FIELDS AIRCRAFT SPARES INC
DEF 14A, 1997-06-27
AIRCRAFT & PARTS
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                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

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


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

Check the appropriate box:

[ ]      Preliminary Proxy Statement
[X]      Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ]      Definitive Additional Materials
[ ]      Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss. 240.14a-11(c) or ss. 240.14a-12

                          Fields Aircraft Spares, Inc.
         _______________________________________________________________________
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

         _______________________________________________________________________
        (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]      No fee required
[ ]      Fee  computed on  table below  per Exchange  Act Rules  14a-6(i)(4) and
         0-11.

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

         _______________________________________________________________________

         (2)      Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

         _______________________________________________________________________
         (3)      Per  unit  price  or other  underlying  value  of  transaction
                  computed  pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth amount
                  on  which  filing  fee  is  calculated  and  state  how it was
                  determined):

         _______________________________________________________________________
         (4)      Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

         _______________________________________________________________________
         (5)      Total fee paid:

         _______________________________________________________________________
[ ]      Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[ ]      Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange  Act
         Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting fee
         was paid  previously.  Identify  the  previous  filing by  registration
         statement number, or the form or schedule and the date of its filing.

         1)       Amount Previously Paid:_______________________________________

         2)       Form Schedule or Registration Statement No.:__________________

         3)       Filing Party:_________________________________________________

         4)       Date Filed:___________________________________________________


<PAGE>

                          FIELDS AIRCRAFT SPARES, INC.
                               2251-A Ward Avenue
                              Simi Valley, CA 93065

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                                 August 7, 1997


To the Shareholders of
Fields Aircraft Spares, Inc.:

         The 1997 Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  (the  "Annual  Meeting")  of
Fields Aircraft Spares,  Inc., a Utah corporation (the "Company"),  will be held
on Thursday,  August 7, 1997, at 1:00 p.m.  (local  time),  at the Radisson Simi
Valley  Hotel,  999  Enchanted  Way,  Simi  Valley,  California  93065,  for the
following purposes:

         1)       to elect six (6) directors of the Company to serve  until  the
next annual meeting of shareholders (or the expiration of their respective terms
if a staggered Board is approved) or until their successors are duly elected;

         2)       increase  the  number of  authorized  common  shares  of   the
Company,  par value $.05 per share (the  "Common  Shares"),  from  2,000,000  to
5,000,000;

         3)       amend the Company's  Articles of Incorporation  to provide for
staggered  terms of  directors  by dividing  the Board of  Directors  into three
groups;

         4)       approve the Company's 1997 Omnibus Stock Option Plan;

         5)       ratify the selection  by  the  Board  of  Directors  of  Moore
Stephens Frazer & Torbet,  Inc. as the  independent  auditors of the Company for
the 1997 fiscal year; and

         6)       to transact such other  business  as may  properly come before
the Annual Meeting, or any adjournments or postponements thereof.

         The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on Monday,  June
16, 1997, as the record date for determining the shareholders entitled to notice
of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting. Only shareholders of record at that time
are  entitled  to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual  Meeting and any and all
adjournments or postponements thereof.

         A copy of the  Company's  Annual  Report  for  the  fiscal  year  ended
December 31, 1996, a Proxy  Statement,  and a proxy card  accompany this notice.
These materials are first being sent to shareholders on or about July 1, 1997.

         Shareholders  are  cordially  invited to attend  the Annual  Meeting in
person.  However,  to assure your  representation at the Annual Meeting,  please
complete and sign the enclosed proxy card and return it promptly. If you choose,
you may still vote in person at the Annual  Meeting  even though you  previously
submitted a proxy card.

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                          Carlos Sedillo
                                          Secretary
Simi Valley, California
July 1, 1997


<PAGE>

                          FIELDS AIRCRAFT SPARES, INC.
                               2251-A Ward Avenue
                              Simi Valley, CA 93065

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                         Annual Meeting of Shareholders
                     To Be Held on Thursday, August 7, 1997


         This  Proxy  Statement  and  the  accompanying  proxy  card  are  being
furnished to the shareholders of Fields Aircraft  Spares,  Inc. (the "Company"),
in connection with the  solicitation of proxies by and on behalf of the Board of
Directors  of the Company (the  "Board")  for use at its 1997 Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders to be held on Thursday,  August 7, 1997, at 1:00 p.m. (local time),
at the Radisson Simi Valley Hotel,  999 Enchanted  Way, Simi Valley,  California
93065, and at any adjournments or postponements  thereof (the "Annual Meeting").
This Proxy  Statement,  the  accompanying  proxy card, and the Company's  Annual
Report on Form 10-KSB (the "Annual  Report") for the fiscal year ended  December
31, 1996 ("Fiscal  1996"),  are first being mailed to  shareholders  on or about
July 1, 1997.  The Annual Report is not to be considered a part of the Company's
proxy solicitation materials.

                            PURPOSE OF ANNUAL MEETING

         At the Annual Meeting,  shareholders will be asked to (i) elect six (6)
directors of the Company to serve until the next annual meeting of  shareholders
(or the expiration of their  respective  terms if a staggered Board is approved)
or until their  successors  are duly elected and  qualified;  (ii)  increase the
number of authorized common shares of the Company, par value $.05 per share (the
"Common Shares") from 2,000,000 to 5,000,000; (iii) amend the Company's Articles
of Incorporation (the "Articles") to provide for staggered terms of directors by
dividing the Board of Directors  into three  groups;  (iv) approve the Company's
1997 Stock  Option Plan;  (v) ratify the  selection by the Board of Directors of
Moore Stephens Frazer & Torbet, Inc. as the independent  auditors of the Company
for the 1997  fiscal  year  ("Fiscal  1997");  and (vi) to  transact  such other
business  as may  properly  come  before the Annual  Meeting.  For  election  of
directors,  those  candidates  receiving  the most votes shall be elected,  if a
quorum exists. Action on items (ii), (iii), (iv), and (v) above will be approved
by the  shareholders  if the  number of votes cast for the  action  exceeds  the
number  of votes  cast  against  the  action,  and a quorum  exists.  The  Board
recommends a vote "FOR" (a) the  election of the  nominees for  directors of the
Company listed below, (b) the increase of the number of authorized Common Shares
from  2,000,000 to 5,000,000,  (c) the  amendment of the  Company's  Articles to

                                       1
<PAGE>

provide for staggered terms of directors, (d) the approval of the Company's 1997
Stock Option Plan, and (e) the  ratification  of Moore Stephens Frazer & Torbet,
Inc. as the Company's auditors for Fiscal 1997.


                            QUORUM AND VOTING RIGHTS

         The  presence,  in person or by proxy,  of the holders of a majority of
the outstanding  Common Shares is necessary to constitute a quorum at the Annual
Meeting.  Only  shareholders of record at the close of business on Monday,  June
16, 1997 (the "Record Date"), will be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the
Annual  Meeting.  As of the Record  Date,  there were  1,877,131  Common  Shares
outstanding and entitled to vote. Holders of Common Shares as of the Record Date
are entitled to one vote for each share held.

         All Common Shares represented by properly executed proxies will, unless
such proxies have  previously  been  revoked,  be voted in  accordance  with the
instructions  indicated in such proxies.  If no such instructions are indicated,
such shares will be voted in favor of (i.e.,  "FOR") (i) the election of six (6)
directors of the Company to serve until the next annual meeting of  shareholders
(or the expiration of their  respective  terms if a staggered Board is approved)
or until their  successors are duly elected and qualified,  (ii) the increase of
the number of authorized  Common Shares from  2,000,000 to 5,000,000,  (iii) the
amendment of the Company's Articles to provide for staggered terms of directors,
(iv) the approval of the Company's  1997 Omnibus Stock Option Plan,  and (v) the
ratification of Moore Stephens Frazer & Torbet,  Inc. as the Company's  auditors
for Fiscal 1997.  Abstentions and broker  non-votes will not be counted as votes
cast and will have no effect on the  result of a vote on matters  identified  in
clause (i) above,  although both will count towards the presence of a quorum. On
the matters identified in clauses (ii), (iii), (iv), and (v) above,  abstentions
will have the same effect as votes  against the  proposal  and broker  non-votes
will not be  counted  as votes cast and will have no effect on the result of the
vote.

         Under  applicable  Utah law,  none of the holders of Common  Shares are
entitled to appraisal  rights in connection  with any proposal to be acted on at
the Annual Meeting.

         Shareholders  who execute  proxies  may revoke  them by giving  written
notice to the  Secretary  of the  Company at any time  before  such  proxies are
voted.  Attendance  at the meeting shall not have the effect of revoking a proxy
unless the shareholder so attending  shall, in writing,  so notify the Secretary
of the meeting at any time prior to the voting of the proxy.

         The cost of  preparing,  printing,  assembling  and mailing  this Proxy
Statement and other material  furnished to  shareholders  in connection with the
solicitation  of  proxies  will be  borne by the  Company.  In  addition  to the
solicitation of proxies by use of the mails,  officers,  directors,  and regular

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<PAGE>

employees  of  the  Company  may  solicit  proxies  by  written   communication,
telephone,  facsimile,  or personal call. Such persons are to receive no special
compensation for any solicitation activities.  The Company will reimburse banks,
brokers,  and other persons  holding  Common Shares in their names,  or those of
their nominees, for their expenses in forwarding proxy solicitation materials to
beneficial owners of Common Shares.

         The  principal  executive  offices of the Company are located at 2251-A
Ward Avenue,  Simi Valley,  California  93065, and its telephone number is (805)
583-0080.


                                       3

<PAGE>

                  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS, NOMINEES AND
                           PRINCIPAL SECURITY HOLDERS

         The following  table sets forth the  ownership of the Company's  Common
Shares by each  person  who owned of record,  or was known to own  beneficially,
more than 5% as of May 22, 1997. As of May 22, 1997, there were 1,877,131 Common
Shares and no preferred shares outstanding. As of May 22, there were options and
warrants  to  acquire   419,665   Common  Shares  from  the  Company   currently
outstanding.  The table also sets forth the present holdings of Common Shares by
all officers and directors, individually and as a group.


Names and Addresses                       Number of Common       Percent of
Principal Shareholders                       Shares Owned*         Class**
- ----------------------                       -------------         --------
McDonnell Douglas Corporation                   564,194            30.06%
P.O. Box 516
McDonnell Blvd. at Airport Road
St. Louis, MO  63166-0516

Keusch & Merlo Invest A.G.                      233,100*           11.92
Bahnhofplatz 2
CH-8023 Zurich
Switzerland

James A., Jr. and Jeanette Duffield             110,500             5.89
2640 West 10th Place
Tempe, AZ  85281

Names and Addresses of
Officers and Directors

Peter Frohlich (1),(2)                           54,927             2.93
128 Mount Street
London W1Y5HA, U.K.

Alan M. Fields (1),(3)                           68,052             3.62
341 "A" Street
Fillmore, CA  93015-1931

Lawrence J. Troyna (1),(4)                       56,926             3.03
128 Mount Street
London W1Y5HA, U.K.

Leonard I. Fields (5)                            30,745             1.64
341 "A" Street
Fillmore, CA  93015-1931


                                       4
<PAGE>


Carlos Sedillo (1),(6)                           13,722            ***
341 "A" Street
Fillmore, CA  93015-1931

Neil E. O'Hara (7)                                8,001            ***
341 "A" Street
Fillmore, CA  93015-1931

Mary Sprouse  (1)                                15,908             **
530 Congress Avenue
Las Vegas, NV  89121

All officers, directors and nominee             234,693            12.50
as a group (6 persons)


*        All shares are held beneficially and of record and each shareholder has
         sole  voting and  investment power  unless otherwise  noted.  A  person
         is deemed to be the beneficial owner of securities that can be acquired
         by such person within 60 days from the record date upon the exercise of
         options or warrants.  The  233,100  shares  reported for Keusch & Merlo
         Invest  A.G. include  warrants to acquire  77,700  shares  at $6.25 per
         share,  which are currently  exercisable. Except for the warrants  held
         by  Keusch &  Merlo Invest  A.G., as of  May 22, 1997,  there  were  no
         options or warrants held by persons  or  entities  listed  in the table
         that were exercisable  within 60 days.

