLY VIA THE INTERNET OR TELEPHONE

     Stockholders  whose  shares  are  registered  in the name of a bank or
brokerage and who elected to receive the  Company's  2001 Annual Report and
this Proxy  Statement  over the  Internet  will be receiving an email on or
about  April  1,  2002  with  information  on  how  to  access  stockholder
information and instructions  for voting.  If your shares are registered in
the name of a participating bank or brokerage firm and you have not elected
to receive the Company's  2001 Annual Report and this Proxy  Statement over
the Internet,  you may be eligible to vote your shares  electronically over
the Internet or by  telephone.  A number of banks and  brokerage  firms are
participating  in the ADP Shareholder  Preference  Database  program.  This
program  provides  eligible  stockholders  who  receive  a paper  copy of a
company's annual report and proxy statement the opportunity to vote via the
Internet or by telephone.  If your bank or brokerage firm is  participating
in ADP's  program,  your voting  form will  provide  instructions.  If your
voting form does not reference  Internet or telephone  information,  please
complete and return the paper proxy card in the self-addressed postage-paid
envelope provided.

REVOCATION

     Any  stockholder who executes and returns a proxy may revoke it at any
time  prior to the  voting  of the  proxies  by  giving  written  notice of
revocation  to the  Secretary of the Company or by executing a  later-dated
proxy. In addition, voting by telephone,  Internet or mail will not prevent
you from voting in person at the Annual  Meeting  should you be present and
wish to do so.



                                     2


                    PROPOSAL ONE: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Company's Board of Directors  currently  consists of six directors
divided into three  classes,  Class I, Class II and Class III, with members
of each class holding office for staggered three-year terms and until their
successors have been duly elected and qualified.  There are currently:  two
Class I Directors, whose terms expire at the 2004 Annual Meeting; two Class
II   Directors,   whose  terms  expire  at  the  2002  Annual   Meeting  of
Stockholders;  and two Class III Directors,  whose terms expire at the 2003
Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  (in all cases subject to the election and
qualification of their  successors and to their earlier death,  resignation
or removal).

     If any one or more of the  nominees  is unable to serve for any reason
or withdraws  from  nomination,  proxies  will be voted for the  substitute
nominee or nominees, if any, proposed by the Board of Directors.  The Board
of  Directors  has no  knowledge  that any nominee will or may be unable to
serve  or  will  or may  withdraw  from  nomination.  All of the  following
nominees are  presently  serving as  directors of the Company.  Information
concerning the nominees for director is set forth below.

  NOMINEES FOR TERMS ENDING AT THE 2005 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

     EDWARD D. BREEN, age 46, is President and Chief Operating Officer of
Motorola, Inc. ("Motorola"). He was Executive Vice President of Motorola
from January 2001 to January 2002, and President of Motorola's Broadband
Communications sector from January 2000 to January 2001. Prior to joining
Motorola, Mr. Breen was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of General
Instrument (formerly NextLevel Systems, Inc.) from December 1997 to January
2000, after having served as Acting Chief Executive Officer and President
of General Instrument since October 1997. He was President of General
Instrument Corporation Broadband Networks Group from February 1996 and Vice
President of General Instrument from November 1994 until the spin-off. He
continued in those positions for General Instrument through October 1997.
He was Executive Vice President, Terrestrial Systems of General Instrument
Corporation, from October 1994 to January 1996 and Senior Vice President of
Sales General Instrument Corporation from June 1988 to October 1994. He is
a director of Motorola, McLeod USA, Inc. and VIA NET.WORKS, INC.

     JAMES N.  WHITSON,  age 67,  has served  and  continues  to serve as a
director  of SEI, a  privately  owned  company  engaged in life  insurance,
equipment  sales  and  rentals,  and  bottled  water,  since  1973,  and as
Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of SEI from 1989 until
March 1998, when he retired. He is a director/trustee of the Seligman Group
of Investment Companies and a director of C-SPAN.

     THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY  RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" EACH OF
THE FOREGOING NOMINEES AS A DIRECTOR OF THE COMPANY.  PROXIES WILL BE VOTED
"FOR" EACH OF THE FOREGOING  NOMINEES AS A DIRECTOR OF THE COMPANY,  UNLESS
OTHERWISE SPECIFIED IN THE PROXY.


                                     3



                         MANAGEMENT OF THE COMPANY

BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE COMPANY

     The  following  table sets forth names,  in  alphabetical  order,  and
information  as to the  persons who  currently  serve as  directors  of the
Company,  each of whom  has  served  since  the  Spin-off  (other  than Mr.
Faircloth,  who has served since February 11, 1999 and Ms. Travis,  who has
served since February 21, 2002).

NAME, AGE AND CURRENT         TERM
PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION         EXPIRES   INFORMATION
---------------------       ---------  ------------------------------------
Edward D. Breen, 46           2002     Edward  D.  Breen is  President  and
 President and Chief                   Chief Operating Officer of Motorola,
 Operating Officer of                  Inc. ("Motorola").  He was Executive
 Motorola, Inc.                        Vice   President   of  Motorola  and
                                       President,   Networks   Sector  from
                                       January 2001 to January 2002. He was
                                       Executive    Vice    President    of
                                       Motorola,     and    President    of
                                       Motorola's Broadband  Communications
                                       Sector from  January 2000 to January
                                       2001. Prior to joining Motorola, Mr.
                                       Breen   was   Chairman   and   Chief
                                       Executive    officer    of   General
                                       Instrument   Corporation,   formerly
                                       NextLevel Systems, Inc. ("GI"), from
                                       December 1997 to January 2000, after
                                       having   served  as   acting   Chief
                                       Executive  Officer and  President of
                                       GI  since   October   1997.  He  was
                                       President   of  General   Instrument
                                       Corporation's   Broadband   Networks
                                       Group  from  February  1996 and Vice
                                       President   of  General   Instrument
                                       Corporation from November 1994 until
                                       the Spin-off.  He was Executive Vice
                                       President,  Terrestrial  Systems  of
                                       General Instrument Corporation, from
                                       October  1994 to  January  1996  and
                                       Senior  Vice  President  of Sales of
                                       General Instrument  Corporation from
                                       June 1988 to October  1994.  He is a
                                       director  of  Motorola,  McLeod USA,
                                       Inc.,   and  VIA   NET.WORKS,   INC.

Frank M. Drendel, 57          2003     Frank M.  Drendel has been  Chairman
 Chairman and Chief Executive          and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
 Officer of the Company                Company  since  the   Spin-off.   He
                                       served as a director of GI Delaware,
                                       a subsidiary  of General  Instrument
                                       Corporation,  and  its  predecessors
                                       from 1987 to 1992. He was a director
                                       of  General  Instrument  Corporation
                                       from 1992 until the  Spin-off and

                                     4


                                       GI from the Spin-off  until  January
                                       5, 2000.  He has served as President
                                       and   Chairman  of   CommScope   NC,
                                       currently   a   subsidiary   of  the
                                       Company,  from  1986  to  1997,  and
                                       Chief Executive Officer of CommScope
                                       NC since  1976.  Prior to that time,
                                       Mr.   Drendel   has   held   various
                                       positions  with  CommScope  NC since
                                       1971.  He is a  director  of  Nextel
                                       Communications,     Inc.,     Corvis
                                       Corporation, C-SPAN and the National
                                       Cable Television Association.

Duncan M. ("Lauch")           2003     Duncan M.  ("Lauch")  Faircloth  has
 Faircloth, 74                         spent  approximately  50 years,  and
 Private Investor,                     continues  to  spend  time,  in  the
 Former U.S. Senator                   private   business  sector  building
                                       several  businesses in  agriculture,
                                       construction,    real   estate   and
                                       automobile dealerships. He is also a
                                       long-time  private   investor.   Mr.
                                       Faircloth   was  a   United   States
                                       Senator  from 1993  through  January
                                       1999.   He  served  on  the   Senate
                                       Appropriations     Committee,    the
                                       Banking,  Housing and Urban  Affairs
                                       Committee  and  the  Small  Business
                                       Committee.  He was the  chairman  of
                                       two      subcommittees     -     the
                                       Appropriations  Subcommittee  on the
                                       District of Columbia and the Banking
                                       Subcommittee       on      Financial
                                       Institutions and Regulatory  Relief.
                                       Mr.   Faircloth   also   served   as
                                       Chairman   of  the  North   Carolina
                                       Highway Commission from 1969 to 1973
                                       and Secretary of the North  Carolina
                                       Department  of Commerce from 1977 to
                                       1983.

Boyd L. George, 60            2004     Boyd L.  George is  Chairman  of the
 Chairman of the Board                 Board and Chief Executive Officer of
 and Chief Executive                   Alex Lee, Inc. (subsidiaries of Alex
 Officer of Alex Lee, Inc.             Lee,   Inc.    include:    Merchants
                                       Distributors,   a   wholesale   food
                                       distributor; Institution Food House,
                                       Inc., a foodservice distributor; and
                                       Lowe's Food  Stores,  Inc., a retail
                                       operation).   Mr.  George  has  been
                                       Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
                                       of Alex Lee, Inc.  since the company
                                       was  founded  in 1992 and  served as
                                       President  from  1992 to  1995.  Mr.
                                       George  joined a subsidiary  of Alex
                                       Lee,  Inc.  in 1969 and has  served,
                                       and  continues to serve,  in various
                                       positions,  including  Chairman  and
                                       Chief  Executive  Officer  for  such
                                       subsidiary  as  well

                                     5


                                       as for other subsidiaries.

George N. Hutton, Jr., 72     2004     George  N.  Hutton,  Jr.  is and has
 Private  Investor                     been a  private  investor  for  more
                                       than  15  years.   He  is  a  former
                                       director of Sprint  Corporation  and
                                       of M/A Com Inc.


James N. Whitson, 67          2002     James  N.  Whitson  has  served  and
 Director of various                   continues  to serve as a director of
 organizations                         Sammons Enterprises, Inc. ("SEI"), a
                                       privately-owned  company  engaged in
                                       life insurance,  equipment sales and
                                       rentals,  and bottled  water,  since
                                       1973,    and   as   Executive   Vice
                                       President   and   Chief    Operating
                                       Officer of SEI from 1989 until March
                                       1998,  when  he  retired.  He  is  a
                                       director/trustee   of  the  Seligman
                                       Group of Investment  Companies and a
                                       director of C-SPAN.

June E. Travis, 62            2004     June E.  Travis  has been  Executive
 Officer of a non-profit               Vice President of the Binning Family
 organization and former cable         Foundation,       a       non-profit
 television executive                  organization  dedicated  to  helping
                                       youth   develop    technology    and
                                       leadership  skills  since  mid-2000.
                                       Ms.  Travis has served as  Executive
                                       Vice  President and Chief  Operating
                                       Officer   of  the   National   Cable
                                       Television  Association  (NCTA) from
                                       1994 to 1999.  Prior  to  1994,  Ms.
                                       Travis  served as the  President and
                                       Chief Operating  Officer of Rifkin &
                                       Associates,   a  Denver-based  cable
                                       television   operator.   Ms.  Travis
                                       chaired  the  industry's   political
                                       action  committee,  Cable  PAC  from
                                       1994 to 1999.  Ms. Travis has served
                                       as a director of NCTA, C-SPAN, Cable
                                       in the Classroom, and Women in Cable
                                       (WIC).

  COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

     Employee directors do not receive additional  compensation for serving
on the  Company's  Board of  Directors.  Nonemployee  directors  receive an
annual retainer of $25,000,  and committee  chairmen  receive an additional
$5,000 retainer. The nonemployee directors'  remuneration is paid quarterly
unless payment is deferred. In addition,  each nonemployee  director,  upon
initial election to the Board of Directors, receives 1,000 shares of Common
Stock that vest  immediately  and is granted an option to  purchase  20,000
shares of Common  Stock at an  exercise  price per share  equal to the fair
market value on the date of grant,  which option becomes  exercisable  with
respect to  one-third of the  underlying  shares on each of the first three
anniversaries of the grant date. In February 2002, such awards were made to
one nonemployee  director upon initial  election to the Board of Directors.
If a director  remains in office,  a similar  option is granted every three
years. In February 2002, the Company made one such grant to one nonemployee
director to purchase 20,000 shares of Common Stock.



                                     6


     The Amended and Restated CommScope 1997 Long-Term  Incentive Plan (the
"1997 LTIP")  provides  that  nonemployee  directors  may be granted  stock
options under the 1997 LTIP in addition to the automatic  grants  described
above. No such additional  grants of stock options were made to nonemployee
directors in 2001.  However,  in February  2002, the Company made four such
additional grants of stock options to nonemployee  directors to purchase an
aggregate of approximately 20,000 shares of Common Stock.

  COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS - BOARD MEETINGS

     The Board of Directors  of the Company  held 7 meetings in 2001.  Each
incumbent director attended (i) 75% or more of all meetings of the Board of
Directors  and (ii) all  meetings  of the Board  Committees  on which  they
served, except Mr. Breen did not attend one board meeting and two committee
meetings.

     The Company has Audit,  Compensation  and Executive  Committees of the
Board of Directors.  Members of the Audit and  Compensation  Committees are
not  employees of the  Company.  The Company has no  nominating  or similar
committee.

     AUDIT  COMMITTEE.  The Audit  Committee's  principal  functions are to
review  the  scope  of  the  annual  audit  of the  Company's  consolidated
financial  statements  by  its  independent  auditors,  review  the  annual
consolidated  financial  statements  of the Company  and the related  audit
report as prepared by the independent auditors,  recommend the selection of
independent  auditors each year, review the independence of the independent
auditors,  review the adequacy and scope of the  internal  audit plan,  and
review any significant  internal audit  findings.  The members of the Audit
Committee are the following nonemployee directors:  Mr. Whitson,  Chairman,
Mr.  Breen  and  Mr.  George.  All  members  of  the  Audit  Committee  are
independent,  financially literate,  and at least one member has accounting
and financial management expertise.  The Audit Committee held 5 meetings in
2001.

     COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE.  The Compensation  Committee  administers the
stock option and  incentive  plans of the Company,  and in this capacity it
makes or recommends option grants or awards under these plans. In addition,
the Compensation  Committee makes recommendations to the Company's Board of
Directors with respect to the  compensation of the Chief Executive  Officer
and  determines  the  compensation  of the  other  senior  executives.  The
Compensation  Committee  also  recommends  the  establishment  of  policies
dealing  with  various  compensation  and  employee  benefit  plans for the
Company.  The  members  of the  Compensation  Committee  are the  following
nonemployee  directors:  Mr.  Hutton,  Chairman,  and  Mr.  Faircloth.  The
Compensation Committee held 3 meetings in 2001.

     EXECUTIVE  COMMITTEE.  The  Executive  Committee  has the authority to
exercise all powers and authority of the Company's  Board of Directors that
may be  lawfully  delegated  to it under  Delaware  law.  It meets  between
regularly  scheduled  meetings of the Company's  Board of Directors to take
such action as is necessary for the efficient operation of the Company. The
members of the Executive  Committee are: Mr. Drendel,  Chairman,  Mr. Breen
and Mr. George. The Executive Committee held 1 meeting in 2001.



                                     7


  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     In 2001,  the  Company  leased an aircraft  and hangar from  companies
owned by Frank M.  Drendel,  Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
Company, for an aggregate amount of approximately  $147,000. Mr. Drendel is
a director  of Nextel  Communications,  Inc.,  a leading  provider of fully
integrated wireless communication services. In 2001, Nextel Communications,
Inc.  and  its  affiliates  purchased  products  from  the  Company  for an
aggregate amount representing less than 2% of the Company's total sales.

     Edward D. Breen,  a director of the Company,  is  President  and Chief
Operating  Officer of  Motorola,  Inc. In 2001,  Motorola,  Inc.  purchased
products from the Company for an aggregate amount representing less than 1%
of the Company's total sales.

     Boyd L.  George,  a director of the  Company,  is  Chairman  and Chief
Executive Officer of Alex Lee, Inc., the parent of Lowe's Food Stores, Inc.
In 2001,  the  Company  purchased  gift  certificates  for all of its North
Carolina area  employees (as an employee  benefit) from Lowe's Food Stores,
Inc. for an aggregate payment of approximately $78,000.

     On November 16, 2001,  Lucent  Technologies Inc.  ("Lucent")  acquired
approximately  16.5%  of  the  Company's  then  outstanding  Common  Stock,
excluding  the Common  Stock  acquired by Lucent,  in  connection  with the
Company's  acquisition of an approximate  18.4% interest in OFS BrightWave,
LLC ("OFS  BrightWave").  The Company and The  Furukawa  Electric  Co. Ltd.
formed OFS  BrightWave  to  acquire  certain  fiber and cable  transmission
assets from Lucent. In 2001, Lucent purchased products from the Company for
an aggregate amount representing less than 1% of the Company's total sales.

     The  Company  believes  that  the  terms  of each of the  transactions
described  above were no less favorable to the Company than the terms which
could be obtained from unrelated third parties.

  SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended,
requires the Company's directors and executive officers and holders of more
than 10% of the  Common  Stock to file  with the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission (the "Commission") reports of ownership and changes in ownership
of Common  Stock and other equity  securities  of the Company on Forms 3, 4
and 5. The  Company  undertakes  to make  such  filings  on  behalf  of its
directors  and  officers.  Based on written  representations  of  reporting
persons and a review of those reports,  the Company  believes that,  during
the year ended December 31, 2001, its officers and directors and holders of
more than 10% of the Common  Stock  complied  with all  applicable  Section
16(a) filing requirements.

  EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION

     SUMMARY OF  COMPENSATION.  The table below sets forth a summary of the
compensation  paid by the  Company for the last three  fiscal  years to the
Chief Executive  Officer of the Company and the four additional most highly
compensated executive officers of the Company.


