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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D. C. 20549

FORM 10-K
(X) ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994
or
( ) TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from to

Commission file number 1-4996-2


ALLTEL CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

DELAWARE 34-0868285
(State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization) Identification No.)

One Allied Drive, Little Rock, Arkansas
72202
(Address of principal executive offices)
(Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code
(501) 661-8000

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock New York and Pacific

$2.06 No Par Cumulative Convertible
Preferred Stock New York and Pacific

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:


NONE
(Title of Class)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports
required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the
registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to
such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
YES X NO

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to
Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be
contained, to the best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or
information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form
10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.
(X)

Aggregate market value of voting stock held by non-affiliates as
of January 31, 1995 - $ 5,341,217,327

Common shares outstanding, January 31, 1995 - 188,236,734

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Document Incorporated Into
Portions of the annual report to stockholders
for the year ended December 31, 1994 Parts I, II and IV
Proxy statement for the 1995 annual meeting
of stockholders Part III
The Exhibit Index is located on pages 24 to 27.






ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

THE COMPANY

GENERAL

ALLTEL Corporation ("ALLTEL" or the "Company"), incorporated in June 1960
under the laws of Ohio as Mid-Continent Telephone Corporation, changed its
name to ALLTEL Corporation in October 1983. During 1990, the Company
changed its state of incorporation to Delaware. ALLTEL is a diversified
telecommunications and information services company. The Company provides
local and network access services to customers throughout 22 states. The
Company also owns subsidiaries or investments that provide cellular
telephone, wide-area paging and fiber optic-based long-distance telephone
service. Information processing management services and advanced
applications software are provided to the financial, healthcare and
telecommunications industries by the Company's information services
subsidiaries. Telecommunications products and electronic and electric wire
and cable are warehoused and sold by the Company's distribution
subsidiaries. In addition, the Company publishes telephone directories and
provides cable television service.

ACQUISITIONS

In November 1994, the Company completed its acquisition of Medical
Data Technology, Inc. ("MDT"). MDT provides information processing
services to 14 hospitals in the northeastern United States utilizing
comprehensive application software developed by ALLTEL's healthcare
information services subsidiary.

Effective November 1, 1993, the Company and GTE Corporation completed an
exchange of telephone service areas in several states. ALLTEL exchanged
approximately 95,000 access lines in Illinois, Indiana and Michigan and
$443 million in cash for GTE's Georgia telephone operations, which serve
approximately 320,000 access lines.

In October 1993, the Company completed its merger with TDS Healthcare
Systems Corporation ("TDS"). TDS is a leading provider of comprehensive
patient care and healthcare enterprise information systems serving more
than 200 hospitals in the United States, Canada and Europe.

In October 1993, ALLTEL Publishing Corporation ("ALLTEL Publishing")
completed its purchase of GTE Directories Service Corporation's ("GTE
Directories") independent publishing business which includes contracts with
more than 125 independent telephone companies across the country.

During 1993, ALLTEL Mobile Communications, Inc. ("ALLTEL Mobile") acquired
a 100% interest in one Georgia Rural Service Area ("RSA") which has a
population of approximately 145,000. In addition, ALLTEL Mobile acquired
interests in two other Georgia RSAs and increased its ownership in one
Texas RSA and one Mississippi RSA.

In January 1993, ALLTEL Mobile acquired an additional 20% interest
in the Ft. Smith, Arkansas Metropolitan Statistical Area ("MSA").
This transaction increased ALLTEL Mobile's interest in the Ft. Smith
MSA to 80%.




1




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

THE COMPANY (continued)

ACQUISITIONS (continued)

On December 31, 1992, ALLTEL Mobile acquired a 60% interest and a
90% interest in the Ft. Smith, Arkansas and Fayetteville, Arkansas
MSAs, respectively.

In December 1992, the Company acquired SLT Communications, Inc. ("SLT").
SLT serves approximately 49,000 telephone customers primarily in suburban
Houston. It also has approximately 328,000 cellular "pops," including 2.34%
ownership in the Houston, Galveston and Beaumont, Texas MSA, a 1% interest
in the Little Rock, Arkansas MSA, and has interest in four Texas RSA
markets. In addition, SLT serves approximately 6,900 cable television
subscribers and owns one-third of Metropolitan Houston Paging Services, one
of the largest paging networks in Texas.

During 1992, ALLTEL Mobile increased its ownership to 100% in the
Springfield, Missouri and Charlotte, North Carolina MSAs, to 80% in the
Savannah, Georgia MSA and to 64% in the Little Rock, Arkansas
MSA.

In February 1992, the Company acquired Computer Power, Inc. ("CPI"), the
nation's largest provider of software and processing services to the
mortgage industry. CPI has a comprehensive set of proprietary software
systems which includes the Mortgage Servicing Package, Residential Loan
Inventory Control Package, the Residential Loan Production Control Package,
and a number of related systems as well as consulting, training, portfolio
conversion and other services.

During 1992, ALLTEL Mobile purchased an additional 42% interest in the
Savannah, Georgia, MSA, increasing its total interest to 80%, purchased
operating control of the Ft. Smith and Fayetteville, Arkansas, MSAs, as
well as additional interests in three Arkansas and Oklahoma RSAs, one
Missouri RSA, and three Alabama RSAs.

In 1991, the Company acquired Missouri Telephone Company. Missouri
Telephone Company serves approximately 20,000 customer access lines and
2,600 cable television customers in Missouri. It also has 320,000 cellular
"pops" including 48% ownership in the Springfield, Mo. MSA cellular market
where together with ALLTEL Mobile, the Company now owns a 98% interest.

In early 1991, Systematics Information Services, Inc. ("Systematics") (now
known as ALLTEL Information Services, Inc.) acquired Systems Limited, an
international banking software firm headquartered in Hong Kong. Systems
Limited is a provider of wholesale banking software.

In January 1991, Systematics (now known as ALLTEL Information Services,
Inc.) completed its acquisition of the cellular telephone billing and
information system software of C-TEC Corporation ("C-TEC"), an
independent telecommunications company.


2




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

THE COMPANY (continued)

ACQUISITIONS (continued)

In October 1990, Systematics (now known as ALLTEL Information Services,
Inc.) acquired Computer Dynamics, Inc. ("CDI"), a mortgage data processor
that services 200,000 loans for financial institutions in six states.
During 1993, these mortgages were transferred to the CPI system.