**       Each beneficial owner's percentage  ownership is determined by assuming
         that options  and  warrants that are held by such person (but not those
         held by  any  other  person) and exercisable in  such  period have been
         exercised.

***      Less than 1%.

(1)      Officer and Director of the Company

(2)      Includes 9,927 shares held by Mr.  Frohlich's  spouse,  Sylvia Frohlich
         and  10,000  shares  held in the name of a nominee  for Mr.  Frohlich's
         benefit.  In addition,  Mr.  Frohlich  has an option to acquire  19,800
         shares  subject to vesting  requirements,  which  includes  the Company
         obtaining  sales during a 12-month  period of $7,500,000 and an average
         closing price for the Company's Common Shares for a three-month  period
         of $6.00,  $9.00 and $12.00,  respectively,  for each  one-third of the
         options to vest. Vesting of the options may be accelerated in the event
         of certain  changes of control of the Company.  The option must vest by
         November 1998 and must be exercised within three years of vesting.  Mr.
         Frohlich  was also  granted in April  1997 an option to acquire  30,000
         Common Shares at a price of $6.25 per share.

(3)      Includes 12,000 shares owned by Alan Fields' spouse, Nancy Fields. Does
         not include (a) 13,488 shares owned by Alan Fields's children through a
         trust created and funded by Leonard Fields and (b) approximately 47,154

                                       5
<PAGE>

         shares owned by relatives of Alan Fields,  including his father Leonard
         Fields,  a director of the Company,  and the estate of his uncle George
         Fields,  who was a former  director of the Company.  In addition,  Alan
         Fields  has an option to  acquire  19,800  shares  subject  to  vesting
         requirements,  which  includes  the Company  obtaining  sales  during a
         12-month  period of  $7,500,000  and an average  closing  price for the
         Company's  Common Shares for a three-month  period of $6.00,  $9.00 and
         $12.00,  respectively,  for  each  one-third  of the  options  to vest.
         Vesting  of the  options  may be  accelerated  in the event of  certain
         changes of control of the  Company.  The option  must vest by  November
         1998 and must be exercised  within three years of vesting.  Mr.  Fields
         was also  granted  in April  1997 an option to  acquire  30,000  Common
         Shares at a price of $6.25 per share.

(4)      Includes 10,000 shares owned by Mr. Troyna's spouse,  Susan Troyna, and
         10,000 shares held in the name of a nominee for Mr.  Troyna's  benefit.
         In addition,  Mr. Troyna has an option to acquire 19,800 shares subject
         to vesting  requirements,  which includes the Company  obtaining  sales
         during a 12-month period of $7,500,000 and an average closing price for
         the Company's  Common Shares for a three-month  period of $6.00,  $9.00
         and $12.00,  respectively,  for each  one-third of the options to vest.
         Vesting  of the  options  may be  accelerated  in the event of  certain
         changes of control of the  Company.  The option  must vest by  November
         1998 and must be exercised  within three years of vesting.  Mr.  Troyna
         was also  granted  in April  1997 an option to  acquire  30,000  Common
         Shares at a price of $6.25 per share.

(5)      Leonard  Fields is a director of the Company.  Includes  13,488  shares
         owned by Alan Fields'  children  through a trust  created and funded by
         Leonard  Fields.  Mr.  Fields  disclaims  beneficial  ownership of such
         shares.  Does  not  include   approximately  102,429  shares  owned  by
         relatives of Leonard Fields,  including his son Alan Fields, an officer
         and  director  of the  Company,  and the estate of his  brother  George
         Fields, who was a former director of the Company.

(6)      Includes 11,722 shares owned by an affiliated entity.

(7)      Mr. O'Hara is an officer of the Company. In addition, Mr. O'Hara has an
         option to acquire 7,125 shares subject to vesting  requirements,  which
         includes  the  Company  obtaining  sales  during a  12-month  period of
         $7,500,000 and an average closing price for the Company's Common Shares
         for a three-month period of $6.00, $9.00 and $12.00, respectively,  for
         each  one-third  of the options to vest.  Vesting of the options may be
         accelerated in the event of certain  changes of control of the Company.
         The option  must vest by  November  1998 and must be  exercised  within
         three years of vesting.  Mr.  O'Hara was also  granted in April 1997 an
         option to acquire 4,000 Common Shares at a price of $6.25 per share.


                                        6

<PAGE>

(8)      Ms. Sprouse is a nominee for Director. Includes 13,488  shares owned by
         Alan  Fields' children  through a  trust created and  funded by Leonard
         Fields.  Ms. Sprouse has voting control of those shares.



                                       7

<PAGE>

                                PROPOSAL NO. 1 --
                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

Nominees

         At the  Meeting,  the  shareholders  will elect all  directors  to hold
office until the annual  meeting of  shareholders  in 1998 (or the expiration of
their  respective  terms if a  staggered  Board  is  approved)  or  until  their
respective  successors  are duly  elected  and  qualified.  The Board  currently
consists of five members:  Peter Frohlich,  Alan M. Fields,  Lawrence J. Troyna,
Leonard I.  Fields and Carlos  Sedillo.  There is  currently  one vacancy on the
Board.  The Board  proposes  that six  directors,  listed below as nominees,  be
elected as  directors of the  Company.  Each  nominee has  consented to serve if
elected  to the  Board.  In the event  that any  nominee is unable to serve as a
director at the time of the Annual Meeting (which is not expected), proxies with
respect  to  which no  contrary  direction  is made  will be  voted  "FOR"  such
substitute nominee as shall be designated by the Board to fill the vacancy.

         The names of the  nominees,  their ages at the Record  Date and certain
other information about them are set forth below:


NAME                             AGE          POSITION

Peter Frohlich                   55           Chairman and Chief Executive 
                                              Officer of the Company; Chairman
                                              of FAS

Alan M. Fields                   45           President and Director of the 
                                              Company; President, Director and 
                                              Chief Executive Officer of FAS

Lawrence J. Troyna               53           Chief Financial Officer and
                                              Director of the Company; Chief
                                              Financial Officer, Secretary and
                                              Director of FAS

Leonard I. Fields                78           Director of the Company; Director
                                              of FAS

Carlos Sedillo                   55           General Counsel, Secretary and 
                                              Director of the Company;
                                              Director of FAS

Mary Sprouse                     49           Nominee for Director of the
                                              Company


         Peter Frohlich is Chairman and  Chief Executive  Officer of the Company
and Chairman of Fields Aircraft  Spares  Incorporated, a wholly owned subsidiary
of the Company  ("FAS").  Mr.  Frohlich is a Certified  Accountant in the United
Kingdom with over 12 years  experience  in public  accounting  as a partner in a
large  accounting  firm. From 1972 to 1980 he was Managing  Director of a public
company  quoted on the London  Stock  Exchange.  The  company  employed  several
thousand  people and had annual sales of  approximately  $75,000,000.  From 1980
until joining the Company in 1987, Mr.  Frohlich was a consultant to a number of
public and private  companies  advising on many aspects of corporate  and fiscal
matters, and on mergers and acquisitions with specific regard to refinancing and
restructuring.  Mr.  Frohlich was appointed  Chairman of the Company in 1987. He

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<PAGE>

resigned as Chairman in 1989 but  remained as a Director  until  resigning  as a
Director in February 1991. Mr. Frohlich was re-appointed a Director and Chairman
of the  Company  in March  1992.  From 1989 to 1991,  Mr.  Frohlich  acted as an
investment  advisor to a substantial  private group of companies.  In 1991,  Mr.
Frohlich  became  Chairman of Tower Group plc, an unquoted United Kingdom public
company.  He  was  retained  by a  number  of its  shareholders  to  attempt  to
reorganize  the company  following  multi million pound  trading  losses.  After
several  months he concluded  that the group should invite the bank to appoint a
receiver and he resigned.  Mr. Frohlich is a director of United Equity Holdings,
PLC. If a staggered Board is approved, Mr. Frohlich will be a Class III director
whose term will expire in 2000.

         Alan M. Fields is President and a Director of the Company, Director and
Chief Executive Officer of FAS and has served in various  capacities since 1992.
From 1989 until 1991 Mr.  Fields was a  Vice-President  and  General  Manager of
Quantum Microsystems,  Inc., a computer systems retailer.  From 1985 until 1992,
Mr. Fields acted as an  independent  sales  consultant  for several direct sales
companies.  His efforts on behalf of those companies resulted in the development
of a combined sales force exceeding 5,000 direct salespersons, and monthly sales
averaging  an  estimated  $350,000.  From 1982 until 1984 he was the Founder and
President of Savers Tax Service.  Mr. Fields was  responsible for all operations
of that  company,  which he built to over 2,000  clients  and 17  offices.  That
company was sold in 1984. From 1982 until 1984 Mr. Fields was also the President
and  responsible for all operations of AFA Datashare  Services,  a computer data
processing firm. That company was also sold in 1984. From 1980 until 1984 he was
President,  one of the founders, a minority shareholder and head of marketing of
an income tax  preparation  firm which  provided  services  to over 3,000  Amway
distributors through 16 offices. In 1984, as a result of Amway corporation being
subjected to major negative  attacks by the media,  the tax preparation firm was
adversely effected resulting in a bankruptcy. Also, as an ongoing result of that
business  bankruptcy,  Mr. Fields filed  personal  bankruptcy in 1992.  Prior to
entering  the  business  world,  Mr.  Fields  spent five years with the Internal
Revenue  Service as a Tax Auditor and Revenue  Agent.  Alan Fields is the son of
Leonard Fields. If a staggered Board is approved, Mr. Fields will be a Class III
director whose term will expire in 2000.

         Lawrence  J.  Troyna  has served  since  1992 as a  Director  and Chief
Financial  Officer of the Company and Chief  Financial  Officer,  Secretary  and
Director of FAS. Mr. Troyna has a law degree and is a chartered accountant,  and
was an audit senior with Price  Waterhouse  before joining  Greyhound  Financial
Corporation.  He spent 17 years with Greyhound, where he rose to the position of
Deputy  Managing  Director of  Greyhound  European  Group.  As the number "2" in
Europe for this  approximately  $350,000,000 in assets  company,  Mr. Troyna was
responsible  for  the  marketing  and  business  development  of  the  company's
investments  in  real  estate,  aviation  and  general  equipment.  He was  also
responsible for overall corporate  control.  From 1986 until joining the Company
in 1988,  Mr.  Troyna was  Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer  of  Chigwell
Properties Ltd., a United Kingdom real estate company. From 1989 to 1992 he took
a leave of absence  from the  Company.  During his three year  absence  from the
Company,  Mr. Troyna acted as a financial and real estate consultant to a number

                                       9
<PAGE>

of private and public  companies in the United Kingdom.  If a staggered Board is
approved, Mr. Troyna will be a Class II director whose term will expire in 1999.

         Leonard I.  Fields has been a Director of the Company and a Director of
FAS since  January  1992.  At various  times since 1985,  he has served in other
capacities for the Company and its subsidiaries. Mr. Fields has a B.S. degree in
Engineering,  and has over 40 years of  management  and sales  experience in the
industrial supply field. He was a founder of Union Industrial Supply in 1953 and
for thirty years was Executive  Vice President of that company  responsible  for
all day to day operations. Under his guidance, that company grew to yearly sales
in excess of  $5,000,000.  Leonard  Fields is the  father of Alan  Fields.  If a
staggered  Board is approved,  Mr. Fields will be a Class II director whose term
will expire in 1999.