                                     8



                         SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE




                                                                           LONG-TERM
                                                                           COMPENSATION
                                            ANNUAL COMPENSATION(a)         AWARDS
                                            ----------------------         -------------

                                                                           SECURITIES
                                                                           UNDERLYING        ALL OTHER
   NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION        YEAR    BASE SALARY       BONUS      OPTIONS(#)(C)     COMPENSATION
   ---------------------------        ----    -----------       -----      -------------     ------------
                                                                                  
Frank M. Drendel..............        2001    $  550,957    $     --         $    --         $   85,107  (d),(e)
   Chairman and Chief Executive       2000       525,475       322,158          120,000          15,707
   Officer                            1999       502,761       424,833           56,300          16,263


Brian D. Garrett..............        2001    $  330,567    $     --         $    --         $   51,848  (d),(e)
   President and Chief Operating      2000       315,265       178,415           57,900          15,666
   Officer                            1999       301,640       259,086           32,650          15,673


Jearld L. Leonhardt...........        2001    $  271,565    $     --         $    --         $   42,952  (d),(e)
   Executive Vice President and       2000       248,892       140,853           38,700          15,229
   Chief Financial Officer            1999       238,135       199,507           22,500          15,510


Gene W. Swithenbank...........        2001    $  231,977    $      --        $     --        $   36,894  (d),(e)
   Executive Vice President,          2000       221,251       125,210           31,400          15,196
   Global Broadband Sales and         1999       211,686       153,629           15,000          15,422
   Marketing
Frank B. Wyatt, II............        2001    $  189,249    $  50,000 (b)    $     --        $   83,939  (d),(e)
   Senior Vice President,             2000       153,860       48,978            27,700          12,678
   General Counsel and Secretary      1999       138,747       58,644             9,600          11,768



(a)      Unless otherwise indicated, with respect to any individual named
         in the above table, the aggregate amount of perquisites and other
         personal benefits, securities or property was less than the lesser
         of $50,000 or 10% of the total annual salary and bonus reported
         for the named executive officer.

(b)      Reflects a one-time bonus that was not paid under the Company's Annual Incentive Plan.

(c)      Reflects the number of shares of Common Stock underlying options granted.

(d)       Amounts for 2001  reflect (i) the  matching  contribution  under the  CommScope,  Inc. of North  Carolina
          Employees  Retirement  Savings Plan (the  "Employees  Retirement  Savings Plan") in the amount of $3,307,
          $3,400, $3,431, $3,366 and $3,096 for 2001 on behalf of Messrs. Drendel, Garrett, Leonhardt, Swithenbank,
          and Wyatt, respectively,  (ii) the profit sharing allocation of $11,087 to the account of each of Messrs.
          Drendel, Garrett,  Leonhardt,  Swithenbank and of $10,035 to the account of Mr. Wyatt under the Employees
          Retirement  Savings Plan for 2001, (iii) payment by the Company in 2001 of cash amounts in lieu of profit
          sharing allocations to their respective Employees Retirement Savings Plan accounts of $4,335 on behalf of
          each of Messrs. Drendel, Garrett,  Leonhardt,  Swithenbank and Wyatt, (iv) payment by the Company in 2001
          of premiums of $734,  $441,  $364,  $309 and $257 for term life  insurance on behalf of Messrs.  Drendel,
          Garrett, Leonhardt,  Swithenbank and Wyatt, respectively, (v) the annual credit under the CommScope, Inc.
          Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (the "Restated Plan") in the amount of $65,644,  $32,585, $23,735,
          and $17,797 for 2001 to the regular  accounts  thereunder of Messrs.  Drendel,  Garrett,  Leonhardt,  and
          Swithenbank,  respectively and (vi) the annual credit for 2001 to the regular  account,  and the one time
          credit to the special account, of Mr. Wyatt under the Restated Plan in the aggregate amount of $66,216.



                                     9


(e)       Effective  January 1, 2001,  the Restated  Plan amended and  superceded  the terms and  conditions of the
          CommScope, Inc. of North Carolina Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (the "Prior Plan"). The Restated
          Plan  provides for  retirement  benefits  payable over 5, 10 or 15 years (or,  upon  approval of the plan
          administrator and subject to forfeiture of a portion of the participant's account balance, in a lump sum)
          out of amounts credited to a participant's  special and regular accounts and earnings at a rate of 7% per
          year (or other rate that may be established by the plan administrator)  credited to undistributed amounts
          in those  accounts.  Pursuant  to the  Restated  Plan,  the special  account of each of Messrs.  Drendel,
          Garrett, Leonhardt and Swithenbank was credited with an amount equal to the lump sum actuarial equivalent
          of the retirement  benefit accrued by that participant under the Prior Plan as of December 31, 2000, and,
          because Mr. Wyatt did not  participate in the Prior Plan,  the special  account of Mr. Wyatt was credited
          with the one-time  credit  described  in footnote  (d) above in  accordance  with the  provisions  of the
          Restated Plan.



  STOCK OPTIONS

     GRANT OF OPTIONS.  The  Company  made no grants of options to purchase
Common  Stock  during the year ended  December  31, 2001 to the  executives
listed in the Summary Compensation Table.

     AGGREGATED  OPTION  EXERCISES AND YEAR-END VALUE.  The following table
sets forth as of and for the year ended  December 31, 2001, for each of the
executives  listed in the  Summary  Compensation  Table (i) the  aggregated
shares  acquired upon exercise of stock options  during the year;  (ii) the
value  realized upon exercise of those  options;  (iii) the total number of
unexercised  options for Common Stock (exercisable and unexercisable)  held
at  fiscal  year-end;  and  (iv)  the  value  of such  options  which  were
in-the-money  at fiscal  year-end  (based  on the  difference  between  the
closing  price of Common Stock on the last day of the year and the exercise
price of the option on such date).

              AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                     AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES




                                                           NUMBER OF SECURITIES           VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                       UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED STOCK        IN-THE-MONEY STOCK
                                                      OPTIONS AT FISCAL YEAR-END (#)        OPTIONS AT FISCAL
                                                                                             YEAR-END ($)(A)
                              SHARES
                            ACQUIRED ON       VALUE
          NAME              EXERCISE(#)    REALIZED($)     EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE   EXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE
-------------------------- ------------  ----------------  -----------   -------------   -----------   -------------
                                                                                           
Frank M. Drendel......           _        $     _              603,319      124,217       $4,474,911      $476,400
Brian D. Garrett......           _        $     _              203,797       61,994       $1,361,909      $231,264
Jearld L. Leonhardt...           _        $     _              235,382       45,810       $1,809,649      $179,808
Gene W. Swithenbank...           _        $     _              135,885       32,709         $984,794      $125,364
Frank B. Wyatt, II....           _        $     _               66,931       26,667         $451,223      $104,650

 (a)     Based on the difference between the closing price of $21.27 per
         share at December 31, 2001, as reported on the NYSE Composite Tape
         and the exercise prices of the in-the-money, unexercised options
         on such date.



         EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS

     In  November  1988,  Frank  M.  Drendel  entered  into  an  employment
agreement (the  "Agreement")  with GI Delaware and CommScope NC,  providing
for his employment as President and Chief Executive Officer of CommScope NC
for an initial term ending on November 28, 1991. The Agreement provides for
a minimum salary,  which is less than Mr.  Drendel's  current  salary,  and
provides that Mr.  Drendel will  participate  in any  management  incentive
compensation  plan for  executive  officers  that  CommScope NC  maintains.
Commencing on November 29, 1989,  subject to early termination by reason of
death or  disability  or for  cause  (as  defined  in the  Agreement),  the
Agreement  extends  automatically  so that the remaining term is always two
years,  unless either party gives notice of termination,  in which case the
Agreement will terminate two years from the date of such notice.  As of the
date  of  this  Proxy   Statement,

                                    10


neither party has given notice of  termination.  Pursuant to the Agreement,
Mr. Drendel is eligible to  participate  in all benefit plans  available to
other CommScope NC senior executives.  The Agreement prohibits Mr. Drendel,
for a  period  of five  years  following  the term of the  Agreement,  from
engaging in any business in competition  with the business of CommScope NC,
in any country where CommScope NC then conducts  business.  Effective as of
the Spin-off, GI Delaware ceased to be a party to the Agreement.

SEVERANCE PROTECTION AND SEPARATION AGREEMENTS

     The Company has entered into severance protection  agreements with its
Chief Executive Officer and its other executive officers.  These agreements
continue in effect for a period of two years from January 1 of a given year
and are  automatically  extended  for one year on  January  1 of each  year
unless notification is given to either the Company or the executive, except
that the term may not  expire  prior to 24  months  following  a Change  in
Control (as defined in the agreement).

     The agreements  provide  severance pay and other benefits in the event
of a termination  of employment  within 24 months of a Change in Control of
the Company if such  termination is (i) by the Company for any reason other
than for cause or  disability  or (ii) by the executive for Good Reason (as
defined in the agreement). Such severance pay will be in an amount equal to
two times the sum of the  executive's  base  salary and the  target  annual
bonus payable to the executive  under the Company's  annual  incentive plan
for the fiscal year immediately preceding the fiscal year of termination in
the case of the Chief Executive Officer and one and one-half times such sum
in the case of all other executive officers. In addition,  the Company will
pay the executive all accrued but unpaid  compensation and a pro rata bonus
(calculated  up to  the  executive's  termination  date).  The  executive's
benefits will be continued  for either 24 months,  in the case of the Chief
Executive Officer, or 18 months in the case of all other executive officers
(in each case, a "Continuation Period"). If, at the end of the Continuation
Period,  the  executive  is not  employed  by another  employer  (including
self-employment),  the  executive  will  receive for up to six  months,  an
amount  equal to  one-twelfth  (1/12)  of the sum of the  executive's  base
amount and the  executive's  bonus amount.  The executive will also receive
limited   reimbursement  for  outplacement,   tax  and  financial  planning
assistance and  reimbursement  for relocation under certain  circumstances.
The severance pay and benefits provided for under the severance  protection
agreements  shall  be in lieu  of any  other  severance  pay to  which  the
executive may be entitled under any other plan, agreement or arrangement of
the Company or any of its  affiliates.  If the  executive's  employment  is
terminated without cause (i) within six months prior to a Change in Control
or (ii) at any time prior to the date of a Change in Control but (A) at the
request of a third  party who has  indicated  an  intention  or taken steps
reasonably  calculated to effect a Change in Control and who  effectuates a
Change in Control or (B) otherwise in connection  with, or in  anticipation
of, a threatened Change in Control which actually occurs,  such termination
shall be deemed to have occurred after the Change in Control.

     If the  executive's  employment is terminated by the Company for cause
or disability, by reason of the executive's death or by the executive other
than for Good Reason,  the Company  shall pay to the  executive his accrued
compensation.  In addition, in the case of a termination by the Company for
disability or due to the  executive's  death,  the executive will receive a
pro rata bonus in addition to accrued compensation.

     The  agreements  provide for a gross-up  payment by the Company in the
event that the total payments the executive receives under the agreement or
otherwise  are subject to the excise tax under Section 4999 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. In such an event, the Company will pay an
additional amount so that the executive is made whole on an after-tax basis
from the effect of the excise tax.

                                    11


OTHER CHANGE IN CONTROL ARRANGEMENTS

     Following is a brief  description of the change in control  provisions
included  in  each  of  the  Company's  employee   compensation  plans  and
arrangements.

     ANNUAL INCENTIVE PLAN. The CommScope,  Inc. Annual Incentive Plan (the
"Annual  Incentive Plan") is the Company's annual cash bonus incentive plan
for the Chief  Executive  Officer and certain other key  employees.  In the
event of a change in  control  of the  Company  (as  defined  in the Annual
Incentive Plan),  within 60 days  thereafter,  the Company will pay to each
participant in the Annual Incentive Plan  immediately  prior to such change
in control (regardless of whether such participant remains in the employ of
the Company  following  the change in control) a pro rata portion of his or
her bonus award assuming that all performance percentages are 100%.

     DEFERRED  COMPENSATION  PLAN.  The  CommScope,  Inc. of North Carolina
Deferred  Compensation  Plan (the  "Deferred  Compensation  Plan") allows a
select  group of  management  or highly  compensated  employees  to defer a
percentage of compensation or a specified dollar amount each year up to 50%
of base salary and 100% of any bonuses  earned under the  Company's  annual
management  incentive plan for that year. Amounts deferred are payable in a
lump sum or in annual installments  pursuant to the terms of an irrevocable
election made by the  participant or earlier upon the occurrence of certain
events, including specified terminations of the participant's employment.

     Upon a change in control of the Company  (as  defined in the  Deferred
Compensation Plan), the Deferred  Compensation Plan will terminate and each
participant  will be paid his or her entire deferred  compensation  account
balance in a single lump sum.

     1997 LTIP.  The 1997 LTIP provides for the granting of stock  options,
restricted stock,  performance units,  performance shares and phantom stock
to  employees  and  officers of the Company  and its  subsidiaries  and the
granting of stock and stock options to the Company's nonemployee directors.
The Compensation  Committee  selects those  individuals to whom options and
awards will be granted,  and determines the type,  size and other terms and
conditions  of such options and awards,  including  the vesting  provisions
and/or restrictions  relating to such awards.  Pursuant to the terms of the
1997 LTIP and subject to an  optionee's  rights  under his or her option or
award  agreement,  in the event of a change in control of the  Company  (as
defined in the 1997 LTIP),  all stock options granted  pursuant to the 1997
LTIP will become immediately and fully exercisable.

     SUPPLEMENTAL   EXECUTIVE   RETIREMENT   PLAN.  The   CommScope,   Inc.
Supplemental  Executive  Retirement Plan is an unfunded  nonqualified  plan
maintained  for the benefit of a select group of  management  and/or highly
compensated employees of the Company and its subsidiaries that, in general,
provides for retirement  benefits  payable over 5, 10 or 15 years (or, upon
approval of the plan  administrator  and subject to forfeiture of a portion
of the  participant's  account  balance,  in a  lump  sum)  out of  amounts
credited  to  a  participant's  accounts  and  earnings  credited  thereon.
Pursuant to the terms of that plan, in the event of a change in control (as
defined  therein),   each  participant  who  is  employed  by  the  Company
immediately prior to that change in control will be eligible to receive the
full value of his or her account balance in a single lump sum following his
or her termination  other than for cause occurring within 2 years after the
date of such change in control.


                                    12



                      COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON
                     COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     The  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of  Directors  is comprised
entirely of nonemployee directors. The Compensation Committee considers and
recommends  to the  Board of  Directors  the base  salary to be paid to the
Chief Executive Officer, determines the base salary for all other executive
officers,  makes  recommendations to the Board of Directors with respect to
the Company's overall compensation policies,  administers and grants awards
under the 1997 LTIP and administers the Annual  Incentive Plan with respect
to executive  officers  and performs  such duties as the Board of Directors
may from time to time request.

     In establishing and administering the Company's  compensation policies
and programs,  the Compensation Committee considered the compensation plans
and  arrangements  of a peer  group of  companies  with  which the  Company
competes  for  customers  and  executive  talent,  including  the levels of
individual  compensation  for  similarly  situated  executives  of the peer
group, as well as factors  specifically  relevant to the Company. The basic
objective  of  the  Compensation  Committee  is to  formulate  compensation
policies  and programs  intended to attract,  retain,  and motivate  highly
qualified key employees,  including  executive  officers.  Compensation  of
executive  officers and other key employees,  including the Chief Executive
Officer,  is comprised of three principal  elements:  (i) stock  ownership,
(ii) base salary and (iii) annual bonus.

  STOCK OWNERSHIP

     The Compensation  Committee believes that executive officers and other
significant  employees,  who  are  in a  position  to  make  a  substantial
contribution  to  the  long-term  success  of  the  Company  and  to  build
stockholder  value,  should  have a  significant  stake  in  the  Company's
on-going  success.  This  focuses  attention  on managing the Company as an
owner with an equity  position  in the  business  and seeks to align  these
employees'   interests  with  the  long-term   interests  of  stockholders.
Accordingly,  one of the Company's  principal methods to motivate executive
officers and other significant  employees is through a broad and deep stock
option program.

     Ordinarily  the Company has awarded  options  annually  under the 1997
LTIP in December of a given year.  However,  in December  2001, the Company
did not award any  options  under the 1997 LTIP  because  the  Company  was
considering  changing the timing of option grants from an annual basis to a
different  basis and evaluating  the impact of a recent  acquisition on its
stock option plans.  In February,  2002, the Company  awarded options under
the 1997 LTIP to purchase an aggregate of  approximately  177,000 shares of
Common Stock to the executive  officers  named in the Summary  Compensation
Table  other than the Chief  Executive  Officer  whose  grant is  described
below.  Such option awards were  consistent with those that would have been
made in December of 2001. The exercise price of each of these options as of
the date of grant was the closing market price per share of Common Stock on
the date of grant.

     Management  recommends to the  Compensation  Committee those executive
officers and other significant  employees to whom options should be granted
and the number of options to be granted to them.  The  recommendations  are
based on a review of each employee's individual  performance,  position and
level of responsibility in the Company, long-term potential contribution to
the Company and the number of options  previously  granted to the employee.
Neither management nor the Compensation Committee assigned specific weights
to these  factors,  although  the  executive's  position  and a  subjective
evaluation of his performance  were  considered most important.  Generally,
the number of options granted to an executive  reflects his or her level of
responsibility and position in the Company. To encourage key

                                    13



employees to remain in the employ of the Company,  options  generally  vest
and become  exercisable  over a three- or four-year period and normally are
not exercisable until one year after the date of grant.


  BASE SALARY

     The  Compensation  Committee  believes  that  it is  important  to pay
reasonable and competitive  salaries.  Salaries paid to executive  officers
are  based  on  the  Chief  Executive  Officer's   recommendations  to  the
Compensation Committee, which is responsible for reviewing and approving or
disapproving those recommendations.  Generally,  an executive's base salary
reflects his level of responsibility and position in the Company.

     During  2001,  each of the  executive  officers  named in the  Summary
Compensation  Table received base salary  increases.  These  increases were
based upon each officer's individual services rendered,  level and scope of
responsibility and experience. Also taken into account was the relationship
of the  compensation  of such  officers  to the  compensation  of  officers
occupying comparable positions in other organizations.

  ANNUAL INCENTIVE BONUS

     The Annual  Incentive  Plan is intended to provide a means of annually
rewarding  certain key employees,  including the  executives  listed in the
Summary  Compensation  Table,  based on the performance of the Company.  In
addition,  awards for each officer (other than the Chief Executive Officer)
may  be  adjusted  based  on  the  officer's   achievement  of  a  personal
performance  percentage.  This approach  allows  management to focus on key
business  objectives  in the  short-term,  and  to  support  the  long-term
performance  orientation  of stock  ownership.  Under the Annual  Incentive
Plan,  in  2001  management  recommended,  and the  Compensation  Committee
established,  for each executive  officer a bonus target percentage of that
officer's  salary.  That percentage was based on the officer's  position in
the Company and was the  percentage of the  officer's  salary that would be
paid if the performance  targets were met. The target award  percentage for
executive officers named in the Summary  Compensation Table (other than the
Chief Executive  Officer) for 2001 ranged from 35% to 60%. The target award
percentage for the Chief Executive  Officer was 75%.  Because the Company's
performance  target for 2001 basic earnings per share was not achieved,  in
2001 no target  awards were paid with respect to  performance  in 2001 (see
"Summary Compensation Table - Bonus").

