ADVISORS SERIES TRUST
485APOS, 1997-09-19
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                                                            File No. 333-17391
                                                                     811-07959
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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              Washington, DC 20549


                                    FORM N-1A

            REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933        o
                          Pre-Effective Amendment No.                      o

   
                       Post-Effective Amendment No. 5                      x
    

               REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
                                  ACT OF 1940                              o

   
                               Amendment No. 7                             x
    

                              ADVISORS SERIES TRUST
               (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

                       4455 E. Camelback Road, Suite 261E
                                Phoenix, AZ 85018
              (Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)

       Registrant's Telephone Number (including area code): (602) 952-1100


                               ROBERT H. WADSWORTH
                              Advisors Series Trust
                       4455 E. Camelback Road, Suite 261E
                                Phoenix, AZ 85018
               (Name and address of agent for service of process)


Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering:  As soon as practicable  
after the effective date of the registration statement.

It is proposed that this filing will become effective  (check  appropriate box)

|_| Immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)

|_| On          pursuant to paragraph (b)

|_| 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)

|_| On             pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)

|X| 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)

|_| On             pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485

If appropriate, check the following box:

|_| this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
    previously filed post-effective amendment.
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         Pursuant  to Rule  24f-2  under  the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940,
Registrant has previously  elected to register an indefinite number of shares of
beneficial interest, $.001.

         The Registrant has not yet filed a 24f-2 Notice.
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<PAGE>

   
                 Preliminary Prospectus dated September 19, 1997
                              SUBJECT TO COMPLETION

A registration  statement  relating to these  securities has been filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission but has not yet become effective. Information
contained herein is subject to completion or amendment. These securities may not
be sold nor may  offers to buy be  accepted  prior to the time the  registration
statement  becomes  effective.  This prospectus shall not constitute an offer to
sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of these
securities in any  jurisdiction in which such offer,  solicitation or sale would
be unlawful prior to registration or qualification  under the securities laws of
any such jurisdiction.

                              The Avatar Advantage
                             Equity Allocation Fund
                                900 Third Avenue
                               New York, NY 10022
                                 (800) 000-0000

                                   PROSPECTUS


         The Avatar  Advantage  Equity  Allocation Fund (the "Fund") is a mutual
fund with the investment  objective of seeking long-term  capital  appreciation.
The Fund  attempts to achieve its  objective by  investing in equity  securities
during  rising  stock  markets and limiting  loss during  market  declines.  See
"Investment  Objective and Policies." Shares are available on a no-load basis to
investors.  There can be no assurance  that the Fund will achieve its investment
objective.

         This  Prospectus  sets  forth  basic  information  about  the Fund that
prospective  investors  should  know  before  investing.  It  should be read and
retained for future reference.  The Fund is a separate series of Advisors Series
Trust (the "Trust"),  an open-end  registered  management  investment company. A
Statement of Additional  Information  (the "SAI") dated December , 1997 has been
filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission and is incorporated herein by
reference.  This SAI is available without charge upon request to the Fund at the
address given above.

These  securities  have not been approved or  disapproved  by the Securities and
Exchange  Commission nor has the Securities and Exchange  Commission passed upon
the accuracy or adequacy of this prospectus.  Any representation to the contrary
is a criminal offense.

                                                  December , 1997

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                                                 Table of Contents

                  Expense Table...................................        2
                  Investment Objective and Policies...............        3
                  Management of the Fund..........................        4
                  Investor Guide..................................        6
                  Services Available to Shareholders..............        8
                  How to Redeem Your Shares.......................        9
                  Distributions and Taxes.........................       11
                  General Information.............................       12

                                                   Expense Table

Expenses  are one of several  factors to consider  when  investing  in the Fund.
There are two types of expenses involved: shareholder transaction expenses, such
as sales loads, and annual operating expenses, such as investment advisory fees.
The Fund is a no-load mutual fund and has no shareholder  transaction  expenses.
The Fund has adopted a plan of distribution under which it will pay the Advisor,
as  Distribution  Coordinator,  a fee at the  annual  rate of up to 0.25% of the
Fund's  net  assets.  A  long-term   shareholder  may  pay  more,  directly  and
indirectly, in such fees than the maximum sales charge permitted under the rules
of the National  Association of Securities  Dealers.  Shares will be redeemed at
net asset value per share.

Annual Operating Expenses
   (As a percentage of average net assets)
Investment Advisory Fee                            0.85%
12b-1 Fee                                          0.25%
Other Expenses (1)                                 0.40%
                                                   ----
Total Fund Operating Expenses (2)                  1.50%
                                                   ====

(1) Other Expenses are estimated for the first fiscal year of the Fund.

(2) The Advisor has agreed to reduce its fees to insure  that the  expenses  for
the Fund  will not  exceed  1.50%.  If the  Advisor  did not  limit  the  Fund's
expenses, it is expected that "Other Expenses" in the above table would be 1.45%
and "Total Operating  Expenses" would be 2.55%. If the Advisor does waive any of
its fees, the Fund may reimburse the Advisor in future years. See "Management of
the Fund."

Example

This table  illustrates the net operating  expenses that would be incurred by an
investment in the Fund over different time periods assuming a $1,000 investment,
a 5% annual return, and redemption at the end of each time period.

1 Year                                      3 Years

$15                                          $47

The Example  shown above should not be  considered a  representation  of past or
future  expenses and actual expenses may be greater or less than those shown. In
addition,

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federal  regulations  require the Example to assume a 5% annual return,  but the
Fund's actual return may be higher or lower. See "Management of the Fund."

The minimum initial  investment in the Fund is $2,500,  with subsequent  minimum
investments  of $250 or more  ($1,000  and  $50,  respectively,  for  retirement
plans). Shares will be redeemed at their net asset value.

                                         Investment Objective And Policies

What is the Fund's investment objective?

The investment objective of the Fund is to seek long-term capital  appreciation,
by  participating  in rising stock markets and then preserving the bulk of those
profits during high-risk periods.
There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve its objective.

How does the Fund seek to achieve its objective?

Avatar  Investors  Associates  Corp.  (the  "Advisor"  or  "Avatar  Associates")
believes that the most important  step in its investment  process is determining
the Fund's  allocation  between equity  securities and cash reserves.  The asset
allocation  decision is based on a proprietary  asset  allocation  model,  which
measures  the risk and  potential  reward  of  investing  in  equity  securities
relative to the safety of cash reserves.  When the Advisor  believes market risk
is low, it maintains a large  commitment (as fully invested as  practicable)  to
equity  securities.  When the Advisor believes market risk is high, it shifts an
appropriate  amount of the Fund's assets into cash reserves to protect  capital.
These shifts from and to equity  securities  are generally made in increments of
five to ten per cent of the Fund's total net assets, as conditions warrant based
on the Advisor's asset allocation model.

The Advisor's  asset  allocation  model measures  liquidity in the market place.
Based on its  experience  and  research,  the Advisor  believes  that changes in
financial  liquidity -- for example,  money, credit and reserves -- are the best
measure of investment  market risk.  When this liquidity  expands beyond what is
needed by the "real" or production side of the economy, much of the excess moves
into the stock markets.  This movement causes stock prices to rise. On the other
hand, when liquidity is contracting, economic demands siphon money away from the
stock  market.  Investment  risks  increase,  and stock  prices  are  subject to
declines.  Thus,  the Advisor makes orderly asset mix decisions by measuring and
reacting to current market risk levels as quantified by the Advisor's model. The
Liquidity Model includes economic factors such as interest rate trends,  Federal
Reserve  policy,  and  yield  spreads.  It  also  includes  inflation  variables
(commodity price trends,  industrial  production growth,  etc.), market momentum
factors (such as short-term trends) and investor sentiment  (institutional  cash
levels, retail optimism/pessimism,  etc.) These factors, blended into the model,
all help  determine  the asset mix.  Any shifts in this mix are  dictated by the
data produced by the model.  The model is updated daily to enable the Advisor to
respond to rapidly changing environments. There is, of course, no assurance that
the Fund's objective will be achieved. Because prices of common stocks and other
securities  fluctuate,  the value of an  investment in the Fund will vary as the
market value of its investment portfolio changes.

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How does the Advisor select equity securities for the Fund's portfolio?

The  Advisor  selects  equity  securities,   consisting  of  common  stocks  and
securities  having the  characteristics  of common  stocks,  such as convertible
securities,  rights  and  warrants,  on  the  basis  of  both  quantitative  and
qualitative  analysis.  It  screens a  universe  of more than  3,400  stocks for
liquidity,  in order to  identify  stocks  with  sufficient  trading  volume  to
establish  or  eliminate a position  quickly and  cost-effectively.  This screen
reduces the list of potential  candidates to 600 to 700 actively  traded issues.
The  Advisor  then ranks each  security  on both  growth and value  factors,  to
identify  stocks that possess good growth  potential at reasonable  prices.  The
Advisor's  qualitative  analysis involves  identifying the investment themes and
stocks that are the best performers in the current market  environment.  The S&P
500  benchmarks are employed to determine  industry and sector weight.  Industry
groups,  sectors, and market  capitalization  quintiles all have ranges in which
the  Advisor  can be over- or  underweight  vis-a-vis  the  benchmark.  When the
Advisor desires maximum exposure to equities,  the Fund's diversified  portfolio
is expected to have between 50 and 70 separate securities.  The Advisor may sell
a stock when its model calls for a reduction in the  exposure to equities,  when
the stock becomes less attractive due to deteriorating  fundamentals or when the
stock's price falls to a pre-set  limit.  The Advisor does not expect the Fund's
annual  turnover  rate to exceed 150%.  High  portfolio  turnover  will increase
transaction costs and may result in higher taxes for investors.

What does the Fund use for cash reserves?

The Advisor  uses high  quality,  short-term  debt  securities  and money market
instruments as cash reserves for the Fund.  These short-term debt securities and
money market  instruments  include  commercial  paper,  certificates of deposit,
bankers' acceptances,  U.S. Government securities and repurchase agreements. The
Fund may also buy mortgage-backed securities.

Other  investments  and  investment  techniques.  The  Fund  may  also  make the
following  investments or use the techniques  described below.  More information
about them is  contained  in the SAI. In addition to these,  the Fund may buy or
write options on equities and sell securities short, although it does not expect
to  invest  more  than 5% of its  total net  assets  in  options  or have  short
positions exceeding 5% of its total net assets.

         Futures  and  Options  on  Futures.  The Fund may  enter  into  futures
contracts,  or options on those contracts,  involving interest rates, securities
and securities indices, for hedging purposes or as a substitute for positions in
the underlying securities. As a general rule, the Fund will not purchase or sell
futures if, immediately thereafter,  more than 25% of its total net assets would
be  hedged.  There are risks  involved  in the use of  futures  and  options  on
futures,  including  the risk that the prices of the  hedging  vehicles  may not
correlate  perfectly with the prices of the securities in the Fund's  portfolio.
This may cause the futures  contracts or options to react  differently  from the
Fund's portfolio securities to market changes. In addition, the Advisor could be
incorrect in its expectations about the direction or extent of market movements.
In these events,  the Fund could lose money on the futures contracts or options.
It is also  not  certain  that a  secondary  market  for  positions  in  futures
contracts or options will exist at all times, although the Advisor will consider
liquidity before entering into these transactions.

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         Lending  Securities.   To  increase  its  income,  the  Fund  may  lend
securities   from  its  portfolio  to  brokers,   dealers  and  other  financial
institutions.  No more than  one-third of the Fund's total assets may be loaned.
The Fund's loans of portfolio  securities will be collateralized at all times by
high quality liquid securities.  Under the present regulatory requirements which
govern loans of portfolio securities, the loan collateral must, on each business
day, at least equal the value of the loaned securities and must consist of cash,
letters of credit of domestic banks or domestic  branches of foreign  banks,  or
securities  of  the  U.S.  Government  or  its  agencies.  To be  acceptable  as
collateral,  letters of credit must  obligate a bank to pay amounts  demanded by
the Fund if the demand meets the terms of the letter. Such terms and the issuing
bank would have to be satisfactory to the Fund. Any loan might be secured by any
one or more of the three types of collateral. The terms of the Fund's loans must
permit the Fund to reacquire  loaned  securities on five days' notice or in time
to vote on any serious  matter and must meet  certain  tests under the  Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code")

Investment restrictions.

The Fund has adopted certain investment restrictions,  which are described fully
in the SAI. Like the Fund's investment objective,  certain of these restrictions
are  fundamental  and may be  changed  only  by a  majority  vote of the  Fund's
outstanding shares. As a fundamental policy, the Fund is a diversified fund.

                                              Management of The Fund

The  Board  of  Trustees  of the  Trust  establishes  the  Fund's  policies  and
supervises and reviews the management of the Fund.

The Advisor.

The Fund's Advisor, Avatar Associates,  900 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10022 has
provided asset management  services to individuals and  institutional  investors
since 1970.  The Advisor was  established  and is controlled  by its  President,
Edward S. Babbitt,  Jr. Two members of the firm,  Charles M. White and Elizabeth
Sonders, are principally responsible for the management of the Fund's portfolio.
Mr.  White is a Managing  Director and Vice  President  of the  Advisor,  having
joined the firm in 1988. Ms.  Sonders is a Vice President and Portfolio  Manager
of the Advisor, having been associated with the firm since 1986.

The Advisor  provides  the Fund with  advice on buying and  selling  securities,
manages the  investments  of the Fund,  furnishes the Fund with office space and
certain  administrative  services,  and provides most of the personnel needed by
the Fund. As  compensation,  the Fund pays the Advisor a monthly  management fee
based upon the average daily net assets of the Fund at the annual rate of 0.85%.

Prior Performance of the Advisor.

The  following  table sets forth  composite  performance  data  relating  to the
historical  performance of institutional private accounts managed by the Advisor
for the periods indicated, that have investment objectives, policies, strategies
and risks  substantially  similar to those of the Fund.  The data is provided to
illustrate the past performance of the Advisor in managing substantially

5

<PAGE>



similar  accounts and does not represent the performance of the Fund. You should
not consider this performance data as an indication of future performance of the
Fund or of the Advisor.