         Carlos  Sedillo has been  Secretary and a Director of the Company and a
Director  of FAS  since  1987.  Mr.  Sedillo  is an  attorney  and has an LLM in
taxation law. He has practiced law for 31 years and  specializes in business and
tax matters.  From 1987 until the present,  he has served as General  Counsel of
the Company.  From 1963 until 1974,  Mr.  Sedillo was President of Stewart Title
and Trust Company.  This firm, which was sold in 1974,  provided title insurance
services  to  clients in five  states.  From 1980  until  1984 Mr.  Sedillo  was
associated  with  Alan  Fields  in the  operation  of Savers  Tax  Service,  AFA
Datashare  Services and Alan Fields and Associates.  From August 1989 to January
1992,  he was the  Secretary  and a member of the Board of  Directors of Quantum
Microsystems,  a company  engaged in the retail  sales of computer  hardware and
software.  From 1989 until 1993, Mr. Sedillo was also an officer and a member of
the Board of Directors of Aerobit  International,  Inc., a  manufacturer  of oil
well drill bits, and of Graphic Arts Personnel, a personnel company specializing
in temporary help for the printing  industry.  If a staggered Board is approved,
Mr. Sedillo will be a Class I director whose term will expire in 1998.

         Mary Sprouse is an attorney  and author.  She has practiced  law for 21
years and specializes in tax and business matters.  Ms. Sprouse is the author of
six books about taxes and personal finance.  She is a contributing tax editor of
MONEY  magazine  and a regular tax  columnist  for Your  Company  magazine.  Ms.
Sprouse is also a tax  consultant  to  Intuit,  a computer  software  firm,  and
appears as an adviser on TurboTax  Deluxe, a tax preparation  software  program.
Ms. Sprouse has been a national  spokesperson for the American Express Gold Card
and has starred in an  infomercial  for her book The MONEY Income Tax  Handbook.
Ms. Sprouse has made numerous appearances on television and radio, including the
Today show and Good Morning  America,  and has been  interviewed by and received
publicity from The New York Times,  The Los Angeles Times,  The Washington Post,
Business Week, Vogue, and People.  Ms. Sprouse has been in private practice as a
business and tax attorney since 1981. She was also President of Sprouse  Kinney,
Inc.  (formerly  Women's Tax Service,  Inc.) from 1983 to 1986 and  President of
Investors Tax Service,  Inc. (formerly Savers Tax Service) from 1984 to 1987. In
1982  and  1983,  Ms.  Sprouse  served  as  General  Counsel  of Alan  Fields  &
Associates,  a tax preparation firm. She was also associated with Alan Fields in
the operation of Savers Tax Service and purchased this business from Alan Fields

                                       10
<PAGE>

& Associates in 1984. If a staggered  Board is approved,  Ms.  Sprouse will be a
Class I director whose term will expire in 1998.

Board Committees and Meetings

         There  is  no  audit  committee,   compensation  committee,  nominating
committee or other committee of the Board of Directors.

         The Board held no regular or special meetings. The actions of directors
were  held  by  execution  of  unanimous   consents,   in  which  all  directors
participated.

Director Compensation

         Except as specifically  provided herein,  board members receive no fees
for serving as members of the board of directors.  However, board members may be
reimbursed their expenses  incurred in attending board meetings and the board of
directors may in the future decide to pay directors' fees.


                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         The following table sets forth (i) the names of the executive officers,
(ii) their ages at the Record Date and (iii) the  capacities in which they serve
the Company:

Name                    Age       Position(s) with the Company
- ----                    ---       ----------------------------

Peter Frohlich          55        Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 
                                  and Director

Alan M. Fields          45        President and Director

Lawrence J. Troyna      53        Chief Financial Officer and Director

Carlos Sedillo          56        General Counsel, Secretary and Director

Neil E. O'Hara          43        Vice President of the Company


         See   "Proposal   No.   1  --   Election  of  Directors   -   Nominees"
for a description of the  backgrounds of Messrs.  Frohlich,  Fields,  Troyna and
Sedillo.

         Neil    E.    O'Hara    is   a    Vice-President    of   the    Company
and has concentrated on marketing and sales of the Company.  Mr. O'Hara has over
18 years of  management  experience  in  aerospace.  He  graduated  from Adelphi
University  in 1976 with a Bachelor of Science  degree.  Mr. O'Hara worked eight
years for  American  Airlines,  rising to the  position  of  Senior  Manager  of
Purchasing  and Material.  In that position he oversaw all purchases of interior
class I equipment. He then spent eight years at Weber Aircraft, where at various
times he held the  positions  of Manager of  Marketing  & Sales,  Manager of New
Product  Development,  and finally  Director of  Customer  Services  and Program

                                       11
<PAGE>

Management.  While in that position,  Mr. O'Hara was  responsible  for all spare
parts sales and pricing and had total  management  control over new programs and
new product development. At the Company, he is using his experience and contacts
to expand our brokerage, distributorship and consignment programs.


                             MANAGEMENT COMPENSATION

         The following table sets forth the aggregate cash  compensation paid by
the Company for services rendered during the last three full fiscal years to the
Company's Chief  Executive  Officer and to each of the Company's other executive
officers whose annual salary and bonus for the year 1996 exceeded  $100,000 (the
"Named Executive Officers").
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                            Summary Compensation Table

                                   Annual Compensation                                      Long-Term Compensation Awards



                                                                                                             Securities
                                                                                            Restricted       Underlying
Name and Principal                                                      Other Annual        Stock            Stock
Position               Year         Salary($)         Bonus($)          Compensation($)     Awards($)        Options(#)

<S>                    <C>          <C>               <C>              <C>                  <C>              <C> 
Peter Frohlich         1996(1)      $130,000          $12,500                                 --               --
Chairman and CEO       1995         $130,000            --                                    --             19,800(2)
                       1994         $130,000(3)       $28,000(4)                            $3,750(5)          --


Alan M. Fields         1996(1)      $130,000          $12,500           $2,800                --               --
President              1995         $130,000            --              $2,800                --             19,800(2)
                       1994         $130,000(6)       $28,000(4)(7)     $2,800              $3,750(5)(7)       --


Lawrence J. Troyna     1996(1)      $130,000          $12,500                                 --               --
Chief Financial        1995         $130,000            --                                    --             19,800(2)
Officer                1994         $130,000(3)       $28,000(4)                            $3,750(5)          --


Neil O'Hara            1996(8)      $ 83,252          $24,838           $6,000                --               --
Vice President         1995         $ 78,000          $23,625           $6,000                --             7,125
                       1994         $ 78,000          $27,662           $6,000              $500(9)
</TABLE>


(1)      Does not include  $15,773 paid to Mr. Fields in 1996 and $2,500 paid to
         each of Mr. Frohlich and Mr. Troyna in 1996 for amounts earned in 1995.
         Does include  salary of $7,500 earned by Mr. Fields in 1996 and $10,000
         earned by each of Mr.  Frohlich and Mr. Troyna in 1996,  which has been
         paid in  1997.  In  addition,  $10,000  bonus  to  each of the  Current
         Executive  Officers  (as defined  below) was earned in 1996 but will be
         paid in 1997.  Does not include options to acquire 30,000 Common Shares
         at  $6.25  per  share  granted  in  April  1997 to each of the  Current
         Executive  Officers  which are not qualified  stock options for federal
         tax purposes.

(2)      Represents  options granted pursuant to a Management Stock Option Plan,
         which is not a qualified  stock option plan for federal tax purposes or
         purposes  of Section  16 of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 (the
         "Exchange Act").

(3)      Reflects fees paid under the Consulting  Agreements between the Company
         and Named Executive  Officers prior to Named  Executive  Officers being
         employed by the Company.

(4)      Represents bonus awarded in 1994, of which $20,000 was paid in 1994 and
         $8,000 was paid in 1995.

(5)      Represents  15,000 shares awarded (after taking into account the 50 for
         1 reverse stock split approved March 29, 1995). Based on a valuation of
         $.25 per share or a total value of approximately $3,750 for each award.
         At December  31, 1996,  based on the closing  market price of $4.75 per
         share,  such shares had a total value of $71,250 for each award.  These
         stock awards are fully vested.

                                       12

<PAGE>

(6)      Reflects fees  paid to  Brimat  International,   Inc.  pursuant  to   a
         Consulting Agreement terminated January 1, 1995. Alan Fields, President
         of the Company, is President of Brimat  International,  Inc., which  is
         owned solely by his father, Leonard Fields.

(7)      Paid or awarded to Alan Fields, individually,  for services rendered in
         his capacity as President of Brimat International, Inc.

(8)      Includes $5,000 bonus earned in 1996 but paid in 1997. Does not include
         options to acquire  4,000 Common  Shares at $6.25 per share  granted in
         April  1997,  which are not  qualified  stock  options  for federal tax
         purposes.

(9)      Represents 2,000 shares awarded (after taking into account the 50 for 1
         reverse stock split approved  March 29, 1995).  Based on a valuation of
         $.25 per share or a total value of approximately  $500. At December 31,
         1996, based on the closing market price of $4.75 per share, such shares
         had a total value of $9,500. These stock awards are fully vested.

         The Company through FAS has a 401(k) plan and a retirement trust but no
other  retirement,  pension  or  profit  sharing  plans for the  benefit  of the
Company's  officers,  directors and  employees.  Each of the 401(k) plan and the
retirement  trust are  defined  contribution  plans.  The  Company  may,  at its
discretion, make matching contributions to the 401(k) plan. However, to date, no
matching contributions have been made and the Company does not anticipate making
any matching contributions until the Company achieves profitability. The Company
does  provide  health  insurance  and  life  and  disability  insurance  for its
employees. The board of directors may recommend and adopt additional programs in
the future for the benefit of officers, directors and employees.

Long-Term Incentive Plan Awards and Option Grants in Fiscal Year 1996

         The   Company  has  no  long-term  incentive   plan.  No  options  were
granted in fiscal year 1996.

Aggregated Option Exercises and Year-End Option Values in 1996

         The following table summarizes for the Named Executive  Officers of the
Company the number of stock options,  if any, exercised during Fiscal Year 1996,
the  aggregate  dollar  value  realized  upon  exercise,  the  total  number  of
unexercised  options held at December 31, 1996 and the aggregate dollar value of
in-the-money  unexercised  options,  if any,  held at December 31,  1995.  Value
realized  upon exercise is the  difference  between the fair market value of the
underlying stock on the exercise date and the exercise price of the option.  The
value  of  unexercised,  in-the-money  options  at  December  31,  1996  is  the
difference  between  its  exercise  price  and  the  fair  market  value  of the
underlying stock on December 31, 1996. The underlying options have not been, and
may never be,  exercised;  and actual gains,  if any, on exercise will depend on
the value of the Common  Shares on the actual date of exercise.  There can be no
assurance that these values will be realized. See "-Stock Option Plan" below for
a description of the terms of the options.

                                       13

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  Aggregate Option Exercises in Fiscal Year 1996
                                            and Year-End Option Values


                                                          Number of Unexercised Options at      Value of Unexercised In-The-Money
                                                                                                      Options at 12/31/96(1)
                                                                     12/31/96


                       Shares Acquired       Value
        Name           on Exercise(#)     Realized($)     # Exercisable      Unexercisable        Exercisable         Unexercisable

<S>                        <C>               <C>             <C>                <C>                  <C>                <C>       
Peter Frohlich              None              N/A             None              19,800                N/A               $ 34,650

Lawrence J. Troyna          None              N/A             None              19,800                N/A                34,650

Alan M. Fields              None              N/A             None              19,800                N/A                34,650

Neil O'Hara                 None              N/A             None              7,125                 N/A                12,469

</TABLE>

(1) The closing bid price of the Common  Shares on December 31, 1996 was $4.75. 
The exercise  price of the options is $3.00.

Employment  Contracts  and  Termination  of  Employment  and   Change-In-Control
Arrangements.