  SUPPLEMENTAL EXECUTIVE RETIREMENT PLAN

     Effective  January 1, 2001, the Company amended and restated the terms
and  conditions  of the  CommScope,  Inc.  of North  Carolina  Supplemental
Executive  Retirement  Plan to change the plan from a defined  benefit type
plan to a defined contribution plan. The amendment and restatement does not
apply with  respect to  participants  who were  retired as of December  31,
2000.  The  amended  and  restated  plan  is  named  the  CommScope,   Inc.
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan and provides for retirement benefits
payable over 5, 10 or 15 years (or, upon approval of the plan administrator
and  subject  to  forfeiture  of a  portion  of the  participant's  account
balance, in a lump sum) out of amounts credited to a participant's  special
and regular  accounts  and earnings at a rate of 7% per year (or other rate
that may be established by the plan administrator).

  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION

     Frank M. Drendel has served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
the  Company  since  July  1997.  In  2001,  the   Compensation   Committee
recommended and the Board of Directors of the Company approved the increase
of Mr.  Drendel's  annual salary rate from $528,000 to $555,000,  effective
March 1, 2001,  and the increase of his target bonus  percentage  under the
Annual Incentive Plan

                                    14



from 65% to 75%. The Compensation Committee recommended and on February 21,
2002,  Mr.  Drendel  was granted an option to  purchase  155,000  shares of
Common Stock with a per share exercise price of $16.20,  the closing market
price of the Common  Stock on the date of the grant.  The  increase  in Mr.
Drendel's  salary and  target  bonus  percentage  was  determined  based on
factors such as the Company's overall performance, Mr. Drendel's individual
performance,  and the  compensation  of similarly  situated  executives  at
comparable corporations.

  COMPLIANCE WITH INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 162(M)

     Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code"),  which was enacted in 1993,  generally  disallows a federal income
tax deduction to any publicly held  corporation  for  compensation  paid in
excess of $1 million in any taxable year to the chief executive  officer or
any of the four other most highly  compensated  executive  officers who are
employed  by the  Company  on the last  day of the  taxable  year.  Section
162(m),  however,  does not  disallow a federal  income tax  deduction  for
qualified "performance-based compensation," the material terms of which are
disclosed to and approved by stockholders.

     The  Compensation  Committee has considered the tax  deductibility  of
compensation  awarded under the 1997 LTIP and the Annual  Incentive Plan in
light of Section 162(m).  The Company  structured and intends to administer
the stock option,  performance  unit and performance  share portions of the
1997  LTIP  with the  intention  that the  resulting  compensation  payable
thereafter qualify as  "performance-based  compensation" and be deductible.
The Company has  structured  the Annual  Incentive  Plan with the intention
that awards payable  thereafter to the Chief  Executive  Officer qualify as
"performance-based"  compensation and, if so qualified,  be deductible.  No
executive  officer's  compensation in 2001 was  non-deductible by reason of
the application of Section 162(m) and it is not expected that any executive
officer's  compensation  will be  non-deductible  in 2002 by  reason of the
application of Section 162(m).

     Respectfully submitted,

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

GEORGE N. HUTTON, JR., CHAIRMAN
DUNCAN M. FAIRCLOTH



                                    15



                       REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

     The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors is providing this report
to enable  stockholders  to  understand  how it monitors  and  oversees the
Company's  financial  reporting  process.   The  Audit  Committee  operates
pursuant to an Audit  Committee  Charter  that is reviewed  annually by the
Audit Committee and updated as  appropriate.  A copy of the Audit Committee
Charter is included as Annex A to this Proxy Statement.

     This report  confirms that the Audit  Committee  has: (i) reviewed and
discussed the audited financial  statements for the year ended December 31,
2001 with management and the Company's independent public accountants; (ii)
discussed with the Company's  independent  public  accountants  the matters
required to be reviewed pursuant to the Statement on Auditing Standards No.
61  (Communications  with Audit  Committees);  (iii)  reviewed  the written
disclosures  letter from the Company's  independent  public  accountants as
required by  Independence  Standards  Board  Standard  No. 1  (Independence
Discussions with Audit  Committees);  and (iv) discussed with the Company's
independent public accountants their independence from the Company.

     The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors has considered  whether
the  provision of non-audit  professional  services  rendered by Deloitte &
Touche  LLP,  as  discussed  above and  disclosed  elsewhere  in this proxy
statement, is compatible with maintaining their independence.

     Based  upon the above  review  and  discussions,  the Audit  Committee
recommended to the Board of Directors that the audited financial statements
for the year ended  December 31, 2001 be included in the  Company's  Annual
Report on Form 10-K for filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

     Respectfully submitted,

AUDIT COMMITTEE

JAMES N. WHITSON, CHAIRMAN
EDWARD D. BREEN
BOYD L. GEORGE



                                    16





                             PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The following graph compares  cumulative total return on $100 invested
on July 28, 1997,  the first day the Common Stock began  trading  after the
Spin-off,  in each of the  Common  Stock,  the  Standard & Poor's 500 Stock
Index ("S&P 500") and the Standard & Poor's  MidCap 400  Telecommunications
Equipment Index  ("Telecommunications  Equip-Mid") (formerly the Standard &
Poor's  MidCap  400  Communications  Equipment  Index).  The  return of the
Standard & Poor's indices is calculated assuming reinvestment of dividends.
The Company has not paid any dividends.  The stock price  performance shown
on the graph  below does not  include  "when-issued"  trading  prior to the
Spin-off and is not necessarily indicative of future price performance.


[OBJECT OMITTED]





 COMPANY/ INDEX                                28 JUL 97    DEC 97     DEC 98      DEC 99     DEC 00      DEC 01
                                                                                        
 COMMSCOPE INC                                    100       88.62      109.35      262.20     107.72      138.34

 S&P 500 INDEX                                    100       104.38     134.12      162.45     147.66      130.11

 TELECOMMUNICATIONS EQUIP-MID                     100       114.21      92.36      442.22     188.56      312.85

*$100 invested on July 28, 1997 including reinvestment of dividends.





                                    17






                    BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF COMMON STOCK

     The table below sets forth information as to the beneficial  ownership
of Common Stock as of March 22, 2002 (except as otherwise specified) by all
directors and the persons listed in the Summary  Compensation Table as well
as by directors  and  executive  officers of the Company as a group and, to
the best knowledge of the Company's management,  beneficial owners of 5% or
more of the outstanding Common Stock.




                                                        Shares of Common           % of Shares Outstanding
                     Name                          Stock Beneficially Owned(1)        Beneficially Owned
    --------------------------------------         -------------------------       ------------------------
                                                                             
Lucent Technologies Inc. (2)                               10,200,000                        16.5
Edward D. Breen (3)                                            27,666                          *
Frank M. Drendel (4)(13)                                      983,124                         1.6
Duncan M. Faircloth (5)                                        21,000                          *
Brian D. Garrett (6)(13)                                      285,699                          *
Boyd L. George (7)                                             36,666                          *
George N. Hutton, Jr. (8)                                      27,999                          *
Jearld L. Leonhardt (9)(13)                                   270,411                          *
Gene W. Swithenbank (10)(13)                                  145,356                          *
June E. Travis                                                  1,000                          *
James N. Whitson (11)                                          27,666                          *
Frank B. Wyatt, II (12)(13)                                    79,017                          *
All current directors and executive officers
   of the Company as a group (15 persons)(14)               2,264,759                         3.7



*        The  percentage of shares of the Common Stock  beneficially  owned
         does  not  exceed  one  percent  of the  shares  of  Common  Stock
         outstanding.

(1)      For purposes of this table, a person or group of persons is deemed
         to have "beneficial ownership" of any shares of Common Stock which
         such  person  has the right to  acquire  within 60 days  following
         March 22,  2002.  For  purposes of  computing  the  percentage  of
         outstanding shares of Common Stock held by each person or group of
         persons named above, any security which such person or persons has
         or have the right to acquire  within 60 days  following  March 22,
         2002  is  deemed  to be  outstanding,  but  is  not  deemed  to be
         outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage  ownership
         of any other person.  The table does not include  shares of Common
         Stock  subject to  options  to be awarded in the future  under the
         1997 LTIP.

(2)      This  information  is obtained from a Schedule 13G, dated November
         26, 2001,  filed with the Commission by Lucent  Technologies  Inc.
         ("Lucent").  Lucent reports that it has sole voting power and sole
         dispositive power over 10,200,000 shares.

(3)      Includes  26,666 shares  subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(4)      Includes  630,319 shares subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common  Stock  currently  or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.
         Also includes 100 shares held by the spouse of Frank M. Drendel.




                                    18


(5)      Includes  20,000 shares  subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(6)      Includes  203,797 shares subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(7)      Includes  26,666 shares  subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common  Stock  currently  or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.
         Also includes 2,000 shares of Common Stock held by the children of
         Boyd L.  George,  as to  which  shares  Boyd L.  George  disclaims
         beneficial ownership.

(8)      Includes  26,666 shares  subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(9)      Includes  235,382 shares subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common  Stock  currently  or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.
         Also  includes  1,000  shares  held by the  spouse  of  Jearld  L.
         Leonhardt.

(10)     Includes  135,885 shares subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(11)     Includes  26,666 shares  subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(12)     Includes  66,931 shares  subject to options which are  exercisable
         for Common Stock currently or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.

(13)     Includes  the number of shares of Common  Stock which were held by
         the  trustee of the  Employees  Retirement  Savings  Plan and were
         allocated  to  the  individual's   respective  account  under  the
         Employees  Retirement  Savings  Plan as of  February  28,  2002 as
         follows:  Frank M.  Drendel,  955 shares;  Brian D.  Garrett,  883
         shares;  Jearld L. Leonhardt,  1,580 shares;  Frank B. Wyatt,  II,
         5,671 shares; and Gene W. Swithenbank, 4,705 shares.

(14)     Includes 1,713,019 shares subject to options which are exercisable
         for Common  Stock  currently  or within 60 days of March 22, 2002.
         Includes an aggregate of 18,790  shares of Common Stock which were
         held by the trustees of the Employees  Retirement Savings Plan and
         were allocated to the current officers'  respective accounts under
         the Employees Retirement Savings Plan as of February 28, 2002.

                PROPOSAL TWO: APPROVAL OF THE AMENDMENT AND
     RESTATEMENT OF THE AMENDED AND RESTATED COMMSCOPE, INC. 1997 LONG-
                            TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

  GENERAL

     The CommScope,  Inc. 1997 Long-Term Incentive Plan was approved by the
Company's  Board of Directors and GI Delaware,  as sole  stockholder of the
Company,  prior to the  Spin-off.  The Board of  Directors  of the  Company
approved  an  amendment  and  restatement  of this plan,  the  Amended  and
Restated  CommScope,  Inc. 1997 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the "1997 LTIP"),
on February 12, 1998. Stockholders of the Company approved the 1997 LTIP at
the Annual Meeting on May 1, 1998 and subsequently approved an amendment to
the 1997 LTIP at the 2000 Annual  Meeting.  The Board of  Directors  of the
Company  approved the amendment and restatement of the 1997 LTIP (the "2002
Amendment  and  Restatement")  on March 21,  2002,  subject to  stockholder
approval at the 2002 Annual  Meeting.  The 2002 Amendment and  Restatement,
among  other  things,  increases  the  number of  shares  of  Common  Stock
available  for future  grants of Awards under the plan by 3 million  shares
(the "Additional Shares"). As of March 22, 2002, only approximately 895,000
shares of Common  Stock  were  available

                                    19



for future grant.  The Company believes that it is in the best interests of
the  Company to  increase  the  maximum  number of shares  that may be made
subject to Awards  under the 1997 LTIP in order (i) to  continue to attract
and  retain key  employees  and (ii) to provide  additional  incentive  and
reward  opportunities to current employees to encourage them to enhance the
profitable growth of the Company.

     The 1997 LTIP provides for the granting of stock  options,  restricted
stock,   performance  units,  performance  shares,  and  phantom  stock  to
employees  of the Company and its  Subsidiaries  and the  granting of stock
options and stock awards to certain nonemployee directors  (collectively or
individually, "Awards").

     The  Company  now  submits  the 2002  Amendment  and  Restatement  for
stockholder  approval.  If such  stockholder  approval is not obtained,  no
Awards will be granted in respect of Additional Shares.

     The  principal  provisions  of the 1997 LTIP, as amended and restated,
are  summarized  below.  This  summary,  however,  does not  purport  to be
complete and is qualified in its entirety by the terms of the 1997 LTIP, as
amended and restated,  included as Appendix B to this Proxy Statement.  All
capitalized  terms used below and not  defined  herein have the meaning set
forth in the 1997 LTIP, unless otherwise indicated.

  PURPOSE OF THE 1997 LTIP

     The Company's  Board of Directors  believes that Awards will provide a
means by which employees and directors of the Company and its  Subsidiaries
can acquire and  maintain  stock  ownership,  thereby  strengthening  their
commitment  to the success of the Company  and its  Subsidiaries  and their
desire to remain  employed by the Company  and its  Subsidiaries,  focusing
their  attention  on managing  the Company as equity  owners,  and aligning
their interest with those of the Company's  stockholders.  The 1997 LTIP is
also  intended  to  attract  and  retain  employees  and to  provide  those
employees with additional  incentive and reward  opportunities  designed to
encourage  them to enhance  the  profitable  growth of the  Company and its
Subsidiaries.

  DESCRIPTION OF THE 1997 LTIP

     The 1997 LTIP must be  administered  by a committee (the  "Committee")
consisting  of at least two  directors of the Company who are  "nonemployee
directors" within the meaning of Rule 16b-3 promulgated under Section 16(b)
of the Exchange Act, and to the extent  necessary for any Award intended to
qualify as "performance-based  compensation" for purposes of Section 162(m)
of the Code to so qualify, each member of the Committee must be an "outside
director"  within the meaning of Section 162(m).  If one or more members of
the Committee is not a "non-employee  director"  within the meaning of Rule
16(b)-3 and an "outside  director" within the meaning of Section 162(m) but
recuses  himself or herself  or  abstains  from  voting  with  respect to a
particular action taken by the Committee,  than the Committee, with respect
to that  action,  shall be deemed to  consist  only of the  members  of the
Committee  who have not recused  themselves or abstained  from voting.  The
1997 LTIP is currently administered by the Compensation  Committee.  Except
to  the   extent   necessary   for  any  Award   intended   to  qualify  as
performance-based   compensation  to  so  qualify,  the  authority  of  the
Committee  may be exercised by the full Board or, with respect to Awards to
be  granted  to  participants  who are not  subject  to  Section  16 of the
Exchange  Act,  by a  committee,  consisting  of  at  least  one  director,
appointed by the Board.  The Committee  will (i) select those  employees to
whom Awards  will be granted,  and (ii)  determine  the type,  size and the
terms and  conditions of Awards,  including the per share purchase price of
restricted stock and Options,  and the restrictions or performance criteria
relating  to  restricted  stock,  phantom  stock,   performance  units  and
performance shares. The Committee will also construe and interpret the 1997

                                    20



LTIP.  The Committee will have the authority to cancel  outstanding  Awards
and make adjustments to outstanding  Awards with the consent of the Grantee
and to accelerate the exercisability of Awards or to waive the restrictions
and  conditions  applicable  to  Awards.  However,  except in the case of a
Change in Capitalization, the exercise price of outstanding Options may not
be decreased and Awards may not by cancelled of forfeited and re-granted to
effect the same result.

     The  maximum  number of shares  of Common  Stock  that may be made the
subject of Awards  granted  under the 1997 LTIP is  9,600,000  million  (in
addition to the Substitute and Spin-off  Options that, as described  below,
were issued  pursuant to the 1997 LTIP in  connection  with the  Spin-off);
provided,  however, that in the aggregate,  not more than 200,000 shares of
Common  Stock may be made the  subject of Awards  other than  Options.  The
maximum  number  of  Shares  with  respect  to which  Options  (other  than
Substitute  and  Spin-off  Options)  and  Awards  may  be  granted  to  any
individual in any three calendar year period is 750,000. The maximum dollar
amount of cash or the Fair Market  Value of shares of Common Stock that may
be  granted  to any  individual  in  any  calendar  year  with  respect  to
Performance Units denominated in dollars may not exceed $1 million.  In the
event of a Change in Capitalization,  however, the Committee may adjust the
maximum number and class of shares which are subject to outstanding  Awards
and the purchase price therefor.  In addition,  if any Award (including the
Substitute and Spin-off Options) is canceled or expires or terminates or is
settled in cash  (including the settlement of tax  withholding  obligations
using shares of Common Stock) without having been exercised,  the shares of
Common  Stock  subject to that Award again  become  available  for granting
under the 1997 LTIP.  If any Option is  exercised  by  tendering  shares of
Common Stock, either actually or by attestation,  to the Company as full or
partial  payment  of the  exercise  price,  the  maximum  number  of Shares
available  under the 1997 LTIP will be increased by the number of shares so
tendered.

  ELIGIBILITY

     Any  of  the  Company's  and  its  Subsidiaries'  approximately  3,100
employees  and any of the Company's  nonemployee  directors are eligible to
participate in the 1997 LTIP.

  OPTIONS

     Pursuant  to  the  1997  LTIP,   the  Committee  will  grant  to  each
nonemployee  director of the Company Nonqualified Stock Options to purchase
20,000  shares  of  Common  Stock in  connection  with  his or her  initial
election to the Board and an additional  Option in respect of 20,000 shares
of Common Stock on each third  anniversary of each  nonemployee  director's
first  appointment  to the Board,  if such  nonemployee  director  is still
serving on the Board ("Formula Director  Options").  The per share exercise
price of the Formula  Director  Options is equal to 100% of the Fair Market
Value on the Grant Date. Each Formula  Director Option will have a ten year
term  and  will  become  exercisable  with  respect  to  one-third  of  the
underlying shares on each of the first,  second and third  anniversaries of
the Grant Date. If a nonemployee  director ceases to serve as a director of
the Company for any reason,  his or her Formula  Director  Options  will be
exercisable,  during their  remaining  terms,  to the extent that they were
exercisable  on the date the  director  ceased to serve as a director.  The
Committee may also make  discretionary  Nonqualifed  Stock Option grants to
nonemployee directors to acquire unrestricted or restricted stock from time
to time.