The composite  performance  data shown below were  calculated in accordance with
recommended  standards of the Association for Investment Management and Research
(AIMR*),  retroactively  applied to all time periods. All returns presented were
calculated  on a total  return  basis and include all  dividends  and  interest,
accrued income and realized and unrealized gains and losses. All returns reflect
the  deduction of investment  advisory  fees (from 1983 to the present;  returns
prior to 1983  reflect the  deduction  of a fee of 1% per annum,  the  Advisor's
highest  advisory  fee),  brokerage  commission  and  execution  costs  paid  by
institutional  private accounts of the Advisor without  provision for federal or
state  income  taxes.   Custodial  fees,  if  any,  were  not  included  in  the
calculation.   The  Advisor's   Composite   includes  all  actual,   fee-paying,
discretionary  institutional  private  accounts managed by the Advisor that have
investment objectives,  policies,  strategies and risks substantially similar to
those of the Fund.  Securities  transactions are accounted for on the trade date
and accrual accounting is used. Cash and equivalents are included in performance
returns. The quarterly returns of the Advisor's Composite combine the individual
accounts' returns (calculated on a time-weighted rate of return that is revalued
whenever  cash flows exceed 5% of the value of the  account) by  asset-weighting
each individual  account's  asset value as of the beginning of the quarter.  The
yearly returns are computed by geometrically linking the returns of each quarter
within the calendar year.

The institutional  private accounts that are included in the Advisor's Composite
are not  subject to the same types of  expenses to which the Fund is subject nor
to the  diversification  requirements,  specific tax restrictions and investment
limitations  imposed on the Fund by the  InvestmentCompany  Act or the  Internal
Revenue Code. Consequently,  the performance results for the Advisor's Composite
could  have  been  adversely  affected  if the  institutional  private  accounts
included in the Composite had been regulated as investment companies.

The investment results of the Advisor's  Composite presented below are unaudited
and are not intended to predict or suggest the returns that might by experienced
by the Fund or an  individual  investing in the Fund.  Investors  should also be
aware that the use of a methodology  different from that used below to calculate
performance could result in different performance data.

- -------

*        AIMR is a non-profit  membership and education  organization  with more
         than 60,000 members worldwide that, among other things,  has formulated
         a set of performance  presentation  standards for investment  advisers.
         These AIMR  performance  presentation  standards  are  intended  to (i)
         promote full and fair  presentations  by  investment  advisers of their
         performance  results,  and (ii) ensure  uniformity in reporting so that
         performance results of investment advisers are directly comparable.



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Annualized Total Return For Years ended June 30, 1997

            Number of Years                     Advisor's Composite
            ---------------                     -------------------
         One Year                               15.5%
         Three Years                            16.8%
         Five Years                             13.9%
         Ten Years                              11.4%
         Inception (1/1/74 - 6/30/97)           14.4%

The Administrator.

Investment Company  Administration  Corporation (the  "Administrator")  prepares
various federal and state regulatory filings,  reports and returns for the Fund,
prepares  reports and  materials  to be supplied to the  trustees,  monitors the
activities of the Fund's custodian, shareholder servicing agent and accountants,
and  coordinates  the  preparation  and payment of Fund expenses and reviews the
Fund's expense accruals.  For its services, the Administrator receives a monthly
fee at the  annual  rate of 0.20% of  average  daily net  assets,  subject  to a
$30,000 annual minimum.

Other operating expenses.

The  Fund is  responsible  for its own  operating  expenses,  including  but not
limited to, the  advisory  and  administration  fees,  custody  and  shareholder
servicing  agent  fees,   legal  and  auditing   expenses,   federal  and  state
registration fees, and fees to the Trust's disinterested  trustees.  The Advisor
may reduce its fees or  reimburse  the Fund for expenses at any time in order to
reduce  the  Fund's  expenses.  Reductions  made by the  Advisor  in its fees or
payments or  reimbursements  of  expenses  which are the Fund's  obligation  are
subject  to  reimbursement  by the Fund  provided  the Fund is able to do so and
remain in compliance with any applicable expense limitations.

The Fund has  adopted a  Distribution  Plan  pursuant  to Rule  12b-1.  The Plan
permits the Fund to pay for  distribution and related expenses at an annual rate
of up to 0.25% of the Fund's average net assets. The expenses which the Fund may
pay include:  preparing and distributing  prospectuses and other sales material;
advertising and public relations expenses;  payments to financial intermediaries
and compensation of personnel involved in selling shares of the Fund.

Brokerage transactions.

The  Advisor  considers  a number of factors  in  determining  which  brokers or
dealers to use for the Fund's portfolio transactions. While these are more fully
discussed in the Statement of Additional  Information,  the factors include, but
are not limited to, the  reasonableness of commissions,  quality of services and
execution,  and the  availability of research which the Advisor may lawfully and
appropriately  use in its  investment  advisory  capacities.  Provided  the Fund
receives prompt execution at competitive  prices,  the Advisor may also consider
the sale of Fund shares as a factor in selecting  broker-dealers  for the Fund's
portfolio transactions.
                                                  INVESTOR GUIDE

How to purchase shares of the Fund.

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There are several ways to purchase  shares of either Fund. An Application  Form,
which accompanies this Prospectus,  is used if you send money directly to a Fund
by mail or by wire. If you have questions  about how to invest,  or about how to
complete the Application  Form,  please call an account  representative at (800)
000-0000.  First Fund  Distributors,  Inc., 4455 E. Camelback Road,  Suite 261E,
Phoenix,  Arizona  85018,  an affiliate of the  Administrator,  is the principal
underwriter ("Distributor") of the Funds' shares.

You may send money to the Fund by mail.

If you wish to invest by mail,  simply complete the Application Form and mail it
with a check (made payable to the Avatar  Advantage  Equity  Allocation Fund) to
the Fund's  Shareholder  Servicing  Agent,  American Data Services,  Inc. at the
following address:

         Avatar Advantage Equity Allocation Fund
         P.O. Box 000
         Cincinnati, OH 45264-0856
You may wire money to the Fund.
Before sending a wire,  you should call the Fund at (800) 000-0000  between 9:00
a.m.  and 5:00 p.m.,  Eastern  time,  on a day when the New York Stock  Exchange
("NYSE")  is open for  trading,  in order to receive an  account  number.  It is
important to call and receive this account number,  because if your wire is sent
without it or without  the name of the Fund,  there may be a delay in  investing
the money you wire. You should then ask your bank to wire money to:
         Star Bank, N.A. Cinti/Trust
         ABA # 0420-0001-3
         for credit to Avatar Advantage Equity Allocation Fund DDA # for further
         credit to [your name and account number]

Your bank may charge you a fee for sending a wire to the Fund.

You may purchase shares through an investment dealer.

You may be able to invest in shares of the Fund through an investment dealer, if
the dealer has made arrangements  with the Distributor.  The dealer may place an
order for you with the Fund;  the price you will pay will be the net asset value
which is next calculated  after receipt of the order from the dealer.  It is the
responsibility  of the dealer to place your order promptly.  A dealer may charge
you a fee for  placing  your  order,  but you could  avoid  paying such a fee by
sending an  Application  Form and payment  directly to the Fund.  The dealer may
also hold the shares you  purchase  in its omnibus  account  rather than in your
name in the records of the Fund's  transfer  agent.  The Fund may  reimburse the
dealer for  maintaining  records of your  account as well as for other  services
provided to you.

Your dealer is  responsible  for sending your money to the Fund  promptly  after
placing  the order to  purchase  shares,  and the Fund may  cancel  the order if
payment is not received from the dealer promptly.



8

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Minimum investments.

The minimum  initial  investment in the Fund is $2,500.  The minimum  subsequent
investment is $50.  However,  if you are  investing in an Individual  Retirement
Account ("IRA"), or you are starting a Check-A-Matic Investing Plan (see below),
the  minimum   initial  and   subsequent   investments   are  $1,000  and  $250,
respectively.

Subsequent investments.

You may purchase additional shares of the Fund by sending a check, with the stub
from an account statement,  to the Fund at the address above.  Please also write
your  account  number on the  check.  (If you do not have a stub from an account
statement,  you can write your name,  address and  account  number on a separate
piece of paper and enclose it with your  check.) If you want to send  additional
money for  investment by wire, it is important for you to call the Fund at (800)
000-0000.  You may also make additional  purchases through an investment dealer,
as described above.

When is money invested in the Fund?

Any money received for investment in the Fund from an investor,  whether sent by
check or by wire,  is  invested at the net asset value of the Fund which is next
calculated  after the money is received  (assuming  the check or wire  correctly
identifies the Fund and account).  Orders  received from dealers are invested at
the net asset value next calculated  after the order is received.  The net asset
value is calculated at the close of regular trading of the NYSE,  currently 4:00
p.m.,  Eastern time. A check or wire received  after the NYSE closes is invested
as of the next calculation of the Fund's net asset value.

What is the net asset value of the Fund?

The Fund's net asset value per share is  calculated by dividing the value of the
Fund's  total  assets,  less  its  liabilities,  by the  number  of  its  shares
outstanding. In calculating the net asset value, portfolio securities are valued
using  current  market  values,  if  available.   Securities  for  which  market
quotations  are not readily  available  are valued at fair values  determined in
good faith by or under the  supervision  of the Board of  Trustees of the Trust.
The fair value of short-term obligations with remaining maturities of 60 days or
less is considered to be their amortized cost.

Other information.

The Distributor may waive the minimum  investment  requirements for purchases by
certain group or retirement plans. All investments must be made in U.S. dollars,
and checks must be drawn on U.S. banks. Third party checks will not be accepted.
A charge may be imposed  if a check used to make an  investment  does not clear.
The Fund and the  Distributor  reserve  the right to reject any  investment,  in
whole or in part.  Federal tax law requires that  investors  provide a certified
taxpayer identification number and other certifications on opening an account in
order to avoid backup  withholding of taxes.  See the Application  Form for more
information  about backup  withholding.  The Fund is not required to issue share
certificates; all shares are normally held in non-certificated form on the books
of the Fund, for the account of the

9

<PAGE>



shareholder.  The Fund, under certain  circumstances,  may accept investments of
securities  appropriate  for the  Fund's  portfolio,  in lieu of cash.  Prior to
making such a purchase,  you should  call the  Advisor to  determine  if such an
investment may be made.  The Advisor may, at its own expense,  pay third parties
for assistance in gathering assets for the Fund.

                                        Services Available to Shareholders

Retirement Plans

You may obtain a prototype  IRA plan from the Fund.  Shares of the Fund are also
eligible investments for other types of retirement plans.

Automatic investing by check

You may make regular  monthly  investments in the Fund using the  "Check-A-Matic
Plan." A check is  automatically  drawn on your personal  checking  account each
month for a predetermined amount (but not less than $100), as if you had written
it directly. Upon receipt of the withdrawn funds, the Fund automatically invests
the money in  additional  shares  of the Fund at the  current  net asset  value.
Applications for this service are available from the Fund. There is no charge by
the Fund for this service.  The Fund may  terminate or modify this  privilege at
any time, and  shareholders  may terminate their  participation by notifying the
Shareholder  Servicing  Agent in  writing,  sufficiently  in advance of the next
withdrawal.

Automatic withdrawals

The Fund offers a Systematic Withdrawal Program whereby shareholders may request
that a check  drawn in a  predetermined  amount  be sent to them  each  month or
calendar quarter. To start this Program, your account must have Fund shares with
a value of at least  $10,000,  and the minimum amount that may be withdrawn each
month or quarter  is $50.  This  Program  may be  terminated  or  modified  by a
shareholder  or the Fund at any time  without  charge or penalty.  A  withdrawal
under the Systematic  Withdrawal  Program involves a redemption of shares of the
Fund,  and may  result in a gain or loss for  federal  income tax  purposes.  In
addition,  if the  amount  withdrawn  exceeds  the  dividends  credited  to your
account, the account ultimately may be depleted.

                                             How to Redeem Your Shares

You have the right to redeem all or any  portion  of your  shares of the Fund at
their net asset value on each day the NYSE is open for trading.

Redemption in writing.

You may redeem your shares by simply sending a written  request to the Fund. You
should give your account  number and state  whether you want all or part of your
shares redeemed.  The letter should be signed by all of the  shareholders  whose
names  appear in the  account  registration.  You  should  send your  redemption
request to:

         Avatar Advantage Equity Allocation Fund
         24 West Carver Street, 2nd Floor
         Huntington, NY 11743

10

<PAGE>



Signature guarantee.

If the value of the shares you wish to redeem exceeds $5,000,  the signatures on
the   redemption   request  must  be  guaranteed   by  an  "eligible   guarantor
institution." These institutions  include banks,  broker-dealers,  credit unions
and savings  institutions.  A  broker-dealer  guaranteeing a signature must be a
member of a clearing  corporation or maintain net capital of at least  $100,000.
Credit  unions  must be  authorized  to issue  signature  guarantees.  Signature
guarantees  will be  accepted  from any  eligible  guarantor  institution  which
participates  in a  signature  guarantee  program.  A  notary  public  is not an
acceptable guarantor.

Redemption by telephone.

If you complete the  Redemption by Telephone  portion of the Fund's  Application
Form,  you may redeem shares on any business day the NYSE is open by calling the
Fund's  Shareholder  Servicing Agent at (800) 000-0000 before 4:00 p.m.  Eastern
time.  Redemption  proceeds will be mailed or wired, at your  direction,  on the
next business day to the bank account you  designated on the  Application  Form.
The minimum  amount that may be wired is $1,000 (wire  charges,  if any, will be
deducted from redemption proceeds). Telephone redemptions cannot be made for IRA
accounts.

By establishing telephone redemption privileges,  you authorize the Fund and its
Shareholder  Servicing Agent to act upon the instruction of any person who makes
the telephone  call to redeem shares from your account and transfer the proceeds
to the  bank  account  designated  in the  Application  Form.  The  Fund and the
Shareholder  Servicing  Agent will use  procedures  to confirm  that  redemption
instructions received by telephone are genuine, including recording of telephone
instructions  and requiring a form of personal  identification  before acting on
these  instructions.  If these normal  identification  procedures  are followed,
neither  the Fund nor the  Shareholder  Servicing  Agent  will be liable for any
loss, liability, or cost which results from acting upon instructions of a person
believed to be a shareholder with respect to the telephone redemption privilege.
The Fund may change,  modify,  or terminate these privileges at any time upon at
least 60-days' notice to shareholders.

You may request  telephone  redemption  privileges after your account is opened;
however,  the authorization  form will require a separate  signature  guarantee.
Shareholders may experience delays in exercising telephone redemption privileges
during periods of abnormal market activity.

What price is used for a redemption?

The  redemption  price  is the  net  asset  value  of the  Fund's  shares,  next
determined after shares are validly  tendered for redemption.  All signatures of
account holders must be included in the request, and a signature  guarantee,  if
required, must also be included for the request to be valid.

When are redemption payments made?