In July 1990, Systematics (now known as ALLTEL Information Services, Inc.)
acquired HORIZON Financial Software Corporation ("Horizon") of Orlando,
Florida. HORIZON develops and markets software for mid-sized community
financial institutions using the IBM AS/400r computer technology.

In May 1990, the Company acquired Systematics (now known as ALLTEL
Information Services, Inc.) headquartered in Little Rock, Arkansas.
Systematics is one of the nation's leading providers of information
processing management services and advanced application software for
the financial services, healthcare and telecommunications industries.

In 1990, ALLTEL Mobile acquired the remaining 55% of the Aiken, South
Carolina / Augusta, Georgia system, where ALLTEL Mobile already held a 45%
interest thereby increasing its ownership to
100%.

DISPOSITIONS

In 1992, the Company sold substantially all of the assets of Ocean
Technology, Inc. ("OTI"). OTI designed, developed, and manufactured
command, control, and communication systems primarily for military use. In
September 1991, the Company completed the sale of all of its natural gas
operations. During 1990, the Company sold Denro, Inc., a manufacturing
subsidiary.

MANAGEMENT

The Company's headquarters and regional offices staff supervise, coordinate
and assist subsidiaries in management activities, investor relations,
acquisitions, corporate planning, insurance, and technical research. They
also coordinate the financing program for the entire corporate system.

EMPLOYEES

At January 31, 1995, the Company had 16,363 employees. Some of the
employees of the Company's telephone subsidiaries are part of collective
bargaining units. The Company maintains good relations with all employee
groups.

INDUSTRY SEGMENTS

Financial information about industry segments is included in the Company's
1994 Annual Report to Stockholders, which is incorporated herein by
reference.


3




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

TELEPHONE OPERATIONS

LOCAL SERVICE

General

The Company's telephone operating subsidiaries provide local service to
over 1,643,000 customer lines through 667 exchanges. The telephone
operating subsidiaries also offer facilities for private line, data
transmission and other communications services. In addition, these
subsidiaries sell and lease end user telephone equipment (terminal
equipment) as well as maintenance and protection plans for customer-owned
equipment.

Regulation

The Company's telephone operating subsidiaries are subject to regulation by
the utility commissions of the states in which they operate. These
commissions have jurisdiction over various matters including local and
intrastate toll rates, conditions of service, securities issues,
depreciation rates, the encumbering or disposition of public utility
properties and the prescription of a uniform system of accounts. There were
no local rate increases granted to any of the Company's telephone operating
subsidiaries in 1994, nor are there any rate requests currently pending
before regulatory commissions. During 1994, telephone operations were
affected by certain regulatory commission orders designed to reduce
earnings levels. These orders did not materially impact the results of
operations of the Company.

Competition

The Company's telephone subsidiaries provide local telephone service in
their service areas without significant competition from other regulated
carriers. However, ALLTEL does experience competition in its territories
from alternative telecommunications systems which include facilities
constructed by large end users or by interexchange carriers, satellite
transmission services, cellular communications, cable television systems,
radio-based personal communications services, competitive access providers
and other systems which are capable of completely or partially bypassing
the local telephone facilities. ALLTEL's subsidiaries are also competing
for the sale and leasing of terminal equipment to business and residential
customers as well as for the installation and maintenance of inside wire
and terminal equipment.

ACCESS SERVICES

General

The Company's customers have access to message and private line toll
services through the local exchanges of the Company's telephone operating
subsidiaries. Local exchanges provide toll service and network access for
interexchange telephone traffic to locations outside of the Company's
service areas through connections with other local exchange and
interexchange carriers. These connections permit communications from any
telephone in the ALLTEL system to nationwide locations and to points in
most foreign countries.


4




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

TELEPHONE OPERATIONS (continued)

ACCESS SERVICES (continued)


Regulation

The Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") authorizes a rate-of- return
("ROR") that telephone companies may earn on interstate services they
provide. Effective January 1, 1991, the FCC replaced rate-of-return
regulation with price cap regulation for the Bell Operating Companies and
GTE Corporation with an optional election for all other companies not
remaining in the National Exchange Carrier Association ("NECA") Common Line
and Traffic Sensitive Pools. The FCC reduced the ROR from 12.0% to 11.25%
for companies remaining under ROR regulation. This 11.25% ROR continued
through 1994. As of December 31, 1994, certain of the Company's telephone
operating subsidiaries have exited the NECA traffic sensitive and end user
tariffs.

Price cap regulation for holding companies, such as ALLTEL, requires all
affiliated operating telephone companies settling on a cost basis to choose
price cap regulation at the same time or all remain under ROR regulation
(with the exception of average schedule affiliates). Price cap regulation
allows for different earnings potential than ROR depending on the
"productivity offset" the company chooses. In addition, companies electing
price cap regulation may make adjustments for the rate of inflation and
exogenous (non-controllable) costs. Price cap regulation is designed to
allow greater pricing flexibility and includes the risk of earnings lower
than under ROR regulation. The FCC undertook a comprehensive review of the
LEC price cap plan in 1994. An order mandating any changes for price cap
companies is expected in early 1995. In 1992, the FCC initiated a
rulemaking proceeding (CC Docket No. 92-135) to address regulatory
alternatives for mid-size and small local exchange carriers. This
proceeding resulted in a set of rules, adopted in September of 1993, that
provide for a non price cap form of incentive regulation for which ALLTEL
would be eligible.

Certain states in which the Company operates, either through legislative
changes or by commission actions, have adopted various forms of
alternatives to rate-of-return regulation. However, most of these plans
have been adopted for the Bell Operating Companies and have not been widely
used by commissions in dealing with other telephone companies including the
Company's telephone operating subsidiaries.

To date, the Company has not elected price cap (incentive) regulation, but
is monitoring the activity of the FCC and the states in which the Company
operates telephone companies and will determine the appropriate action
required as these activities develop.