     In addition,  the Committee may grant  Nonqualified  Stock Options and
Incentive  Stock  Options to any  eligible  employee  of the Company or its
Subsidiaries.  The per share  exercise price of the Options is fixed by the
Committee  when the Options  are  granted and must be at least,  and in the
case of Options granted to nonemployee  directors will be, 100% of the Fair
Market Value of the Common Stock on the Option Grant Date (110% in the case
of an Incentive Stock Option granted to a 10% owner).



                                    21


     Each Option (other than Formula Director  Options) will be exercisable
at  the  times  and  in  the  installments  determined  by  the  Committee,
commencing not earlier than the first anniversary of the Option Grant Date.
All  outstanding  Options will become fully vested and  exercisable  upon a
Change  in  Control.  A "Change  of  Control"  under  the 1997 LTIP  means,
generally:  (i) the  acquisition  by any Person of beneficial  ownership of
voting securities  resulting in such Person beneficially owning 33% or more
of the  combined  voting power of the  Company's  then  outstanding  voting
securities;  (ii) the  individuals  who, as of July 23, 1997,  the date the
1997 LTIP was  adopted,  are members of the Board (the  "Incumbent  Board")
cease for any reason to  constitute at least  two-thirds  of the Board;  or
(iii)  consummation  of:  (A) a  merger,  consolidation  or  reorganization
involving  the  Company  unless:  (1)  the  stockholders  of  the  Company,
immediately  before such merger,  consolidation  etc. own,  following  such
merger, consolidation or reorganization at least a majority of the combined
voting  power  of the  outstanding  voting  securities  of the  corporation
resulting   from  such   merger,   consolidation   or   reorganization   in
substantially  the same proportion as before the merger,  consolidation  or
reorganization;  and (2) the  members of the  Incumbent  Board  immediately
prior to the merger,  consolidation or reorganization constitute at least a
majority of the Board of the Surviving  Corporation;  and (3) no Person has
beneficial  ownership  of 33% or more of the  combined  voting power of the
Surviving Corporation's then outstanding voting securities;  (B) a complete
liquidation or dissolution of the Company; or (C) the disposition of all or
substantially all of the assets of the Company.

     In addition,  the Committee  reserves the authority to accelerate  the
exercisability  of any Option (other than Formula Director  Options).  Each
Option  (other  than  Formula  Director  Options)  terminates  at the  time
determined  by the  Committee,  except that the term of each Option may not
exceed  ten years  (five  years in the case of an  Incentive  Stock  Option
granted to a 10% owner). Options are not transferable by the Grantee except
by will or the laws of descent and  distribution or, other than in the case
of an  Incentive  Stock  Option,  pursuant  to a domestic  relations  order
(within the meaning of Rule 16a-12  promulgated under the Exchange Act) and
may be exercised  during the Grantee's  lifetime only by the Grantee or the
Grantee's  guardian or legal  representative  or,  except as would cause an
Incentive Stock Option to lose its status as such, by a bankruptcy trustee;
provided,  however, that the Committee may set forth in the Award Agreement
evidencing  an Award (other than an Incentive  Stock Option) at the time of
the grant or  thereafter,  that the Award may be  transferred to members of
the Grantee's  immediate  family,  to trusts solely for the benefit of such
immediate  family members and to  partnerships in which such family members
and/or trusts are the only  partners.  In the  discretion of the Committee,
the  purchase  price for shares  acquired  pursuant  to the  exercise of an
option may be paid (i) in cash, (ii) by transferring shares of unrestricted
Common  Stock to the Company,  (iii)  through  simultaneous  sale through a
broker of shares of  unrestricted  stock  acquired on exercise or (iv) by a
combination of the foregoing.

  RESTRICTED STOCK

     The Committee will determine when each restricted stock Award is made,
the terms of the restricted stock Award, including the price, if any, to be
paid by the Grantee for the restricted  stock, the  restrictions  placed on
the  shares  and the  time or  times  when  the  restrictions  will  lapse,
provided,  however,  that, except in the case of shares of restricted stock
issued in full or  partial  settlement  of  another  Award or other  earned
compensation,  or in the event of the Grantee's  termination of employment,
as determined by the  Committee and set forth in an Award  Agreement,  such
restrictions  shall not lapse prior to the third  anniversary  of the Grant
Date. In addition,  when  restricted  stock is granted under the 1997 LTIP,
the Committee may, in its discretion, decide: (i) whether dividends paid on
the restricted  stock will be remitted to the Grantee or deferred until the
restrictions on the restricted stock Award lapse; (ii) whether any deferred
dividends will be invested in additional shares of the Common Stock;  (iii)
whether  interest  will be  accrued  on any  dividends  not  reinvested  in
additional  shares of restricted  stock;  (iv) whether any stock  dividends
paid on the  restricted  stock  Award will be  subject to the  restrictions
applicable  to the

                                    22



restricted  stock  Award;  and  (v)  whether,   and  to  what  extent,  the
restrictions on the restricted stock shall lapse upon a Change in Control.

  PERFORMANCE UNITS AND PERFORMANCE SHARES

     The Committee may grant performance units or performance shares to any
eligible   individual.   Before  the  grant  of  any  performance  unit  or
performance  share, the Committee will (i) designate a Measuring Period, of
not less than one year nor more than five years, for the measurement of the
extent to which performance goals are attained;  (ii) determine performance
goals applicable to such grant;  and (iii) assign a Performance  Percentage
to each level of  attainment  of  performance  goals  during the  Measuring
Period.   The  performance   goals  applicable  to  performance   units  or
performance  shares shall, in the discretion of the Committee,  be based on
earnings  per share,  operating  income,  return on equity or assets,  cash
flow,  EBITDA or any combination of the foregoing.  Such performance  goals
may be absolute or relative (to prior  performance or to the performance of
one or more other  entities or external  indices)  and may be  expressed in
terms of a progression within a specified range. At the time of grant or at
any time  thereafter,  in either case to the extent permitted under Section
162(m)  of the  Code  and  the  regulations  thereunder  without  adversely
affecting the treatment of the  performance  unit or  performance  share as
Performance-Based Compensation, the Committee may provide for the manner in
which  performance will be measured  against the performance  goals (or may
adjust the performance goals) to reflect the impact of specified  corporate
transactions,  special charges, foreign currency effects, accounting or tax
law changes and other  extraordinary or nonrecurring  events.  Prior to the
vesting, payment, settlement or lapsing of any restrictions with respect to
any  performance  unit or performance  share that is intended to constitute
Performance-Based  Compensation made to a Grantee who is subject to Section
162(m) of the  Code,  the  Committee  shall  certify  in  writing  that the
applicable performance goals have been satisfied. The agreements evidencing
Awards of performance units and performance shares will set forth the terms
and conditions of Awards,  including  those  applicable in the event of the
Grantee's  Termination  of Employment  or a Change of Control.  Performance
units may be  denominated  in  dollars  or in shares of Common  Stock,  and
payments  in  respect  of vested  performance  units  will be made in cash,
shares of Common Stock or any  combination of the foregoing,  as determined
by the Committee. Performance shares are initially denominated in shares of
Common Stock,  but the Committee may ultimately  settle  performance  share
Awards in cash,  shares of Common Stock or a  combination  thereof,  at its
discretion.

  PHANTOM STOCK

     The  Committee  may  grant  phantom  stock to any  eligible  employee,
subject to the terms and conditions established by the Committee.  Upon the
vesting of a phantom stock Award, the Grantee will be entitled to receive a
cash  payment in respect of each share of phantom  stock  equal to the Fair
Market  Value of a share of Common  Stock as of the date the phantom  stock
Award was granted or such other date as determined  by the  Committee  when
the phantom  stock Award was granted.  The  Committee  may,  when a phantom
stock  Award is  granted,  provide a  limitation  on the amount  payable in
respect of each share of phantom stock.

  TANDEM AWARDS

     The 1997  LTIP  provides  that the  Committee  may  grant any Award in
tandem with another Award. Unless otherwise provided by the Committee, upon
the exercise, payment or forfeiture of one tandem Award, the related tandem
Award  will be  canceled  to the extent of the number of shares as to which
the tandem Award is so exercised, paid or forfeited.



                                    23


  AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION

     The 1997 LTIP will terminate on July 23, 2007,  the tenth  anniversary
of its adoption.  However,  the Board of Directors may sooner  terminate or
amend the 1997 LTIP at any time without stockholder approval,  except where
stockholder  approval is required to retain the  favorable tax treatment of
Incentive Stock Options under the Code, to qualify the shares offered under
the  1997  LTIP  for  listing  on any  securities  exchange,  or to  permit
transactions  pursuant  to the plan to be exempt from  potential  liability
under Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act. The  termination of the 1997 LTIP will
not affect then outstanding Awards.

  SUBSTITUTE OPTIONS AND SPIN-OFF OPTIONS

     On August 1, 1997,  Substitute Options were issued under the 1997 LTIP
to officers, key employees and certain nonemployee directors of the Company
and  Spin-off  Options were issued to certain  former  directors of General
Instrument  Corporation  to  replace  options  awarded  under  the  General
Instrument  Corporation  1993  Long-Term  Incentive  Plan.  The  terms  and
conditions  of each  Substitute  and Spin-off  Option issued under the 1997
LTIP, including, without limitation, the time or times when, and the manner
in which,  each shall be exercisable,  the duration of the exercise period,
the permitted  method of exercise,  settlement  and payment,  and the rules
that shall apply in the event of termination  of employment,  were the same
as those of the surrendered award it replaced.

  CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES RELATING TO AWARDS UNDER THE 1997 LTIP

     Incentive  Stock  Option  ("ISO").  In  general,  a  Grantee  will not
recognize  taxable  income upon the grant or  exercise  of an ISO,  and the
Company and its  Subsidiaries  will not be entitled to any business expense
deduction with respect to the grant or exercise of an ISO.  (However,  upon
the  exercise of an ISO, the excess of the Fair Market Value on the date of
exercise of the shares  received over the exercise price of the option will
be treated as an  adjustment to  alternative  minimum  taxable  income.) In
order for the exercise of an ISO to qualify as an ISO, a Grantee  generally
must be an employee of the Company or a  subsidiary  (within the meaning of
Section 422 of the Code) from the date the ISO is granted  through the date
three months  before the date of exercise  (one year  preceding the date of
exercise in the case of an Grantee whose  employment  is terminated  due to
disability).  The employment  requirement  does not apply where a Grantee's
employment is terminated due to his or her death.

     If a Grantee has held the shares  acquired upon exercise of an ISO for
at least two years  after the date of grant and for at least one year after
the  date of  exercise,  when  the  Grantee  disposes  of the  shares,  the
difference,  if any, between the sales price of the shares and the exercise
price of the  option  will be  treated as  long-term  capital  gain or loss
subject to reduced rates of tax,  provided that any gain will be subject to
further  reduced  rates of tax if shares  are held for more  than  eighteen
months  after the date of  exercise.  If a Grantee  disposes  of the shares
prior to satisfying  these holding period  requirements  (a  "Disqualifying
Disposition"),  the Grantee  will  recognize  ordinary  income  (treated as
compensation) at the time of the Disqualifying Disposition, generally in an
amount  equal to the excess of the Fair  Market  Value of the shares at the
time the option was exercised  over the exercise  price of the option.  The
balance of the gain  realized,  if any, will  generally be capital gain. If
the  Grantee  sells the shares in a  Disqualifying  Disposition  at a price
below  the Fair  Market  Value of the  shares  at the time the  option  was
exercised,  the amount of ordinary income (treated as compensation) will be
limited to the amount  realized on the sale over the exercise  price of the
option.  In  general,  if the  Company  and its  Subsidiaries  comply  with
applicable income reporting requirements,  the Company and its Subsidiaries
will be  allowed  a  business  expense  deduction  to the  extent a Grantee
recognizes ordinary income.



                                    24


     Nonqualified  Stock  Option.  In  general,  a Grantee  who  receives a
Nonqualified Stock Option will recognize no income at the time of the grant
of the option. In general,  upon exercise of a Nonqualified Stock Option, a
Grantee will recognize  ordinary  income  (treated as  compensation)  in an
amount  equal to the excess of the Fair  Market  Value of the shares on the
date of exercise over the exercise price of the option. The basis in shares
acquired upon exercise of a  Nonqualified  Stock Option will equal the Fair
Market Value of such shares at the time of exercise, and the holding period
of the  shares  (for  capital  gain  purposes)  will  begin  on the date of
exercise.  In  general,  if the Company  and its  Subsidiaries  comply with
applicable  income  reporting  requirements,  they  will be  entitled  to a
business  expense  deduction in the same amount and at the same time as the
Grantee  recognizes  ordinary income.  In the event of a sale of the shares
received upon the exercise of a Nonqualified Stock Option, any appreciation
or depreciation  after the exercise date generally will be taxed as capital
gain or loss,  provided  that any gain will be subject to reduced  rates of
tax if the shares were held for more than twelve months.  Special rules may
apply with  respect to persons  who may be subject to Section  16(b) of the
Exchange Act.

     Excise Taxes. Under certain circumstances,  the accelerated vesting or
exercise of options in connection  with a Change in Control might be deemed
an "excess  parachute  payment"  for purposes of the golden  parachute  tax
provisions of Section 280G of the Code. To the extent it is so  considered,
a Grantee  may be  subject  to a 20%  excise  tax and the  Company  and its
Subsidiaries may be denied a tax deduction.

     Section  162(m) of the Code  generally  disallows a federal income tax
deduction to any publicly-held  corporation for compensation paid in excess
of $1 million in any taxable year to the chief executive  officer or any of
the four other most highly compensated  executive officers who are employed
by the Company on the last day of the taxable year, but does not disallow a
deduction  for  qualified  "performance-based  compensation,"  the material
terms of which are disclosed to and approved by  stockholders.  The Company
has structured the 1997 LTIP with the intention that compensation resulting
from the exercise of Options,  and from performance  shares and performance
units, qualify as "performance-based compensation" and, if so qualified, be
deductible.

     THE BOARD OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS  A VOTE "FOR"  PROPOSAL  TWO,  THE
AMENDMENT AND RESTATEMENT OF THE 1997 LTIP TO, AMONG OTHER THINGS, INCREASE
THE SHARES  RESERVED FOR  ISSUANCE  THEREUNDER  BY AN  ADDITIONAL 3 MILLION
SHARES.  PROXIES  WILL  BE  VOTED  "FOR"  APPROVAL  OF  THE  AMENDMENT  AND
RESTATEMENT OF THE 1997 LTIP UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED IN THE PROXY.


                                    25



               2001 AND 2002 AWARDS MADE UNDER THE 1997 LTIP

     Awards  under  the  1997  LTIP  are  made  at  the  discretion  of the
Compensation Committee, and, accordingly, future awards under the 1997 LTIP
are not yet  determinable.  The  following  table  sets  forth  information
concerning  awards made under the 1997 LTIP during the year ended  December
31, 2001 and in February and March of 2002. Such awards are not necessarily
indicative of awards that may be made in the future.

                             NEW PLAN BENEFITS



                                                                  SHARES SUBJECT TO AWARDS
                                                                            UNDER
NAME AND POSITION                                                   THE 1997 LTIP (#) (A)
-----------------                                               ---------------------------
                                                                       
Frank M. Drendel
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer                                      155,000

Brian D. Garrett
President and Chief Operating Officer                                     75,000

Jearld L. Leonhardt
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer                      50,000

Gene W. Swithenbank
Executive Vice President, Global Broadband Sales & Marketing              32,000

Frank B. Wyatt, II
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary                      20,000

All current executive officers as a group (9 persons
including those named above)                                              444,000

All current directors (including nominees for director) who
are not executive officers as a group (6 persons)                         61,000 (b)

All employees (other than current executive officers and
directors who are not executive officers) as a group who were
granted awards under the 1997 LTIP (528 persons)                         971,756




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

(a)  Except as indicated below in footnote (b),  represents options granted
     under the 1997 LTIP  during the year ended  December  31,  2001 and in
     February and March of 2002. Ordinarily the Company has awarded options
     annually under the 1997 LTIP in December of a given year.  However, in
     December  2001,  the Company did not award any options  under the 1997
     LTIP because the Company was considering changing the timing of option
     grants from an annual basis to a different  basis and  evaluating  the
     impact of a recent  acquisition on its stock option plans. In February
     2002, the Company made option grants that were  consistent  with those
     that would have been made in December 2001.



                                    26


(b)  Includes an award of 1,000 shares of stock pursuant to the 1997 LTIP.

     The per share  closing price of the Common Stock on March 18, 2002, as
reported on the New York Stock Exchange Composite Tape, was $18.15.

           PROPOSAL THREE: RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF AUDITOR

     The  Board of  Directors,  based on the  recommendation  of the  Audit
Committee,  appointed  the firm of  Deloitte  & Touche  LLP as  independent
auditor to examine  the books of account  and other  records of the Company
and its  consolidated  subsidiaries  for the 2002 fiscal year. The Board of
Directors  is asking the  stockholders  to ratify and approve  this action.
Deloitte & Touche LLP has been the Company's independent auditor since July
1997.  Representatives  of the auditing  firm will be present at the Annual
Meeting and will be afforded the opportunity,  if they so desire, to make a
statement  or respond to  appropriate  questions  that may come  before the
Annual Meeting.

     Although  such  ratification  is not  required  by law,  the  Board of
Directors  believes that  stockholders  should be given the  opportunity to
express  their  views on the  subject.  While not  binding  on the Board of
Directors,  the failure of the  stockholders  to ratify the  appointment of
Deloitte  &  Touche  LLP as the  Company's  independent  auditor  would  be
considered  by the Board of  Directors in  determining  whether to continue
with the services of Deloitte & Touche LLP.