As noted above,  redemption  payments for telephone  redemptions are sent on the
day after the  telephone  call is  received.  Payments for  redemptions  sent in
writing  are  normally  made  promptly,  but no later  than seven days after the
receipt of a request that meets requirements  described above. However, the Fund
may suspend the right of redemption under certain

11

<PAGE>



extraordinary  circumstances  in  accordance  with rules of the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission.

If shares were  purchased by wire,  they cannot be redeemed  until the day after
the  Application  Form is received.  If shares were  purchased by check and then
redeemed  shortly  after the check is received,  the Fund may delay  sending the
redemption  proceeds  until it has been notified that the check used to purchase
the  shares has been  collected,  a process  which may take up to 15 days.  This
delay may be avoided by  investing  by wire or by using a certified  or official
bank check to make the purchase.

Repurchases from dealers

The Fund may accept  orders to repurchase  shares from an  investment  dealer on
behalf of a dealer's  customers.  The net asset value for a  repurchase  is that
next  calculated  after  receipt  of the order  from the  dealer.  The dealer is
responsible  for  forwarding  any  documents   required  in  connection  with  a
redemption,  including a signature guarantee,  promptly, and the Fund may cancel
the order if these documents are not received promptly.

Other information about redemptions.

A redemption  may result in recognition of a gain or loss for federal income tax
purposes.  Due to the relatively high cost of maintaining smaller accounts,  the
shares in your  account  (unless it is a  retirement  plan or  Uniform  Gifts or
Transfers  to  Minors  Act  account)  may be  redeemed  by the Fund  if,  due to
redemptions  you have made,  the total value of your  account is reduced to less
than $500. If the Fund  determines to make such an involuntary  redemption,  you
will first be notified that the value of your account is less than $500, and you
will be allowed 30 days to make an  additional  investment to bring the value of
your account to at least $500 before the Fund takes any action.

                                              Distributions and Taxes

Dividends and Distributions.

Dividends from net investment  income, if any, are normally declared and paid by
the Fund in December.  Capital  gains  distributions,  if any, are also normally
made in December,  but the Fund may make an  additional  payment of dividends or
distributions if it deems it desirable at another time during any year.

Dividends and capital gain  distributions  (net of any required tax withholding)
are  automatically  reinvested in additional shares of the Fund at the net asset
value per share on the reinvestment date unless you have previously requested in
writing to the Shareholder Servicing Agent that payment be made in cash.

Any dividend or distribution paid by the Fund has the effect of reducing the net
asset  value per share on the  record  date by the  amount  of the  dividend  or
distribution.  You should  note that a dividend or  distribution  paid on shares
purchased  shortly  before that  dividend or  distribution  was declared will be
subject to income taxes even though the dividend or distribution represents,  in
substance, a partial return of capital to you.

12

<PAGE>



Taxes

The Fund  intends to qualify and elect to be treated as a  regulated  investment
company  under  Subchapter  M of the  Code.  As long as the  Fund  continues  to
qualify,  and as long as the Fund distributes all of its income each year to the
shareholders,  the Fund  will not be  subject  to any  federal  income or excise
taxes.  Distributions  made by the Fund will be taxable to shareholders  whether
received in shares (through  dividend  reinvestment ) or in cash.  Distributions
derived from net investment income,  including net short-term capital gains, are
taxable to shareholders as ordinary income. A portion of these distributions may
qualify  for  the  intercorporate  dividends-received  deduction.  Distributions
designated  as capital gains  dividends  are taxable as long-term  capital gains
regardless  of the length of time  shares of the Fund have been  held.  Although
distributions are generally taxable when received, certain distributions made in
January  are  taxable as if received  the prior  December.  You will be informed
annually  of the  amount  and  nature of the  Fund's  distributions.  Additional
information about taxes is set forth in the Statement of Additional Information.
You  should  consult  your own  advisers  concerning  federal,  state  and local
taxation of distributions from the Fund.

                                                General Information

The Trust.

The Trust was  organized as a Delaware  business  trust on October 3, 1996.  The
Agreement  and  Declaration  of Trust  permits the Board of Trustees to issue an
unlimited number of full and fractional shares of beneficial  interest,  without
par value,  which may be issued in any number of series.  The Board of  Trustees
may, from time to time, issue other series,  the assets and liabilities of which
will be  separate  and  distinct  from any  other  series.  The  Board  may also
authorize the issuance of additional  classes of shares for an existing  series.
The fiscal year of the Fund ends on October 31.

Shareholder Rights

Shares  issued  by the Fund  have no  preemptive,  conversion,  or  subscription
rights.  Shareholders  have  equal  and  exclusive  rights as to  dividends  and
distributions  as  declared  by the Fund and to the net  assets of the Fund upon
liquidation or dissolution.  The Fund, as a separate series of the Trust,  votes
separately on matters affecting only the Fund (e.g.,  approval of the Investment
Advisory  Agreement);  all series of the Trust vote as a single class on matters
affecting all series jointly or the Trust as a whole (e.g.,  election or removal
of Trustees). Voting rights are not cumulative, so that the holders of more than
50% of the shares  voting in any  election of  Trustees  can, if they so choose,
elect all of the  Trustees.  While the Trust is not required and does not intend
to hold annual  meetings of  shareholders,  such  meetings  may be called by the
Trustees  in their  discretion,  or upon demand by the holders of 10% or more of
the  outstanding  shares of the Trust for the  purpose of  electing  or removing
Trustees.

Performance Information.

From time to time, the Fund may publish its total return in  advertisements  and
communications  to investors.  Total return  information will include the Fund's
average annual compounded rate

13

<PAGE>



of return over the most recent four  calendar  quarters and over the period from
the Fund's  inception of operations.  The Fund may also advertise  aggregate and
average total return  information  over  different  periods of time.  The Fund's
total  return  will be based  upon the value of the  shares  acquired  through a
hypothetical  $1,000 investment at the beginning of the specified period and the
net asset value of those shares at the end of the period,  assuming reinvestment
of all  distributions.  Total return figures will reflect all recurring  charges
against Fund  income.  You should note that the  investment  results of the Fund
will fluctuate over time,  and any  presentation  of the Fund's total return for
any  prior  period  should  not be  considered  as a  representation  of what an
investor's total return may be in any future period.

Shareholder Inquiries.

Shareholder  inquiries should be directed to the Shareholder  Servicing Agent at
(800) 000-0000.



14

<PAGE>



         Subject to Completion.  Preliminary Statement of Additional Information
dated September 19, 1997



Information   contained  herein  is  subject  to  completion  or  amendment.   A
registration  statement  relating  to these  securities  has been filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. These securities may not be sold nor may any
offers to buy be accepted prior to the time the registration  statement  becomes
effective.  This  Statement  of  Additional  Information  does not  constitute a
prospectus.

                              The AVATAR ADVANTAGE
                             Equity Allocation Fund

                       Statement of Additional Information

                              Dated December , 1997

This Statement of Additional  Information is not a prospectus,  and it should be
read in conjunction with the prospectus dated December , 1997, as may be amended
from time to time,  of the The  AVATAR  ADVANTAGE  Equity  Allocation  Fund (the
"Fund"), a series of Advisors Series Trust (the "Trust"). Avatar Associates (the
"Advisor") is the Advisor to the Fund. A copy of the  prospectus may be obtained
from the Fund at 900 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10022; telephone (800) - .

<TABLE>
                                                 TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                           Cross-reference to sections
                                                              Page              in the prospectus
<CAPTION>



<S>                                                       <C>        <C>
Introduction to the Fund.............................      B-2       Investment Objective and Policies

Investment Objective and Policies....................      B-3       Investment Objective and Policies

Management...........................................     B-14       Management of the Fund

Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage.................     B-17       Management of the Fund

Net Asset Value......................................     B-17       Investor Guide

Taxation  ...........................................     B-18       Distributions and Taxes

Dividends and Distributions..........................     B-19       Distributions and Taxes

Performance Information..............................     B-20       General Information

General Information..................................     B-20       General Information

Appendix.............................................     B-20       Not applicable
</TABLE>


                                                      B-1

<PAGE>



Avatar  Associates:   Investment   Approach  for  The  Avatar  Advantage  Equity
Allocation Fund

The Avatar Advantage Equity Allocation Fund seeks long-term capital appreciation
by investing in a blend of common stocks and cash equivalents.

Avatar  Associates,  the  investment  advisor  to The  Avatar  Advantage  Equity
Allocation  Fund  (the  "Fund"),  seeks to serve  the  serious  investor  -- the
investor who understands the risks as well as the rewards of market  volatility.
To these  investors,  the firm offers and  approach  that  balances the need for
solid  returns  with the desire for  capital  appreciation.  From the  Advisor's
inception in 1970, it has grown to a company of 65 employees  managing almost $4
billion  in  assets,  stressing  for its  clients  the need  for an  all-weather
investment  approach  which attempts to adapt to both bull and bear markets in a
prudent and profitable manner.

The goals of Avatar for the Fund and for its other clients are to participate in
rising markets and, more  importantly,  to limit the impact of market  declines.
Avatar seeks to meet these goals  through its  development  of a flexible  asset
allocation  approach  designed to generate solid returns by attempting to reduce
the significant perils of market volatility.

Since 1900,  the market has seen more than 100  corrections  where the price has
dropped  more than 10%.  In  addition to these  moderate  corrections,  a severe
correction of 15% or more occurred  about every two years.  Bear market drops of
more than 20% have been  witnessed  every three  years,  on  average.  While the
overall market has recovered from these setbacks,  it is the view of the Advisor
that  few  investors  have had the  discipline  to stick  with  their  long-term
strategy in the face of 20%, 15%, or even 10% losses. In Avatar's view, limiting
the impact of declining markets is the key to maintaining long-term focus.

Since  1970,  a  disciplined  asset  allocation  approach  has been  critical in
Avatar's  efforts to address  varying  market  cycles,  such as the severe  bear
market of 1973-74,  the  inflation/recession  environment of the late 1970's and
early 1980's, the crash in 1987 and the sustained bull market of the 1990's. The
firm's  analyses of stock market risks  drives its asset  allocation  decisions.
When Avatar's research  measures  expanding  liquidity,  market risk is reduced.
During these periods,  the Advisor believes that the potential for strong market
advances is high,  and stock  holdings are increased to take  advantage of these
conditions.  Conversely, when indicators measure contracting liquidity, the risk
of a market decline is greater and exposure to stocks is systematically lowered,
while cash positions are increased.  Avatar believes that there is no substitute
for the safety of cash equivalents investments in high- risk market periods. The
ability to increase cash positions is central to the firm's  approach.  Avatar's
allocation  may range  from 100%  invested  in  equities  to a  completely  cash
equivalent  portfolio.  For example,  during 1991,  the best year of the ongoing
bull market as of the current  date,  allocations  to stocks  ranged from 75% in
June of that year to 100% in February  and March of that year.  When market risk
is perceived to have  increased,  the shift is made to cash  equivalents,  as in
1987,  the year of the  market  crash,  where in  January,  95% of  assets  were
allocated to stocks, but by September, the month preceding the market break, the
cash allocation had increased to 55%.

[Insert historical  information about the ranges of asset allocation to serve as
a basis  for  illustrating  how the firm was  positioned  during  market  stress
periods]

Once the portfolio asset mix has been determined,  Avatar carefully selects what
we believe to be a  high-quality  portfolio of equity  securities.  These equity
portfolios  include a mixture of stocks and cash  equivalents.  We select stocks
that we believe  demonstrate  the ability to grow  earnings  in the future,  but
which are  relatively  undervalued  today.  In seeking these  companies,  Avatar
combines   "computer-driven"    quantitative   research   with   "people-driven"
qualitative   research  to  create  the  firm's  current  evaluation  of  market
opportunity  and  risk.  Using  a  computer  ranking  system,  stocks  that  are
inexpensive  relative to their growth rates are identified.  A team of portfolio
managers and analysts work closely to identify sustainable industry and business
trends and to select  stocks that are expected to be the best  performers in the
particular environment. The portfolio is diversified and normally contains 50 to
70 stocks when at maximum equity  exposure.  Stock holdings are medium to larger
capitalization  issues  that  are  extremely  liquid  to  facilitate  any  asset
allocation  moves  that  may  become  necessary  as  market  conditions  change.
Generally,  stocks  will be  sold if any of the  following  factors  occur:  (a)
Avatar's asset allocation research indicates that equity

                                                      B-2

<PAGE>



exposure  should be reduced and cash reserves  should be increased'  (b) a stock
becomes less attractive due to deteriorating fundamentals; and (c )a stock price
falls to its predetermined stop-loss limit.

While there can be no assurance  that the Fund's  investment  objectives  can be
attained,  the goal for  management  of the Fund is to maintain  an  all-weather
investment  approach  that adapts to both bull and bear markets in a prudent and
profitable manner. Fund investors should bear in mind that fund share values and
returns  fluctuate  and that they may have a gain or loss on their  fund  shares
when they are redeemed.

                                        INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES
         The investment objective of the Fund is long-term capital appreciation.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its  objective.  The discussion
below  supplements  information  contained in the  prospectus  as to  investment
policies of the Fund.