         Effective  January  1,  1995,  the Board of  Directors  authorized  the
Company  to  enter  into  one-year  Employment  Agreements  with  each of  Peter
Frohlich,  Lawrence Troyna, and Alan Fields (the "Current Executive  Officers"),
which are  automatically  renewable  for  additional  one- year  periods  unless
terminated  by the  executive  officer  or the  Company  at the end of the  then
current term.  The terms of employment  provide for a base salary to each of the
Current Executive Officers of $143,000,  which includes $13,000 payable only out
of and to the  extent of  profits of the  Company  and was not paid in 1995.  In
addition,  the Current  Executive  Officers were entitled to bonuses in calendar
year 1995 of $41,800  payable  only in the event that the Company  achieved  the
minimum financial  covenants  established by the Company's principal lender. The
minimum financial  covenants were not achieved and these bonuses were not earned
in 1995. The Current Executive  Officers have been employed on these terms since
January 1, 1995. However, formal employment agreements have not been executed by
either the Company or any of its Current  Executive  Officers.  The parties have
agreed that the written  consulting  agreements  between each Current  Executive
Officer and the Company, to the extent not inconsistent with the terms described
in this paragraph,  will document the terms of employment.  The Company employed
the  Current  Executive  Officers  on the same terms for 1996,  except  that the
annual base salary was set at $157,300  with $27,300  payable only out of and to
the extent of profits of the  Company  for 1996.  Since the Company did not have
profits  in  1996,  the  $27,300  was not  earned.  However,  a bonus  equal  to
one-week's  base salary was paid. In addition,  the Current  Executive  Officers
were  entitled  to  bonuses  in 1996 of  $41,800  payable  only in the event the
Company achieved the minimum  financial  covenants  established by the Company's
principal lender. Since the minimum financial covenants were not achieved, these
bonuses were not earned in 1996.  However,  the Current Executive  Officers were
awarded a bonus of $10,000  for their  services  in 1996,  which will be paid in
1997.  Effective  November 29, 1995,  the Current  Executive  Officers were each
awarded an option to acquire  19,800  Common Shares of the Company at a purchase
price of $3.00 per share pursuant to the Management  Plan described  below.  The

                                       14

<PAGE>

Company has employed the Current  Executive  Officers for 1997 on the same terms
as set forth above, except that the annual base salary is set at $157,000,  with
$17,000 payable only out of and to the extent of profits of the Company for 1997
and a one week bonus  equal to one week's  base  salary.  To the extent that the
Company has pre-tax net income in 1997, each of the Current  Executive  Officers
will be  entitled  to a bonus  equal to 6.67% of  pre-tax  net  income,  up to a
maximum of $41,800 each. Each Current  Executive Officer is also entitled to one
year's base salary if he is terminated for any reason other than cause. In April
1997, each of the Current Executive Officers was granted an option to acquire up
to 30,000 Common Shares at $6.25 per share.

         The Company has not entered  into any  currently  effective  employment
agreements other than the employment agreements described above.

Insider Participation in Compensation Decisions

         The Company has no compensation  committee.  Compensation decisions are
made by the Board of  Directors.  Each of the  Current  Executive  Officers is a
member of the Board of Directors and participates in compensation decisions.

Stock Option Plans

         Effective  November 29, 1995,  the Company  adopted a Management  Stock
Option Plan  ("Management  Plan") and an Employee  Stock Option Plan  ("Employee
Plan").  Pursuant to the Management Plan, the Company has issued options to five
individuals  involved in the  management  of the Company to acquire up to 69,025
Common  Shares of the Company at a purchase  price of $3.00 per share subject to
vesting  requirements,  which  includes  the Company  obtaining  sales  during a
12-month  period of  $7,500,000  and an average  closing price for the Company's
Common Shares for a three-month period of $6.00, $9.00 and $12.00, respectively,
for each  one-third  of the options to vest.  The options  must vest by November
1998 and must be exercised within three years of vesting. The first one-third of
these  options  vested as of June 1, 1997.  Pursuant to the Employee  Plan,  the
Company has issued  options to acquire 13,500 Common Shares of the Company to 20
employees  of the  Company  at a  purchase  price of $3.00 per share  subject to
vesting  requirements,  which  include  the  Company  obtaining  sales  during a
12-month period of $7,500,000 and at least one year continued  employment  after
the grant of the  option.  The options  must vest by  November  1998 and must be
exercised within two years of vesting.  These options vested as of June 1, 1997.
Neither the Management Plan or the Employee Plan provide for any further options
to be issued.  In addition,  neither the Management Plan or the Employee Plan is
qualified for federal tax purposes or for purposes of Section 16 of the Exchange
Act.

         Other than the 1997 Omnibus  Stock  Option Plan  described  below,  the
Company has not adopted any other incentive stock option or stock award plan. No
options  were  granted  by the  Company  to any of its  officers,  directors  or
employees  during  fiscal years 1994 and 1996.  However,  the Company has in the
past paid  bonuses to certain key  employees  through  grants of Common  Shares.

                                       15

<PAGE>

During  calendar  year 1994,  the Company  granted  approximately  61,120 Common
Shares to key employees of or consultants to the Company as bonus  compensation.
(3,056,002  shares prior to the 50 to 1 reverse stock split  approved  March 29,
1995.)

         On April 2, 1997,  the Board of Directors  authorized and granted stock
options  to  key  employees  (including  the  Current  Executive  Officers)  and
directors providing for options to acquire an aggregate of 100,000 Common Shares
at a price of $6.25 per share.  Half of the options are  exercisable on April 2,
1998 and the remainder are exercisable  April 2,  1999. The  options  expire  on
April 2, 2000.

         On   May   8,   1997, the Board of Directors  adopted   the   Company's
1997  Omnibus  Stock  Option  Plan to enable the  Company to issue up to 100,000
Common  Shares  to  key  employees,   directors  and  consultants,   subject  to
shareholder  approval.  See  "Proposal  No. 4 -- Adoption of 1997 Omnibus  Stock
Option Plan."


                        TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES

         Except  as set  forth  below,  the  Company  has not  entered  into any
transactions with officers and directors of the Company or their affiliates that
may involve conflicts of interest or were other than arms' length transactions.

         During  1994,  the Company was a party to a Consulting  Agreement  with
Brimat International,  Inc., Lawrence Troyna and Peter Frohlich. Pursuant to the
agreement,  an annual  amount of  approximately  $130,000 was paid in consulting
fees by the Company to each of Brimat  International,  Inc., Lawrence Troyna and
Peter  Frohlich  during that fiscal  year.  Alan  Fields,  the  President of the
Company, is also President of Brimat International,  Inc., which is owned by his
father,  Leonard  Fields.  The  Consulting  Agreements  between  the Company and
Lawrence  Troyna,  Peter  Frohlich and Brimat,  Inc. were  terminated  effective
January 1, 1995 at which time the Company authorized  employment agreements with
each of Lawrence  Troyna,  Peter  Frohlich  and Alan Fields.  In addition,  Alan
Fields,  Lawrence  Troyna and Peter Frohlich  received stock and cash bonuses in
connection with the Consulting Agreements. See "Management Compensation."

         The  Company  paid  approximately  $27,700,  $40,650 and $32,533 (on an
estimated  average  conversion  rate of  $1.60  to each  British  Pound)  during
calendar  years  1994,  1995 and  1996,  respectively,  to  Belgravia  Financial
Services  Limited  for  rent,   telephone  and  medical  insurance  expenses  in
connection  with a sales office in London,  England during 1994,  1995 and 1996.
Amounts paid to Belgravia Financial Services Limited represent its actual costs,
except that Belgravia Financial Services Limited pays a portion of rent expenses
in London without  reimbursement  from the Company.  Peter Frohlich and Lawrence
Troyna are officers,  directors and shareholders of Belgravia Financial Services
Limited.

                                       16

<PAGE>

         During the three most recent full  fiscal  years,  the Company has paid
legal fees in the  aggregate  of  approximately  $64,000 to Carlos  Sedillo.  An
additional  $8,000 is owed to Mr. Sedillo for 1996 services but has not yet been
paid. Mr. Sedillo serves as General Counsel and Secretary of the Company, and is
also a director of the Company.  In April 1997, the Company  granted Mr. Sedillo
an option to acquire 2,000 Common Shares of the Company.


                                       17

<PAGE>

                                PROPOSAL NO. 2 --
                   INCREASE OF SHARES AUTHORIZED FOR ISSUANCE

         The Company's  shareholders are being asked to approve an increase from
2,000,000  to  5,000,000  in the  number of Common  Shares  that the  Company is
authorized  to issue,  by  amending  the first  sentence  of  Article  IV of the
Company's Articles of Incorporation to read as follows:

                  "Authorized  Shares.  The total  number  of  shares
                  of stock that the Corporation shall  have authority
                  to issue  is  5,000,000  Common  Shares, par  value
                  $.05 per share, and 50,000 Preferred Shares, $0.001
                  par value per share."

The Board of Directors has  unanimously  approved this proposal and recommends a
favorable vote to the shareholders.

         The current number of authorized Common Shares is not adequate to cover
existing commitments to issue Common Shares. In addition, the Board of Directors
believes it to be  desirable,  for the  flexibility  of the Company in financial
matters,  to have additional  Common Shares  available for issue in transactions
(i) to finance the Company's business  expansion,  (ii) to be used for potential
acquisitions, (iii) to take advantage of attractive business opportunities, (iv)
to raise additional  capital for the Company,  (v) to provide stock dividends to
shareholders in the discretion of the Board of Directors,  and (vi) to otherwise
further the Company's  purposes,  such as, but not limited to, stock splits, and
grants of stock options,  including the options  granted in 1997 and pursuant to
the 1997  Omnibus  Stock  Option Plan.  The  increase in shares  authorized  for
issuance is not being proposed in connection with any pending acquisition.

         If the amendment is adopted, the Board of Directors would be authorized
to issue the additional Common Shares in public or private  transactions without
further  shareholder  approval  unless  shareholder  approval is required  for a
particular  transaction  by  applicable  laws or  regulations.  The  rights  and
privileges of the additional Common Shares to be authorized will be identical to
the rights and privileges of the presently authorized Common Shares.

         The  Company's   financial   statements  and  related  information  are
incorporated  herein by reference to the Company's Form 10-KSB accompanying this
Proxy Statement.

                                       18

<PAGE>

                                PROPOSAL NO. 3 --
                        APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES
                         OF INCORPORATION TO PROVIDE FOR
                          STAGGERED TERMS OF DIRECTORS

         The Company's Bylaws  currently  provide that the term of each Director
shall begin immediately upon election and continue until the next annual meeting
of  shareholders  until a successor  shall have been elected or  qualified.  The
Company's  Shareholders are being asked to approve the amendment to Section VIII
of the  Company's  Articles  to add an  additional  paragraph,  as set  forth in
Exhibit A, that provides for staggered  terms of directors by dividing the Board
of Directors  into three groups,  designated as Class I, Class II and Class III.
Class I will initially  consist of two directors,  each to hold office until the
annual meeting of shareholders in 1998;  Class II will initially  consist of two
directors, each to hold office until the annual meeting of shareholders in 1999;
Class III will initially consist of two directors, each to hold office until the
annual meeting of shareholders in 2000; and in each case, until their successors
are duly elected or until their  earlier  resignation,  removal from office,  or
death.  Starting  with the 1998  annual  meeting  of  shareholders  one class of
directors would be elected for a three-year  term at each Annual  Meeting,  with
the  remaining  continuing  in office.  The  directors of each class would be as
follows:

         Class I               Class II                     Class III

         Carlos Sedillo        Lawrence J. Troyna           Peter Frohlich
         Mary Sprouse          Leonard Fields               Alan Fields


         A staggered  Board of Directors,  which prevents more than one-third of
the Board from being replaced at any one annual meeting, will help to assure the
continuity  and  stability of the  Company's  management  and  policies  since a
majority  of the  directors  will have  prior  experience  as  directors  of the
Company.

         The Board of  Directors  has  unanimously  approved  this  proposal and
recommends a favorable vote to the shareholders.

Purposes and Effects of Proposal No. 3

         The  purpose  of  Proposal  No.  3 is to  discourage  certain  types of
activity that involve an actual or threatened  change in control of the Company.
Proposal  No. 3 is  designed to make it more  difficult  and time  consuming  to
change majority control of the Board and thereby reduce the vulnerability of the
Company to an unsolicited  proposal for a takeover that does not contemplate the
acquisition  of  all of  the  Company's  outstanding  shares  or an  unsolicited
proposal for the  restructuring  or sale of all or part of the Company.  As more
fully  discussed  herein,  the Board  believes  that,  as a general  rule,  such
takeover  proposals  are  not in the  best  interests  of the  Company  and  its
shareholders.