5




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

TELEPHONE OPERATIONS (continued)

ACCESS SERVICES (continued)

Interexchange carrier charges

The FCC establishes access procedures by which interexchange carriers
reimburse the Company's telephone operating subsidiaries for the use of
their local networks to complete long-distance calls. With the exception of
ALLTEL Carolina, Inc., ALLTEL Florida, Inc., ALLTEL Georgia Communications
Corp., ALLTEL Pennsylvania, Inc., ALLTEL New York, Inc., ALLTEL Tennessee,
Inc., Georgia ALLTEL Telecom Inc., Oklahoma ALLTEL, Inc. and Sugar Land
Telephone Company, all of the Company's telephone operating subsidiaries
participated in NECA's interstate traffic sensitive tariff and settlements
processes during 1994. All companies, with the exception of ALLTEL Georgia
Communications Corp. and Georgia ALLTEL Telecom Inc., also participated in
NECA's common line tariffs and pools during 1994. For those companies
remaining in the NECA common line and traffic sensitive pools,
participation in NECA's revenue distribution process was entirely based on
actual costs. Intrastate interlata services are reimbursed to the Company's
telephone operating subsidiaries under arrangements ordered by state
commissions. These arrangements are based on access and can be on a
bill-and-keep or pooled basis. The Company's telephone operating
subsidiaries receive reimbursement for intrastate intralata services
through access or toll based revenue arrangements, once again on either a
bill-and-keep or pooled basis.

Equal access

The Company's telephone operating subsidiaries offer equal access to nearly
94% of their customers. The availability of equal access provides customers
with the opportunity to choose the long-distance company they want to use.
The Company's telephone operating subsidiaries then program their equipment
to allow the customer to use the selected long-distance company by dialing
1, the area code, and a seven-digit telephone number.

Billing and collection

Interstate billing and collection services were previously detariffed as
ordered by the FCC. The Company's telephone operating subsidiaries continue
to provide interstate billing and collection services for interexchange
carriers through various agreements and also provide intrastate billing and
collection services under state tariff arrangements or under contract where
these services are detariffed.

Competition

Long-distance services are provided by several competing companies. One
aspect of competition is the potential bypass of the local exchange
carrier's facilities by large volume toll users. Certain states in which
the Company's telephone subsidiaries operate allow various forms of
intralata competition for select functions or complete intralata service.
There has been no significant measurable effect on the operations of the
Company's telephone subsidiaries as a result of this competition.



6




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

TELEPHONE OPERATIONS (continued)

ACCESS SERVICES (continued)

Competition (continued)

The long-range effect of competition on the provision and cost of
telecommunications services and equipment will depend on technological
advances, regulatory actions at both the state and federal levels, court
decisions, and possible future federal and state legislation. The continued
growth of competition may have an effect on the cost of telephone service
to customers and on the telephone revenues of the Company's telephone
operating subsidiaries. The FCC has ordered that the larger (Tier 1) local
exchange carriers provide switched and special transport interconnection as
well as tandem signaling to competitive providers. Local exchange carriers
are no longer required to provide physical collocation but are required to
tariff virtual interconnection arrangements.

OTHER

In November 1994, the Company signed definitive agreements to sell certain
telephone properties serving approximately 111,000 access lines in Arizona,
California, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah and West Virginia
to Citizens Utilities Company in exchange for approximately $290 million in
cash, assumed debt and 3,600 access lines in Pennsylvania. This sale will
be completed on a state-by-state basis as necessary regulatory approvals
are obtained. Once completed, this transaction will result in the Company's
telephone operating subsidiaries serving approximately 1.5 million access
lines in 14 states.


INFORMATION SERVICES

GENERAL

Effective February 15, 1995, the Company changed the names of its
principal information services subsidiaries. Systematics
Information Services, Inc. was changed to ALLTEL Information
Services, Inc., Systematics Financial Services, Inc. was changed to
ALLTEL Financial Information Services, Inc., Computer Power, Inc.
was changed to ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services Inc.,
Systematics Healthcare Services, Inc. was changed to ALLTEL
Healthcare Information Services, Inc. and Systematics
Telecommunications Services, Inc. was changed to ALLTEL Telecom
Information Services, Inc.

ALLTEL Information Services, Inc. ("ALLTEL Information Services") provides
a wide range of information processing services to the financial services,
healthcare and telecommunications industries through information processing
centers that it staffs, equips and operates. Information processing
contracts are generally for a multi-year period. ALLTEL Financial
Information Services Inc.'s software and services have been developed and
improved continuously over the last 26 years and are designed to fulfill
substantially all of the retail information processing and management
information requirements of financial institutions. ALLTEL Information
Services also markets software worldwide to financial services, healthcare
and telecommunications companies operating their own information processing
departments.


7




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

INFORMATION SERVICES (continued)

GENERAL (continued)

ALLTEL Healthcare Information Services, Inc. is primarily engaged in the
development and marketing of comprehensive patient centered healthcare
enterprise information systems to medium to large healthcare companies
throughout North America and Europe. These systems are designed to enhance
the quality of patient care, control processing costs and provide
substantially all of the information requirements of its users. Under
typical arrangements with hospitals, software is licensed under perpetual
license arrangements. Software and hardware maintenance are normally
contracted for periods of five to seven years. Contracts to install
software normally range over periods from twelve to eighteen months. Other
services provided include training, consulting and data processing
services.

ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services, Inc. provides data processing and
related computer software and systems to financial institutions originating
and/or servicing single family mortgage loans. This subsidiary's software
products and processing services, combined with its team of mortgage
bankers, are intended to offer a cost-effective alternative to the
extensive technical support staff and the enlarged group of mortgage
bankers which would otherwise have to be assembled in-house by each
customer. ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services, Inc.'s on-line systems
automate processing functions required in the origination of mortgage
loans, the management of such loans while in inventory before they are sold
in the secondary market, and their subsequent servicing.

CUSTOMERS

ALLTEL Financial Information Services, Inc.'s primary market for its
financial products and services are the nation's commercial banks and
savings institutions and financial institutions outside the United States,
primarily in Europe and Asia. Financial software and services are also
marketed to mortgage service companies, credit unions and healthcare
companies. ALLTEL Telecom Information Services, Inc.'s primary market
for its telecommunications products and services is the top 150 telephone
companies and top 50 cellular companies in the United States. ALLTEL
Healthcare Information Services, Inc.'s primary market for its healthcare
software products are hospitals with 400 or more beds. Many of these
customers are large, state funded hospitals which include a significant
number of university hospitals and other large healthcare providers.

ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services, Inc. provides its services primarily
to financial institutions originating and/or servicing single family
mortgage loans that have sold the loans in the secondary market while
continuing to service the loans. These institutions which include more than
one-half of the top 100 servicers of residential mortgages are located
throughout the United States. In total, nearly 15 million mortgage loans
representing over $1.1 trillion are processed by its software.