Convertible Securities and Warrants
         The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible   securities  and  warrants.  A
convertible  security  is a  fixed  income  security  (a  debt  instrument  or a
preferred  stock)  which may be  converted  at a stated price within a specified
period of time  into a certain  quantity  of the  common  stock of the same or a
different  issuer.  Convertible  securities  are  senior to common  stocks in an
issuer's   capital   structure,   but  are  usually   subordinated   to  similar
non-convertible  securities.  While  providing a fixed income stream  (generally
higher in yield than the income  derivable from common stock but lower than that
afforded by a similar  nonconvertible  security),  a  convertible  security also
gives  an  investor  the  opportunity,   through  its  conversion   feature,  to
participate in the capital  appreciation of the issuing company depending upon a
market price advance in the convertible security's underlying common stock.
         A warrant  gives the holder a right to  purchase  at any time  during a
specified  period a  predetermined  number of shares of common  stock at a fixed
price.  Unlike  convertible debt securities or preferred stock,  warrants do not
pay a fixed dividend.  Investments in warrants involve certain risks,  including
the possible lack of a liquid market for resale of the warrants, potential price
fluctuations  as a result of speculation  or other  factors,  and failure of the
price  of the  underlying  security  to reach or have  reasonable  prospects  of
reaching a level at which the warrant can be prudently exercised (in which event
the warrant  may expire  without  being  exercised,  resulting  in a loss of the
Fund's entire investment therein). Short-Term Investments
         The Fund may invest in any of the following securities and instruments:
         Bank Certificates or Deposit,  Bankers'  Acceptances and Time Deposits.
The Fund may acquire  certificates  of deposit,  bankers'  acceptances  and time
deposits.  Certificates  of deposit are negotiable  certificates  issued against
funds deposited in a commercial bank for a definite period of time and earning a
specified  return.  Bankers'  acceptances  are  negotiable  drafts  or  bills of
exchange,  normally  drawn  by an  importer  or  exporter  to pay  for  specific
merchandise,  which are  "accepted"  by a bank,  meaning in effect that the bank
unconditionally  agrees to pay the face  value of the  instrument  on  maturity.
Certificates  of deposit and bankers'  acceptances  acquired by the Fund will be
dollar-denominated  obligations  of  domestic  or  foreign  banks  or  financial
institutions  which at the time of purchase have capital,  surplus and undivided
profits in excess of $100 million (including assets of both domestic and foreign
branches),  based on latest published reports,  or less than $100 million if the
principal  amount  of such  bank  obligations  are  fully  insured  by the  U.S.
Government.  If the  Fund  holds  instruments  of  foreign  banks  or  financial
institutions,  it may  be  subject  to  additional  investment  risks  that  are
different in some respects  from those  incurred by a fund which invests only in
debt obligations of U.S. domestic issuers. See "Foreign Investments" below. Such
risks  include  future  political  and  economic   developments,   the  possible
imposition of withholding taxes by the particular country in which the issuer is
located on interest  income payable on the securities,  the possible  seizure or
nationalization  of foreign  deposits,  the possible  establishment  of exchange
controls, or the adoption of other foreign governmental restrictions which might
adversely affect the payment of principal and interest on these securities.
         Domestic banks and foreign banks are subject to different  governmental
regulations  with respect to the amount and types of loans which may be made and
interest  rates which may be charged.  In  addition,  the  profitability  of the
banking industry depends largely upon the availability and cost of funds for the
purpose  of  financing   lending   operations   under  prevailing  money  market
conditions.  General  economic  conditions  as well as exposure to credit losses
arising from

                                                      B-3

<PAGE>



possible  financial  difficulties  of borrowers  play an  important  part in the
operations  of the banking  industry.  As a result of federal and state laws and
regulations,  domestic  banks are,  among  other  things,  required  to maintain
specified  levels of  reserves,  limited in the amount  which they can loan to a
single borrower,  and subject to other regulations designed to promote financial
soundness.  However,  such  laws and  regulations  do not  necessarily  apply to
foreign bank obligations that the Fund may acquire.
         In  addition  to  purchasing   certificates  of  deposit  and  bankers'
acceptances,  to the  extent  permitted  under  its  investment  objectives  and
policies stated above and in its prospectus,  the Fund may make interest-bearing
time or other  interest-bearing  deposits in commercial or savings  banks.  Time
deposits are non-negotiable  deposits  maintained at a banking institution for a
specified period of time at a specified interest rate.
         Savings Association Obligations. The Fund may invest in certificates of
deposit  (interest-bearing time deposits) issued by savings banks or savings and
loan associations that have capital,  surplus and undivided profits in excess of
$100 million,  based on latest published  reports,  or less than $100 million if
the  principal  amount  of  such  obligations  is  fully  insured  by  the  U.S.
Government.
         Commercial Paper, Short-Term Notes and Other Corporate Obligations. The
Fund may  invest a portion  of its  assets in  commercial  paper and  short-term
notes.  Commercial  paper  consists  of  unsecured  promissory  notes  issued by
corporations. Issues of commercial paper and short-term notes will normally have
maturities  of less than nine  months and fixed rates of return,  although  such
instruments may have maturities of up to one year.
         Commercial  paper and short-term  notes will consist of issues rated at
the time of purchase "A-2" or higher by S&P,  "Prime-1" or "Prime-2" by Moody's,
or  similarly  rated  by  another  nationally   recognized   statistical  rating
organization  or,  if  unrated,  will  be  determined  by the  Advisor  to be of
comparable quality. These rating symbols are described in the Appendix.
         Corporate obligations include bonds and notes issued by corporations to
finance  longer-term credit needs than supported by commercial paper. While such
obligations  generally  have  maturities  of ten  years  or  more,  the Fund may
purchase  corporate  obligations which have remaining  maturities of one year or
less from the date of purchase and which are rated "AA" or higher by S&P or "Aa"
or higher by Moody's. Government Obligations
         The  Fund  may  make   short-term   investments   in  U.S.   Government
obligations.   Such  obligations   include   Treasury  bills,   certificates  of
indebtedness,  notes and bonds,  and issues of such  entities as the  Government
National Mortgage Association ("GNMA"), Export-Import Bank of the United States,
Tennessee  Valley  Authority,  Resolution  Funding  Corporation,   Farmers  Home
Administration,  Federal Home Loan Banks,  Federal  Intermediate  Credit  Banks,
Federal Farm Credit Banks, Federal Land Banks,  Federal Housing  Administration,
Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  ("FNMA"),  Federal Home Loan  Mortgage
Corporation, and the Student Loan Marketing Association.
         Some of these obligations,  such as those of the GNMA, are supported by
the full faith and  credit of the U.S.  Treasury;  others,  such as those of the
Export-Import Bank of United States, are supported by the right of the issuer to
borrow from the Treasury;  others,  such as those of the FNMA,  are supported by
the  discretionary  authority  of the U.S.  Government  to purchase the agency's
obligations;  still  others,  such  as  those  of  the  Student  Loan  Marketing
Association,  are  supported  only  by the  credit  of the  instrumentality.  No
assurance can be given that the U.S.  Government would provide financial support
to U.S.  Government-sponsored  instrumentalities if it is not obligated to do so
by law.
         The Fund may invest in sovereign debt obligations of foreign countries.
A sovereign debtor's willingness or ability to repay principal and interest in a
timely  manner may be affected by a number of factors,  including  its cash flow
situation,  the extent of its foreign  reserves,  the availability of sufficient
foreign  exchange on the date a payment is due,  the  relative  size of the debt
service burden to the economy as a whole,  the sovereign  debtor's policy toward
principal international lenders and the political constraints to which it may be
subject. Emerging market governments could default on their sovereign debt. Such
sovereign debtors also may be dependent on expected  disbursements  from foreign
governments, multilateral agencies and other entities abroad to reduce principal
and interest  arrearages  on their debt.  The  commitments  on the part of these
governments,  agencies and others to make such  disbursements may be conditioned
on a sovereign  debtor's  implementation  of economic  reforms  and/or  economic
performance and the timely service of such debtor's obligations. Failure to meet
such  conditions  could  result  in the  cancellation  of  such  third  parties'
commitments to lend funds to the sovereign debtor, which may further impair such
debtor's ability or willingness to service its debt in a timely manner.

                                                      B-4

<PAGE>



Mortgage-Related Securities
         The Fund may invest in  mortgage-related  securities.  Mortgage-related
securities  are  derivative  interests  in pools of mortgage  loans made to U.S.
residential  home  buyers,  including  mortgage  loans made by savings  and loan
institutions,  mortgage bankers,  commercial banks and others. Pools of mortgage
loans are assembled as securities for sale to investors by various governmental,
government-related and private  organizations.  The Fund may also invest in debt
securities which are secured with collateral consisting of U.S. mortgage-related
securities, and in other types of U.S. mortgage-related securities.
         U.S.   Mortgage   Pass-Through   Securities.   Interests  in  pools  of
mortgage-related  securities  differ from other forms of debt securities,  which
normally  provide  for  periodic  payment  of  interest  in fixed  amounts  with
principal  payments  at  maturity  or  specified  call  dates.  Instead,   these
securities  provide  a monthly  payment  which  consists  of both  interest  and
principal  payments.  In effect,  these  payments  are a  "pass-through"  of the
monthly payments made by the individual  borrowers on their residential mortgage
loans,  net of any fees paid to the  issuer  or  guarantor  of such  securities.
Additional  payments are caused by  repayments of principal  resulting  from the
sale of the underlying residential property,  refinancing or foreclosure, net of
fees or costs which may be incurred.  Some mortgage-related  securities (such as
securities  issued by GNMA) are  described  as "modified  pass-throughs."  These
securities  entitle the holder to receive all  interest and  principal  payments
owed on the mortgage pool,  net of certain fees, at the scheduled  payment dates
regardless of whether or not the mortgagor actually makes the payment.
         The   principal   governmental   guarantor  of  U.S.   mortgage-related
securities is GNMA, a wholly owned United States Government  corporation  within
the  Department  of  Housing  and  Urban  Development.  GNMA  is  authorized  to
guarantee,  with the full faith and credit of the United States Government,  the
timely  payment of principal and interest on securities  issued by  institutions
approved by GNMA (such as savings and loan  institutions,  commercial  banks and
mortgage  bankers)  and  backed by pools of  mortgages  insured  by the  Federal
Housing Agency or guaranteed by the Veterans Administration.
         Government-related  guarantors  include the Federal  National  Mortgage
Association ("FNMA") and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage  Corporation  ("FHLMC").
FNMA  is  a   government-sponsored   corporation   owned   entirely  by  private
stockholders  and subject to general  regulation by the Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development. FNMA purchases conventional residential mortgages not insured
or guaranteed by any government  agency from a list of approved  seller/services
which  include  state and  federally  chartered  savings and loan  associations,
mutual savings banks,  commercial banks and credit unions and mortgage  bankers.
FHLMC is a government-sponsored  corporation created to increase availability of
mortgage  credit  for   residential   housing  and  owned  entirely  by  private
stockholders.  FHLMC issues participation certificates which represent interests
in  conventional   mortgages  from  FHLMC's  national  portfolio.   Pass-through
securities  issued by FNMA and  participation  certificates  issued by FHLMC are
guaranteed  as to timely  payment of  principal  and interest by FNMA and FHLMC,
respectively,  but are not  backed by the full  faith and  credit of the  United
States Government.
         Although the underlying mortgage loans in a pool may have maturities of
up to 30 years, the actual average life of the pool certificates  typically will
be substantially  less because the mortgages will be subject to normal principal
amortization and may be prepaid prior to maturity.  Prepayment rates vary widely
and may be affected by changes in market  interest  rates. In periods of falling
interest rates, the rate of prepayment tends to increase, thereby shortening the
actual average life of the pool  certificates.  Conversely,  when interest rates
are rising, the rate of prepayments tends to decrease,  thereby  lengthening the
actual  average  life of the  certificates.  Accordingly,  it is not possible to
predict accurately the average life of a particular pool.
         Collateralized Mortgage Obligations ("CMOs"). A domestic or foreign CMO
in which the Fund may invest is a hybrid  between a  mortgage-backed  bond and a
mortgage  pass-through  security.  Like a bond, interest is paid, in most cases,
semiannually.  CMOs may be  collateralized by whole mortgage loans, but are more
typically  collateralized  by  portfolios  of mortgage  pass-through  securities
guaranteed by GNMA, FHLMC, FNMA or equivalent foreign entities.
         CMOs are  structured  into multiple  classes,  each bearing a different
stated  maturity.  Actual  maturity and average life depend upon the  prepayment
experience  of  the  collateral.  CMOs  provide  for a  modified  form  of  call
protection  through a de facto  breakdown  of the  underlying  pool of mortgages
according to how quickly the loans are repaid.  Monthly payment of principal and
interest received from the pool of underlying mortgages,  including prepayments,
is first  returned to the class  having the  earliest  maturity  date or highest
maturity.  Classes  that have longer  maturity  dates and lower  seniority  will
receive principal only after the higher class has been retired.

                                                      B-5

<PAGE>



Foreign Investments and Currencies
         The Fund may invest in  securities  of foreign  issuers,  provided that
they are publicly traded in the United States.

         Depositary  Receipts.  Depositary  Receipts  ("DRs")  include  American
Depositary  Receipts ("ADRs"),  European  Depositary  Receipts ("EDRs"),  Global
Depositary  Receipts  ("GDRs") or other forms of  depositary  receipts.  DRs are
receipts  typically  issued in  connection  with a U.S. or foreign bank or trust
company which evidence  ownership of underlying  securities  issued by a foreign
corporation.
         Risks of  Investing  in  Foreign  Securities.  Investments  in  foreign
securities involve certain inherent risks, including the following:
         Political and Economic Factors. Individual foreign economies of certain
countries may differ favorably or unfavorably from the United States' economy in
such respects as growth of gross national  product,  rate of inflation,  capital
reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency, diversification and balance of payments
position.  The  internal  politics of certain  foreign  countries  may not be as
stable as those of the United States.  Governments in certain foreign  countries
also continue to participate to a significant degree, through ownership interest
or regulation, in their respective economies.  Action by these governments could
include  restrictions on foreign investment,  nationalization,  expropriation of
goods or  imposition  of taxes,  and could have a  significant  effect on market
prices of  securities  and payment of  interest.  The  economies of many foreign
countries are heavily  dependent upon  international  trade and are  accordingly
affected  by the  trade  policies  and  economic  conditions  of  their  trading
partners. Enactment by these trading partners of protectionist trade legislation
could have a  significant  adverse  effect upon the  securities  markets of such
countries.
         Currency Fluctuations. The Fund may invest in securities denominated in
foreign  currencies.  Accordingly,  a change in the  value of any such  currency
against the U.S. dollar will result in a corresponding change in the U.S. dollar
value of the Fund's assets denominated in that currency.  Such changes will also
affect the Fund's  income.  The value of the Fund's  assets may also be affected
significantly by currency  restrictions and exchange control regulations enacted
from time to time.
         Taxes.  The  interest  and  dividends  payable on certain of the Fund's
foreign portfolio  securities may be subject to foreign  withholding taxes, thus
reducing  the net  amount of income  available  for  distribution  to the Fund's
shareholders.