                                       19

<PAGE>


         There has been a recent trend toward the  accumulation  of  substantial
stock positions in public  companies by third parties with a view toward using a
control  block of stock to force a merger,  consolidation,  restructuring  or to
force a corporation  to  repurchase a control block of stock at a premium.  Such
actions are taken without advance notice to, or consultation  with, the board of
directors or management of the  corporation.  In many cases,  such third parties
seek representation on the corporation's board of directors in order to increase
the likelihood  that their  proposals will be  implemented.  If the  corporation
resists their efforts to obtain  representation on the corporation's board, such
parties may commence proxy contests to have themselves or their nominees elected
to the board of directors in place of certain  directors or the entire board. In
some  cases,  the  third  party  may  not  be  interested  in  taking  over  the
corporation,  but uses the threat of a proxy fight or  takeover  bid as means of
forcing the corporation to repurchase its holdings at a substantial premium over
market price.

         The  Board  believes  that  the  threat  of  removal  of the  Company's
management in such situations  would curtail  management's  ability to negotiate
effectively with such  purchasers.  Management would be deprived of the time and
information  necessary to evaluate the takeover  proposal,  to study alternative
proposals and to help ensure that the best price is obtained in any  transaction
involving the Company that may ultimately be undertaken.

         Proposal  No. 3 would  have the effect of making it more  difficult  to
change the  composition  of the Board.  A staggered  Board upon which  directors
serve  three-year  terms  requires at least two annual  shareholder  meetings in
order to  effect a change in  control  in the  Board.  At  present,  a change in
control of the Board could be effected in one shareholder meeting.

         By stabilizing the composition of the Board, Proposal No. 3 is designed
to  encourage  any person who might  seek to acquire  control of the  Company to
consult  with the  Company's  Board and to  negotiate  the terms of any proposed
business  combination  or tender  offer.  The Board  believes  that any takeover
attempt or  business  combination  in which the  Company is  involved  should be
thoroughly studied by the Company's  management and its Board to assure that all
of the Company's shareholders are treated fairly.

         Takeovers or changes in management of the Company that are proposed and
effected without prior consultation and negotiation with the Company's Board and
management   may  not   necessarily  be  detrimental  to  the  Company  and  its
shareholders.  The  adoption of Proposal  No. 3 could  discourage  or  frustrate
future  attempts to acquire  control of the Company that are not approved by the
incumbent  Board,  but which a majority of shareholders  may deem to be in their
best  interests.  One of the  effects  of  Proposal  No. 3 may be to  discourage
prospective  acquirors  from making tender offers for, or open market  purchases
of, shares of the Company's Common Shares.  Because tender offers are often made
at a premium above market  price,  and large  purchases  made in the open market
often  result in  temporary  fluctuations  in the market  price of such  shares,
shareholders  may be denied the  opportunity  to sell their  shares at prices in
excess of historic  market  prices if the proposed  amendments  discourage  such
tender offers or open market  purchases.  Proposal No. 3 if adopted,  could also
delay or frustrate the assumption of control by a holder of a large block of the

                                       20

<PAGE>

Company's  shares or the removal of incumbent  directors,  even if  shareholders
considered  such  event to be  beneficial.  However,  the Board  feels  that the
benefits of seeking to protect its ability to negotiate with the proponent of an
unfriendly  or  unsolicited  proposal  to take over or  restructure  the Company
outweigh the disadvantages of discouraging such proposals.

                                       21

<PAGE>

                                PROPOSAL NO. 4 --
                   ADOPTION OF 1997 OMNIBUS STOCK OPTION PLAN

         The  Company's  shareholders  are being asked to approve the  Company's
1997 Omnibus  Stock Option Plan (the  "Plan").  The Plan is set forth in full as
Exhibit B to this proxy statement and is incorporated herein by reference.

         The Plan,  which was approved by the Board of Directors on May 8, 1997,
is designed to enable the Company to offer certain of its  officers,  employees,
directors and  consultants  options to acquire  equity  interests in the Company
thereby attracting,  retaining, and rewarding such persons and strengthening the
mutuality of interests between such persons and the Company's shareholders.  The
effectiveness  of the Plan is subject to the approval of the  shareholders,  and
upon approval,  100,000  Common Shares will become  available for issuance under
the Plan.

Administration

         The Plan is to be  administered by the Company's Board of Directors and
the Board may delegate  responsibility  to a committee  comprised of two or more
members of the Board in  compliance  with Rule 16b-3 under the  Exchange Act (in
either case, the "Administrator").

         The  Administrator,  subject  to the  provisions  of the Plan,  has the
authority  to  determine  and  designate  officers,  employees,   directors  and
consultants  to whom  options  shall be awarded  and the terms,  conditions  and
restrictions  applicable  to each  option  (including,  but not  limited to, the
number of options,  the option price, the term of the option, any restriction or
limitation  affecting the exercisability of such option, any vesting schedule of
such option and any forfeiture  restrictions,  which restrictions or limitations
may be waived by the Administrator in its sole discretion).

Types of Awards

         The  terms of  options  granted  under the Plan are  determined  by the
Administrator.  The  Administrator  determines the eligible  recipients,  option
price, the expiration date of the option (provided that no option is exercisable
more than 10 years after the date the option is  granted),  the number of Common
Shares to which the option pertains,  any conditions relating to the exercise of
the option and such other terms and conditions as the Administrator, in its sole
discretion,  shall determine.  The  Administrator  will also specify whether the
option is  intended  to be an  incentive  stock  option  ("ISO"),  eligible  for
preferential  tax treatment  under  Section 422 of the Code, or a  non-qualified
stock option.

         The option  price per Common  Share  purchasable  upon  exercise  of an
option shall be determined by the Administrator at the time of grant. The option
price for ISOs may not be less than the fair market  value of the Common  Shares
on the date of grant. The option price for  non-qualified  stock options may not
be less than 85% of the fair  market  value of the Common  Shares on the date of

                                       22

<PAGE>

grant.  The option exercise price may be paid (i) in cash or by check payable to
the Company, (ii) to the extent determined by the Administrator,  in the form of
Common Shares duly owned by the  participant  (and for which the participant has
good title free and clear of any liens and  encumbrances) or (iii) to the extent
determined  by the  Administrator,  by reduction in the number of Common  Shares
issuable upon such  exercise,  based,  in each case, on the fair market value of
the Common Shares on the last  business day  preceding  the date of exercise.  A
participant  is not  deemed to be the  holder of Common  Shares,  or to have the
rights of a holder of Common Shares, with respect to Common Shares subject to an
option,  unless and until a stock  certificate  representing  the Common  Shares
subject to an option is issued to the participant.

         The term of each option shall be fixed by the Administrator at the time
of grant,  but no option shall be exercisable  more than 10 years after the date
it is granted.

         Unless otherwise  determined by the Administrator,  in the event that a
participant's  employment  with, or services as a director of or consultant  to,
the Company and all its  subsidiaries  terminates  by reason of the death of the
participant,  any option held by such participant  exercisable as of the date of
death may be exercised by the legal representative of the participant's  estate.
Such option shall be exercisable until the earlier of one year after the date of
death  or  until  the  expiration  of the  term  of  such  option.  Options  not
exercisable on the date of death shall be forfeited.

         Unless otherwise  determined by the Administrator,  in the event that a
participant's  employment  with, or services as a director of or consultant  to,
the Company and all its  subsidiaries  terminates by reason of the disability of
the participant,  any option held by the participant that was exercisable on the
date of such  termination of employment  may  thereafter be exercised  until the
earlier of one year after the date of such  termination  or until the expiration
of such option,  and any option not  exercisable  on the date of  termination of
employment  shall be  forfeited.  If the  participant  dies  during the one year
period,  any  unexercised  options held by the  participant  may  thereafter  be
exercised  by the legal  representative  of the  participant's  estate until the
earlier of one year after the date of death or until the  expiration of the term
of such option.  If an ISO is  exercised  after the  expiration  of the exercise
period that applies for purposes of Section 422 of the Code, such option will be
treated as a non-qualified option.

         Unless otherwise  determined by the  Administrator,  if a participant's
employment  with, or services as a director of or consultant to, the Company and
all of its  subsidiaries  terminates  for  retirement  or any reason  other than
death,  disability or termination for cause,  any option that was exercisable on
the date of such  termination  may be exercised  within a period of three months
from the date of  termination or until the expiration of the stated term of such
option,  whichever period is shorter, and any option not exercisable on the date
of termination of employment shall be forfeited.

         In the  event of a  termination  for  cause,  any  option  that was not
exercised prior to the date of such termination shall be forfeited.

                                       23

<PAGE>

         In the event of a Change of Control (as defined below), all outstanding
options  will  immediately  become  fully  exercisable,  and upon payment by the
participant of the option  exercise price,  and, if requested by the Company,  a
representation  in writing that the  participant  is acquiring the Common Shares
without a view to distribution  thereof,  a stock  certificate  representing the
Common Shares covered thereby will be issued and delivered to the participant. A
"Change of Control" means the occurrence of any of the following events: (i) the
reorganization,  merger or consolidation of the Company,  (ii) the Company sells
substantially  all of its assets to a purchaser  or (iii) shares of stock of the
Company  representing in excess of 50% of the total combined voting power of all
outstanding classes of stock of the Company are acquired,  in one transaction or
a series of transactions,  by a single purchaser or group of related purchasers,
in any case,  other than a transaction in which the Company or any subsidiary of
the Company is the surviving corporation or the purchaser.

Eligibility

         Officers and other employees of the Company and its  subsidiaries,  and
directors of and consultants for the Company and its  subsidiaries  are eligible
to be granted stock  options under the Plan.  Directors who are not employees of
the  Company  or one of its  subsidiaries  may not be  granted  incentive  stock
options. At present, no options have been granted under the Plan.

Shares Subject to the Plan

         The Plan provides for the issuance of options to purchase up to 100,000
Common Shares.  Common Shares to be issued may be either authorized and unissued
shares or issued Common  Shares  reacquired by the Company and held in treasury.
The maximum  number of Common  Shares  which may be issued  under the Plan,  the
maximum  number of Common Shares with respect to which options may be granted to
any  individual  during any year,  and the  number  and option  prices of Common
Shares subject to outstanding  options are subject to adjustment in the event of
a merger, reorganization, consolidation,  recapitalization, dividend (other than
a regular cash dividend),  stock split,  or other change in corporate  structure
affecting  the Common  Shares.  Common  Shares  subject to options  that expire,
terminate,  or are  cancelled  without  being  exercised in full may be reissued
under the Plan.

Federal Income Tax Consequences

         The federal  income tax  discussion  set forth  below is  intended  for
general  information  only.  State and local  income  tax  consequences  are not
discussed, and may vary from locality to locality.

         Non-Qualified  Stock Options.  Under present Treasury  regulations,  an
optionee who is granted a  non-qualified  stock option does not realize  taxable
income at the time the option is granted.  In general, an optionee is subject to
tax in the year of exercise on an amount of ordinary  income equal to the excess
of the fair market  value of the shares on the date of exercise  over the option
price,  and  the  Company  receives  a  corresponding   deduction.   Income  tax

                                       24

<PAGE>

withholding requirements apply upon exercise. The optionee's basis in the shares
so acquired is equal to the option price plus the amount of ordinary income upon
which he is taxed.  Upon  subsequent  disposition  of the shares,  the  optionee
realizes  capital gain or loss,  long-term  or  short-term,  depending  upon the
length of time the shares are held after the option is exercised.

         Incentive  Stock  Options.  An  optionee  is not  taxed  at the time an
incentive stock option is granted.  The tax consequences upon exercise and later
disposition depend upon whether the optionee was an employee of the Company or a
subsidiary  at all times from the date of grant until three  months (one year in
the case of permanent and total  disability)  (or the estate of such an employee
(the "employee's  estate")) preceding exercise and on whether the optionee holds
the shares for more than one year after exercise and two years after the date of
grant of the option (the "holding rule").

         If the  optionee  satisfies  both the  employment  rule and the holding
rule,  for regular  tax  purposes  the  optionee  does not  realize  income upon
exercise of the option and the Company is not allowed an income tax deduction at
any time. The difference  between the option price and the amount  realized upon
disposition of the shares by the optionee  constitutes a long-term  capital gain
or a long-term capital loss, as the case may be.