8




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

INFORMATION SERVICES (continued)

COMPETITION

ALLTEL Financial Information Services, Inc.'s competition primarily comes
from "in-house" bank information processing departments and other companies
engaged in active competition for financial institution outsourcing
contracts. Numerous large financial institutions provide information
processing for smaller institutions in their respective geographic areas,
along with other companies that perform such services for small
institutions. There are also other companies that provide information
processing services to the telecommunications industry. Competition in the
healthcare industry primarily comes from other companies that provide
comprehensive integrated hospital information systems and from companies
which offer solutions for individual departments within the respective
healthcare enterprises.

ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services, Inc.'s competition comes from
"in-house" information processing departments and from other companies that
offer information processing services to the mortgage banking industry.
This subsidiary competes in its business by providing a high level of
service and support.

The information services subsidiaries substantially rely upon and
vigorously enforce contract and trade secret laws and internal
non-disclosure safeguards to protect the proprietary nature of their
computer software.

REGULATION AND EXAMINATION

Both ALLTEL Financial Information Services, Inc. and ALLTEL Mortgage
Information Services, Inc. are regulated by the federal agencies that have
supervisory authority over banking, thrift, and credit union operations.
ALLTEL Financial Information Services, Inc. is also classified as one of
twelve national vendors that, as a result of their market share, process a
significant portion of the financial industry assets. These industry
leaders are also examined by the federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council on an ongoing basis. The information services subsidiaries'
management practices, policies, procedures, standards, and overall
financial condition are components of these reviews. In addition to these
corporate examinations, the information services subsidiaries' individual
processing sites are examined, as if they were departments of their
respective clients, by federal and state regulators, as well as the
clients' internal audit departments and their independent auditing firms.
The same standards of performance are applied to those information
processing centers as are applied to the client financial institutions.
Reports of the information services subsidiaries' data center performance
are furnished to the Board of Directors of ALLTEL Information Services and
to the Board of Directors of the examined client. The supervisory agencies
include applicable state banking departments, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the Office of Thrift Supervision, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, and the National Credit Union Administration. The information
services subsidiaries' processing contracts include a commitment to install
all necessary changes in its computer software that are required by changes
in regulations.

ALLTEL Healthcare Information Services, Inc.'s operations are not
specifically regulated by any federal or state healthcare agency. However,
its software must meet all federal and state reporting requirements of its
customers, including Medicare, Medicaid and other state sponsored programs.

9




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

INFORMATION SERVICES (continued)

REGULATION AND EXAMINATION (continued)

ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services, Inc. operates transmitters at the
network's information processing facility hub and operates very small
aperture technology ("VSAT") earth stations at numerous customer locations.
Prior to initiation, construction or operation of the transmitters used in
a VSAT satellite network, operators of these transmitters are required by
the Communications Act of 1934 to be authorized by the FCC. The FCC grants
licenses to VSAT operators for a predetermined number of earth stations
that may be placed at unspecified locations in the domestic United States.
ALLTEL Mortgage Information Services, Inc. has FCC authorization to operate
its domestic earth station satellite network, consisting of one hub located
in Jacksonville, Florida and various 1.8m and 2.4m VSATs.

PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT

In the past five years, the information services subsidiaries have spent
approximately $134.1 million ($37.7 million in 1994) on IBM mainframe COBOL
software design and development, or an average of 4.6% of their total
information services operating revenues in those years. One of the
information services subsidiaries has also begun to develop products which
will be utilized in a UNIX based environment. Changes in regulatory
requirements of both state and federal authorities, increasing competition,
and the development of new products and markets create the need continually
to update or modify existing software and systems offered to customers. The
information services subsidiaries intend to continue to maintain, improve,
and expand the functions and capabilities of their software products over
the next several years.

OTHER

In 1994, ALLTEL Information Services signed a long-term agreement to
provide information processing services for the telephone operations of
Citizens Utilities Company. Under terms of the ten year contract, ALLTEL
Information Services will provide complete outsourcing services for
Citizens' 750,000 telephone access lines, including generating Citizens'
billing, customer service information, engineering, and operational
support.

In 1993, ALLTEL Information Services signed a long-term agreement with GTE
Telecommunications Products and Services Group to outsource GTE's cellular
billing operations.

Within three months of acquiring TDS, ALLTEL Information Services signed
its first hospital outsourcing contract with St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg, West Virginia. Under terms of the five-year contract,
Systematics assumed all healthcare information systems operations for this
375 bed hospital, including providing on-site and remote management,
software implementation and support, hardware and network management and
maintenance. TDS was merged with Systematics Healthcare Services, Inc.
during 1994. As discussed previously, Systematics Healthcare Services,
Inc.'s name was changed to ALLTEL Healthcare Information Services, Inc. on
February 15, 1995.

During 1991, ALLTEL Information Services signed a long-term facilities
management contract to handle all information processing activities for
ALLTEL's telephone and cellular operations.

10




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

PRODUCT DISTRIBUTION OPERATIONS

GENERAL

ALLTEL Supply, Inc. ("ALLTEL Supply"), with fourteen warehouses and
thirteen counter-sales showrooms across the United States, is a major
distributor of telecommunications equipment and materials. It supplies
equipment to affiliated and non-affiliated telephone companies, business
systems suppliers, railroads, governments, and retail and industrial
companies. HWC, with ten warehouses throughout the United States, is one of
the nation's leading suppliers of specialty wire and cable products.

COMPETITION

ALLTEL Supply and HWC (the "Distribution companies") experience substantial
competition throughout their sales territories from other distribution
companies and direct sales by manufacturers. Competition is based primarily
on quality, product availability, service, price, and technical assistance.

PRODUCTS

ALLTEL Supply offers more than 35,000 products for sale. In addition,
ALLTEL Supply inventories single and multi-line telephone sets, local area
networks ("LANS"), switching equipment modules, interior cable, pole line
hardware, and various other telecommunications supply items.

HWC inventories more than 44,000 reels of specialty wire and cable. These
include shielded and unshielded power cables, flame resistant cables, and
high temperature precision engineered cables.

The Distribution companies have not encountered any material shortages or
delays in delivery of products from their suppliers.