Options on Securities
         Purchasing  Put and Call Options.  The Fund may purchase  covered "put"
and "call" options with respect to securities  which are otherwise  eligible for
purchase by the Fund  subject to certain  restrictions.  The Fund will engage in
trading of such derivative securities exclusively for hedging purposes.
         If the Fund purchases a put option, the Fund acquires the right to sell
the underlying  security at a specified price at any time during the term of the
option  (for  "American-style"  options) or on the option  expiration  date (for
"European-style"  options).  Purchasing  put  options may be used as a portfolio
investment strategy when the Advisor perceives  significant  short-term risk but
substantial long-term  appreciation for the underlying security.  The put option
acts as an insurance policy, as it protects against  significant  downward price
movement while it allows full participation in any upward movement.  If the Fund
is  holding a  security  which it feels has  strong  fundamentals,  but for some
reason may be weak in the near term,  the Fund may purchase a put option on such
security,  thereby  giving  itself the right to sell such  security at a certain
strike  price  throughout  the term of the option.  Consequently,  the Fund will
exercise the put only if the price of such security falls below the strike price
of the put. The  difference  between the put's strike price and the market price
of the  underlying  security  on the  date  the Fund  exercises  the  put,  less
transaction  costs,  will be the  amount by which the Fund will be able to hedge
against a decline in the underlying security. If during the period of the option
the  market  price for the  underlying  security  remains  at or above the put's
strike price,  the put will expire  worthless,  representing a loss of the price
the  Fund  paid  for the  put,  plus  transaction  costs.  If the  price  of the
underlying security  increases,  the profit the Fund realizes on the sale of the
security  will be reduced by the premium paid for the put option less any amount
for which the put may be sold.
         If the Fund purchases a call option,  it acquires the right to purchase
the underlying  security at a specified price at any time during the term of the
option.  The  purchase of a call option is a type of  insurance  policy to hedge
against  losses  that  could  occur  if the  Fund  has a short  position  in the
underlying  security and the security  thereafter  increases in price.  The Fund
will  exercise a call  option  only if the price of the  underlying  security is
above the strike price at the time of exercise.  If during the option period the
market price for the underlying security remains at or below the strike price of
the call option,  the option will expire  worthless,  representing a loss of the
price paid for the option, plus transaction

                                                      B-6

<PAGE>



costs.  If the call option has been  purchased to hedge a short  position of the
Fund  in the  underlying  security  and the  price  of the  underlying  security
thereafter  falls,  the  profit  the Fund  realizes  on the  cover of the  short
position in the security will be reduced by the premium paid for the call option
less any amount for which such option may be sold.
         Prior to  exercise  or  expiration,  an option  may be sold when it has
remaining value by a purchaser  through a "closing sale  transaction,"  which is
accomplished  by selling an option of the same  series as the option  previously
purchased.  The Fund  generally  will  purchase only those options for which the
Advisor  believes  there is an active  secondary  market to  facilitate  closing
transactions.
         Writing Call Options.  The Fund may write covered call options.  A call
option is "covered" if the Fund owns the security  underlying the call or has an
absolute right to acquire the security  without  additional  cash  consideration
(or, if additional cash  consideration is required,  cash or cash equivalents in
such amount as are held in a segregated account by the Custodian). The writer of
a call option  receives a premium and gives the  purchaser  the right to buy the
security  underlying  the  option at the  exercise  price.  The  writer  has the
obligation  upon  exercise  of the option to  deliver  the  underlying  security
against payment of the exercise price during the option period. If the writer of
an  exchange-traded  option wishes to terminate his obligation,  he may effect a
"closing purchase  transaction." This is accomplished by buying an option of the
same series as the option previously  written. A writer may not effect a closing
purchase transaction after it has been notified of the exercise of an option.
         Effecting a closing  transaction  in the case of a written  call option
will permit the Fund to write  another  call option on the  underlying  security
with either a different exercise price, expiration date or both. Also, effecting
a closing  transaction will permit the cash or proceeds from the concurrent sale
of any securities  subject to the option to be used for other investments of the
Fund.  If the Fund desires to sell a particular  security  from its portfolio on
which it has written a call option,  it will effect a closing  transaction prior
to or concurrent with the sale of the security.
         The Fund will realize a gain from a closing  transaction if the cost of
the closing  transaction  is less than the  premium  received  from  writing the
option or if the proceeds from the closing transaction are more than the premium
paid to  purchase  the  option.  The Fund  will  realize  a loss  from a closing
transaction  if the cost of the  closing  transaction  is more than the  premium
received from writing the option or if the proceeds from the closing transaction
are less  than  the  premium  paid to  purchase  the  option.  However,  because
increases in the market price of a call option will generally  reflect increases
in the market price of the underlying  security,  any loss to the Fund resulting
from the  repurchase of a call option is likely to be offset in whole or in part
by appreciation of the underlying security owned by the Fund.
         Risks Of Investing in Options.  There are several risks associated with
transactions  in options on  securities.  Options may be more  volatile than the
underlying  securities and,  therefore,  on a percentage basis, an investment in
options  may be  subject  to  greater  fluctuation  than  an  investment  in the
underlying securities themselves. There are also significant differences between
the securities and options markets that could result in an imperfect correlation
between these markets, causing a given transaction not to achieve its objective.
In addition,  a liquid secondary market for particular options may be absent for
reasons which include the following:  there may be insufficient trading interest
in  certain  options;  restrictions  may be imposed  by an  exchange  on opening
transactions  or closing  transactions  or both;  trading halts,  suspensions or
other  restrictions may be imposed with respect to particular  classes or series
of options of underlying  securities;  unusual or unforeseen  circumstances  may
interrupt  normal  operations on an exchange;  the  facilities of an exchange or
clearing  corporation may not at all times be adequate to handle current trading
volume; or one or more exchanges could, for economic or other reasons, decide or
be  compelled  at some future date to  discontinue  the trading of options (or a
particular  class or series of options),  in which event the secondary market on
that  exchange  (or in that class or series of  options)  would  cease to exist,
although outstanding options that had been issued by a clearing corporation as a
result of trades on that exchange would continue to be exercisable in accordance
with their terms.
         A decision as to  whether,  when and how to use  options  involves  the
exercise of skill and judgment,  and even a  well-conceived  transaction  may be
unsuccessful to some degree because of market behavior or unexpected events. The
extent to which the Fund may enter into options  transactions  may be limited by
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code") requirements for qualification of
the Fund as a regulated  investment  company.  See "Dividends and Distributions"
and "Taxation."
         Dealer Options.  The Fund will engage in transactions  involving dealer
options  as  well as  exchange-traded  options.  Certain  additional  risks  are
specific to dealer options.  While the Fund might look to a clearing corporation
to  exercise  exchange-traded  options,  if the Fund were to  purchase  a dealer
option it would need to rely on the dealer from which it purchased the option to
perform  if the  option  were  exercised.  Failure  by the dealer to do so would
result in the

                                                      B-7

<PAGE>



loss of the premium paid by the Fund as well as loss of the expected  benefit of
the transaction.

         Exchange-traded options generally have a continuous liquid market while
dealer options may not. Consequently,  the Fund may generally be able to realize
the value of a dealer  option it has  purchased  only by exercising or reselling
the option to the dealer who issued it. Similarly, when the Fund writes a dealer
option,  the Fund may  generally  be able to close out the  option  prior to its
expiration only by entering into a closing purchase  transaction with the dealer
to whom the Fund originally wrote the option.  While the Fund will seek to enter
into dealer  options  only with dealers who will agree to and which are expected
to be capable of entering into closing  transactions with the Fund, there can be
no assurance that the Fund will at any time be able to liquidate a dealer option
at a  favorable  price at any time prior to  expiration.  Unless the Fund,  as a
covered  dealer  call  option  writer,  is able to  effect  a  closing  purchase
transaction,  it will not be able to liquidate securities (or other assets) used
as cover until the option expires or is exercised. In the event of insolvency of
the other  party,  the Fund may be unable to  liquidate  a dealer  option.  With
respect to options  written by the Fund,  the  inability to enter into a closing
transaction may result in material losses to the Fund. For example,  because the
Fund must  maintain a secured  position  with  respect  to any call  option on a
security it writes,  the Fund may not sell the assets which it has segregated to
secure the position while it is obligated under the option. This requirement may
impair the Fund's ability to sell portfolio  securities at a time when such sale
might be advantageous.
         The Staff of the Securities and Exchange  Commission (the "Commission")
has taken the position that purchased  dealer  options are illiquid  securities.
The Fund may treat the cover used for  written  dealer  options as liquid if the
dealer agrees that the Fund may  repurchase the dealer option it has written for
a maximum price to be calculated by a predetermined  formula. In such cases, the
dealer  option  would be  considered  illiquid  only to the extent  the  maximum
purchase  price under the formula  exceeds  the  intrinsic  value of the option.
Accordingly,  the Fund will  treat  dealer  options  as  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on illiquid securities. If the Commission changes its position on the
liquidity  of  dealer  options,  the Fund  will  change  its  treatment  of such
instruments accordingly.
         Spread Transactions.  The Fund may purchase covered spread options from
securities   dealers.   These   covered   spread   options  are  not   presently
exchange-listed  or  exchange-traded.  The purchase of a spread option gives the
Fund the right to put securities  that it owns at a fixed dollar spread or fixed
yield spread in relationship to another security that the Fund does not own, but
which is used as a benchmark.  The risk to the Fund, in addition to the risks of
dealer options  described  above, is the cost of the premium paid as well as any
transaction  costs.  The purchase of spread  options will be used to protect the
Fund against adverse  changes in prevailing  credit quality  spreads,  i.e., the
yield spread between high quality and lower quality securities.  This protection
is provided only during the life of the spread  options.  Futures  Contracts and
Related Options
         The Fund may  invest  in  futures  contracts  and  options  on  futures
contracts as a hedge against changes in market conditions or interest rates. The
Fund will trade in such derivative securities for bona fide hedging purposes and
otherwise  in  accordance  with  the  rules  of the  Commodity  Futures  Trading
Commission ("CFTC"). The Fund will segregate liquid assets in a separate account
with its Custodian  when required to do so by CFTC  guidelines in order to cover
its obligation in connection with futures and options transactions.
         No price is paid or received by the Fund upon the purchase or sale of a
futures contract. When it enters into a domestic futures contract, the Fund will
be required to deposit in a segregated  account with its  Custodian an amount of
cash or U.S.  Treasury bills equal to  approximately  5% of the contract amount.
This amount is known as initial margin.
The margin requirements for foreign futures contracts may be different.
         The nature of initial margin in futures  transactions is different from
that of margin in  securities  transactions.  Futures  contract  margin does not
involve the  borrowing  of funds by the  customer  to finance the  transactions.
Rather,  the initial margin is in the nature of a performance bond or good faith
deposit on the contract  which is returned to the Fund upon  termination  of the
futures  contract,  assuming all  contractual  obligations  have been satisfied.
Subsequent  payments  (called  variation  margin) to and from the broker will be
made on a daily basis as the price of the underlying stock index fluctuates,  to
reflect  movements  in the  price of the  contract  making  the  long and  short
positions in the futures contract more or less valuable.  For example,  when the
Fund  has  purchased  a  stock  index  futures  contract  and the  price  of the
underlying stock index has risen, that position will have increased in value and
the Fund will receive from the broker a variation  margin  payment equal to that
increase in value. Conversely, when the Fund has purchased a stock index futures
contract and the price of the underlying stock index has declined,  the position
will be less  valuable and the Fund will be required to make a variation  margin
payment to the broker.
         At any time prior to  expiration  of a futures  contract,  the Fund may
elect to close the position by taking an

                                                      B-8

<PAGE>



opposite  position,  which will operate to terminate the Fund's  position in the
futures  contract A final  determination  of variation margin is made on closing
the position. Additional cash is paid by or released to the Fund, which realizes
a loss or a gain.
         In addition  to amounts  segregated  or paid as initial  and  variation
margin,  the Fund must segregate  liquid assets with its custodian  equal to the
market  value of the  futures  contracts,  in order to  comply  with  Commission
requirements  intended to ensure that the Fund's use of futures is  unleveraged.
The  requirements  for margin  payments and  segregated  accounts  apply to both
domestic and foreign futures contracts.
         Stock Index Futures Contracts. The Fund may invest in futures contracts
on stock indices.  Currently,  stock index futures contracts can be purchased or
sold with respect to, among others, the S&P 500 Stock Price Index on the Chicago
Mercantile  Exchange,  the Major Market Index on the Chicago Board of Trade, the
New York Stock Exchange Composite Index on the New York Futures Exchange and the
Value Line Stock Index on the Kansas City Board of Trade.
         Interest Rate or Financial  Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may invest in
interest rate or financial  futures  contracts.  Bond prices are  established in
both the cash  market and the  futures  market.  In the cash  market,  bonds are
purchased  and sold with payment for the full  purchase  price of the bond being
made in cash,  generally  within  five  business  days after the  trade.  In the
futures market,  a contract is made to purchase or sell a bond in the future for
a set price on a certain date. Historically, the prices for bonds established in
the futures  markets have  generally  tended to move in the aggregate in concert
with cash market  prices,  and the prices  have  maintained  fairly  predictable
relationships.
         The sale of an interest rate or financial  futures contract by the Fund
would create an obligation by the Fund, as seller,  to deliver the specific type
of financial instrument called for in the contract at a specific future time for
a specified  price.  A futures  contract  purchased  by the Fund would create an
obligation by the Fund,  as purchaser,  to take delivery of the specific type of
financial instrument at a specific future time at a specific price. The specific
securities  delivered or taken,  respectively,  at settlement date, would not be
determined until at or near that date. The determination  would be in accordance
with the rules of the  exchange on which the futures  contract  sale or purchase
was made.
         Although  interest rate or financial  futures  contracts by their terms
call for  actual  delivery  or  acceptance  of  securities,  in most  cases  the
contracts  are closed  out  before  the  settlement  date  without  delivery  of
securities.  Closing  out of a futures  contract  sale is effected by the Fund's
entering into a futures  contract  purchase for the same aggregate amount of the
specific type of financial  instrument  and the same delivery date. If the price
in the sale exceeds the price in the offsetting  purchase,  the Fund is paid the
difference  and thus realizes a gain. If the  offsetting  purchase price exceeds
the sale price, the Fund pays the difference and realizes a loss. Similarly, the
closing out of a futures  contract  purchase is effected by the Fund's  entering
into a futures  contract sale. If the offsetting sale price exceeds the purchase
price,  the  Fund  realizes  a  gain,  and if the  purchase  price  exceeds  the
offsetting sale price, the Fund realizes a loss.
         The  Fund  will  deal  only in  standardized  contracts  on  recognized
exchanges.  Each  exchange  guarantees  performance  under  contract  provisions
through a clearing corporation, a nonprofit organization managed by the exchange
membership.  Domestic  interest rate futures  contracts are traded in an auction
environment on the floors of several exchanges - principally,  the Chicago Board
of Trade and the  Chicago  Mercantile  Exchange.  A public  market now exists in
domestic futures  contracts  covering various  financial  instruments  including
long-term  United States  Treasury bonds and notes;  GNMA modified  pass-through
mortgage-backed  securities;  three-month  United States Treasury bills; and 90-
day commercial paper. The Fund may trade in any futures contract for which there
exists  a  public  market,   including,   without   limitation,   the  foregoing
instruments.
         Risks of  Transactions  in Futures  Contracts.  There are several risks
related to the use of futures as a hedging  device.  One risk arises  because of
the imperfect correlation between movements in the price of the futures contract
and movements in the price of the securities which are the subject of the hedge.
The price of the future  may move more or less than the price of the  securities
being  hedged.  If the  price of the  future  moves  less  than the price of the
securities  which are the  subject  of the  hedge,  the hedge  will not be fully
effective,  but if the  price of the  securities  being  hedged  has moved in an
unfavorable direction, the Fund would be in a better position than if it had not
hedged  at all.  If the  price of the  securities  being  hedged  has moved in a
favorable direction,  this advantage will be partially offset by the loss on the
future.  If the price of the  future  moves  more  than the price of the  hedged
securities, the Fund will experience either a loss or a gain on the future which
will not be completely  offset by movements in the price of the securities which
are subject to the hedge.
         To compensate  for the imperfect  correlation of movements in the price
of securities being hedged and