                            INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     AUDIT FEES

     The aggregate  fees and expenses  billed by Deloitte & Touche LLP, the
member firms of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu,  and their respective  affiliates
("Deloitte")  for  professional  services  rendered  for the  audit  of the
Company's  annual  consolidated  financial  statements  for the year  ended
December 31, 2001 and the reviews of the consolidated  financial statements
included  in the  Company's  Quarterly  Reports  on Form 10-Q for that year
amounted to $691,282.

     FINANCIAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION FEES

     The aggregate  fees and expenses  billed by Deloitte for  professional
information  technology  services  rendered  to  the  Company  relating  to
financial  information systems design and implementation for the year ended
December 31, 2001 amounted to $183,818.

     ALL OTHER FEES

     The aggregate  fees and expenses  billed by Deloitte for  professional
services  rendered  to the Company  relating  to services  other than those
described  above under  "Audit  Fees" and  "Financial  Information  Systems
Design  and  Implementation  Fees" for the year  ended  December  31,  2001
amounted to $1,290,237. This amount includes $1,078,600 of tax-related fees
and $211,637 of audit-related fees.

     The Audit Committee of the Company's Board of Directors has considered
whether  the  provision  of  non-audit  professional  services  rendered by
Deloitte,   as  discussed  above,  is  compatible  with  maintaining  their
independence.


                                    27




        STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR THE COMPANY'S 2003 ANNUAL MEETING

     Stockholders  who  intend  to  present  proposals  at the 2003  Annual
Meeting of  Stockholders,  and who wish to have such proposals  included in
the proxy statement for such meeting, must submit such proposals in writing
by notice  delivered or mailed by first-class  United States mail,  postage
prepaid,  to the Secretary,  CommScope,  Inc., 1100 CommScope Place,  S.E.,
P.O.  Box 339,  Hickory,  North  Carolina  28602,  and such  notice must be
received no later than  November 30,  2002.  Such  proposals  must meet the
requirements  set forth in the rules and  regulations  of the Commission in
order to be eligible for inclusion in the Company's proxy statement for its
2003 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

     In addition,  under the Company's  By-laws,  stockholders  must comply
with  specified  procedures  to nominate  directors or introduce an item of
business at the Annual  Meeting.  Nominations  or an item of business to be
introduced  at an annual  meeting must be submitted in writing and received
by the  Company  generally  not less  than 60 days nor more than 90 days in
advance of an annual meeting. To be in proper written form, a stockholder's
notice must  contain the  specific  information  required by the  Company's
By-laws.  A copy of the  Company's  By-laws,  which  describes  the advance
notice procedures, can be obtained from the Secretary of the Company.

                          SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

     Proxies will be solicited electronically, by mail, telephone, or other
means  of  communication.  Solicitation  of  proxies  also  may be  made by
directors,  officers and regular employees of the Company.  The Company has
retained  Morrow & Co., Inc. to assist in the  solicitation of proxies from
stockholders.  Morrow  &  Co.,  Inc.  will  receive  a fee of  $5,000  plus
reimbursement of certain out-of-pocket expenses. The Company will reimburse
brokerage  firms,  custodians,  nominees and fiduciaries in accordance with
the  rules  of the  NYSE,  for  reasonable  expenses  incurred  by  them in
forwarding materials to the beneficial owners of shares. The entire cost of
solicitations will be borne by the Company.

                               OTHER MATTERS

     The Company  knows of no other matter to be brought  before the Annual
Meeting.  If any other matter requiring a vote of the  stockholders  should
come before the Annual Meeting, it is the intention of the persons named in
the proxy to vote with respect to any such matter in accordance  with their
best judgment.

         The Company will furnish, without charge, to each person whose
proxy is being solicited upon written request, a copy of its Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001, as filed with the
Commission (excluding exhibits). Copies of any exhibits thereto also will
be furnished upon the payment of a reasonable duplicating charge. Requests
in writing for copies of any such materials should be directed to
CommScope, Inc., 1100 CommScope Place, S.E., P.O. Box 339, Hickory, North
Carolina 28602, Attention: Investor Relations.

                                        BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,



                                          /s/ Frank B. Wyatt, II
                                          Frank B. Wyatt, II
                                          Secretary

Dated:  March 27, 2002
Hickory, North Carolina


                                    28




                                                               APPENDIX A

                              COMMSCOPE, INC.

                          AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

The Board of Directors of CommScope,  Inc. (the  "Company") has established
an Audit  Committee  (the  "Committee")  with  general  responsibility  and
specific duties as described below.

COMPOSITION:
-----------

The Committee shall be comprised of not less than three Directors who shall
meet the requirements of the New York Stock Exchange.  Committee membership
shall be approved by the Board of Directors.

RESPONSIBILITY:
--------------

The  Committee's  responsibility  is to assist  the Board of  Directors  in
fulfilling  its fiduciary  responsibilities  as to accounting  policies and
reporting  practices of the Company.  The  Committee is empowered to retain
persons having  special  competence as necessary to assist the Committee in
fulfilling its responsibility. While the Committee has the responsibilities
and powers set forth in this  Charter,  it is not the duty of the Committee
to plan or conduct  audits or to  determine  that the  Company's  financial
statements  are complete and accurate and are in accordance  with generally
accepted  accounting  principles.  This is the responsibility of Management
and the Independent  Accountant.  The Independent  Accountant is ultimately
accountable to the Board of Directors and the Committee.

ATTENDANCE:
----------

Members of the  Committee  should  endeavor to be present,  in person or by
telephone, at all meetings; however, two Committee members shall constitute
a quorum. As necessary,  the Chairperson may request members of Management,
the  Internal  Audit  Manager,   and  representatives  of  the  Independent
Accountant to be present at meetings.

MINUTES OF MEETINGS:
-------------------

Minutes of each meeting shall be prepared and sent to Committee members and
presented to Company Directors who are not members of the Committee.

SPECIFIC DUTIES:
---------------

The Committee is to:

1.   Review,  at  least  annually,  with  the  Company's  Management,   the
     Independent Accountant,  and the Internal Audit Manager, the Company's
     policies and  procedures,  as  appropriate,  to reasonably  assess the
     adequacy of internal accounting and financial reporting controls.

2.   Review the Committee's Charter annually, and update as appropriate.

3.   Recommend to the Board of Directors the  Independent  Accountant to be
     selected (subject to ratification by the  stockholders),  evaluate the
     Independent Accountant, approve the

                                    A-1



     compensation of the Independent Accountant, and review and approve any
     discharge of the Independent Accountant.

4.   Review and concur in the appointment,  replacement,  reassignment,  or
     dismissal of the Internal Audit Manager.

5.   Receive  periodic  written  statements,  at least  annually,  from the
     Independent  Accountant regarding its independence and delineating all
     relationships  between it and the  Company,  discuss such reports with
     the  Independent  Accountant,  and if so determined by the  Committee,
     recommend that the Board take appropriate action.

6.   Become  familiar  with the  accounting  and reporting  principles  and
     practices applied by the Company in preparing its financial statements
     and discuss with the Independent  Accountant and Management  judgments
     about  the  quality,  not just  the  acceptability,  of the  Company's
     accounting  principles,  to include  their  clarity,  consistency  and
     completeness.

7.   Review,  at least  annually,  with  Management  and the Internal Audit
     Manager the adequacy and the scope of the annual  internal audit plan,
     and any significant audit findings.

8.   Review, prior to the annual audit, the scope and general extent of the
     Independent Accountant's audit examinations.

9.   Review with Management and the Independent Accountant, upon completion
     of their  audit,  financial  statements  for the  year  prior to their
     filing with the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  Discuss with the
     Independent  Accountant  the matters  required to be  discussed by the
     Statement  on Auditing  Standards  No. 61, as amended by  Statement on
     Auditing  Standards  No. 89,  relating to the conduct of the  year-end
     audit.

10.  Discuss,  at least  annually,  with  the  Independent  Accountant  the
     quality  of the  Company's  financial  accounting  personnel,  and any
     relevant recommendations that the Independent Accountant may have.

11.  Review,  at  least  annually,  with  Management  and  the  Independent
     Accountant any related party  transactions  of the Company which would
     be subject to  disclosure  in the  Company's  annual  proxy  statement
     pursuant to the rules of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission and
     any material off-balance sheet financings being used by the Company.

12.  Report  Committee   actions  to  the  Board  of  Directors  with  such
     recommendations, as the Committee may deem appropriate.

13.  Prepare  the  audit  committee  report  required  by the  rules of the
     Securities  and Exchange  Commission  to be included in the  Company's
     annual proxy  statement,  commencing  with the proxy statement for the
     2001 annual meeting.

14.  Perform such other  functions as may be required by law, the Company's
     Certificate of Incorporation or By-Laws of the Board.


                                    A-2


                                                                 APPENDIX B









                            AMENDED AND RESTATED

                              COMMSCOPE, INC.

                       1997 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

                   (AS AMENDED AND RESTATED MAY 3, 2002)







                             TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                         Page

1.    Establishment, Purpose and Effective Date...........................B-1

(a)   Establishment.......................................................B-1
(b)   Purpose.............................................................B-1
(c)   Effective Date......................................................B-1

2.    Definitions.........................................................B-1

3.    Scope of the Plan...................................................B-6

(a)   Number of Shares Available Under the Plan...........................B-6
(b)   Reduction in the Available Shares in Connection with Award Grants...B-6
(c)   Effect of the Expiration or Termination of Awards...................B-7

4.    Administration......................................................B-7

(a)   Committee Administration............................................B-7
(b)   Board Reservation and Delegation....................................B-7
(c)   Committee Authority.................................................B-8
(d)   Committee Determinations Final......................................B-9

5.    Eligibility.........................................................B-9

6.    Conditions to Grants................................................B-9

(a)   General Conditions..................................................B-9
(b)   Grant of Options and Option Price..................................B-10
(c)   Grant of Incentive Stock Options...................................B-11
(d)   Grant of Shares of Restricted Stock................................B-11
(e)   Grant of Performance Units and Performance Shares..................B-14
(f)   Grant of Phantom Stock.............................................B-15
(g)   Grant of Director's Shares.........................................B-15
(h)   Tandem Awards......................................................B-15

7.    Non-transferability................................................B-15

8.    Exercise...........................................................B-16

(a)   Exercise of Options................................................B-16
(b)   Exercise of Performance Units......................................B-17
(c)   Payment of Performance Shares......................................B-18
(d)   Payment of Phantom Stock Awards....................................B-18
(e)   Exercise, Cancellation, Expiration or Forfeiture of Tandem Awards..B-18

9.    Spin-off and Substitute Options....................................B-18

10.        Effect of Certain Transactions................................B-19

11.        Mandatory Withholding Taxes...................................B-19

                                     1



12.        Termination of Employment.....................................B-19

13.        Securities Law Matters........................................B-20

14.        No Funding Required...........................................B-20

15.        No Employment Rights..........................................B-20

16.        Rights as a Stockholder.......................................B-20

17.        Nature of Payments............................................B-21

18.        Non-Uniform Determinations....................................B-21

19.        Adjustments...................................................B-21

20.        Amendment of the Plan.........................................B-22

21.        Termination of the Plan.......................................B-22

22.        No Illegal Transactions.......................................B-22

23.        Governing Law.................................................B-22

24.        Severability..................................................B-22

25.        Translations..................................................B-23



                                     1




      1. Establishment, Purpose and Effective Date.

          (a) Establishment. The Company hereby establishes the Amended and
Restated CommScope, Inc. 1997 Long-Term Incentive Plan (as set forth herein
and from time to time amended, the "Plan").

          (b)  Purpose.  The  primary  purpose  of the Plan is to provide a
means  by  which  key  employees  and  directors  of the  Company  and  its
Subsidiaries   can   acquire  and   maintain   stock   ownership,   thereby
strengthening  their  commitment  to the  success  of the  Company  and its
Subsidiaries  and their  desire to remain  employed  by the Company and its
Subsidiaries, focusing their attention on managing the Company as an equity
owner,   and  aligning   their   interests  with  those  of  the  Company's
stockholders. The Plan also is intended to attract and retain key employees
and  to  provide  such  employees  with  additional  incentive  and  reward
opportunities  designed to encourage them to enhance the profitable  growth
of the Company and its Subsidiaries.

          (c)  Effective  Date.  The Plan shall become  effective  upon its
adoption by the Board.

      2. Definitions.

     As used in the Plan, terms defined  parenthetically  immediately after
their use shall have the respective  meanings  provided by such definitions
and the terms set forth  below  shall  have the  following  meanings  (such
meanings to be equally  applicable to both the singular and plural forms of
the terms defined):

               (a)  "Award"  means  Options,  shares of  restricted  Stock,
                    performance  units,  performance  shares or  Director's
                    Shares granted under the Plan.

               (b)  "Award  Agreement" means the written agreement by which
                    an Award is evidenced.

               (c)  "Beneficial    Owner,"    "Beneficially    Owned"   and
                    "Beneficially   Owning"   shall   have   the   meanings
                    applicable under Rule 13d-3  promulgated under the 1934
                    Act.

               (d)  "Board" means the board of directors of the Company.

               (e)  "Change  in  Capitalization"   means  any  increase  or
                    reduction  in the  number of  shares  of Stock,  or any
                    change in the shares of Stock or  exchange of shares of
                    Stock for a different number or kind of shares or other
                    securities by reason of a stock dividend, extraordinary
                    dividend,  stock  split,  reverse  stock  split,  share
                    combination,    reclassification,     recapitalization,
                    merger,     consolidation,      spin-off,     split-up,
                    reorganization,   issuance   of   warrants  or  rights,
                    liquidation,  exchange of shares, repurchase of shares,
                    change in corporate structure,  or similar event, of or
                    by the Company.

               (f)  "Change of Control" means, any of the following:

                                     B-1


                    (i)  the   acquisition  by  any  Person  of  Beneficial
               Ownership  of Voting  Securities  which,  when  added to the
               Voting  Securities then  Beneficially  Owned by such Person,
               would result in such Person  Beneficially Owning 33% or more
               of  the  combined   Voting  Power  of  the  Company's   then
               outstanding Voting Securities;  provided,  however, that for
               purposes of this paragraph (i), a Person shall not be deemed
               to have made an  acquisition  of Voting  Securities  if such
               Person:  (1)  acquires  Voting  Securities  as a result of a
               stock split, stock dividend or other corporate restructuring
               in  which  all  stockholders  of the  class  of such  Voting
               Securities are treated on a pro rata basis; (2) acquires the
               Voting Securities directly from the Company; (3) becomes the
               Beneficial Owner of 33% or more of the combined Voting Power
               of the Company's then outstanding  Voting  Securities solely
               as a result of the  acquisition of Voting  Securities by the
               Company or any Subsidiary  which,  by reducing the number of
               Voting  Securities  outstanding,  increases the proportional
               number of shares Beneficially Owned by such Person, provided
               that if (x) a Person would own at least such percentage as a
               result of the  acquisition  by the Company or any Subsidiary
               and  (y)  after  such  acquisition  by  the  Company  or any
               Subsidiary,  such Person acquires Voting Securities, then an
               acquisition of Voting Securities shall have occurred; (4) is
               the Company or any  corporation  or other  Person of which a
               majority  of its voting  power or its equity  securities  or
               equity  interest  is owned  directly  or  indirectly  by the
               Company (a  "Controlled  Entity");  or (5)  acquires  Voting
               Securities in connection  with a  "Non-Control  Transaction"
               (as defined in paragraph (iii) below); or

                    (ii) the individuals who, as of the Effective Date, are
               members of the Board (the  "Incumbent  Board") cease for any
               reason  to  constitute  at least  two-thirds  of the  Board;
               provided,  however,  that if either the  election of any new
               director or the  nomination for election of any new director
               by the Company's  stockholders  was approved by a vote of at
               least  two-thirds  of the  Incumbent  Board  prior  to  such
               election  or   nomination,   such  new  director   shall  be
               considered  as a member  of the  Incumbent  Board;  provided
               further,  however,  that no individual shall be considered a
               member of the Incumbent Board if such  individual  initially
               assumed office as a result of either an actual or threatened
               "Election  Contest" (as described in Rule 14a-11 promulgated
               under   the  1934  Act)  or  other   actual  or   threatened
               solicitation  of  proxies or  consents  by or on behalf of a
               Person other than the Board (a "Proxy Contest") including by
               reason of any  agreement  intended  to avoid or  settle  any
               Election Contest or Proxy Contest; or

                    (iii) consummation of:

                         (A)  a  merger,  consolidation  or  reorganization
                    involving  the  Company  (a  "Business   Combination"),
                    unless

                              (1)   the   stockholders   of  the   Company,
                    immediately  before  the  Business  Combination,   own,
                    directly  or  indirectly   immediately   following  the
                    Business  Combination,  at  least  a

                                     B-2


                    majority   of  the   combined   voting   power  of  the
                    outstanding   voting   securities  of  the  corporation
                    resulting from the Business Combination (the "Surviving
                    Corporation") in  substantially  the same proportion as
                    their  ownership of the Voting  Securities  immediately
                    before the Business Combination, and

                              (2) the  individuals  who were members of the
                    Incumbent Board  immediately  prior to the execution of
                    the agreement  providing  for the Business  Combination
                    constitute  at least a majority  of the  members of the
                    Board of Directors of the Surviving Corporation, and

                              (3) no Person  (other than the Company or any
                    Controlled Entity, a trustee or other fiduciary holding
                    securities  under one or more employee benefit plans or
                    arrangements  (or any  trust  forming  a part  thereof)
                    maintained by the Company, the Surviving Corporation or
                    any Controlled  Entity, or any Person who,  immediately
                    prior  to  the  Business  Combination,  had  Beneficial
                    Ownership of 33% or more of the then outstanding Voting
                    Securities) has Beneficial  Ownership of 33% or more of
                    the   combined    voting   power   of   the   Surviving
                    Corporation's  then  outstanding  voting  securities (a
                    Business  Combination   satisfying  the  conditions  of
                    clauses (1), (2) and (3) of this subparagraph (A) shall
                    be referred to as a "Non-Control Transaction");

                    (B)  a  complete  liquidation  or  dissolution  of  the
          Company; or

                    (C)  the   sale  or   other   disposition   of  all  or
          substantially  all of the  assets of the  Company  (other  than a
          transfer to a Controlled Entity).

          Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  a Change of Control shall not be
deemed to occur solely because 33% or more of the then  outstanding  Voting
Securities  is  Beneficially  Owned by (x) a  trustee  or  other  fiduciary
holding securities under one or more employee benefit plans or arrangements
(or any trust  forming a part  thereof)  maintained  by the  Company or any
Controlled  Entity or (y) any corporation  which,  immediately prior to its
acquisition  of such  interest,  is owned  directly  or  indirectly  by the
stockholders  of the Company in the same  proportion as their  ownership of
stock in the Company immediately prior to such acquisition.

               (g)  "Committee"  means the committee of the Board appointed
                    pursuant to Article 4.

               (h) "Company" means CommScope, Inc., a Delaware corporation.

               (i)  "Director's  Shares"  means the shares of Stock awarded
                    to a  nonemployee  director of the Company  pursuant to
                    Article 6(g).

               (j)  "Disability"  means  a  mental  or  physical  condition
                    which,  in the  opinion  of the  Committee,  renders  a
                    Grantee  unable  or  incompetent  to carry  out the job

                                     B-3




                    responsibilities  which such Grantee held or the duties
                    to which  such  Grantee  was  assigned  at the time the
                    disability  was  incurred,  and which is expected to be
                    permanent or for an indefinite duration.

               (k)  "Effective  Date"  means  the  date  that  the  Plan is
                    adopted by the Board.

               (l)  "Fair  Market  Value" of any security of the Company or
                    any other issuer means, as of any applicable date:

                    (i) if the  security  is listed for  trading on the New
               York Stock  Exchange,  the closing price at the close of the
               primary  trading session of the security on such date on the
               New  York  Stock  Exchange,  or if  there  has  been no such
               closing  price of the  security  on such  date,  on the next
               preceding date on which there was such a closing price, or

                    (ii) if the security is not so listed, but is listed on
               another national securities  exchange,  the closing price at
               the close of the primary  trading session of the security on
               such  date on such  exchange,  or if there  has been no such
               closing  price of the  security  on such  date,  on the next
               preceding date on which there was such a closing price, or

                    (iii) if the  security is not listed for trading on the
               New York Stock  Exchange or on another  national  securities
               exchange,  the last sale  price at the end of normal  market
               hours of the security on such date as quoted on the National
               Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System
               ("NASDAQ")  or, if no such  price  shall have been so quoted
               for such  date,  on the next  preceding  date for which such
               price was so quoted, or

                    (iv) if the  security  is not listed  for  trading on a
               national  securities  exchange  or  is  not  authorized  for
               quotation  on NASDAQ,  the fair market value of the security
               as  determined  in good faith by the  Committee,  and in the
               case of Incentive Stock Options,  in accordance with Section
               422 of the Internal Revenue Code.

               (m)  "Grant  Date"  means  the  date of  grant  of an  Award
                    determined in accordance with Article 6.

               (n)  "Grantee"  means an individual  who has been granted an
                    Award.

               (o)  "Incentive Stock Option" means an Option satisfying the
                    requirements  of Section  422 of the  Internal  Revenue
                    Code and  designated  by the  Committee as an Incentive
                    Stock Option.

               (p)  "Internal Revenue Code" means the Internal Revenue Code
                    of  1986,  as  amended,  and  regulations  and  rulings
                    thereunder.  References to a particular  Section of the
                    Internal  Revenue  Code  shall  include  references  to
                    successor provisions.

               (q)  "Measuring Period" has the meaning specified in Article
                    6(f)(ii)(B).

                                     B-4



               (r)  "Minimum  Consideration"  means  the $.0l par value per
                    share  of  Stock  or  such  larger  amount   determined
                    pursuant  to  resolution  of the  Board  to be  capital
                    within  the  meaning  of  Section  154 of the  Delaware
                    General Corporation Law.

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

               (t)  "Nonqualified  Stock  Option"  means an Option which is
                    not  an  Incentive   Stock  Option  or  other  type  of
                    statutory stock option under the Internal Revenue Code.

               (u)  "Option"  means an option to purchase  Stock granted or
                    issued  under  the  Plan,   including   Substitute  and
                    Spin-off Options.

               (v)  "Option  Price" means the per share  purchase  price of
                    (i) Stock subject to an Option or (ii) restricted Stock
                    subject to an Option.

               (w)  "Performance-Based  Compensation"  means any  Option or
                    Award that is intended to constitute "performance based
                    compensation"    within   the    meaning   of   Section
                    162(m)(4)(C)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  and  the
                    regulations promulgated thereunder.

               (x)  "Performance  Percentage" has the meaning  specified in
                    Article 6(f)(ii)(C).

               (y)  "Person"  means a person within the meaning of Sections
                    13(d) and 14(d) of the 1934 Act.

               (z)  "Plan" has the meaning set forth in Article 1(a).

               (aa) "SEC" means the Securities and Exchange Commission.

               (bb) "Section  16  Grantee"   means  a  person   subject  to
                    potential  liability with respect to equity  securities
                    of the Company under Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act.

               (cc) "Spin-off  Option" means an Option that has been issued
                    under this Plan to certain  named  persons  pursuant to
                    the  Employee  Benefits  Allocation  Agreement  between
                    General Semiconductor, Inc. ("GS"), CommScope, Inc. and
                    the Company, dated June 25, 1997, as amended, modified,
                    or otherwise supplemented (the "Benefits Agreement").

               (dd) "Stock" means common  stock,  par value $.01 per share,
                    of the Company.

               (ee) "Subsidiary" means (i) except as provided in subsection
                    (ii)  below,  any  corporation  which  is a  subsidiary
                    corporation within the meaning of Section 424(f) of the
                    Internal Revenue Code with respect to the Company,  and
                    (ii) in relation to the  eligibility to receive Options
                    or Awards  other  than  Incentive  Stock  Options,  any
                    entity,  whether  or not  incorporated,  in  which  the
                    Company  directly or indirectly  owns either (A) Voting
                    Securities  possessing at least 50% of the Voting Power
                    of such  entity,  or (B) if such  entity does not issue
                    Voting  Securities,  at  least  50%  of  the  ownership
                    interests in such entity.

                                     B-5



               (ff) "Substitute  Option"  means  an  Option  that  has been
                    issued under this Plan to certain  persons  pursuant to
                    the Benefits Agreement.

               (gg) "10%  Owner"  means a person who owns stock  (including
                    stock  treated  as owned  under  Section  424(d) of the
                    Internal  Revenue Code) possessing more than 10% of the
                    Voting Power of the Company.

               (hh) "Termination  of  Employment"  occurs  the first day on
                    which  an  individual  is  for  any  reason  no  longer
                    employed by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries,  or
                    with respect to an  individual  who is an employee of a
                    Subsidiary,  the  first  day on which  the  Company  no
                    longer owns Voting  Securities  possessing at least 50%
                    of the Voting Power of such Subsidiary.

               (ii) "Voting  Power" means the combined  voting power of the
                    then outstanding Voting Securities.

               (jj) "Voting  Securities" means, with respect to the Company
                    or any Subsidiary, any securities issued by the Company
                    or  such  Subsidiary,   respectively,  which  generally
                    entitle the holder  thereof to vote for the election of
                    directors of the Company.

          3. Scope of the Plan.

          (a) Number of Shares Available Under the Plan. The maximum number
of shares of Stock that may be made the subject of Awards granted under the
Plan is  9,600,000  plus the number of shares of Stock that are  covered by
Substitute  Options and Spin-off  Options (or the number and kind of shares
of Stock or other  securities  to which such  shares of Stock are  adjusted
upon a Change in Capitalization pursuant to Article 18); provided, however,
that in the  aggregate,  not more than 200,000  shares of Stock may be made
the subject of Awards other than Options.  The maximum  number of shares of
Stock that may be the subject of Options (other than Substitute Options and
Spin-off Options) and Awards granted to any individual pursuant to the Plan
in any three (3) calendar year period may not exceed  750,000.  The maximum
dollar amount of cash or the Fair Market Value of Stock that any individual
may  receive  in  any  calendar  year  in  respect  of  performance   units
denominated in dollars may not exceed $1,000,000. The Company shall reserve
for the purpose of the Plan, out of its  authorized but unissued  shares of
Stock or out of shares  held in the  Company's  treasury,  or partly out of
each, such number of shares as shall be determined by the Board.  The Board
shall have the authority to cause the Company to purchase from time to time
shares of Stock to be held as treasury shares and used for or in connection
with Awards.  The issuance of Substitute Options and Spin-off Options shall
not reduce the shares  available  for grants under the Plan or to a Grantee
in any calendar year.

          (b)  Reduction in the Available  Shares in Connection  with Award
Grants. Upon the grant of an Award, the number of shares of Stock available
under  Article 3(a) for the granting of further  Awards shall be reduced as
follows:
                    (i)  Performance  Units  Denominated  in  Dollars.   In
          connection with the granting of each performance unit denominated
          in dollars, the number of

                                     B-6



          shares of Stock  available under Article 3(a) for the granting of
          further Awards shall be reduced by the quotient of (x) the dollar
          amount  represented  by the  performance  unit divided by (y) the
          Fair  Market  Value of a share  of Stock on the date  immediately
          preceding the Grant Date of the performance unit.

                    (ii) Other Awards.  In connection  with the granting of
          each Award, other than a performance unit denominated in dollars,
          the number of shares of Stock  available  under  Article 3(a) for
          the  granting of further  Awards  shall be reduced by a number of
          shares equal to the number of shares of Stock in respect of which
          the Award is granted or denominated;  provided,  however, that if
          any Award is  exercised  by  tendering  shares  of Stock,  either
          actually  or by  attestation,  to the  Company as full or partial
          payment of the exercise  price,  the maximum  number of shares of
          Stock  available  under  Section  3(a) shall be  increased by the
          number of shares of Stock so tendered.

     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  where two or more Awards are granted
with  respect to the same shares of Stock,  such shares shall be taken into
account only once for purposes of this Article 3(b).

          (c) Effect of the Expiration or Termination of Awards.  If and to
the extent an Option or Award (including a Substitute  Option or a Spin-off
Option) expires,  terminates or is canceled, settled in cash (including the
settlement  of tax  withholding  obligations  using  shares  of  Stock)  or
forfeited for any reason without having been exercised in full  (including,
without  limitation,  a  cancellation  of an  Option  pursuant  to  Article
4(c)(vi)),  the shares of Stock  associated  with the expired,  terminated,
canceled,  settled  or  forfeited  portion  of the Award (to the extent the
number of shares  available for the granting of Awards was reduced pursuant
to Article 3(b)) shall again become available for Awards under the Plan.

     4. Administration.

          (a) Committee  Administration.  The Plan shall be administered by
the  Committee,  which  shall  consist  of not less than two  "non-employee
directors"  within the meaning of Rule 16b-3,  and to the extent  necessary
for any Award intended to qualify as  Performance-Based  Compensation to so
qualify, each member of the Committee shall be an "outside director" within
the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. For purposes of
the  preceding  sentence,  if one or more members of the Committee is not a
"non-employee  director"  within the  meaning of Rule 16b-3 and an "outside
director" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
but recuses  himself or herself or abstains  from voting with  respect to a
particular action taken by the Committee,  then the Committee, with respect
to that  action,  shall be deemed to  consist  only of the  members  of the
Committee who have not recused themselves or abstained from voting.
          (b)  Board  Reservation  and  Delegation.  Except  to the  extent
necessary   for  any  Award   intended  to  qualify  as   Performance-Based
Compensation to so qualify,  the Board may, in

                                     B-7



its  discretion,  reserve to itself or exercise any or all of the authority
and  responsibility  of the  Committee  hereunder  and may also delegate to
another   committee  of  the  Board  any  or  all  of  the   authority  and
responsibility  of the Committee with respect to Awards to Grantees who are
not  Section  16  Grantees  at the  time any such  delegated  authority  or
responsibility  is  exercised.  Such other  committee may consist of one or
more  directors  who may,  but need not be,  officers or  employees  of the
Company or of any of its  Subsidiaries.  To the  extent  that the Board has
reserved to itself,  or exercised the authority and  responsibility  of the
Committee,  or delegated the authority and  responsibility of the Committee
to such other committee,  all references to the Committee in the Plan shall
be to the Board or to such other committee.

          (c) Committee Authority.  The Committee shall have full and final
authority, in its discretion,  but subject to the express provisions of the
Plan, as follows:

                    (i) to grant Awards,

                    (ii) to determine  (A) when Awards may be granted,  and
          (B) whether or not specific Awards shall be identified with other
          specific  Awards,  and if so,  whether they shall be  exercisable
          cumulatively  with,  or  alternatively  to,  such other  specific
          Awards,

                    (iii) to issue Substitute Options and Spin-off Options,

                    (iv)  to   interpret   the   Plan   and  to  make   all
          determinations  necessary or advisable for the  administration of
          the Plan,

                    (v)  to  prescribe,   amend,   and  rescind  rules  and
          regulations relating to the Plan, including,  without limitation,
          rules with respect to the exercisability and nonforfeitability of
          Awards upon the Termination of Employment of a Grantee,

                    (vi) to determine the terms and provisions of the Award
          Agreements,  which need not be identical and, with the consent of
          the Grantee, to modify any such Award Agreement at any time,

                    (vii) to  cancel,  with  the  consent  of the  Grantee,
          outstanding Awards,

                    (viii)  except  with  respect  to  Nonqualified   Stock
          Options  granted to  nonemployee  directors  pursuant  to Section
          6(b)(ii)(A)  hereof, to accelerate the  exercisability of, and to
          accelerate or waive any or all of the restrictions and conditions
          applicable to, any Award,

                    (ix)  to   authorize   any   action   of  or  make  any
          determination   by  the  Company  as  the  Committee  shall  deem
          necessary or advisable for carrying out the purposes of the Plan,
          and

                    (x) to impose such additional conditions, restrictions,
          and limitations  upon the grant,  exercise or retention of Awards
          as the  Committee  may,  before  or

                                     B-8



          concurrently with the grant thereof, deem appropriate, including,
          without limitation,  requiring  simultaneous  exercise of related
          identified  Awards,  and limiting the  percentage of Awards which
          may from time to time be exercised by a Grantee.

     Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the exercise price of
outstanding  Options may not be decreased (except pursuant to Section 19 of
the Plan) and Options may not be cancelled or forfeited  and  re-granted to
effect the same result.  Notwithstanding  anything  herein to the contrary,
with respect to Grantees  working outside the United States,  the Committee
may determine the terms and  provisions  of the Award  Agreements  and make
such  adjustments or modifications to Awards as are necessary and advisable
to fulfill the purposes of the Plan.

          (d) Committee  Determinations  Final.  The  determination  of the
Committee on all matters  relating to the Plan or any Award Agreement shall
be conclusive and final. No member of the Committee shall be liable for any
action or determination  made in good faith with respect to the Plan or any
Award.

     5. Eligibility.

     Awards  may be granted to any  employee  of the  Company or any of its
Subsidiaries,  and Nonqualified Stock Options may be granted to nonemployee
directors of the Company pursuant to Article 6(b)(ii)(B).  In selecting the
individuals to whom Awards may be granted,  as well as in  determining  the
number of shares of Stock  subject to, and the other  terms and  conditions
applicable to, each Award, the Committee shall take into consideration such
factors as it deems  relevant in  promoting  the  purposes of the Plan.  In
addition,  Nonqualified  Stock  Options  will be  automatically  granted to
nonemployee  directors of the Company, as set forth in Article 6(b)(ii)(A),
and Director's Shares will be automatically issued to nonemployee directors
of the Company pursuant to Article 6(g).


     6. Conditions to Grants.


               (a) General Conditions.

                    (i) The  Grant  Date of an  Award  shall be the date on
               which the  Committee  grants the Award or such later date as
               specified in advance by the Committee.

                    (ii) The term of each Award  (subject  to Article  6(c)
               with respect to Incentive  Stock  Options) shall be a period
               of not more than ten years  from the Grant Date and shall be
               subject to earlier  termination as provided herein or in the
               applicable  Award  Agreement;  provided,  however,  that the
               Committee   may  provide  that  an  Option  (other  than  an
               Incentive  Stock Option) may, upon the death of the Grantee,
               be exercised  for up to one year  following  the date of the

                                     B-9



               Grantee's death even if such period extends beyond ten years
               from the date the Option is granted.

                    (iii) A Grantee may, if otherwise eligible,  be granted
               additional Awards in any combination.

                    (iv) The  Committee  may grant  Awards  with  terms and
               conditions which differ among the Grantees  thereof.  To the
               extent not set forth in the Plan,  the terms and  conditions
               of each Award shall be set forth in an Award Agreement.

               (b) Grant of Options and Option Price. The Committee may, in
its discretion, and shall as provided in Article 6(b)(ii), grant Options as
follows:


                    (i) Employee Options.  Options to acquire  unrestricted
               Stock or  restricted  Stock may be granted  to any  employee
               eligible  under Article 5 to receive  Awards.  No later than
               the Grant Date of any Option,  the Committee shall determine
               the Option  Price  which  shall not be less than 100% of the
               Fair Market Value of the Stock on the Grant Date.

                    (ii) Nonemployee Director Options.

                        (A).  Automatic Grants.  Nonqualified Stock Options
                        with respect to 20,000 shares of unrestricted Stock
                        shall be granted to each  nonemployee  director  of
                        the Company upon his or her initial election to the
                        Board  and  every  three  years  thereafter  on the
                        anniversary of such nonemployee  director's initial
                        election  to the Board as long as such  nonemployee
                        director is then still serving on the Board.

                        (B).   Discretionary  Grants.   Nonqualified  Stock
                        Options to acquire unrestricted or restricted stock
                        may be  granted  to  nonemployee  directors  of the
                        Company from time to time.

                        (C). Terms  Applicable to all Nonemployee  Director
                        Options.  Each Nonqualified Stock Option granted to
                        a nonemployee director will be granted at an Option
                        Price equal to 100% of the Fair Market Value of the
                        Stock on the Grant Date,  will  become  exercisable
                        with respect to one-third of the underlying  shares
                        on   each   of  the   first,   second   and   third
                        anniversaries  of the Grant  Date,  and will have a
                        term of ten years. If a nonemployee director ceases
                        to  serve  as a  director  of the  Company  for any
                        reason,  any  Nonqualified  Stock Option granted to
                        such  nonemployee  director  shall  be  exercisable
                        during its remaining  term, to the extent that such
                        Nonqualified  Stock Option was  exercisable  on the
                        date  such  nonemployee  director  ceased  to  be a
                        director.