CELLULAR OPERATIONS

GENERAL

ALLTEL Mobile provides cellular mobile telephone service in various major
markets throughout the United States. Cellular telephone service combines
the latest advances in telephone, radio and computer technology and is
being marketed to business executives, on- the-move professional people and
individual consumers. As cellular has become increasing more popular with
broader segments of the population, ALLTEL Mobile has opened several retail
stores, in addition to its traditional sales offices, where customers can
purchase equipment and learn more about wireless services.


11




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I
Item 1. Business

CELLULAR OPERATIONS (continued)

BUSINESS

One potential of a cellular telephone market's investment is quantified by
the market's population times the percent of a company's ownership interest
of the cellular operation in that market ("pops"). ALLTEL Mobile owns a
majority interest in cellular operations in 12 MSAs and a minority interest
in 13 other MSAs. This represents 4.6 million cellular pops. ALLTEL Mobile
also owns a majority interest in cellular operations in 47 RSAs and a
minority interest in 23 other RSAs. This represents 3.3 million cellular
pops.

ALLTEL Mobile operates systems in Charlotte, North Carolina; Little Rock,
Arkansas, Jackson, Mississippi; Montgomery, Alabama; Springfield, Missouri;
Ocala/Gainesville, Florida; Albany, Georgia; Aiken, South Carolina/Augusta,
Georgia; Savannah, Georgia; Ft. Smith, Arkansas; and Fayetteville,
Arkansas.

COMPETITION

Direct competition in the cellular telephone market consists of a
non-wireline carrier licensed to provide cellular telephone service in the
same area. Additionally, non-cellular mobile telephone service may be
available in the licensed area but is not currently considered a direct
competitor within the cellular market.

ALLTEL Mobile expects to face additional new competitors in its markets as
a result of the licensing of personal communication services ("PCS")
providers currently under way by the FCC. It is expected that these new
competitors will begin operations in 1996 or 1997. ALLTEL Mobile has and
continues to take actions in its markets to minimize the impact of these
new competitors; however, the long-term impacts of new competition can not
be determined at this time.

OTHER

In January 1995, ALLTEL Mobile and BellSouth Mobility signed a definitive
agreement involving cellular transactions impacting markets in five states.
The agreement, which is contingent on BellSouth's success in winning a
PCS license to provide services in North and South Carolina, would create
a limited partnership comprising cellular properties owned by the
two companies in five markets. The limited partnership would consist
of BellSouth's interest in cellular properties in Columbia, South Carolina
(85.5%) and Florence, South Carolina (100%) and ALLTEL Mobile's cellular
interests in Columbia, South Carolina (14.5%), Jackson, Mississippi and
eight contiguous RSAs (49.9%), Chattanooga, Tennessee (15.5%) and
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (3.6%). ALLTEL Mobile and BellSouth Mobility
would share ownership of the partnership 53.5% and 46.5%, respectively,
with ALLTEL Mobile serving as managing partner. In addition, under terms
of the agreement, BellSouth Mobility will purchase 0.1% of ALLTEL Mobile's
ownership interest in its Jackson, Mississippi and eight contiguous RSA
cellular properties. ALLTEL Mobile will purchase BellSouth Mobility's
interest in six cellular properties in North and South Carolina. Purchase
of the properties is subject to rights of first refusal by BellSouth's
partners in these six cellular properties.


12




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I
Item 1. Business

CELLULAR OPERATIONS (continued)

OTHER (continued)

In November 1994, ALLTEL Mobile signed a definitive agreement to exchange
several of its cellular telephone properties for several cellular
properties owned by United States Cellular Corp. ("U.S. Cellular"). Under
terms of the agreement, ALLTEL Mobile will exchange certain assets in a
West Virginia RSA and an Oklahoma RSA for U.S. Cellular's certain assets in
a Georgia RSA and a North Carolina RSA. The acquired properties are
contiguous to ALLTEL Mobile's Albany, Georgia and Charlotte, North Carolina
markets. In January 1995, ALLTEL Mobile purchased U.S. Cellular's 20
percent interest in the Fort Smith, Arkansas, MSA, thereby increasing
ALLTEL Mobile's ownership interest in the Fort Smith MSA to 100 percent.


PAGING

ALLTEL Mobile also operates wide-area computer-driven paging networks as a
complementary service to cellular telephones. In addition to paging
networks in Arkansas and Florida, the Company's acquisition of SLT in 1992
added a one-third ownership in one of the largest paging networks in Texas,
which serves more than 177,000 subscribers.


DIRECTORY PUBLISHING

ALLTEL Publishing currently coordinates advertising, sales, printing, and
distribution for 362 telephone directories in 39 states.

In October 1993, ALLTEL Publishing completed its purchase of GTE
Directories independent publishing business, which includes contracts with
more than 125 independent telephone companies across the country. Under
terms of the agreement, ALLTEL Publishing provides all directory publishing
services including contract management, production and marketing. As
subcontractor, GTE Directories provides directory sales and printing
services through a separate contract with ALLTEL Publishing.


CABLE TELEVISION SERVICE

The Company provides cable television service to more than 17,500 customers
in certain areas of the Navajo Indian Reservation (which covers an area
including parts of New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah), and to residents of
Needles, California, Springfield, Missouri, and central Texas.

In November 1994, as part of its agreement to sell certain telephone
properties, the Company also signed definitive agreements to sell certain
of its cable television properties to Citizens Utilities Company. These
cable television properties serve approximately 7,000 customers in Arizona,
California, New Mexico and Utah.


13




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 1. Business

NATURAL GAS DISTRIBUTION

In 1991, the Company disposed of all of natural gas distribution operations.


MANUFACTURING

During 1992, the Company sold substantially all of the assets of OTI, which
designed, developed, manufactured and marketed products for use in military
command, control and communications systems. During 1990, the Company sold
Denro, Inc., which designs and manufactures microprocessor-based air
traffic control voice switching and control systems. After the sale of OTI,
the Company did not have any manufacturing operations.


INVESTMENTS

LDDS

ALLTEL owns approximately an 8% interest in LDDS Communications, Inc.
("LDDS"), a publicly-held company. The investment was acquired in exchange
for the Company's previous interest in Advanced Telecommunications
Corporation ("ATC"), which was acquired by LDDS during 1992.

LDDS is one of the largest regional long-distance companies in the United
States and provides long-distance telecommunications services to customers
located in 41 states.

COMDIAL

ALLTEL owns approximately a 6% interest in Comdial Corporation, a producer
of quality telephone sets and key systems.