                                                      B-9

<PAGE>



movements in the price of the futures contract, the Fund may buy or sell futures
contracts in a greater dollar amount than the dollar amount of securities  being
hedged if the  historical  volatility of the prices of such  securities has been
greater  than the  historical  volatility  over such time  period of the future.
Conversely,  the Fund may buy or sell fewer futures  contracts if the historical
volatility  of the  price  of the  securities  being  hedged  is less  than  the
historical  volatility of the futures  contract being used. It is possible that,
when the Fund has sold futures to hedge its  portfolio  against a decline in the
market,  the market may advance while the value of securities held in the Fund's
portfolio  may decline.  If this occurs,  the Fund will lose money on the future
and also experience a decline in value in its portfolio securities. However, the
Advisor  believes that over time the value of a diversified  portfolio will tend
to move in the same  direction as the market  indices upon which the futures are
based.
         Where futures are purchased to hedge against a possible increase in the
price  of  securities  before  the  Fund is able to  invest  its  cash  (or cash
equivalents)  in securities (or options) in an orderly  fashion,  it is possible
that the market may decline  instead.  If the Fund then decides not to invest in
securities  or options at that time  because of concern as to  possible  further
market  decline  or for other  reasons,  it will  realize a loss on the  futures
contract that is not offset by a reduction in the price of securities purchased.
         In  addition  to  the  possibility  that  there  may  be  an  imperfect
correlation,  or no correlation at all, between movements in the futures and the
securities being hedged,  the price of futures may not correlate  perfectly with
movement in the stock index or cash  market due to certain  market  distortions.
All  participants  in the  futures  market  are  subject to margin  deposit  and
maintenance   requirements.   Rather  than  meeting  additional  margin  deposit
requirements,   investors  may  close  futures  contracts   through   offsetting
transactions,  which could distort the normal relationship  between the index or
cash market and futures markets.  In addition,  the deposit  requirements in the
futures  market are less  onerous  than margin  requirements  in the  securities
market. Therefore,  increased participation by speculators in the futures market
may also cause temporary price distortions.  As a result of price distortions in
the futures market and the imperfect  correlation  between movements in the cash
market and the price of  securities  and  movements  in the price of futures,  a
correct  forecast  of general  trends by the  Advisor  may still not result in a
successful hedging transaction over a very short time frame.
         Positions  in futures may be closed out only on an exchange or board of
trade which provides a secondary market for such futures.  Although the Fund may
intend to purchase or sell  futures  only on  exchanges or boards of trade where
there appears to be an active  secondary  market,  there is no assurance  that a
liquid  secondary  market on an  exchange  or board of trade  will exist for any
particular  contract or at any  particular  time.  In such event,  it may not be
possible  to  close a  futures  position,  and in the  event  of  adverse  price
movements, the Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash payments of
variation  margin.  When  futures  contracts  have been used to hedge  portfolio
securities,  such securities will not be sold until the futures  contract can be
terminated.  In such circumstances,  an increase in the price of the securities,
if any,  may  partially or  completely  offset  losses on the futures  contract.
However,  as  described  above,  there is no  guarantee  that  the  price of the
securities  will in fact  correlate  with the  price  movements  in the  futures
contract and thus provide an offset to losses on a futures contract.
         Most United States  futures  exchanges  limit the amount of fluctuation
permitted  in futures  contract  prices  during a single  trading day. The daily
limit  establishes  the maximum amount that the price of a futures  contract may
vary either up or down from the previous day's  settlement price at the end of a
trading  session.  Once the daily limit has been reached in a particular type of
futures  contract,  no  trades  may be made on that day at a price  beyond  that
limit.  The daily limit governs only price movement during a particular  trading
day and therefore does not limit potential losses, because the limit may prevent
the  liquidation  of  unfavorable   positions.   Futures  contract  prices  have
occasionally moved to the daily limit for several  consecutive trading days with
little or no trading, thereby preventing prompt liquidation of futures positions
and subjecting some futures traders to substantial losses.
         Successful  use of futures by the Fund is also subject to the Advisor's
ability to predict  correctly  movements  in the  direction  of the market.  For
example,  if the Fund has hedged  against  the  possibility  of a decline in the
market  adversely  affecting  stocks  held in its  portfolio  and  stock  prices
increase instead, the Fund will lose part or all of the benefit of the increased
value of the stocks which it has hedged because it will have  offsetting  losses
in its futures  positions.  In  addition,  in such  situations,  if the Fund has
insufficient cash, it may have to sell securities to meet daily variation margin
requirements.  Such sales of securities may be, but will not  necessarily be, at
increased  prices  which  reflect the rising  market.  The Fund may have to sell
securities at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.
         In the  event of the  bankruptcy  of a broker  through  which  the Fund
engages in transactions in futures contracts

                                                      B-10

<PAGE>



or options,  the Fund could  experience  delays and losses in  liquidating  open
positions  purchased or sold through the broker, and incur a loss of all or part
of its margin deposits with the broker.
         Options on Futures Contracts. As described above, the Fund may purchase
options on the futures  contracts  they can purchase or sell.  A futures  option
gives the holder,  in return for the premium paid,  the right to buy (call) from
or sell  (put) to the  writer of the option a futures  contract  at a  specified
price at any time during the period of the option. Upon exercise,  the writer of
the option is  obligated  to pay the  difference  between  the cash value of the
futures  contract and the exercise price.  Like the buyer or seller of a futures
contract,  the  holder or writer of an  option  has the right to  terminate  its
position  prior  to the  scheduled  expiration  of the  option  by  selling,  or
purchasing an option of the same series,  at which time the person entering into
the closing  transaction will realize a gain or loss. There is no guarantee that
such closing transactions can be effected.
         Investments in futures options involve some of the same  considerations
as  investments  in futures  contracts  (for example,  the existence of a liquid
secondary market). In addition,  the purchase of an option also entails the risk
that changes in the value of the underlying  futures  contract will not be fully
reflected  in the value of the  option.  Depending  on the pricing of the option
compared  to either the  futures  contract  upon which it is based,  or upon the
price of the  securities  being  hedged,  an option may or may not be less risky
than  ownership  of the futures  contract or such  securities.  In general,  the
market  prices of options can be expected  to be more  volatile  than the market
prices on the underlying futures contracts.  Compared to the purchase or sale of
futures  contracts,  however,  the  purchase  of call or put  options on futures
contracts may  frequently  involve less  potential  risk to the Fund because the
maximum  amount at risk is limited to the  premium  paid for the  options  (plus
transaction costs).
         Restrictions on the Use or Futures  Contracts and Related Options.  The
Fund will not engage in transactions in futures contracts or related options for
speculation,  but  only  as  a  hedge  against  changes  resulting  from  market
conditions in the values of securities held in the Fund's  portfolio or which it
intends to purchase and where the transactions  are economically  appropriate to
the reduction of risks inherent in the ongoing  management of the Fund. The Fund
may not purchase or sell  futures or purchase  related  options if,  immediately
thereafter,  more than 33% of its net assets would be hedged.  The Fund also may
not  purchase  or sell  futures or  purchase  related  options  if,  immediately
thereafter,  the sum of the amount of margin  deposits  on the  Fund's  existing
futures  positions  and premiums  paid for such  options  would exceed 5% of the
market value of the Fund's net assets.
         These restrictions,  which are derived from current federal regulations
regarding the use of options and futures by mutual funds,  are not  "fundamental
restrictions"  and may be changed by the Trustees of the Trust if applicable law
permits such a change and the change is consistent  with the overall  investment
objective and policies of the Fund.

Repurchase Agreements
         The Fund may enter  into  repurchase  agreements  with  respect  to its
portfolio securities.  Pursuant to such agreements, the Fund acquires securities
from financial institutions such as banks and broker-dealers as are deemed to be
creditworthy by the Advisor, subject to the seller's agreement to repurchase and
the Fund's  agreement to resell such  securities at a mutually  agreed upon date
and price. The repurchase price generally equals the price paid by the Fund plus
interest  negotiated on the basis of current short-term rates (which may be more
or less than the rate on the underlying portfolio security).  Securities subject
to  repurchase  agreements  will  be  held by the  Custodian  or in the  Federal
Reserve/Treasury  Book-Entry System or an equivalent  foreign system. The seller
under a  repurchase  agreement  will be required  to  maintain  the value of the
underlying  securities at not less than 102% of the  repurchase  price under the
agreement.  If the seller defaults on its repurchase  obligation,  the Fund will
suffer a loss to the  extent  that the  proceeds  from a sale of the  underlying
securities are less than the repurchase price under the agreement. Bankruptcy or
insolvency of such a defaulting  seller may cause the Fund's rights with respect
to such securities to be delayed or limited.
Repurchase agreements are considered to be loans under the 1940 Act.

When-Issued Securities, Forward Commitments and Delayed Settlements

         The Fund may purchase securities on a "when-issued," forward commitment
or delayed  settlement basis. In this event, the Custodian will segregate liquid
assets equal to the amount of the  commitment in a separate  account.  Normally,
the  Custodian  will set  aside  portfolio  securities  to  satisfy  a  purchase
commitment.  In such a case, the Fund may be required  subsequently to segregate
additional assets in order to assure that the value of the account remains equal
to the amount of the Fund's  commitment.  It may be expected that the Fund's net
assets  will  fluctuate  to a  greater  degree  when  it  sets  aside  portfolio
securities to cover such purchase commitments than when it sets aside cash.

                                                      B-11

<PAGE>



         The  Fund  does  not  intend  to  engage  in  these   transactions  for
speculative  purposes  but only in  furtherance  of its  investment  objectives.
Because  the  Fund  will  segregate   liquid  assets  to  satisfy  its  purchase
commitments in the manner described, the Fund's liquidity and the ability of the
Advisor  to  manage  it  may  be  affected  in  the  event  the  Fund's  forward
commitments,   commitments  to  purchase  when-issued   securities  and  delayed
settlements ever exceeded 15% of the value of its net assets.
         The Fund will purchase securities on a when-issued,  forward commitment
or  delayed   settlement  basis  only  with  the  intention  of  completing  the
transaction.  If deemed advisable as a matter of investment  strategy,  however,
the Fund may dispose of or  renegotiate  a commitment  after it is entered into,
and may sell securities it has committed to purchase before those securities are
delivered  to the  Fund on the  settlement  date.  In these  cases  the Fund may
realize a taxable  capital gain or loss.  When the Fund engages in  when-issued,
forward commitment and delayed settlement  transactions,  it relies on the other
party to consummate the trade.  Failure of such party to do so may result in the
Fund's  incurring a loss or missing an opportunity to obtain a price credited to
be advantageous.
         The market value of the securities  underlying a when-issued  purchase,
forward  commitment  to purchase  securities,  or a delayed  settlement  and any
subsequent  fluctuations  in  their  market  value is taken  into  account  when
determining  the market value of the Fund starting on the day the Fund agrees to
purchase the  securities.  The Fund does not earn interest on the  securities it
has  committed  to  purchase  until  they  are  paid  for and  delivered  on the
settlement date. Lending Portfolio Securities
         The Fund may lend its  portfolio  securities in an amount not exceeding
30% of its total assets to financial  institutions  such as banks and brokers if
the loan is collateralized in accordance with applicable regulations.  Under the
present regulatory requirements which govern loans of portfolio securities,  the
loan  collateral  must,  on each  business  day, at least equal the value of the
loaned securities and must consist of cash,  letters of credit of domestic banks
or domestic  branches of foreign banks, or securities of the U.S.  Government or
its agencies. To be acceptable as collateral,  letters of credit must obligate a
bank to pay amounts  demanded  by the Fund if the demand  meets the terms of the
letter.  Such terms and the issuing  bank would have to be  satisfactory  to the
Fund.  Any  loan  might  be  secured  by any one or more of the  three  types of
collateral.  The terms of the  Fund's  loans must  permit the Fund to  reacquire
loaned  securities on five days' notice or in time to vote on any serious matter
and must meet certain tests under the Code.

Short Sales

         The Fund is  authorized to make short sales of  securities.  In a short
sale,  the Fund sells a security  which it does not own,  in  anticipation  of a
decline in the market value of the security. To complete the sale, the Fund must
borrow the security  (generally  from the broker through which the short sale is
made) in order to make  delivery  to the buyer.  The Fund is then  obligated  to
replace the security  borrowed by  purchasing it at the market price at the time
of  replacement.  The Fund is said to have a "short  position" in the securities
sold until it delivers them to the broker.  The period during which the Fund has
a short position can range from one day to more than a year.  Until the security
is replaced,  the proceeds of the short sale are retained by the broker, and the
Fund is required to pay to the broker a negotiated  portion of any  dividends or
interest  which accrue  during the period of the loan.  To meet  current  margin
requirements,  the Fund is also  required to deposit with the broker  additional
cash or securities so that the total deposit with the broker is maintained daily
at 150% of the current  market value of the  securities  sold short (100% of the
current market value if a security is held in the account that is convertible or
exchangeable  into the security  sold short  within 90 days without  restriction
other than the payment of money).

         Short sales by the Fund  create  opportunities  to increase  the Fund's
return but, at the same time,  involve specific risk  considerations  and may be
considered  a  speculative  technique.  Since the Fund in effect  profits from a
decline in the price of the securities sold short without the need to invest the
full purchase  price of the securities on the date of the short sale, the Fund's
net asset value per share will tend to increase more when the  securities it has
sold short  decrease in value,  and to decrease more when the  securities it has
sold short  increase in value,  than would  otherwise  be the case if it had not
engaged in such short sales.  The amount of any gain will be decreased,  and the
amount  of any loss  increased,  by the  amount  of any  premium,  dividends  or
interest  the Fund may be  required  to pay in  connection  with the short sale.
Furthermore,  under adverse  market  conditions  the Fund might have  difficulty
purchasing  securities  to meet its short sale delivery  obligations,  and might
have to sell  portfolio  securities  to raise the capital  necessary to meet its
short sale  obligations  at a time when  fundamental  investment  considerations
would not favor such sales.