                                    B-10


               (c) Grant of  Incentive  Stock  Options.  At the time of the
grant of any Option,  the Committee may designate that such Option shall be
an Incentive  Stock Option.  Any Option  designated  as an Incentive  Stock
Option:

                    (i)  shall  have an  Option  Price of (A) not less than
               100% of the Fair Market Value of the Stock on the Grant Date
               or (B) in the case of a 10% Owner, not less than 110% of the
               Fair Market Value of the Stock on the Grant Date;

                    (ii) shall have a term of not more than ten years (five
               years,  in the case of a 10% Owner) from the Grant Date, and
               shall be subject to earlier  termination as provided  herein
               or in the applicable Award Agreement;

                    (iii)  shall,  if,  with  respect  to  any  grant,  the
               aggregate  Fair  Market  Value of Stock  (determined  on the
               Grant Date) of all Incentive Stock Options granted under the
               Plan and "incentive  stock  options"  (within the meaning of
               Section 422 of the Internal  Revenue Code) granted under any
               other  stock  option plan of the  Grantee's  employer or any
               parent or  subsidiary  thereof  (in either  case  determined
               without regard to this Article 6(c)) are exercisable for the
               first time during any  calendar  year exceeds  $100,000,  be
               treated as Nonqualified  Stock Options.  For purposes of the
               foregoing sentence, Incentive Stock Options shall be treated
               as  Nonqualified  Stock  Options  according  to the order in
               which they were granted such that the most recently  granted
               Incentive  Stock Options are first  treated as  Nonqualified
               Stock Options.

                    (iv) shall be granted within ten years from the earlier
               of the date the Plan is adopted by the Board or the date the
               Plan is approved by the stockholders of the Company; and

                    (v) shall  require the Grantee to notify the  Committee
               of any  disposition  of any  Stock  issued  pursuant  to the
               exercise   of  the   Incentive   Stock   Option   under  the
               circumstances  described  in Section  421(b) of the Internal
               Revenue   Code    (relating    to   certain    disqualifying
               dispositions), within ten days of such disposition.

               (d) Grant of Shares of Restricted Stock.

                    (i) The Committee may, in its discretion,  grant shares
               of restricted Stock to any employee eligible under Article 5
               to receive Awards.

                    (ii)  Before  the  grant of any  shares  of  restricted
               Stock, the Committee shall determine, in its discretion:

                         (A) whether the certificates for such shares shall
                    be  delivered to the Grantee or held  (together  with a
                    stock power executed in blank by the Grantee) in escrow
                    by the  Secretary  of the  Company  until  such  shares
                    become nonforfeitable or are forfeited;

                                    B-11


                         (B) the per share  purchase  price of such shares,
                    which  may be  zero;  provided,  however,  that the per
                    share  purchase  price of all such  shares  (other than
                    treasury  shares)  shall not be less  than the  Minimum
                    Consideration for each such share;

                         (C) the restrictions  applicable to such grant and
                    the   time  or  times   upon   which   any   applicable
                    restrictions  on  the  restricted  Stock  shall  lapse;
                    provided, however, that except in the case of shares of
                    restricted  Stock issued in full or partial  settlement
                    of another  Award or other earned  compensation,  or in
                    the event of the Grantee's  termination  of employment,
                    as  determined  by the  Committee  and set  forth in an
                    Award  Agreement,  such  restrictions  shall  not lapse
                    prior to the third anniversary of the Grant Date of the
                    restricted Stock; and

                         (D)   whether   the  payment  to  the  Grantee  of
                    dividends, or a specified portion thereof,  declared or
                    paid on such  shares by the  Company  shall be deferred
                    until the lapsing of the restrictions imposed upon such
                    shares and shall be held by the Company for the account
                    of  the  Grantee,   whether  such  dividends  shall  be
                    reinvested in additional shares of restricted Stock (to
                    the  extent  shares  are  available  under  Article  3)
                    subject  to the same  restrictions  and other  terms as
                    apply  to  the  shares  with   respect  to  which  such
                    dividends  are issued or otherwise  reinvested in Stock
                    or held in escrow, whether interest will be credited to
                    the  account  of  the  Grantee   with  respect  to  any
                    dividends  which are not  reinvested  in  restricted or
                    unrestricted  Stock,  and whether  any Stock  dividends
                    issued  with  respect  to the  restricted  Stock  to be
                    granted  shall  be  treated  as  additional  shares  of
                    restricted Stock.

                    (iii)  Payment of the  purchase  price (if greater than
               zero) for shares of  restricted  Stock shall be made in full
               by the  Grantee  before the  delivery of such shares and, in
               any  event,  no later than ten days after the Grant Date for
               such shares.  Such payment may be made, as determined by the
               Committee in its  discretion,  in any one or any combination
               of the following:

                         (A) cash; or

                         (B)  with the  prior  approval  of the  Committee,
                    shares of restricted or unrestricted Stock owned by the
                    Grantee  prior to such  grant  and  valued  at its Fair
                    Market Value on the business day immediately  preceding
                    the date of payment;

               provided, however, that, in the case of payment in shares of
               restricted or unrestricted  Stock, if the purchase price for
               restricted  Stock  ("New  Restricted  Stock")  is paid  with
               shares of restricted  Stock ("Old  Restricted  Stock"),  the
               restrictions applicable to the New Restricted Stock shall be
               the same as if the Grantee  had paid for the New  Restricted
               Stock in cash unless, in the judgment of

                                    B-12



               the  Committee,  the Old  Restricted  Stock was subject to a
               greater risk of forfeiture, in which case a number of shares
               of New Restricted Stock equal to the number of shares of Old
               Restricted  Stock  tendered  in payment  for New  Restricted
               Stock shall be subject to the same  restrictions  as the Old
               Restricted  Stock,   determined   immediately   before  such
               payment.

                    (iv) The Committee may, but need not,  provide that all
               or any  portion of a  Grantee's  Award of  restricted  Stock
               shall be forfeited:

                         (A)  except as  otherwise  specified  in the Award
                    Agreement, upon the Grantee's Termination of Employment
                    within a specified time period after the Grant Date; or

                         (B) if the Company or the Grantee does not achieve
                    specified  performance  goals  within a specified  time
                    period  after the Grant Date and  before the  Grantee's
                    Termination of Employment; or

                         (C)   upon   failure   to   satisfy   such   other
                    restrictions  as the Committee may specify in the Award
                    Agreement.

               (v) If a share of restricted Stock is forfeited, then:

                         (A) the  Grantee  shall be deemed  to have  resold
                    such share of  restricted  Stock to the  Company at the
                    lesser of (1) the  purchase  price paid by the  Grantee
                    (such purchase price shall be deemed to be zero dollars
                    ($0) if no  purchase  price  was  paid) or (2) the Fair
                    Market  Value  of a share  of Stock on the date of such
                    forfeiture;

                         (B)  the  Company  shall  pay to the  Grantee  the
                    amount determined under clause (A) of this sentence, if
                    not zero, as soon as is  administratively  practicable,
                    but in any case within 90 days after forfeiture; and

                         (C) such share of restricted  Stock shall cease to
                    be  outstanding,  and  shall no  longer  confer  on the
                    Grantee  thereof  any  rights as a  stockholder  of the
                    Company,  from  and  after  the  date of the  Company's
                    tender of the payment  specified  in clause (B) of this
                    sentence, whether or not such tender is accepted by the
                    Grantee,  or the date the restricted Stock is forfeited
                    if no purchase price was paid for the restricted Stock.

                    (vi)  Any  share  of  restricted  Stock  shall  bear an
               appropriate   legend   specifying   that   such   share   is
               non-transferable  and subject to the  restrictions set forth
               in the  Plan  and the  Award  Agreement.  If any  shares  of
               restricted  Stock become  nonforfeitable,  the Company shall
               cause  certificates for such shares to be issued or reissued
               without such legend and  delivered to the Grantee or, at the


                                    B-13



               request  of the  Grantee,  shall  cause  such  shares  to be
               credited to a brokerage account specified by the Grantee.

               (e) Grant of Performance Units and Performance Shares.

                    (i)  The  Committee  may,  in  its  discretion,   grant
               performance  units or  performance  shares  to any  employee
               eligible under Article 5 to receive Awards.

                    (ii)  Before  the  grant  of any  performance  unit  or
               performance share, the Committee shall:

                         (A) designate a period,  of not less than one year
                    nor more than five years,  for the  measurement  of the
                    extent to which  performance  goals are  attained  (the
                    "Measuring Period");

                         (B) determine performance goals applicable to such
                    grant;  provided,  however,  that the performance goals
                    with respect to a Measuring Period shall be established
                    in writing by the  Committee  by the earlier of (x) the
                    date on which a quarter  of the  Measuring  Period  has
                    elapsed or (y) the date which is ninety (90) days after
                    the  commencement of the Measuring  Period,  and in any
                    event while the performance relating to the performance
                    goals remain substantially uncertain; and

                         (C)  assign  a  "Performance  Percentage"  to each
                    level of  attainment  of  performance  goals during the
                    Measuring  Period,  with the  percentage  applicable to
                    minimum  attainment  being  zero  percent  (0%) and the
                    percentage  applicable  to  optimum  attainment  to  be
                    determined by the Committee from time to time.

                    (iii) The performance  goals  applicable to performance
               units or performance  shares shall, in the discretion of the
               Committee,  be based on stock  price,  earnings  per  share,
               operating  income,  return on equity or  assets,  cash flow,
               EBITDA or any combination of the foregoing. Such performance
               goals may be absolute or relative (to prior  performance  or
               to the performance of one or more other entities or external
               indices)  and may be  expressed  in terms  of a  progression
               within a  specified  range.  At the time of the  granting of
               performance  units  or  performance  shares,  or at any time
               thereafter,  in either  case to the extent  permitted  under
               Section  162(m)  of  the  Internal   Revenue  Code  and  the
               regulations   thereunder  without  adversely  affecting  the
               treatment of the  performance  unit or performance  share as
               Performance-Based  Compensation,  the  Committee may provide
               for the manner in which performance will be measured against
               the performance goals (or may adjust the performance  goals)
               to reflect the impact of specified  corporate  transactions,
               special charges, foreign currency effects, accounting or tax
               law changes and other extraordinary or nonrecurring events.

                                    B-14


                    (iv)  Prior  to the  vesting,  payment,  settlement  or
               lapsing of any restrictions  with respect to any performance
               unit or  performance  share that is intended  to  constitute
               Performance-Based  Compensation  made  to a  Grantee  who is
               subject to Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code, the
               Committee  shall  certify  in  writing  that the  applicable
               performance goals have been satisfied.

                    (v) Unless  otherwise  expressly stated in the relevant
               Award Agreement, each performance unit and performance share
               granted  under the Plan is intended to be  Performance-Based
               Compensation   and  the   Committee   shall   interpret  and
               administer the applicable provisions of the Plan in a manner
               consistent therewith.  Any provisions inconsistent with such
               treatment  shall be  inoperative  and  shall  not  adversely
               affect the  treatment of  performance  units or  performance
               shares granted hereunder as Performance-Based  Compensation.
               The  Committee   shall  not  be  entitled  to  exercise  any
               discretion  otherwise  authorized  hereunder with respect to
               such performance unit or performance share if the ability to
               exercise such  discretion or the exercise of such discretion
               itself  would cause the  compensation  attributable  to such
               performance unit or performance  share to fail to qualify as
               Performance-Based  Compensation.

               (f)  Grant of  Phantom  Stock.  The  Committee  may,  in its
discretion,  grant shares of phantom  stock to any employee who is eligible
under Article 5 to receive  Awards.  Such phantom stock shall be subject to
the terms and conditions  established by the Committee and set forth in the
applicable Award Agreement.

               (g)  Grant of  Director's  Shares.  There  shall be  granted
Director's Shares with respect to 1,000 shares of Stock to each nonemployee
director  of the  Company  upon his or her  initial  election to the Board.
Director's Shares shall be fully vested and transferable upon issuance.

               (h) Tandem Awards.  The Committee may grant and identify any
Award with any other Award granted under the Plan ("Tandem  Award"),  other
than a  Substitute  Option or a Spin-off  Option,  on terms and  conditions
determined by the Committee.

     7. Non-transferability.

     Unless set forth in the  applicable  Award  Agreement  with respect to
Awards other than Incentive Stock Options, no Award (other than an Award of
restricted  Stock)  granted  hereunder  shall by its terms be assignable or
transferable  except by will or the laws of descent and distribution or, in
the case of an Option other than an Incentive  Stock Option,  pursuant to a
domestic  relations  order  (within the meaning of Rule 16a-12  promulgated
under the Exchange Act). An Option may be exercised  during the lifetime of
a  Grantee   only  by  the  Grantee  or  his  or  her   guardian  or  legal
representatives or, except as would cause an Incentive Stock Option to lose
its status as such, by a bankruptcy trustee. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the  Committee  may set forth in the Award  Agreement  evidencing  an Award
(other than an Incentive  Stock Option) at

                                    B-15



the time of grant or  thereafter,  that the  Award  may be  transferred  to
members of the Grantee's immediate family, to trusts solely for the benefit
of such immediate  family members and to  partnerships in which such family
members and/or trusts are the only partners, and for purposes of this Plan,
a  transferee  of an Award  shall be  deemed  to be the  Grantee.  For this
purpose,  immediate family means the Grantee's spouse,  parents,  children,
stepchildren and grandchildren  and the spouses of such parents,  children,
stepchildren  and  grandchildren.  The  terms of an Award  shall be  final,
binding and conclusive upon the beneficiaries,  executors,  administrators,
heirs and successors of the Grantee.  Each share of restricted  Stock shall
be non-transferable until such share becomes nonforfeitable.

     8. Exercise.

     (a) Exercise of Options.  Subject to Articles 4(c)(vii), 12 and 13 and
such terms and conditions as the Committee may impose, each Option shall be
exercisable  in one or more  installments  commencing  not earlier than the
first anniversary of the Grant Date of such Option; provided, however, that
all Options  held by each Grantee  shall  become  fully  (100%)  vested and
exercisable  upon the  occurrence  of a Change  of  Control  regardless  of
whether the acceleration of the  exercisability of such Options would cause
such Options to lose their  eligibility  for  treatment as Incentive  Stock
Options.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,  Options may not be exercised by a
Grantee for such period of time  following a hardship  distribution  to the
Grantee,  to the extent such  exercise is prohibited  under the  applicable
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and any authority thereunder.  Each
Option shall be  exercised by delivery to the Company of written  notice of
intent to  purchase  a  specific  number of shares of Stock  subject to the
Option. The Option Price of any shares of Stock as to which an Option shall
be exercised shall be paid in full at the time of the exercise. Payment may
be made, as determined by the Committee in its  discretion  with respect to
Options  granted to  eligible  employees  and in all cases with  respect to
Options granted to nonemployee  directors pursuant to Article 6(b)(ii),  in
any one or any combination of the following:

                    (i)  cash,

                    (ii) shares of  unrestricted  Stock held by the Grantee
               for at least six  months  (or such  lesser  period as may be
               permitted  by the  Committee)  prior to the  exercise of the
               Option,  and  valued  at its Fair  Market  Value on the last
               business day immediately preceding the date of exercise, or

                    (iii)  through  simultaneous  sale  through a broker of
               shares  of  unrestricted  Stock  acquired  on  exercise,  as
               permitted under Regulation T of the Federal Reserve Board.

     Shares of  unrestricted  Stock acquired by a Grantee on exercise of an
Option shall be delivered to the Grantee or, at the request of the Grantee,
shall be credited directly to a brokerage account specified by the Grantee.

                                    B-16




     (b) Exercise of Performance Units.

               (i) Subject to Articles 4(c)(vii),  12 and 13 and such terms
          and conditions as the Committee may impose,  and unless otherwise
          provided in the applicable Award  Agreement,  if, with respect to
          any performance  unit, the Committee has determined in accordance
          with Article  6(f)(iv)  that the minimum  performance  goals have
          been achieved during the applicable  Measuring Period,  then such
          performance  unit shall be deemed  exercised on the date on which
          it first becomes exercisable.

               (ii) The benefit for each  performance  unit exercised shall
          be an amount equal to the product of

                    (A) the Unit Value (as defined below), multiplied by

                    (B) the  Performance  Percentage  attained  during  the
               Measuring Period for such performance unit.

               (iii)  The  Unit  Value  shall  be,  as   specified  by  the
          Committee,

                    (A) a dollar amount,

                    (B) an amount equal to the Fair Market Value of a share
               of Stock on the Grant Date,

                    (C) an amount equal to the Fair Market Value of a share
               of Stock on the exercise date of the performance unit, plus,
               if so provided in the Award Agreement,  an amount ("Dividend
               Equivalent  Amount")  equal to the Fair Market  Value of the
               number of shares of Stock that would have been  purchased if
               each dividend paid on a share of Stock on or after the Grant
               Date and on or before the  exercise  date were  invested  in
               shares of Stock at a purchase price equal to its Fair Market
               Value on the respective dividend payment date, or

                    (D) an amount equal to the Fair Market Value of a share
               of Stock on the exercise date of the performance unit (plus,
               if  so  specified  in  the  Award   Agreement,   a  Dividend
               Equivalent  Amount),  reduced by the Fair Market  Value of a
               share of Stock on the Grant Date of the performance unit.

               (iv) The benefit  upon the  exercise of a  performance  unit
          shall be payable as soon as is administratively  practicable (but
          in any event  within 90 days) after the later of (A) the date the
          Grantee is deemed to exercise such  performance  unit, or (B) the
          date (or dates in the event of installment  payments) as provided
          in the applicable Award Agreement.  Such benefit shall be payable
          in  cash,  except  that  the  Committee,   with  respect  to  any
          particular exercise, may, in

                                    B-17



          its discretion,  pay benefits wholly or partly in Stock delivered
          to the Grantee or credited to a brokerage  account  specified  by
          the  Grantee.  The  number of shares of Stock  payable in lieu of
          cash shall be  determined by valuing the Stock at its Fair Market
          Value on the business day next preceding the date such benefit is
          to be paid.