CHILLICOTHE

ALLTEL owns a 19.8% interest in Chillicothe Telephone Company, which serves
approximately 27,000 telephone lines in Ohio. Frederick G. Griech,
President of ALLTEL Telephone Services Corporation's Northeast Region, and
Americo Cornacchione, Senior Vice President-Accounting and Finance of
ALLTEL Telephone Services Corporation's Northeast Region, are members of
Chillicothe's Board of Directors.

OTHER

During 1991, the Company sold its stock in Luz International Limited, a
provider of solar energy, to an investment group in a private transaction.

During 1990, the Company completed the sale of its 14.5% interest in TPI
Enterprises, Inc., which had been a supplier of business communications
systems.


14




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 2. Properties

TELEPHONE PROPERTY

The Company's telephone property in service consists primarily of land and
buildings, central office equipment, telephone lines, and related
equipment. The gross investment by category in telephone property as of
December 31, 1994 was as follows:

(Thousands)
Telephone-
Land, buildings and leasehold
improvements $ 267,030
Central office equipment 1,232,517
Outside plant 1,953,600
Furniture, fixtures,
vehicles and other 303,747
Total $3,756,894

Standard practices prevailing in the telephone industry are followed by the
Company's telephone operating subsidiaries in the construction and
maintenance of plant and facilities. Certain properties of the Company and
its telephone operating subsidiaries are pledged as collateral for
long-term debt.



OTHER PROPERTY

Other properties of the Company in service consist primarily of property,
plant and equipment used in information services, product distribution and
cellular telephone operations. The total investment by category for these
operations as of December 31, 1994 was as follows:

(Thousands)

Land, buildings and leasehold
improvements $164,623
Data processing equipment 257,830
Cellular telephone plant
and equipment 236,675
Furniture, fixtures
and miscellaneous 70,323
Total $729,451

All of the Company's property is considered to be in reasonably sound
operating condition.


15




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 3. Legal Proceedings

The Company is not currently involved in any material pending legal
proceedings, other than routine litigation incidental to its business,
and, to the knowledge of the Company's management, no material legal
proceedings, either private or governmental, are contemplated or
threatened.

Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

No matters were submitted to the security holders for a vote during
the fourth quarter of the fiscal year.

Item 10(b). Executive Officers of the Registrant.

Name Age Position

* Joe T. Ford 57 Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer
(beginning January 26, 1995)

** Max E. Bobbitt 50 President and Chief
Operating Officer
(up until January 4, 1995)

Dennis J. Ferra 41 Senior Vice President -
Accounting and Administration

Francis X. Frantz 41 Senior Vice President -
External Affairs, General
Counsel and Secretary

Tom T. Orsini 44 Senior Vice President - Finance
and Corporate Development

John L. Comparin 42 Vice President -Human Resources

Ronald D. Payne 48 Vice President - Corporate
Communications

Jerry M. Green 47 Treasurer

John M. Mueller 44 Controller

Deborah J. Akins 39 Assistant Treasurer

* - On January 26, 1995, the Board of Directors named Joe T. Ford as
President of the Company, in addition to his other responsibilities as
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.

** - On January 4, 1995, Max E. Bobbitt announced his retirement from
the Company. Mr. Bobbitt had most recently served as the Company's
President and Chief Operating Officer. On January 26, 1995, Mr. Bobbitt
also resigned from his position as Director of the Company.


16




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part I

Item 10(b). Executive Officers of the Registrant (continued)

There are no arrangements between any officer and any other person
pursuant to which he was selected as an officer. Except for Francis
X. Frantz and John L. Comparin, each of the officers named above has
been employed by ALLTEL or a subsidiary for the last five years.
Mr. Frantz joined the Company in March, 1990 as Senior Vice
President and General Counsel. Prior to joining ALLTEL, Mr. Frantz
was a partner in the law firm of Thompson, Hine and Flory,
Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Comparin joined the Company in February, 1990
as Vice President - Human Resources. Prior to joining ALLTEL, Mr.
Comparin was Director of Human Resources for Maxus Corp. (formerly
Diamond Shamrock Corp.) of Dallas Texas.


FORM 10-K Part II


Item 5. Market for the Registrant's Common Equity and Related
Stockholder Matters.

As of January 31, 1995, the approximate number of stockholders
of common stock including an estimate for those holding shares in
brokers' accounts was 93,000. For additional information
pertaining to Markets for ALLTEL Corporation's Common Stock and
Related Stockholder Matters, refer to pages 35, 37, 42 and the
inside back cover of ALLTEL's 1994 Annual Report to Stockholders,
which is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 6. Selected Financial Data.

For information pertaining to Selected Financial Data of
ALLTEL Corporation, refer to page 32 of ALLTEL's 1994 Annual
Report to Stockholders, which is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
and Results of Operations.

For information pertaining to Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations of
ALLTEL Corporation, refer to pages 27-30 of ALLTEL's 1994 Annual
Report to Stockholders, which is
incorporated herein by reference.

Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.

For information pertaining to Financial Statements and
Supplementary Data of ALLTEL Corporation, refer to pages 31 and
33-45 of ALLTEL's 1994 Annual Report to Stockholders, which is
incorporated herein by reference.


17




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part II


Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting
and Financial Disclosure.

During the two most recent fiscal years or the subsequent interim
period up to the date of this Form 10-K, there were no
disagreements with the Company's independent certified public
accountants on any matter of accounting principles or practices,
financial statement disclosures or auditing scope or procedures. In
addition, none of the "kinds of events" described in item
304(a)(1)(v)(A), (B), (C) and (D) of Regulation S-K have occurred.


FORM 10-K PART III


Item 10(a). Directors of the Registrant.

For information pertaining to Directors of ALLTEL Corporation refer
to "Election of Directors" in ALLTEL's Proxy Statement for its 1995
Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which is incorporated herein by
reference.

Item 10(b). Executive Officers of the Registrant.

For information pertaining to Executive Officers of ALLTEL
Corporation, refer to Part I, pages 16 and 17 of this Report.

Item 11. Executive Compensation.

For information pertaining to Executive Compensation, refer to
"Management Compensation" in ALLTEL's Proxy Statement for its 1995
Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which is incorporated herein by
reference.

Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.

For information pertaining to beneficial ownership of ALLTEL
securities, refer to "Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial
Owners and Management" in ALLTEL's Proxy Statement for its 1995
Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which is incorporated herein by
reference.

Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.

For information pertaining to Certain Relationships and Related
Transactions, refer to "Management Compensation" in ALLTEL's Proxy
Statement for its 1995 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which is
incorporated herein by reference.


18




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part IV


Item 14. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form 8-K.

(a) The following documents are filed as a part of this report:

1. Financial Statements:

The following Consolidated Financial Statements of ALLTEL
Corporation and subsidiaries, included in the annual
report of ALLTEL Corporation to its stockholders
for the year ended December 31, 1994, are
incorporated herein by reference:
Annual Report
Page Number

Report of Independent Public Accountants 31

Consolidated Balance Sheets - December 31, 1994
and 1993 34-35

Consolidated Statements of Income - for the
years ended December 31, 1994, 1993, and 1992 33

Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity
- for the years ended December 31, 1994,
1993 and 1992 37

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
- for the years ended December 31, 1994,
1993 and 1992 36

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 40-45

Supplementary Information-Business Segment and
Quarterly (Unaudited) Financial Information
38, 39
and 45

The Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary
Financial Information listed in the above index which are
included in the 1994 Annual Report to Stockholders of ALLTEL
Corporation are hereby incorporated by reference.


19




ALLTEL Corporation
Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K, Part IV


Item 14. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form 8-K.
(continued):

2. Financial Statement Schedules:
Form 10-K
Page Number

Report of Independent Public Accountants 22

Schedule II. Valuation and Qualifying Accounts 23

3. Exhibits:

See "Exhibit Index" located on page 24-27 of this document.

(b) No reports on Form 8-K were filed during the last quarter of 1994.

Separate condensed financial statements of ALLTEL Corporation have
been omitted since the Company meets the tests set forth in Regulation
S-X Rule 4-08(e)(3). All other schedules are omitted since the
required information is not present or is not present in amounts
sufficient to require submission of the schedule, or because the
information required is included in the consolidated financial
statements and notes thereto.



20



SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

ALLTEL Corporation
Registrant

By /s/ Joe T. Ford
Joe T. Ford, Chairman, President and Date: February 21, 1995
Chief Executive Officer

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf
of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

By /s/ Dennis J. Ferra Date: February 21, 1995
Dennis J. Ferra, Senior Vice President -
Accounting and Administration
(Principal Accounting Officer)

Joe T. Ford, Chairman, President,
Chief Executive Officer, and Director
(Principal Executive Officer)

Dennis J. Ferra, Senior Vice President -
Accounting and Administration
(Principal Accounting Officer)

Tom T. Orsini, Senior Vice President -
Finance and Corporate Development
(Principal Financial Officer)
By /s/ Dennis J. Ferra
Ben W. Agee, Director (Dennis J. Ferra,
Attorney-in-fact)
Lawrence L. Gellerstedt III, Director
Date: February 21, 1995
W. W. Johnson, Director

Emon A. Mahony, Jr., Director

George C. McConnaughey, Director

John P. McConnell, Director

Philip F. Searle, Director

John E. Steuri, Director

Carl H. Tiedemann, Director

Ronald Townsend, Director

William H. Zimmer, Jr., Director




21





REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS





To the Shareholders of
ALLTEL Corporation:


We have audited in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards,
the financial statements included in ALLTEL Corporation's Annual Report to
stockholders incorporated by reference in this Form 10-K, and have issued
our report thereon dated January 23, 1995. Our audit was made for the
purpose of forming an opinion on those statements taken as a whole. The
schedule on page 23 is the responsibility of the company's management and
is presented for purposes of complying with the Securities and Exchange
Commission's rules and is not a required part of the basic financial
statements. This information has been subjected to the auditing procedures
applied in the basic financial statements and, in our opinion, is fairly
stated in all material respects in relation to the basic financial
statements taken as a whole.

As explained in Note 3 to the financial statements, as of December 31,
1993, the Company changed its method of accounting for investments in
conjunction with the adoption of Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 115, "Accounting for Certain
Investments in Debt and Equity Securities."




ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP



Little Rock, Arkansas,
January 23, 1995.


22





ALLTEL CORPORATION
SCHEDULE II - VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
(Dollars in Thousands)




Column A Column B Column C Column D Column E

Additions
Per Adjusted Charged to Charged Balance at
Previous Adjustments Beginning Cost and to Other Deduction End of
Description Report (B) Balance Expenses Accounts Describe Period

Allowance for doubtful accounts,
subscribers and others:

For the years ended


December 31, 1994 $10,766 $ 39 $10,805 $33,504 -- $22,799 (A) $21,510

December 31, 1993 $ 8,849 $656 $ 9,505 $13,636 -- $12,375 (A) $10,766

December 31, 1992 $10,961 $10,961 $10,506 $205 $12,823 (A) $ 8,849





Notes:
(A) Accounts charged off less recoveries of amounts previously charged off.
(B) Reclassification of amount for companies purchased in 1994 and 1993.





23

EXHIBIT INDEX

Number and Name Page

(3)(a) Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of *
ALLTEL Corporation (incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit B to Proxy Statement, dated March 9, l990).

(b) By-Laws of ALLTEL Corporation (Exhibit 3(b) to Form SE *
dated February 17, 1993).

(4)(a) Amended and Restated Rights Agreement dated as of *
April 26, l989, between ALLTEL Corporation and
Ameritrust Company N.A. (incorporated herein by
reference to Form 8 dated April 26, l989, filed with
the Commission on April 28, l989).

(b) First Amendment to Amended and Restated Rights *
Agreement dated as of April l6, l990, between ALLTEL
Corporation and Ameritrust Company N.A. (incorporated
herein by reference to Form SE of ALLTEL Corporation
filed with the Commission on April 23, l990). *

(c) The Company agrees to provide to the Commission, upon --
request, copies of any agreement defining rights of
long-term debt holders.

(10)(a)(1) Executive Compensation Agreement and amendments *
thereto by and between the Corporation and Joe T.
Ford (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit
10(b) to Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December
31, 1983).

(a)(2) Modification to Executive Compensation Agreement by *
and between the Corporation and Joe T. Ford
effective as of January 1, 1987 (incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit 10(b)(2) to Form 10-K for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1986).

(a)(3) Modification to Executive Compensation Agreement by *
and between ALLTEL Corporation and Joe T. Ford,
effective as of January 1, 1991 (incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit 10 of ALLTEL Corporation
Registration Statement (No. 33-44736) on Form S-4
dated December 23, 1991).