         If the  optionee  meets the  employment  rule but fails to observe  the
holding rule (a "disqualifying disposition"),  the optionee generally recognizes
as ordinary income, in the year of the disqualifying disposition,  the excess of
the fair  market  value of the  shares at the date of  exercise  over the option
price.  Any excess of the sales price over the fair market  value at the date of
exercise is recognized by the optionee as capital gain  (long-term or short-term
depending  on the  length  of time the  stock  was held  after  the  option  was
exercised).  If, however,  the sales price is less than the fair market value at
the date of exercise,  then the ordinary  income  recognized  by the optionee is
generally  limited to the excess of the sales  price over the option  price.  In
both  situations,  the  Company's  tax  deduction  is  limited  to the amount of
ordinary  income  recognized by the optionee.  Under  current  Internal  Revenue
Service  guidelines,  the Company is not required to withhold any federal income
tax in the event of a disqualifying disposition.

         Different  consequences apply for optionees who pay the option price in
whole or in part in the form of Common Shares and for  optionees  subject to the
alternative minimum tax.

         Withholding.  The  Company has the right to reduce the number of Common
Shares  deliverable  pursuant  to the Plan by an amount  which has a fair market
value equal to the amount of all  federal,  state or local taxes to be withheld,
or to deduct the amount of such taxes from any cash payment otherwise to be made
to the participant.

                                       25

<PAGE>

Termination or Amendment

         Unless sooner terminated as provided below, the Plan shall terminate 10
years  after  its  effective  date and no  options  may be  granted  thereafter.
Termination  of  the  Plan  will  not  affect  options  granted  prior  to  such
termination.

         The Board of Directors may at any time amend,  discontinue or terminate
the Plan or any part thereof; provided, however, that, unless otherwise required
by law, the rights of a  participant  with respect to options  granted  prior to
such amendment,  discontinuance  or termination may not be impaired  without the
consent of such participant and,  provided  further,  that the Company will seek
shareholder approval for any amendment,  if necessary,  to comply with the Code,
Federal or state securities law or any other applicable rules or regulations.

         The  Administrator  may  amend  the  terms of any  outstanding  option,
prospectively or  retroactively,  provided that no such amendment may impair the
rights of any holder without the holder's consent.

Approval of the Plan

         The Plan will become effective,  assuming the existence of a quorum, if
the number of votes cast for  approval  of the Plan  exceeds the number of votes
cast against  approval.  The Board of Directors  has  unanimously  approved this
proposal and recommends a favorable vote to shareholders.


                                       26

<PAGE>


                                PROPOSAL NO. 5 --
               RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

         The  Board  has  appointed  Moore  Stephens  Frazer  &  Torbet,   Inc.,
independent  certified public accountants,  as auditors to examine the financial
statements  of the  Company  for Fiscal  1997 and to perform  other  appropriate
accounting  services and is requesting  ratification of such  appointment by the
stockholders.  Moore Stephens Frazer & Torbet,  Inc. has served as the Company's
auditors since 1991.

         A representative of Moore Stephens Frazer & Torbet, Inc. is expected to
attend the Annual Meeting and will have an opportunity to make a statement if he
desires to do so and to respond to appropriate questions.

         The Board of  Directors  has  unanimously  approved  this  proposal and
recommends a favorable vote to the shareholders.

         In the event that the  shareholders  do not ratify the  appointment  of
Moore Stephens  Frazer & Torbet,  Inc., the adverse vote will be considered as a
direction to the Board to select other auditors for the next fiscal year.

         It is understood  that even if the selection of Moore Stephens Frazer &
Torbet,  Inc.  is  ratified,  the  Board,  in its  discretion,  may  direct  the
appointment of a new independent  accounting firm at any time during the year if
the Board feels that such a change would be in the best interests of the Company
and its shareholders.


                      COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(a) OF THE
                         SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

         Section  16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934  requires  the
Company's  directors,  and persons who own more than ten percent of a registered
class of the  Company's  equity  securities,  to file reports of  ownership  and
changes  in  ownership  with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  and the
National Association of Securities Dealers. Officers, directors and greater than
ten-percent  shareholders  are required by  Securities  and Exchange  Commission
regulations  to furnish the Company with copies of all Section  16(a) forms they
file.  Based  solely on a review of the  copies of such forms  furnished  to the
Company  between  January 1, 1996 and  December 31,  1996,  on year-end  reports
furnished to the Company after December 31, 1996 and on representations  that no
other reports were  required,  the Company has  determined  that during the last
fiscal year all applicable 16(a) filing requirements were met except as follows:

         McDonnell Douglas Corporation filed a Form 3 on May 31, 1996, reporting
a beneficial  ownership in the Company.  The Form 3 should have been filed on or
before April 27, 1996.

                                       27


<PAGE>


         Alan Fields filed a Form 4 on August  12, 1996, reporting  the purchase
of 100 Common  Shares of the Company  during  July 1996.  The Form 4 should have
been filed on or before August 10, 1996.

                              SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

         Shareholders   may  submit   proposals  on  matters   appropriate   for
shareholder action at the Company's annual meetings  consistent with regulations
adopted by the SEC. For such  proposals to be  considered  for  inclusion in the
proxy statement and form of proxy relating to the 1998 annual meeting, they must
be received by the Company not later than January 5, 1998. Such proposals should
be  addressed  to the Company at 341-A Ward  Avenue,  Fillmore,  CA 93015- 1931,
Attention: Alan M. Fields.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

         Management does not intend to present, and has no information as of the
date of  preparation  of this Proxy  Statement  that  others will  present,  any
business  at the  Annual  Meeting  other  than  business  pertaining  to matters
required to be set forth in the Notice of Annual  Meeting  and Proxy  Statement.
However,  if other matters requiring the vote of the shareholders  properly come
before the Annual  Meeting,  it is the  intention  of the  persons  named in the
enclosed  proxy to vote the proxies held by them in  accordance  with their best
judgment on such matters.

         A COPY  OF THE  COMPANY'S  ANNUAL REPORT  ON FORM 10-KSB FOR THE FISCAL
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996, FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
IS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE IN THIS PROXY STATEMENT AND IS BEING DELIVERED WITH
THIS PROXY  STATEMENT.  COPIES OF EXHIBITS TO SUCH FORM 10-KSB WILL BE AVAILABLE
UPON WRITTEN REQUEST FOR A REASONABLE FEE. DIRECT YOUR WRITTEN REQUEST TO FIELDS
AIRCRAFT SPARES,  INC., 2251-A WARD AVENUE,  SIMI VALLEY,  CA 93065,  ATTENTION:
ALAN M. FIELDS; PHONE: (805) 583-0800.

                                       28

<PAGE>

                                    EXHIBIT A

                     AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
                         PROVIDING FOR A STAGGERED BOARD

         Article  VIII of the  Articles  of  Incorporation  shall be  amended by
adding the following as the second paragraph:

                  The directors shall be divided into three classes,  designated
         Class I, Class II, and Class III. Each class shall  consist,  as nearly
         as may be  possible,  of  one-third  of the total  number of  directors
         constituting  the entire  Board of  Directors.  The term of the initial
         Class I  directors  shall  terminate  on the  date of the  1998  annual
         meeting of  shareholders;  the term of the initial  Class II  directors
         shall terminate on the date of the 1999 annual meeting of shareholders;
         and the term of the initial Class III directors  shall terminate on the
         date of the 2000 annual meeting of shareholders. At each annual meeting
         of shareholders beginning in 1998, successors to the class of directors
         whose  term  expires at that  annual  meeting  shall be  elected  for a
         three-year term. If the number of directors is changed, any increase or
         decrease shall be  apportioned  among the classes so as to maintain the
         number of directors  in each class as nearly equal as possible,  but in
         no case will a decrease in the number of directors  shorten the term of
         any incumbent  director.  A director shall hold office until the annual
         meeting for the year in which his or her term  expires and until his or
         her successor shall be elected and shall qualify,  subject, however, to
         prior death,  resignation  or removal  from office.  Any vacancy on the
         Board of  Directors  that  results  from an  increase  in the number of
         directors may be filled by a majority of the Board of Directors then in
         office,  provided  that a quorum  is  present,  and any  other  vacancy
         occurring in the Board of Directors  may be filled by a majority of the
         directors  then in  office,  even if less than a  quorum,  or by a sole
         remaining director. Any director of any class elected to fill a vacancy
         resulting  from an  increase in such class shall hold office for a term
         that shall coincide with the remaining term of that class. Any director
         elected to fill a vacancy not resulting  from an increase in the number
         of  directors  shall  have  the  same  remaining  term  as  his  or her
         predecessor.

                                                      A-1

<PAGE>


                                    EXHIBIT B

                         1997 OMNIBUS STOCK OPTION PLAN


                          FIELDS AIRCRAFT SPARES, INC.

                         1997 OMNIBUS STOCK OPTION PLAN



                                    ARTICLE I

                                     Purpose

                  The purpose of the 1997 Omnibus Stock Option Plan (the "Plan")
is to enable Fields Aircraft  Spares,  Inc., a Utah corporation (the "Company"),
to offer to certain  of its  officers,  employees,  directors,  and  consultants
options  to  acquire  equity  interests  in  the  Company,  thereby  attracting,
retaining,  and  rewarding  such  persons,  and  strengthening  the mutuality of
interests between such persons and the Company's shareholders.


                                   ARTICLE II

                                   Definitions

                 For purposes of the Plan, the  following terms  shall  have the
following meanings:

                 2.1  "Administrator"  shall mean the Board or, if the Board has
delegated its responsibility to administer the Plan pursuant to Section 3.1, the
committee of the Board to which such responsibility has been delegated.

                 2.2  "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company.

                 2.3  "Change of Control" shall  mean the  occurrence of any one
of the following: (i) a reorganization, merger, or consolidation of the Company,
(ii) the Company  sells  substantially  all its assets to a purchaser,  or (iii)
shares  of stock of the  Company  representing  in  excess  of 50% of the  total
combined  voting  power of all  outstanding  classes of stock of the Company are
acquired, in one transaction or a series of transactions,  by a single purchaser

                                      B-1

<PAGE>

or group of related  purchasers in any case other than in a transaction in which
the Company or a subsidiary of the Company is the surviving  corporation  or the
purchaser.

                 2.4       "Code" shall mean  the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended.

                 2.5       "Common   Stock"  shall  mean the common  stock, $.05
par value per share, of the Company.

                 2.6       "Disability" shall mean a disability that results  in
a  Participant's  Termination  of  Employment  with the Company,  as  determined
pursuant to standard Company procedures.

                 2.7       "Effective  Date" shall  mean the  date on  which the
Plan is adopted by the Board.

                 2.8 "Fair  Market  Value"  for  purposes  of the  Plan,  unless
otherwise  required by any applicable  provision of the Code or any  regulations
issued  thereunder,  shall mean, as of any date, the average of the high and low
sales  prices of a share of Common Stock as reported on the  principal  national
securities  exchange on which the Common Stock is listed or admitted to trading,
or, if not listed or traded on any such exchange,  on the Nasdaq SmallCap Market
("Nasdaq"),  or, if such sales prices are not available,  the average of the bid
and asked prices per share  reported on Nasdaq,  or, if such  quotations are not
available, the fair market value as determined by the Board, which determination
shall be conclusive.

                 2.9  "Incentive  Stock Option" shall mean any Stock Option that
is intended to be and is designated as an  "incentive  stock option"  within the
meaning of Section 422 of the Code.

                 2.10  "Non-Qualified Stock Option" shall mean any  Stock Option
that is not an Incentive Stock Option.

                 2.11 "Participant" shall mean an officer, employee, director or
consultant to whom an Option has been granted under the Plan.

                 2.12  "Stock  Option"  or  "Option"  shall  mean any  option to
purchase shares of Common Stock granted pursuant to Article VI of the Plan.

                 2.13  "Termination  for  Cause"  shall  mean a  Termination  of
Employment  that has been  designated as a "termination  for cause"  pursuant to
standard Company procedures.