                                                      B-12

<PAGE>



Illiquid Securities

         The Fund may not invest more than 15% of the value of its net assets in
securities  that at the time of purchase have legal or contractual  restrictions
on resale or are  otherwise  illiquid.  The Advisor  will  monitor the amount of
illiquid  securities  in the  Fund's  portfolio,  under the  supervision  of the
Trust's  Board of  Trustees,  to ensure  compliance  with the Fund's  investment
restrictions.

         Historically,  illiquid  securities have included securities subject to
contractual  or  legal  restrictions  on  resale  because  they  have  not  been
registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "Securities  Act"),  securities
which are otherwise not readily  marketable and repurchase  agreements  having a
maturity of longer than seven days.  Securities  which have not been  registered
under the  Securities  Act are referred to as private  placement  or  restricted
securities  and are  purchased  directly  from the  issuer  or in the  secondary
market.  Mutual  funds  do not  typically  hold a  significant  amount  of these
restricted or other illiquid  securities  because of the potential for delays on
resale and  uncertainty in valuation.  Limitations on resale may have an adverse
effect on the marketability of portfolio securities and the Fund might be unable
to dispose of restricted or other illiquid  securities promptly or at reasonable
prices and might thereby experience  difficulty  satisfying  redemption requests
within  seven  days.  The Fund  might  also  have to  register  such  restricted
securities  in order to dispose of them,  resulting  in  additional  expense and
delay.  Adverse  market  conditions  could  impede  such a  public  offering  of
securities.

         In recent years,  however, a large  institutional  market has developed
for  certain  securities  that are not  registered  under  the  Securities  Act,
including repurchase agreements, commercial paper, foreign securities, municipal
securities and corporate bonds and notes.  Institutional  investors depend on an
efficient institutional market in which the unregistered security can be readily
resold or on an issuer's ability to honor a demand for repayment.  The fact that
there are  contractual or legal  restrictions on resale to the general public or
to  certain  institutions  may  not be  indicative  of  the  liquidity  of  such
investments.  If such securities are subject to purchase by institutional buyers
in accordance with Rule 144A  promulgated by the Commission under the Securities
Act, the Trust's Board of Trustees may determine  that such  securities  are not
illiquid securities  notwithstanding their legal or contractual  restrictions on
resale.  In all other cases,  however,  securities  subject to  restrictions  on
resale will be deemed illiquid.

Investment Restrictions

         The  Trust  (on  behalf  of  the  Fund)  has  adopted   the   following
restrictions  as  fundamental  policies,  which may not be changed  without  the
favorable  vote of the holders of a  "majority,"  as defined in the 1940 Act, of
the outstanding  voting securities of the Fund. Under the 1940 Act, the "vote of
the holders of a majority of the outstanding  voting  securities" means the vote
of the holders of the lesser of (i) 67% of the shares of the Fund represented at
a meeting at which the  holders of more than 50% of its  outstanding  shares are
represented or (ii) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund.

         As a matter of fundamental policy, the Fund is diversified.  The Fund's
investment objective is also fundamental.

         In addition, the Fund may not:

         1. Issue senior securities,  borrow money or pledge its assets,  except
that (i) the Fund may borrow from banks in amounts not  exceeding  one-third  of
its total assets (not including the amount borrowed);  and (ii) this restriction
shall not  prohibit  the Fund from  engaging  in options  transactions  or short
sales;

         2. Purchase securities on margin, except such short-term credits as may
be  necessary  for the  clearance of  transactions  and except that the Fund may
borrow money from banks to purchase securities;

         3. Act as  underwriter  (except to the extent the Fund may be deemed to
be an  underwriter  in connection  with the sale of securities in its investment
portfolio);

         4. Invest 25% or more of its total  assets,  calculated  at the time of
purchase  and  taken at  market  value,  in any one  industry  (other  than U.S.
Government securities);

         5.  Purchase  or sell real estate or  interests  in real estate or real
estate limited partnerships  (although the Fund may purchase and sell securities
which are secured by real estate and  securities  of  companies  which invest or
deal in real estate);

                                                      B-13

<PAGE>



         6. Purchase or sell commodities or commodity futures contracts,  except
that the Fund may  purchase and sell foreign  currency  contracts in  accordance
with any rules of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission;

         7.  Make  loans of  money  (except  for  purchases  of debt  securities
consistent  with the  investment  policies of the Fund and except for repurchase
agreements); or

        8. Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or management.

         The Fund observes the following  restrictions  as a matter of operating
but not fundamental  policy,  pursuant to positions taken by federal  regulatory
authorities:

         The Fund may not:

         1. Invest in the securities of other  investment  companies or purchase
any other investment company's voting securities or make any other investment in
other investment companies except to the extent permitted by federal law; or

         2.  Invest  more  than  15% of  its  assets  in  securities  which  are
restricted  as to  disposition  or  otherwise  are  illiquid  or have no readily
available  market  (except for  securities  which are determined by the Board of
Trustees to be liquid).

                                                    MANAGEMENT

         The  overall  management  of the  business  and affairs of the Trust is
vested with its Board of Trustees. The Board approves all significant agreements
between the Trust and persons or companies  furnishing services to it, including
the agreements  with the Advisor,  Administrator,  Custodian and Transfer Agent.
The day to day operations of the Trust are delegated to its officers, subject to
the Fund's investment  objectives and policies and to general supervision by the
Board of Trustees.

         The Trustees and officers of the Trust,  their ages and positions  with
the Trust,  their business  addresses and principal  occupations during the past
five years are:

<TABLE>

<S>                              <C>             <C>    
Name, address and age            Position        Principal Occupation During Past Five Years
Walter E. Auch, Sr. (75)         Trustee         Director, Geotech Communications, Inc., Nicholas-Applegate
6001 N. 62d Place                                Investment Trust, Brinson Funds (since 1994), Smith Barney Trak
Paradise Valley, AZ 85253                        Fund, Pimco Advisors L.P., Banyan Realty Trust, Banyan Land Fund
                                                 II and Legend Properties.

Eric M. Banhazl (40)*            Trustee,        Senior Vice President, Investment Company Administration
2025 E. Financial Way            President and   Corporation; Vice President, First Fund Distributors; President,
Glendora, CA 91740               Treasurer       RNC Mutual Fund Group; Treasurer, Guinness Flight Investment
                                                 Funds, Inc. and Professionally Managed Portfolios.

Donald E. O'Connor (60) Trustee Retired;  formerly  Executive Vice President and
Chief  Operating  Officer  1700 Taylor  Avenue of ICI Mutual  Insurance  Company
(until January,  1997),  Vice President,  Fort Washington MD, 20744  Operations,
Investment Company Institute (until June, 1993).

George T. Wofford III (57) Trustee Vice President, Information Services, Federal
Home  Loan  Bank of San 305  Glendora  Circle  Francisco  (since  March,  1993);
formerly  Director  of  Management  Danville,  CA  94526  Information  Services,
Morrison & Foerster (law firm).

Steven J. Paggioli (47)          Vice            Executive Vice President, Robert H. Wadsworth & Associates, Inc.
479 W. 22d Street                President       and Investment Company Administration Corporation; Vice President
New York, NY 10011                               First Fund Distributors, Inc.; President and Trustee, Professionally
                                                 Managed Portfolios; Director, Managers Funds, Inc.

Robert H. Wadsworth (57)         Vice            President, Robert H. Wadsworth & Associates, Inc., Investment
4455 E. Camelback Road           President       Company Administration Corporation and First Fund Distributors, Inc.;
Suite 261E                                       Vice President, Professionally Managed Portfolios; President, Guinness

                                                      B-14

<PAGE>



Phoenix, AZ 85018                                Flight Investment Funds, Inc.; Director, Germany Fund, Inc., New
                                                 Germany Fund, Inc. and Central European Equity Fund, Inc.

Chris O. Kissack (48)            Secretary       Employed by Investment Company Administration Corporation (since
4455 E. Camelback Road, 261E                     July, 1996); formerly employed by Bank One, N.A. (from August, 1995
Phoenix, AZ 85018                                until July, 1996); O'Connor, Cavanagh,  Anderson, Killingsworth and
                                                 Beshears   (law  firm)   (until August, 1995) .

* denotes Trustee who is an "interested person" of the Trust under the 1940 Act.
</TABLE>

Name and Position                         Aggregate Compensation from The Trust*

Walter E. Auch, Sr., Trustee              $5,000

Donald E. O'Connor, Trustee               $5,000

George T. Wofford III, Trustee            $5,000

*Estimated  for the current  fiscal year. The Trust has no pension or retirement
plan. No other entity  affiliated  with the Trust pays any  compensation  to the
Trustees.

The Advisor

         Subject  to  the  supervision  of the  Board  of  Trustees,  investment
management  and related  services are  provided by the  Advisor,  pursuant to an
Investment Advisory Agreement (the "Advisory Agreement").

         Under the Advisory  Agreement,  the Advisor agrees to invest the assets
of  the  Fund  in  accordance  with  the  investment  objectives,  policies  and
restrictions  of the  Fund as set  forth in the  Fund's  and  Trust's  governing
documents,  including, without limitation, the Trust's Agreement and Declaration
of  Trust  and  By-Laws;   the  Fund's   prospectus,   statement  of  additional
information,  and  undertakings;  and  such  other  limitations,   policies  and
procedures  as the Trustees of the Trust may impose from time to time in writing
to the  Advisor.  In providing  such  services,  the Advisor  shall at all times
adhere to the provisions and  restrictions  contained in the federal  securities
laws, applicable state securities laws, the Code, and other applicable law.

         Without  limiting  the  generality  of the  foregoing,  the Advisor has
agreed to (i) furnish the Fund with advice and  recommendations  with respect to
the  investment  of the Fund's  assets,  (ii)  effect the  purchase  and sale of
portfolio  securities;  (iii)  manage and oversee the  investments  of the Fund,
subject to the  ultimate  supervision  and  direction  of the  Trust's  Board of
Trustees;  (iv) vote  proxies and take other  actions with respect to the Fund's
securities;  (v) maintain the books and records  required to be maintained  with
respect  to the  securities  in the  Fund's  portfolio;  (vi)  furnish  reports,
statements and other data on securities,  economic  conditions and other matters
related  to the  investment  of the  Fund's  assets  which the  Trustees  or the
officers  of the Trust may  reasonably  request;  and (vi) render to the Trust's
Board of Trustees such periodic and special  reports as the Board may reasonably
request. The Advisor has also agreed, at its own expense, to maintain such staff
and employ or retain such  personnel  and consult with such other  persons as it
shall from time to time  determine  to be necessary  to the  performance  of its
obligations under the Advisory Agreement.  Personnel of the Advisor may serve as
officers of the Trust provided they do so without  compensation  from the Trust.
Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the staff and personnel of the
Advisor shall be deemed to include  persons  employed or retained by the Advisor
to furnish statistical  information,  research,  and other factual  information,
advice  regarding  economic  factors and  trends,  information  with  respect to
technical and scientific  developments,  and such other information,  advice and
assistance  as the  Advisor  or the  Trust's  Board of  Trustees  may desire and
reasonably  request.  With respect to the operation of the Fund, the Advisor has
agreed to be  responsible  for the expenses of printing and  distributing  extra
copies of the Fund's prospectus,  statement of additional information, and sales
and  advertising  materials  (but not the legal,  auditing  or  accounting  fees
attendant thereto) to prospective investors (but not to existing  shareholders);
and the costs of any special Board of Trustees meetings or shareholder  meetings
convened for the primary benefit of the Advisor.
         As  compensation  for  the  Advisor's  services,  the  Fund  pays it an
advisory fee at the rate  specified in the  prospectus.  In addition to the fees
payable to the Advisor and the  Administrator,  the Trust is responsible for its
operating