(a)(4) Split-dollar Life Insurance Agreement by and between 63
the Corporation and Joe T. Ford effective as of
March 1, 1994.

(b)(1) Executive Retirement Agreement by and between the 69
Corporation and Max E. Bobbitt effective as of
January 24, 1995.

(b)(2) Split- dollar Life Insurance Agreement by and between 84
the Corporation and Max E. Bobbitt effective as of
March 1, 1994.




* Incorporated herein by reference as indicated.




24


EXHIBIT INDEX, Continued

Number and Name Page

(10)(c)(1) Executive Compensation Agreement by and between the *
Company and John E. Steuri effective as of April l7,
l990 (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit B
of ALLTEL Corporation Registration Statement (No.
33-34495) on Form S-4 dated April 23, 1990).

(c)(2) Change in Control Agreement by and between the 89
Company and John L. Comparin effective as of
October 24, 1994.

(c)(3) Change in Control Agreement by and between the 109
Company and Dennis J. Ferra effective as of
October 24, 1994.

(c)(4) Change in Control Agreement by and between the 129
Company and Francis X. Frantz effective as of
October 24, 1994.

(c)(5) Change in Control Agreement by and between the 149
Company and Tom T. Orsini effective as of
October 24, 1994.

(c)(6) Change in Control Agreement by and between the 169
Company and Ronald D. Payne effective as of
October 24, 1994.

(d)(1) Split- dollar Life Insurance Agreement by and 189
between the Corporation and Dennis J. Ferra
effective as of March 1, 1994.

(d)(2) Split - dollar Life Insurance Agreement by and 195
between the Corporation and Francis X. Frantz
effective as of March 1, 1994.

(d)(3) Split - dollar Life Insurance Agreement by and 201
between the Corporation and Tom T. Orsini
effective as of March 1, 1994.

(e)(1) ALLTEL Corporation Supplemental Executive Retirement 207
Plan, effective October 24, 1994.

(e)(2) Directors' Retirement Plan of ALLTEL Corporation, as *
amended and restated effective January 1, 1994
(incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10(d)
to Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1993).

(f)(1) Executive Deferred Compensation Plan of ALLTEL *
Corporation, as amended and restated effective
October 1, 1993 (incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10(e) to Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 1993).).

(f)(2) Deferred Compensation Plan for Directors of ALLTEL *
Corporation, as amended and restated effective
October 1, 1993 (incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10(f) to Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 1993).).



* Incorporated herein by reference as indicated.



25



EXHIBIT INDEX, Continued

Number and Name Page

(10)(g)(l) ALLTEL Corporation 1975 Incentive Stock Option Plan *
(as amended and restated effective July 26, 1988)
(incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10(i)
to Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1988).

(g)(2) ALLTEL Corporation 1991 Stock Option Plan *
(incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit A to
Proxy Statement, dated March 8, 1991).

(g)(3) ALLTEL Corporation l994 Stock Option Plan for *
Nonemployee Directors (incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit B to Proxy Statement dated
March 4, l994).

(g)(4) ALLTEL Corporation l994 Stock Option Plan for *
Employees (incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit A to Proxy Statement dated March 4, l994).

(h)(1) Systematics, Inc. 1981 Incentive Stock Option Plan *
and Amendment No. 1 thereto (incorporated herein
by reference to Form S-8 (No. 33-35343) of ALLTEL
Corporation filed with the Commission on June 11,
1990).

(h)(2) Stock Purchase Plan for Employees of Systematics *
Information Services, Inc. and its Affiliates,
effective June 18, 1991 (incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10(h)(2) to Amendment No.1 to
Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1993).

(i) ALLTEL Corporation Performance Incentive *
Compensation Plan as amended, effective January 1,
1993 (Exhibit 10(i) to Form SE dated February 17,
1993).

(j) ALLTEL Corporation Long-Term Performance Incentive *
Compensation Plan, as amended and restated
effective January 1, 1993 (Exhibit 10(j) to Form SE
dated February 17, 1993).

(j)(1) Amendment No. 1 to ALLTEL Corporation Long-Term *
Performance Incentive Compensation Plan as amended
and restated effective January 1, 1993,
(incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit
10(j)(1) to Amendment No.1 to Form 10-K for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1993).

(k) ALLTEL Corporation Pension Plan (January 1, 1994 226
Restatement).

(l) ALLTEL Corporation Profit-Sharing Plan (January 1, 533
1994 Restatement).

(m) ALLTEL Corporation Excess Benefit Plan, as restated *
January 1, 1994 (incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 10(m) to Amendment No. 1 to Form 10-K for
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993).



* Incorporated herein by reference as indicated.




26


EXHIBIT INDEX, Continued

Number and Name Page

(10)(n) Amended and Restated ALLTEL Corporation Supplemental *
Medical Expense Reimbursement Plan (incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 10(p) to Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1990).

(o) Systematics Information Services, Inc. Excess *
Benefit Plan, effective January 1, 1994
(incorporated herein by reference to Amendment No. 1
to Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1993).

(p) ALLTEL Corporation Thrift Plan (January 1, 1994 612
Restatement).

(11) Statement re computation of per share earnings. 28

(13) Annual report to stockholders for the year ended 33
December 31, 1994. Such report, except for the
portions incorporated by reference herein, is
furnished for the information of the SEC and is not
"filed" as part of this report.

(21) Subsidiaries of the registrant. 29

(23) Consents of experts and counsel. 32

(24) Powers of Attorney. 696

(27) Financial Data Schedule for the year ended December 698
31, 1994.

(99)(a) Annual report on Form 11-K for the Stock Purchase --
Plan for Employees of Systematics Information
Services, Inc. and its Affiliates for the year ended
December 31, 1994 will be filed by amendment.

(99)(b) Annual report on Form 11-K for the ALLTEL --
Corporation Thrift Plan for the year ended
December 31, 1994 will be filed by amendment.

(99)(c) Annual report on Form 11-K for the Computer Power, --
Inc. Retirement Savings Plan for the year ended
December 31, 1994 will be filed by amendment.

(99)(d) Annual report on Form 11-K for the CP National --
Corporation Incentive Thrift Savings Plan for the
year ended December 31, 1994 will be filed by
amendment.



* Incorporated herein by reference as indicated.




27