          (c) Payment of Performance Shares. Subject to Articles 4(c)(vii),
12 and 13 and such terms and  conditions as the  Committee may impose,  and
unless  otherwise  provided  in  the  applicable  Award  Agreement,  if the
Committee  has  determined  in  accordance  with Article  6(f)(iv) that the
minimum  performance  goals with respect to an Award of performance  shares
have been achieved during the applicable Measuring Period, then the Company
shall pay to the Grantee of such Award (or, at the request of the  Grantee,
deliver to a brokerage  account  specified by the Grantee)  shares of Stock
equal  in  number  to the  product  of the  number  of  performance  shares
specified in the applicable  Award Agreement  multiplied by the Performance
Percentage achieved during such Measuring Period, except to the extent that
the  Committee in its  discretion  determines  that cash be paid in lieu of
some or all of such shares of Stock.  The amount of cash payable in lieu of
a share of Stock  shall be  determined  by  valuing  such share at its Fair
Market Value on the business day next preceding the date such cash is to be
paid.  Payments  pursuant  to this  Article  8(d)  shall be made as soon as
administratively  practicable  (but in any event  within 90 days) after the
end of the applicable Measuring Period. Any performance shares with respect
to which the  performance  goals have not been  achieved  by the end of the
applicable Measuring Period shall expire.

          (d)  Payment  of  Phantom  Stock  Awards.  Upon the  vesting of a
phantom  stock  Award,  the  Grantee  shall be  entitled  to receive a cash
payment in respect of each share of phantom  stock  which shall be equal to
the Fair Market Value of a share of Stock as of the date the phantom  stock
Award was granted, or such other date as determined by the Committee at the
time the phantom stock Award was granted.  The Committee may, at the time a
phantom stock Award is granted,  provide a limitation on the amount payable
in respect of each share of phantom stock.  In lieu of a cash payment,  the
Committee  may settle  phantom  stock  Awards with shares of Stock having a
Fair Market Value equal to the cash payment to which the Grantee has become
entitled.

          (e)  Exercise,  Cancellation,  Expiration or Forfeiture of Tandem
Awards. Upon the exercise, cancellation,  expiration, forfeiture or payment
in respect of any Award which is identified  with any Tandem Award pursuant
to Article  6(i),  the Tandem  Award shall  automatically  terminate to the
extent  of the  number  of  shares  in  respect  of which  the  Award is so
exercised, cancelled, expired, forfeited or paid, unless otherwise provided
by the Committee at the time of grant of the Tandem Award or thereafter.

     9. Spin-off and Substitute Options.

     Spin-off  Options and  Substitute  Options  shall be issued under this
Plan  pursuant  to  and in  accordance  with  the  terms  of  the  Benefits
Agreement. Spin-off Options and Substitute Options

                                    B-18



shall be  governed by the terms of the Plan to the extent that the terms of
the Plan do not conflict with the terms of the  agreements  evidencing  the
Spin-off Options and Substitute Options.

     10. Effect of Certain Transactions.

     With respect to any Award which relates to Stock,  in the event of (i)
the  liquidation  or  dissolution  of  the  Company  or  (ii) a  merger  or
consolidation  of the  Company (a  "Transaction"),  the Plan and the Awards
issued  hereunder  shall  continue  in  effect  in  accordance  with  their
respective  terms,  except  that  following a  Transaction  either (i) each
outstanding Award shall be treated as provided for in the agreement entered
into in connection with the Transaction  (the  "Transaction  Agreement") or
(ii) if not so provided in the Transaction Agreement, each Grantee shall be
entitled  to  receive  in  respect  of each  share of Stock  subject to any
outstanding Awards, upon the vesting,  payment or exercise of the Award (as
the case may be),  the same  number  and kind of stock,  securities,  cash,
property,  or other  consideration that each holder of a share of Stock was
entitled to receive in the Transaction in respect of a share of Stock.

     11. Mandatory Withholding Taxes.

     The Company  shall have the right to deduct from any  distribution  of
cash to any Grantee an amount equal to the federal,  state and local income
taxes and other  amounts  as may be  required  by law to be  withheld  (the
"Withholding  Taxes")  with  respect  to  any  Award.  If a  Grantee  is to
experience a taxable event in connection  with (i) the receipt of an Award,
(ii) the  receipt  of  shares  pursuant  to an Option  exercise,  (iii) the
vesting  or payment  of  another  type of Award or (iv) any other  event in
connection  with the Plan (a "Taxable  Event"),  the Grantee  shall pay the
Withholding  Taxes to the Company  prior to the  issuance,  or release from
escrow,  of such  Award or shares or  vesting  or  payment of such Award or
occurrence  of  such  event,  as  applicable.  Payment  of  the  applicable
Withholding  Taxes  may be made,  as  determined  by the  Committee  in its
discretion,  in any one or any  combination  of (i)  cash,  (ii)  shares of
restricted or unrestricted  Stock owned by the Grantee prior to the Taxable
Event and valued at its Fair Market Value on the  business day  immediately
preceding  the date of  exercise,  or (iii) by  making a Tax  Election  (as
described  below).  For  purposes  of this  Article 11, the  Committee  may
provide  in the  Award  Agreement  at the  time of  grant,  or at any  time
thereafter,  that the Grantee,  in  satisfaction  of the  obligation to pay
Withholding  Taxes to the Company,  may elect to have withheld a portion of
the shares  then  issuable  to him or her having an  aggregate  Fair Market
Value equal to the Withholding Taxes.

     12. Termination of Employment.

     The Award Agreement pertaining to each Award shall set forth the terms
and conditions applicable to such Award upon a Termination of Employment of
the Grantee by the Company,  a Subsidiary or an operating division or unit,
which,  except for Options  granted to  nonemployee  directors  pursuant to
Article  6(b)(ii),  shall  be as the  Committee  may,  in  its  discretion,
determine at the time the Award is granted or thereafter.

                                    B-19




     13. Securities Law Matters.

          (a) If the  Committee  deems  it  necessary  to  comply  with the
Securities  Act of 1933,  the  Committee  may require a written  investment
intent  representation  by the Grantee and may require  that a  restrictive
legend be affixed to certificates for shares of Stock.

          (b) If,  based upon the opinion of counsel for the  Company,  the
Committee determines that the exercise or nonforfeitability of, or delivery
of benefits  pursuant to, any Award would violate any applicable  provision
of (i) federal or state  securities  law, (ii) the listing  requirements of
any national  securities  exchange on which are listed any of the Company's
equity securities or (iii) any other law or regulation,  then the Committee
may postpone any such exercise,  nonforfeitability or delivery, as the case
may be, but the Company shall use its best efforts, if applicable, to cause
such  exercise,  nonforfeitability  or  delivery  to  comply  with all such
provisions at the earliest practicable date.

          (c)  Notwithstanding  any  provision  of the  Plan  or any  Award
Agreement  to the  contrary,  no  shares  of Stock  shall be  issued to any
Grantee in respect of any Award prior to the time a registration  statement
under the Securities Act of 1933 is effective with respect to such shares.

     14. No Funding Required.

     Benefits  payable  under the Plan to any person shall be paid directly
by the  Company.  The Company  shall not be required to fund,  or otherwise
segregate assets to be used for payment of, benefits under the Plan.

     15. No Employment Rights.

     Neither the  establishment  of the Plan, nor the granting of any Award
shall be construed to (a) give any Grantee the right to remain  employed by
the Company or any of its  Subsidiaries or to any benefits not specifically
provided  by the Plan or (b) in any manner  modify the right of the Company
or any of its  Subsidiaries  to  modify,  amend,  or  terminate  any of its
employee benefit plans.

     16. Rights as a Stockholder.

     A Grantee  shall not, by reason of any Award  (other  than  restricted
Stock),  have any right as a stockholder of the Company with respect to the
shares of Stock which may be  deliverable  upon exercise or payment of such
Award until such shares have been  delivered to him.  Shares of  restricted
Stock held by a Grantee or held in escrow by the  Secretary  of the Company
shall  confer on the Grantee all rights of a  stockholder  of the  Company,
except as otherwise provided in the Plan.

                                    B-20



     17. Nature of Payments.

     Any and all grants, payments of cash, or deliveries of shares of Stock
hereunder shall constitute  special  incentive  payments to the Grantee and
shall  not be taken  into  account  in  computing  the  amount of salary or
compensation  of the Grantee for the purposes of  determining  any pension,
retirement,  death or other  benefits  under (a) any  pension,  retirement,
profit-sharing, bonus, life insurance or other employee benefit plan of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or (b) any agreement between the Company
or any  Subsidiary,  on the one hand,  and the Grantee,  on the other hand,
except as such plan or agreement shall otherwise expressly provide.

     18. Non-Uniform Determinations.

     Neither the Committee's nor the Board's  determinations under the Plan
need be uniform and may be made by the  Committee or the Board  selectively
among persons who receive,  or are eligible to receive,  Awards (whether or
not such persons are similarly  situated).  Without limiting the generality
of the foregoing,  the Committee shall be entitled,  among other things, to
make  non-uniform and selective  determinations,  to enter into non-uniform
and selective Award Agreements as to (a) the identity of the Grantees,  (b)
the terms and provisions of Awards,  and (c) the treatment of  Terminations
of Employment.

     19. Adjustments.

     In the event of Change in Capitalization,  the Committee shall, in its
sole discretion, make equitable adjustment of

          (a)       the  aggregate  number  and class of shares of Stock or
                    other stock or securities available under Article 3,

          (b)       the number and class of shares of Stock or other  stock
                    or securities  covered by an Award and to be covered by
                    Options  granted to nonemployee  directors  pursuant to
                    Article 6(b)(ii),

          (c)       the Option Price applicable to outstanding Options,

          (d)       the terms of  performance  unit and  performance  share
                    grants (to the extent  permitted  under Section 162(m))
                    of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code  and  the  regulations
                    thereunder without adversely affecting the treatment of
                    the   performance   unit  or   performance   share   as
                    Performance-Based Compensation,

          (e)       the Fair Market  Value of Stock to be used to determine
                    the amount of the  benefit  payable  upon  exercise  of
                    performance units, performance shares or phantom stock,

          (f)       the  maximum  number  and  class of  shares of Stock or
                    other  securities  with  respect to which Awards may be
                    granted to any  individual  in any three  calendar year
                    period, and

                                    B-21



          (g)       the  number  and  class  of  shares  of  Stock or other
                    securities with respect to which Director Shares are to
                    be granted under Article 6(h).

     20. Amendment of the Plan.

     The Board may from time to time in its discretion  amend or modify the
Plan without the  approval of the  stockholders  of the Company,  except as
such  stockholder  approval may be required (a) to retain  Incentive  Stock
Option  treatment  under Section 422 of the Internal  Revenue Code,  (b) to
permit  transactions  in  Stock  pursuant  to the  Plan to be  exempt  from
potential  liability  under  Section 16(b) of the 1934 Act or (c) under the
listing  requirements  of  any  securities  exchange  on  which  any of the
Company's equity securities are listed.

     21. Termination of the Plan.

     The Plan  shall  terminate  on the  tenth  (10th)  anniversary  of the
Effective  Date or at such  earlier  time as the Board may  determine.  Any
termination,  whether in whole or in part,  shall not affect any Award then
outstanding under the Plan.

     22. No Illegal Transactions.

     The Plan and all Awards granted pursuant to it are subject to all laws
and  regulations  of any  governmental  authority  which may be  applicable
thereto;  and  notwithstanding  any  provision  of the  Plan or any  Award,
Grantees  shall not be entitled to exercise  Awards or receive the benefits
thereof and the Company  shall not be obligated to deliver any Stock or pay
any benefits to a Grantee if such exercise, delivery, receipt or payment of
benefits would  constitute a violation by the Grantee or the Company of any
provision of any such law or regulation or applicable court order.

     23. Governing Law.

     Except  where  preempted  by  federal  law,  the law of the  State  of
Delaware shall be controlling in all matters relating to the Plan,  without
giving effect to the conflicts of law principles thereof.

     24. Severability.

     If all  or  any  part  of  the  Plan  is  declared  by  any  court  or
governmental  authority  to be unlawful or invalid,  such  unlawfulness  or
invalidity  shall  not  serve to  invalidate  any  portion  of the Plan not
declared to be  unlawful  or invalid.  Any Article or part of an Article so
declared to be unlawful or invalid  shall,  if possible,  be construed in a
manner  which will give  effect to the terms of such  Article or part of an
Article to the fullest extent possible while remaining lawful and valid.

                                    B-22



     25. Translations.

     Any inconsistency between the terms of the Plan or any Award Agreement
and the  corresponding  translation  thereof  into a  language  other  than
English shall be resolved by  reference,  solely,  to the English  language
document.


                                    B-23





                              COMMSCOPE, INC.
                 PROXY SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                   FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD MAY 3, 2002



     The  undersigned  hereby  appoints  Frank B.  Wyatt,  II and Jearld L.
Leonhardt  and each or either of them his/her  attorneys  and agents,  with
full power of  substitution  to vote as Proxy for the undersigned as herein
stated at the Annual  Meeting  of  Stockholders  of  CommScope,  Inc.  (the
"Company") to be held at the JP  MorganChase  Bank,  270 Park Avenue,  11th
Floor, New York, New York 10017 on Friday,  May 3, 2002 at 1:30 p.m., local
time, and at any adjournment thereof,  according to the number of votes the
undersigned  would  be  entitled  to vote  if  personally  present,  on the
proposals  set forth on the  reverse  hereof and in  accordance  with their
discretion  on any other  matters that may properly come before the meeting
or any adjournments thereof. The undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of
the Notice and Proxy  Statement,  dated  March 27,  2002.  If this proxy is
returned  without  direction  being  given,  this proxy will be voted "FOR"
Proposals One, Two, and Three.

PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN,  DATE AND RETURN  THIS PROXY CARD  PROMPTLY  USING THE
ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.



(IMPORTANT -- TO BE SIGNED AND DATED ON REVERSE SIDE)

                                                       SEE REVERSE
                                                           SIDE






The Board of Directors  recommends that  stockholders  vote "FOR" Proposals
One, Two, and Three.

PROPOSAL  ONE: To elect two Class II directors for terms ending at the 2005
Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

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

Nominees:        Edward D. Breen and James N. Whitson

INSTRUCTION:     To withhold your vote for any individual nominee, strike a
                 line through the nominee's name.

PROPOSAL TWO:    To approve an amendment and restatement of the Amended and
                 Restated CommScope, Inc. 1997 Long-Term Incentive Plan to,
                 among  other  things,  increase  the shares  reserved  for
                 issuance thereunder by an additional 3 million shares.


      FOR  /___ /          AGAINST /___ /           ABSTAIN  /___ /


PROPOSAL THREE:  To ratify the appointment by the Board of Directors of the
                 Company of  Deloitte & Touche LLP as  independent  auditor
                 for the Company for the 2002 fiscal year.


      FOR  /___ /          AGAINST /___ /           ABSTAIN  /___ /


                              PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS PROXY
                              CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.

                              Please sign exactly as your name appears.  If
                              acting as attorney, executor,  administrator,
                              trustee,   guardian,   etc.,  you  should  so
                              indicate  when  signing.  If  a  corporation,
                              please  sign  the  full   corporate  name  by
                              President or other duly  authorized  officer.
                              If  a   partnership,   please  sign  in  full
                              partnership  name by  authorized  person.  If
                              shares are held  jointly,  both  parties must
                              sign and date.

Signature(s): _________________________  Date:  _________________________
Signature(s): _________________________  Date:  _________________________



                                    2



                              COMMSCOPE, INC.
                 PROXY SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                   FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                           TO BE HELD MAY 3, 2002



The  undersigned  hereby  authorizes and directs  Vanguard  Fiduciary Trust
Company,  as  trustee  (the  "Trustee")  of the  CommScope,  Inc.  of North
Carolina  Employees  Retirement  Savings  Plan,  to vote as  Proxy  for the
undersigned  as herein  stated at the  Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  of
CommScope,  Inc. (the "Company") to be held at the JP MorganChase Bank, 270
Park Avenue,  11th Floor, New York, New York 10017, on Friday,  May 3, 2002
at 1:30 p.m.,  local time, and at any  adjournment  thereof,  all shares of
Common Stock of CommScope, Inc. allocated to the account of the undersigned
under such Plan, on the  proposals  set forth on the reverse  hereof and in
accordance  with the  Trustee's  discretion  on any other  matters that may
properly  come  before  the  meeting  or  any  adjournments   thereof.  The
undersigned hereby acknowledges  receipt of the Notice and Proxy Statement,
dated March 27, 2002.

THE  SHARES  COVERED  BY THIS  PROXY  WILL BE  VOTED  AS  SPECIFIED.  IF NO
SPECIFICATION  IS MADE,  THE PROXY WILL BE VOTED BY THE TRUSTEE IN ITS SOLE
DISCRETION IN THE BEST INTEREST OF THE PLAN PARTICIPANTS AND BENEFICIARIES.

PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN,  DATE AND RETURN  THIS PROXY CARD  PROMPTLY  USING THE
ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.



(IMPORTANT -- TO BE SIGNED AND DATED ON REVERSE SIDE)

                                                      SEE REVERSE
                                                          SIDE





The Board of Directors  recommends that  stockholders  vote "FOR" Proposals
One, Two, and Three.

PROPOSAL ONE:    To elect two Class II  directors  for terms  ending at the
                 2005 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

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

Nominees:        Edward D. Breen and James N. Whitson

INSTRUCTION:     To withhold your vote for any individual nominee, strike a
                 line through the nominee's name.


PROPOSAL TWO:    To approve an amendment and restatement of the Amended and
                 Restated CommScope, Inc. 1997 Long-Term Incentive Plan to,
                 among  other  things,  increase  the shares  reserved  for
                 issuance thereunder by an additional 3 million shares.


      FOR  /___ /          AGAINST /___ /           ABSTAIN  /___ /


PROPOSAL THREE:  To ratify the appointment by the Board of Directors of the
                 Company of  Deloitte & Touche LLP as  independent  auditor
                 for the Company for the 2002 fiscal year.


      FOR  /___ /          AGAINST /___ /           ABSTAIN  /___ /

                              PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS PROXY
                              CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.

                              Please sign exactly as your name appears.  If
                              acting as attorney, executor,  administrator,
                              trustee,   guardian,   etc.,  you  should  so
                              indicate  when  signing.  If  a  corporation,
                              please  sign  the  full   corporate  name  by
                              President or other duly  authorized  officer.
                              If  a   partnership,   please  sign  in  full
                              partnership  name by  authorized  person.  If
                              shares are held  jointly,  both  parties must
                              sign and date.

Signature(s): _________________________  Date:  _________________________
Signature(s): _________________________  Date:  _________________________


                                    2