                                       B-2

<PAGE>

                 2.14  "Termination  of Employment"  shall mean, as appropriate,
(a) the  termination  of a  Participant's  employment  with the  Company and its
subsidiaries  for reasons  other than a military  or  personal  leave of absence
granted  by  the  Company,   (b)  termination  of  a  Participant's   consulting
relationship with the Company or (c) termination of a Participant's service as a
member of the Board.


                                   ARTICLE III

                                 Administration

                 3.1 The Administrator.  The  Plan  shall  be  administered  and
interpreted by the Board;  provided,  however,  that the Board may delegate this
responsibility to a committee comprised of two or more members of the Board.

                 3.2 Awards.  The  Administrator  shall have full  authority  to
grant,  pursuant  to the terms of the Plan,  Stock  Options to persons  eligible
under Article V. In particular, the Administrator shall have the authority:

                           (a)      to select the officers, employees, directors
and consultants to whom Stock Options may from time to time be granted;

                           (b)      to  determine  whether  and  to what  extent
Stock Options are to be granted to one or more  officers,  employees,  directors
and consultants eligible to receive Options under Article V;

                           (c)      to determine  the   number   of  shares   of
Common Stock to be covered by each Option granted pursuant to Article VI; and

                           (d)      to   determine  the  terms  and  conditions,
not inconsistent with the terms of the Plan, of any Option granted under Article
VI  (including,  but  not  limited  to,  the  option  price,  the  option  term,
installment exercise or waiting period provisions and provisions relating to the
waiver or acceleration thereof).

                 3.3   Guidelines.   Subject  to   Article   VII   hereof,   the
Administrator  shall  have  the  authority  to  adopt,  alter  and  repeal  such
administrative  rules,  guidelines and practices governing the Plan as it shall,
from time to time, deem advisable;  to interpret the terms and provisions of the
Plan and any  Option  granted  under  the  Plan  (and  any  agreements  relating
thereto);  and to  otherwise  supervise  the  administration  of the  Plan.  The
Administrator  may correct  any defect,  supply any  omission or  reconcile  any
inconsistency  in the Plan or in any  Option in the  manner and to the extent it

                                      B-3

<PAGE>

shall  deem  necessary  to  carry  the Plan  into  effect.  Notwithstanding  the
foregoing,  no action of the  Administrator  under this Section 3.3 shall impair
the  rights  of  any  Participant  without  the  Participant's  consent,  unless
otherwise required by law.

                 3.4       Decisions   Final.   Any   decision,   interpretation
or other action made or taken in good faith by the Administrator  arising out of
or in  connection  with the Plan shall be final,  binding and  conclusive on the
Company,  all  officers,   employees,   directors  and  consultants,  and  their
respective heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns.


                                   ARTICLE IV

                                Share Limitation

                 4.1 Shares.  The maximum  aggregate  number of shares of Common
Stock  that may be issued  under the Plan is 100,000  (subject  to  increase  or
decrease  pursuant to Section 4.2), which may be either  authorized and unissued
shares of Common Stock or issued Common Stock reacquired by the Company.  If any
Option  granted under the Plan shall  expire,  terminate or be cancelled for any
reason without  having been exercised in full, the number of unpurchased  shares
shall again be available for the purposes of the Plan.

                 4.2  Changes.  In  the  event  of any  merger,  reorganization,
consolidation,  recapitalization, dividend (other than a regular cash dividend),
stock split, or other change in corporate  structure affecting the Common Stock,
such substitution or adjustment shall be made in the maximum aggregate number of
shares  which may be issued  under the Plan,  the maximum  number of shares with
respect to which Options may be granted to any  individual  during any year, and
the number and option price of shares subject to outstanding  Options, as may be
determined to be appropriate by the Board, in its sole discretion, provided that
the number of shares subject to any Option shall always be a whole number.


                                    ARTICLE V

                                   Eligibility

                 5.1 Employees.  Officers and other employees of the Company and
its  subsidiaries  are eligible to be granted both  Incentive  Stock Options and
Non-Qualified Stock Options under the Plan.


                                       B-4

<PAGE>

                 5.2 Directors and Consultants. Directors and consultants of the
Company and its  subsidiaries  are  eligible to be granted  Non-Qualified  Stock
Options,  but may not receive  Incentive Stock Options unless they are employees
of the Company or a subsidiary  corporation within the meaning of Section 424 of
the Code.


                                   ARTICLE VI

                             Grant of Stock Options

                 6.1 Grants. The Administrator shall have the authority to grant
to any person,  to the extent  eligible  under Article V, one or more  Incentive
Stock Options,  Non-Qualified  Stock Options, or both types of Stock Options. To
the extent that any Stock Option does not qualify as an  Incentive  Stock Option
(whether  because of its  provisions  or the time or manner of its  exercise  or
otherwise),  such Stock Option or the portion  thereof which does not qualify as
an  Incentive  Stock  Option shall  constitute  a separate  Non-Qualified  Stock
Option.

                 6.2  Incentive  Stock  Options.  Anything  in the  Plan  to the
contrary  notwithstanding,  no term of this Plan  relating  to  Incentive  Stock
Options shall be  interpreted,  amended or altered,  nor shall any discretion or
authority  granted  under the Plan be exercised,  so as to  disqualify  the Plan
under  Section 422 of the Code,  or,  without  the  consent of the  Participants
affected, to disqualify any Incentive Stock Option under such Section 422 of the
Code.

                 6.3 Terms of Options.  Options  granted under the Plan shall be
subject to the following  terms and conditions and shall contain such additional
terms and  conditions,  not  inconsistent  with the  terms of the  Plan,  as the
Administrator shall deem desirable:

                           (a)      Stock   Option   Certificate.    Each  Stock
Option  shall be  evidenced  by,  and  subject  to the terms of, a Stock  Option
Certificate  executed by the Company. The Stock Option Certificate shall specify
whether  the  Option is an  Incentive  Stock  Option or a Non-  Qualified  Stock
Option,  the number of shares of Common Stock subject to the Stock  Option,  the
option price, the option term, and the other terms and conditions  applicable to
the Stock Option.

                           (b)      Option  Price. The  option  price  per share
of Common Stock  purchasable upon exercise of a Stock Option shall be determined
by the  Administrator  at the time of grant,  but shall not be less than 100% of
the Fair  Market  Value of a share of  Common  Stock on the date the  Option  is
granted if the Stock  Option is intended  to be an  Incentive  Stock  Option and
shall not be less than 85% of the Fair Market  Value of the Common  Stock on the
date of grant if the  Stock  Option is  intended  to be an  Non-Qualified  Stock
Option.

                                       B-5

<PAGE>

                           (c)      Option   Term.   The   term  of  each  Stock
Option shall be fixed by the  Administrator  at the time of grant,  but no Stock
Option shall be exercisable more than ten years after the date it is granted.

                           (d)      Exercisability.   Stock   Options  shall  be
exercisable  at such time or times and subject to such terms and  conditions  as
shall be determined by the  Administrator  at the time of grant,  and subject to
Section  6.3(k);  provided,  however,  that  the  Administrator  may  waive  any
installment  exercise or waiting period provisions,  in whole or in part, at any
time after the date of grant,  based on such factors as the Administrator  shall
deem appropriate in its sole discretion.

                           (e)      Method   of   Exercise.    Subject  to  such
installment  exercise  and waiting  period  provisions  as may be imposed by the
Administrator,  Stock  Options may be  exercised in whole or in part at any time
during the option term by delivering to the Company  written  notice of exercise
specifying  the  number  of  shares  of  Common  Stock to be  purchased  and the
aggregate option price therefor.  The notice of exercise shall be accompanied by
payment in full of the option price and, if  requested  by the  Company,  by the
representation described in Section 9.2. Payment of the option price may be made
(i) in cash or by check payable to the Company, (ii) to the extent determined by
the  Administrator on or after the date of grant, in shares of Common Stock duly
owned by the Participant (and for which the Participant has good title, free and
clear of any liens and  encumbrances),  or (iii) to the extent determined by the
Administrator  on or after  the date of grant,  by  reduction  in the  number of
shares of Common Stock issuable upon such exercise,  based, in each case, on the
Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the last  business  day  preceding  the
date of exercise.  Upon payment in full of the option price and  satisfaction of
the other  conditions  provided  herein,  a stock  certificate  representing the
number of shares of Common Stock to which the  Participant  is entitled shall be
issued and delivered to the Participant.

                           (f)      Death.  Unless  otherwise determined  by the
Administrator  on or after  the date of grant,  in the event of a  Participant's
Termination  of  Employment  by reason of death,  any Stock  Option held by such
Participant  which  was  exercisable  on the date of  death  may  thereafter  be
exercised  by the legal  representative  of the  Participant's  estate until the
earlier of one year after the date of death or the expiration of the stated term
of such Stock Option,  and any Stock Option not exercisable on the date of death
shall be forfeited.

                           (g)      Disability.   Unless  otherwise   determined
by  the  Administrator  on or  after  the  date  of  grant,  in the  event  of a
Participant's  Termination  of  Employment  by reason of  Disability,  any Stock
Option  held  by such  Participant  that  was  exercisable  on the  date of such
Termination of Employment may thereafter be exercised by the  Participant  until
the earlier of one year after such date or the  expiration of the stated term of
such  Stock  Option,  and  any  Stock  Option  not  exercisable  on the  date of

                                      B-6

<PAGE>

Termination of Employment  shall be forfeited.  If the  Participant  dies during
such one-year period,  any unexercised  Stock Options held by the Participant at
the time of death may thereafter be exercised by the legal representative of the
Participant's  estate  until  the  earlier  of one  year  after  the date of the
Participant's  death or the  expiration of the option term of such Stock Option.
If an Incentive  Stock Option is exercised  after the expiration of the exercise
periods  that apply for  purposes of Section 422 of the Code,  such Stock Option
will thereafter be treated as a Non-Qualified Stock Option.

                           (h)      Termination    of     Employment.     Unless
otherwise  determined by the Administrator on or after the date of grant, in the
event of a  Participant's  Termination  of Employment by reason of retirement or
for any reason other than death, Disability, or Termination for Cause, any Stock
Option  exercisable on the date of such  Termination of Employment  shall become
fully exercisable,  and may thereafter be exercised by the Participant until the
earlier of three months after such date or the  expiration of the stated term of
such  Stock  Option,  and  any  Stock  Option  not  exercisable  on the  date of
Termination of Employment shall be forfeited.

                           (i)      Termination  for  Cause. In the event of   a
Termination for Cause,  any Share Option held by the  Participant  which was not
exercised prior to the date of such Termination for Cause shall be forfeited.

                           (j)      Change  of  Control.  In  the  event   of  a
Change of Control,  all outstanding Stock Options shall immediately become fully
exercisable,  and upon payment by the  Participant  of the option price (and, if
requested,  delivery of the  representation  described in Section  9.2), a stock
certificate  representing  the Common Stock covered  thereby shall be issued and
delivered to the Participant.

                           (k)      Non-Transferability of Options.   No   Stock
Option shall be  transferrable  by the Participant  otherwise than by will or by
the laws of descent and distribution, to the extent consistent with the terms of
the Plan and the Option, and all Stock Options shall be exercisable,  during the
Participant's lifetime, only by the Participant.

                           (l)      Incentive    Stock    Option    Limitations.
To the extent that the aggregate Fair Market Value (determined as of the date of
grant) of the Common Stock with  respect to which  Incentive  Stock  Options are
exercisable for the first time by the Participant during any calendar year under
the Plan and/or any other stock option plan of the Company or any  subsidiary or
parent  corporation  (within  the  meaning of Section  424 of the Code)  exceeds
$100,000,  the  exercisability of such Stock Options shall be deferred until the
following  calendar  year, or such Options shall be treated as Options which are
not Incentive Stock Options, as determined by the Board.

                                       B-7

<PAGE>

                                    Should  any  of  the   foregoing  provisions
not be  necessary in order for the Stock  Options to qualify as Incentive  Stock
Options,  or should any additional  provisions be required,  the Board may amend
the Plan  accordingly,  without the  necessity of obtaining  the approval of the
shareholders of the Company.

                           (m)      Ten-Percent         Shareholder        Rule.
Notwithstanding  any other  provision of the Plan to the contrary,  no Incentive
Stock Option shall be granted to any person who, immediately prior to the grant,
owns stock  possessing  more than ten percent of the total combined voting power
of all classes of stock of the Company or any  subsidiary or parent  corporation
(within the meaning of Section 424 of the Code),  unless the option  price is at
least 110% of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock on the date of grant and
the  Option,  by its terms,  expires no later than five years  after the date of
grant.

                 6.4       Rights  as Shareholder.  A Participant  shall  not be
deemed  to be the  holder  of Common  Stock,  or to have any of the  rights of a
holder of Common Stock, with respect to shares subject to an Option,  unless and
until the Option is exercised and a stock  certificate  representing such shares
of Common Stock is issued to the Participant.


                                   ARTICLE VII

                            Termination or Amendment

                 7.1       Termination   or   Amendment   of  Plan.   The  Board
may at any time amend,  discontinue  or  terminate  the Plan or any part thereof
(including any amendment  deemed necessary to ensure that the Company may comply
with any regulatory  requirement referred to in Article IX); provided,  however,
that, unless otherwise required by law, the rights of a Participant with respect
to Options  granted prior to such amendment,  discontinuance  or termination may
not be impaired without the consent of such Participant and,  provided  further,
that the Company will seek the approval of the  Company's  shareholders  for any
amendment  if such  approval is  necessary  to comply with the Code,  Federal or
state securities law or any other applicable rules or regulations.

                 7.2       Amendment  of Options.  The Board may amend the terms
of any Option previously granted,  prospectively or retroactively,  but, subject
to Article IV, no such  amendment  or other action by the Board shall impair the
rights of any holder without the holder's consent.


                                       B-8

<PAGE>

                                  ARTICLE VIII

                                  Unfunded Plan

                 8.1       Unfunded  Status.  The Plan is intended to constitute
an "unfunded" plan for incentive  compensation.  With respect to any payment not
yet made to a Participant by the Company,  nothing  contained  herein shall give
any such  Participant  any  rights  that are  greater  than  those of a  general
creditor of the Company.


                                   ARTICLE IX

                               General Provisions

                 9.1       Nonassignment.  Except  as  otherwise   provided   in
the Plan, any Option granted  hereunder and the rights and privileges  conferred
thereby may not be sold, transferred,  assigned,  pledged or hypothecated in any
way  (whether by  operation  of law or  otherwise),  and shall not be subject to
execution,  attachment or similar process. Upon any attempt to transfer, assign,
pledge,  hypothecate  or  otherwise  dispose  of an Option,  right or  privilege
contrary to the provisions hereof, or upon the levy of any attachment or similar
process  thereon,  such Option and the rights and privileges  conferred  thereby
shall immediately terminate and the Option shall immediately be forfeited to the
Company.

                 9.2       Legend.  The  Company   may  require    each   person
acquiring  shares  upon  exercise  of an Option to  represent  to the Company in
writing  that the  Participant  is  acquiring  the shares  without a view to the
distribution  thereof.  The stock  certificates  representing  such  shares  may
include  any  legend  which  the  Company  deems   appropriate  to  reflect  any
restrictions on transfer.

                  All certificates representing shares of Common Stock delivered
under  the Plan  shall be  subject  to such  stock  transfer  orders  and  other
restrictions as the Company may deem advisable under the rules,  regulations and
other requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission, any stock exchange
or stock  market  upon which the  Common  Stock is then  listed or  traded,  any
applicable  Federal or state  securities law, and any applicable  corporate law,
and the Company may cause a legend or legends to be put on any such certificates
to make appropriate reference to such restrictions.

                 9.3       Other  Plans. Nothing  contained  in  the Plan  shall
prevent the Company from adopting other or additional compensation arrangements,
and such  arrangements may be either generally  applicable or applicable only in
specific cases.

                                                      B-9

<PAGE>

                 9.4       No Right to  Employment.  Neither  the Plan  nor  the
grant of any Option shall give any Participant or other employee,  consultant or
director  any right  with  respect  to  continuance  of  employment,  consulting
relationship  or  directorship,  as the case may be,  with  the  Company  or any
subsidiary, nor shall the Plan impose any limitation on the right of the Company
or  any   subsidiary  by  which  a  Participant   is  employed  to  terminate  a
Participant's  employment or consulting  relationship  at any time.  Neither the
Plan nor the grant of any Option  shall give any  director the right to continue
as a member of the Board or obligate  the Company to nominate  any  director for
reelection by the Company's shareholders.

                 9.5       Withholding  of Taxes.  The Company  shall  have  the
right to reduce the number of shares of Common Stock otherwise  deliverable upon
exercise of an Option by an amount that would have a Fair Market  Value equal to
the amount of all Federal,  state and local taxes required to be withheld, or to
deduct the amount of such taxes from any cash  payment  otherwise  to be made to
the  Participant,  pursuant to the Plan or otherwise.  In  connection  with such
withholding,  the Company may make such  arrangements as are consistent with the
Plan as it may deem appropriate.

                 9.6       Listing and Other Conditions.

                           (a)      If  the   Common   Stock  is  listed   on  a
national  securities  exchange or Nasdaq,  the  issuance of any shares of Common
Stock upon  exercise of an Option  shall be  conditioned  upon such shares being
listed on such exchange or Nasdaq. The Company shall have no obligation to issue
any shares of Common Stock  unless and until such shares are so listed,  and the
right to exercise  any Option  shall be  suspended  until such  listing has been
effected.

                           (b)      If  at  any  time   counsel  to the  Company
shall be of the opinion that any sale or delivery of shares of Common Stock upon
exercise  of an Option is or may in the  circumstances  be unlawful or result in
the  imposition of excise taxes under the statutes,  rules or regulations of any
applicable jurisdiction,  the Company shall have no obligation to make such sale
or  delivery,  or to make  any  application  or to  effect  or to  maintain  any
qualification or registration  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  or
otherwise  with respect to shares of Common  Stock or Options,  and the right to
exercise any Option shall be suspended  until,  in the opinion of such  counsel,
such sale or delivery  shall be lawful or shall not result in the  imposition of
excise taxes.

                           (c)      Upon    termination   of   any   period   of
suspension  under this Section 9.6, any Option affected by such suspension which
shall not then have expired or  terminated  shall be reinstated as to all shares
available  before such  suspension  and as to shares which would  otherwise have

                                      B-10

<PAGE>

become available  during the period of such  suspension,  but no such suspension
shall extend the term of any Option.

                 9.7       Governing    Law.    The  Plan  and   actions   taken
in connection  herewith  shall be governed and construed in accordance  with the
laws of the State of Colorado  without  regard to the conflict of law principles
thereof.

                 9.8       Construction.  Wherever  any  words  are  used in the
Plan in the  masculine  gender they shall be  construed as though they were also
used in the feminine gender in all cases where they would so apply, and wherever
any words are used herein in the singular form they shall be construed as though
they were also used in the plural form in all cases where they would so apply.

                 9.9       Liability  of the  Board.  No member of the Board nor
any employee of the Company or any of its  subsidiaries  shall be liable for any
act or action hereunder,  whether of omission or commission, by any other member
of the Board or employee or by any agent to whom duties in  connection  with the
administration  of the Plan  have been  delegated  or,  except in  circumstances
involving bad faith,  gross negligence or fraud, for anything done or omitted to
be done by himself.

                 9.10      Costs.  The Company shall bear all expenses  incurred
in administering the Plan,  including expenses related to the issuance of Common
Stock upon exercise of Options.

                 9.11      Severability.  If  any  part  of  the  Plan  shall be
determined to be invalid or void in any respect,  such  determination  shall not
affect, impair, invalidate or nullify the remaining provisions of the Plan which
shall continue in full force and effect.

                 9.12      Successors.  The Plan  shall  be  binding   upon  and
inure to the benefit of any successor or successors of the Company.

                 9.13      Headings. Article  and  section  headings   contained
in the  Plan  are  included  for  convenience  only  and  are  not to be used in
construing or interpreting the Plan.


                                      B-11

<PAGE>

                                    ARTICLE X

                                  Term of Plan

                  10.1     Effective  Date.  The Plan shall be  effective  as of
the  Effective  Date,  but the grant of any Option  hereunder  is subject to the
express  condition that the Plan be approved by the  shareholders of the Company
within 12 months after the Effective Date.

                  10.2     Termination    Date.    Unless   sooner   terminated,
the Plan shall  terminate ten years after the Effective  Date and no Options may
be granted thereafter.  Termination of the Plan shall not affect Options granted
before such date.


                                      B-12

<PAGE>

                          FIELDS AIRCRAFT SPARES, INC.
                               2251-A Ward Avenue
                              Simi Valley, CA 93065

                    PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                                 August 7, 1997

         The undersigned shareholder  of  Fields Aircraft  Spares, Inc., a  Utah
corporation (the "Company"), revoking all previous proxies, hereby appoints each
of Alan Fields and Peter Frohlich,  individually,  as proxy and attorney-in-fact
for the  undersigned  with full power of  substitution  to vote on behalf of the
undersigned at the Company's 1997 Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held on
August 7, 1997, and at any adjournment(s) or postponement(s) thereof, all of the
Common  Shares,  $.05 par  value,  of the  Company  standing  in the name of the
undersigned or which the undersigned may be entitled to vote as follows:

         THIS  PROXY,  WHEN  PROPERLY  EXECUTED,  WILL BE  VOTED  IN THE  MANNER
DIRECTED  HEREIN BY THE UNDERSIGNED  SHAREHOLDER.  IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS
PROXY  WILL BE VOTED  "FOR"  ITEMS 1, 2, 3, 4 AND 5. In  their  discretion,  the
proxies are  authorized  to vote upon such other  business as may properly  come
before the Annual Meeting or any adjournments or postponements  thereof,  hereby
revoking any proxy or proxies heretofore given by the undersigned.

         THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

1.       Election of Directors:

         Peter Frohlich             FOR  [ ]      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY  [ ]
         Alan M. Fields             FOR  [ ]      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY  [ ]
         Lawrence J. Troyna         FOR  [ ]      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY  [ ]
         Leonard I. Fields          FOR  [ ]      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY  [ ]
         Carlos Sedillo             FOR  [ ]      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY  [ ]
         Mary Sprouse               FOR  [ ]      WITHHOLD AUTHORITY  [ ]

2.       Increase in the number of the Company's  authorized Common  Shares from
         2,000,000 to 5,000,000 shares:

                            FOR [ ]     AGAINST [ ]     ABSTAIN [ ]

3.       Amend Articles of Incorporation  to  provide  for  staggered  terms  of
         directors:

                            FOR [ ]     AGAINST [ ]     ABSTAIN [ ]

4.       Approve the Company's 1997 Omnibus Stock Option Plan:

                            FOR [ ]     AGAINST [ ]     ABSTAIN [ ]

5.       Ratify the selection by the Board of Directors of Moore Stephens Frazer
         & Torbet, Inc. as  independent  auditors of  the Company  for the  1997
         fiscal year.
                            FOR [ ]     AGAINST [ ]     ABSTAIN [ ]

THE  UNDERSIGNED  HEREBY  ACKNOWLEDGES  RECEIPT OF THE NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING,
PROXY STATEMENT AND ANNUAL REPORT OF FIELDS AIRCRAFT SPARES, INC.

Dated:__________________, 1997


________________________        ________________________________________________
Signature of Shareholder        Print Name Exactly as shown on Share Certificate

________________________        ________________________________________________
Signature of Shareholder        Number of Shares

NOTE:  Please date and sign this Proxy exactly as the names appear hereon.  When
signing as  attorney-in-fact,  executor,  administrator,  trustee  or  guardian,
please add your title as such.  Proxies  executed  in the name of a  corporation
should be signed on behalf  of the  corporation  by a duly  authorized  officer.
Where  shares  are owned in the name of two or more  persons,  all such  persons
should sign.

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



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