                                                      B-15

<PAGE>



expenses, including: fees and expenses incurred in connection with the issuance,
registration and transfer of its shares;  brokerage and commission expenses; all
expenses of transfer,  receipt,  safekeeping,  servicing and  accounting for the
cash,  securities  and other  property  of the Trust for the benefit of the Fund
including all fees and expenses of its custodian, shareholder services agent and
accounting  services  agent;  interest  charges  on any  borrowings;  costs  and
expenses of pricing and calculating its daily net asset value and of maintaining
its books of  account  required  under the 1940 Act;  taxes,  if any; a pro rata
portion of expenditures  in connection with meetings of the Fund's  shareholders
and the  Trust's  Board of  Trustees  that are  properly  payable  by the  Fund;
salaries  and  expenses  of  officers  and fees and  expenses  of members of the
Trust's Board of Trustees or members of any advisory  board or committee who are
not  members  of,  affiliated  with or  interested  persons  of the  Advisor  or
Administrator;  insurance  premiums on property or  personnel  of the Fund which
inure to its benefit,  including liability and fidelity bond insurance; the cost
of preparing and printing reports, proxy statements, prospectuses and statements
of additional  information of the Fund or other  communications for distribution
to existing shareholders; legal, auditing and accounting fees; trade association
dues;  fees and expenses  (including  legal fees) of registering and maintaining
registration  of its shares  for sale under  federal  and  applicable  state and
foreign  securities laws; all expenses of maintaining and servicing  shareholder
accounts,  including  all  charges  for  transfer,   shareholder  recordkeeping,
dividend disbursing,  redemption,  and other agents for the benefit of the Fund,
if any; and all other charges and costs of its operation plus any  extraordinary
and  non-recurring  expenses,  except as  otherwise  prescribed  in the Advisory
Agreement.
         The Advisor  may agree to waive  certain of its fees or  reimburse  the
Fund for certain  expenses,  in order to limit the expense ratio of the Fund. In
that event,  subject to approval by the Trust's Board of Trustees,  the Fund may
reimburse  the  Advisor  in  subsequent  years  for  fees  waived  and  expenses
reimbursed,  provided the expense  ratio before  reimbursement  is less than the
expense limitation in effect at that time.
         Under the  Advisory  Agreement,  the Advisor  will not be liable to the
Trust or the Fund or any  shareholder  for any act or omission in the course of,
or connected  with,  rendering  services or for any loss  sustained by the Trust
except in the case of a breach of fiduciary  duty with respect to the receipt of
compensation for services (in which case any award of damages will be limited as
provided  in the  1940  Act) or of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith  or  gross
negligence,  or  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and duties  under the
Agreement.
         The Advisory Agreement will remain in effect for a period not to exceed
two years. Thereafter,  if not terminated,  the Advisory Agreement will continue
automatically for successive  annual periods,  provided that such continuance is
specifically  approved  at  least  annually  (i)  by  a  majority  vote  of  the
Independent  Trustees  cast in person at a meeting  called  for the  purpose  of
voting  on such  approval,  and (ii) by the  Board of  Trustees  or by vote of a
majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund.
         The Advisory  Agreement is  terminable by vote of the Board of Trustees
or by the holders of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund
at any time  without  penalty,  on 60 days written  notice to the  Advisor.  The
Advisory  Agreement  also may be  terminated  by the Advisor on 60 days  written
notice to the Trust. The Advisory  Agreement  terminates  automatically upon its
assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).
         The  Administrator.  The Administrator has agreed to be responsible for
providing  such services as the Trustees may reasonably  request,  including but
not  limited to (i)  maintaining  the  Trust's  books and  records  (other  than
financial or accounting books and records maintained by any custodian,  transfer
agent or accounting  services  agent);  (ii)  overseeing  the Trust's  insurance
relationships;  (iii)  preparing  for the Trust  (or  assisting  counsel  and/or
auditors in the preparation of) all required tax returns,  proxy  statements and
reports  to the  Trust's  shareholders  and  Trustees  and  reports to and other
filings  with the  Commission  and any  other  governmental  agency  (the  Trust
agreeing to supply or cause to be supplied to the  Administrator  all  necessary
financial  and  other  information  in  connection  with  the  foregoing);  (iv)
preparing such  applications and reports as may be necessary to permit the offer
and sale of the shares of the Trust under the  securities  or "blue sky" laws of
the various  states  selected by the Trust (the Trust agreeing to pay all filing
fees or other  similar fees in  connection  therewith);  (v)  responding  to all
inquiries or other communications of shareholders, if any, which are directed to
the  Administrator,  or if any such inquiry or communication is more properly to
be responded to by the Trust's custodian,  transfer agent or accounting services
agent,  overseeing  their response  thereto;  (vi) overseeing all  relationships
between  the  Trust  and any  custodian(s),  transfer  agent(s)  and  accounting
services  agent(s),  including the negotiation of agreements and the supervision
of the performance of such agreements;  and (vii)  authorizing and directing any
of the Administrator's  directors,  officers and employees who may be elected as
Trustees or officers of the Trust to serve in the  capacities  in which they are
elected.  All services to be furnished by the Administrator under this Agreement
may be

                                                      B-16

<PAGE>



furnished through the medium of any such directors, officers or employees of the
Administrator.

                                       PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
         The Advisory Agreement states that the Advisor shall be responsible for
broker-dealer  selection  and for  negotiation  of brokerage  commission  rates,
provided that the Advisor shall not direct orders to an affiliated person of the
Advisor without  general prior  authorization  to use such affiliated  broker or
dealer by the Trust's Board of Trustees.  The Advisor's primary consideration in
effecting a  securities  transaction  will be  execution  at the most  favorable
price. In selecting a broker-dealer to execute each particular transaction,  the
Advisor may take the following into consideration: the best net price available;
the reliability,  integrity and financial  condition of the  broker-dealer;  the
size of and  difficulty  in executing  the order;  and the value of the expected
contribution of the broker-dealer to the investment performance of the Fund on a
continuing basis. The price to the Fund in any transaction may be less favorable
than that available from another  broker-dealer  if the difference is reasonably
justified by other aspects of the portfolio execution services offered.
         Subject to such  policies  as the  Advisor and the Board of Trustees of
the  Trust  may  determine,  the  Advisor  shall  not be  deemed  to have  acted
unlawfully or to have  breached any duty created by this  Agreement or otherwise
solely by reason of its having  caused  the Fund to pay a broker or dealer  that
provides (directly or indirectly)  brokerage or research services to the Advisor
an amount of commission  for effecting a portfolio  transaction in excess of the
amount of commission  another  broker or dealer would have charged for effecting
that  transaction,  if the Advisor  determines in good faith that such amount of
commission was reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research
services  provided  by such  broker or  dealer,  viewed in terms of either  that
particular transaction or the Advisor's overall responsibilities with respect to
the Fund. The Advisor is further  authorized to allocate the orders placed by it
on behalf of the Fund to such  brokers or dealers who also  provide  research or
statistical  material,  or other  services,  to the Trust,  the Advisor,  or any
affiliate of either. Such allocation shall be in such amounts and proportions as
the Advisor shall  determine,  and the Advisor shall report on such  allocations
regularly to the Advisor and the Trust,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom
such  allocations  have been made and the basis  therefor.  The  Advisor is also
authorized to consider  sales of shares of the Fund as a factor in the selection
of  brokers  or  dealers  to  execute  portfolio  transactions,  subject  to the
requirements of best  execution,  i.e., that such brokers or dealers are able to
execute the order promptly and at the best obtainable securities price.
         On occasions  when the Advisor deems the purchase or sale of a security
to be in the best  interest of the Fund as well as other clients of the Advisor,
the Advisor,  to the extent  permitted by applicable laws and  regulations,  may
aggregate the  securities to be so purchased or sold in order to obtain the most
favorable price or lower brokerage commissions and the most efficient execution.
In such event, allocation of the securities so purchased or sold, as well as the
expenses incurred in the transaction,  will be made by the Advisor in the manner
it  considers  to be the  most  equitable  and  consistent  with  its  fiduciary
obligations to the Fund and to such other clients.
                                                  NET ASSET VALUE
         The  net  asset  value  of the  Fund's  shares  will  fluctuate  and is
determined  as of the  close of  trading  on the New York  Stock  Exchange  (the
"NYSE")  (currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) each business day. The NYSE annually
announces  the days on which it will not be open for  trading.  The most  recent
announcement  indicates  that it will  not be open on the  following  days:  New
Year's Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday,  Memorial
Day,  Independence Day, Labor Day,  Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. However,
the NYSE may close on days not included in that announcement.
         The net asset value per share is computed by dividing  the value of the
securities  held by the Fund plus any cash or other assets  (including  interest
and dividends  accrued but not yet received)  minus all  liabilities  (including
accrued  expenses) by the total number of shares in the Fund outstanding at such
time.
         Generally, the Fund's investments are valued at market value or, in the
absence  of a market  value,  at fair value as  determined  in good faith by the
Advisor and the Trust's Valuation  Committee pursuant to procedures  approved by
or under the direction of the Board.

         The Fund's securities,  including ADRs, EDRs and GDRs, which are traded
on  securities  exchanges  are valued at the last sale price on the  exchange on
which such  securities  are  traded,  as of the close of business on the day the
securities are being valued or, lacking any reported  sales, at the mean between
the last available bid and asked price.  Securities that are traded on more than
one exchange are valued on the exchange determined by the Advisor to be the

                                                      B-17

<PAGE>



primary market.  Securities traded in the over-the-counter  market are valued at
the mean  between  the last  available  bid and asked price prior to the time of
valuation.  Securities  and assets for which market  quotations  are not readily
available (including  restricted  securities which are subject to limitations as
to their sale) are valued at fair value as  determined in good faith by or under
the direction of the Board.

         Short-term debt obligations  with remaining  maturities in excess of 60
days are  valued at  current  market  prices,  as  discussed  above.  Short-term
securities  with 60 days or less  remaining to maturity are,  unless  conditions
indicate  otherwise,  amortized  to maturity  based on their cost to the Fund if
acquired  within 60 days of maturity or, if already held by the Fund on the 60th
day, based on the value determined on the 61st day.

         An option that is written by the Fund is  generally  valued at the last
sale price or, in the absence of the last sale price,  the last offer price.  An
option that is purchased by the Fund is generally  valued at the last sale price
or, in the  absence of the last sale  price,  the last bid price.  If an options
exchange  closes  after  the  time at  which  the  Fund's  net  asset  value  is
calculated,  the last sale or last bid and asked  prices as of that time will be
used to calculate the net asset value.

         All other  assets of the Fund are valued in such manner as the Board in
good faith deems appropriate to reflect their fair value.

                                                     TAXATION

         The Fund will be taxed,  under the Code, as a separate  entity from any
other series of the Trust, and it intends to elect to qualify for treatment as a
regulated  investment  company  ("RIC") under  Subchapter M of the Code. In each
taxable  year that the Fund so  qualifies,  the Fund (but not its  shareholders)
will be relieved of federal  income tax on that part of its  investment  company
taxable income (consisting generally of interest and dividend income, net short-
term capital gains and net realized  gains from currency  transactions)  and net
capital gain that is distributed to shareholders.

         In order to qualify for  treatment as a RIC,  the Fund must  distribute
annually to shareholders  at least 90% of its investment  company taxable income
and must meet several additional requirements.  Among these requirements are, in
general, the following: (1) at least 90% of the Fund's gross income each taxable
year  must be  derived  from  dividends,  interest,  payments  with  respect  to
securities  loans and gains from the sale or other  disposition of securities or
foreign  currencies,  or other  income  derived  with respect to its business of
investing in securities or  currencies;  (2) at the close of each quarter of the
Fund's  taxable  year,  at least 50% of the value of its  total  assets  must be
represented by cash and cash items, U.S.  Government  securities,  securities of
other RICs and other  securities,  limited in respect of any one  issuer,  to an
amount  that does not exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's  assets and that does
not represent more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer;
and (3) at the close of each quarter of the Fund's  taxable year,  not more than
25% of the value of its assets may be  invested in  securities  (other than U.S.
Government securities or the securities of other RICs) of any one issuer.

         Distributions  of net investment  income and net realized capital gains
by the Fund will be taxable to  shareholders  whether made in cash or reinvested
in  shares.  In  determining  amounts  of  net  realized  capital  gains  to  be
distributed,  any  capital  loss  carryovers  from  prior  years will be applied
against  capital  gains.  Shareholders  receiving  distributions  in the form of
additional shares will have a cost basis for federal income tax purposes in each
share so  received  equal to the net  asset  value of a share of the Fund on the
reinvestment  date. Fund  distributions  also will be included in individual and
corporate  shareholders'  income on which  the  alternative  minimum  tax may be
imposed.

         The Fund intends to declare and pay dividends  and other  distributions
annually,  as stated in the  Prospectus.  In order to avoid the  payment  of any
federal  excise  tax based on net  income,  the Fund must  declare  on or before
December 31 of each year, and pay on or before January 31 of the following year,
distributions  at least equal to 98% of its  ordinary  income for that  calendar
year and at least 98% of the excess of any capital gains over any capital losses
realized in the one-year  period ending  October 31 of that year,  together with
any  undistributed  amounts of ordinary  income and capital  gains (in excess of
capital losses) from the previous calendar year.

         The Fund may receive dividend distributions from U.S. corporations.  To
the extent that the Fund receives such  dividends  and  distributes  them to its
shareholders,  and meets  certain  other  requirements  of the  Code,  corporate
shareholders of the Fund may be entitled to the "dividends  received" deduction.
Availability  of  the  deduction  is  subject  to  certain  holding  period  and
debt-financing limitations.

         The use of hedging  strategies,  such as purchasing  options,  involves
complex rules that will determine the

                                                      B-18

<PAGE>



character  and  timing of  recognition  of the  income  received  in  connection
therewith  by the Fund.  For  accounting  purposes,  when the Fund  purchases an
option, the premium paid by the Fund is recorded as an asset and is subsequently
adjusted to the current market value of the option. Any gain or loss realized by
the Fund upon the  expiration or sale of such options held by the Fund generally
will be capital gain or loss.

         Any security,  option,  or other  position  entered into or held by the
Fund  that  substantially  diminishes  the  Fund's  risk of loss  from any other
position held by that Fund may  constitute a "straddle"  for federal  income tax
purposes. In general, straddles are subject to certain rules that may affect the
amount,  character  and timing of the Fund's  gains and losses  with  respect to
straddle positions by requiring,  among other things,  that the loss realized on
disposition  of one position of a straddle be deferred until gain is realized on
disposition  of the  offsetting  position;  that the  Fund's  holding  period in
certain straddle positions not begin until the straddle is terminated  (possibly
resulting  in the gain being  treated as  short-term  capital  gain  rather than
long-term  capital  gain);  and that losses  recognized  with respect to certain
straddle positions,  which would otherwise constitute short-term capital losses,
be treated as long-term capital losses. Different elections are available to the
Fund that may mitigate the effects of the straddle rules.

         Certain  options that are subject to Section 1256 of the Code ("Section
1256  Contracts")  and that are held by the Fund at the end of its taxable  year
generally  will be  required  to be "marked to market"  for  federal  income tax
purposes,  that is, deemed to have been sold at market  value.  Sixty percent of
any net gain or loss recognized on these deemed sales and 60% of any net gain or
loss realized from any actual sales of Section 1256 Contracts will be treated as
long-term  capital gain or loss,  and the balance will be treated as  short-term
capital gain or loss.

         The Fund may be subject to foreign  withholding  taxes on dividends and
interest earned with respect to securities of foreign corporations.

         Redemptions and exchanges of shares of the Fund will result in gains or
losses for tax purposes to the extent of the difference between the proceeds and
the shareholder's  adjusted tax basis for the shares. Any loss realized upon the
redemption  or exchange of shares  within six months from their date of purchase
will be treated as a long-term  capital loss to the extent of  distributions  of
long-term  capital  gain  dividends  with  respect to such  shares  during  such
six-month  period.  All or a portion of a loss realized  upon the  redemption of
shares  of the Fund  may be  disallowed  to the  extent  shares  of the Fund are
purchased (including shares acquired by means of reinvested dividends) within 30
days before or after such redemption.

         Distributions  and redemptions may be subject to state and local income
taxes,  and the  treatment  thereof  may  differ  from the  federal  income  tax
treatment. Foreign taxes may apply to non-U.S. investors.

         The above  discussion and the related  discussion in the Prospectus are
not  intended  to  be  complete   discussions  of  all  applicable  federal  tax
consequences  of an  investment  in the  Fund.  The law  firm  of Paul  Hastings
Janofsky & Walker LLP has expressed no opinion in respect  thereof.  Nonresident
aliens and  foreign  persons  are  subject to  different  tax rules,  and may be
subject to withholding of up to 30% on certain payments  received from the Fund.
Shareholders  are advised to consult with their own tax advisers  concerning the
application of foreign,  federal,  state and local taxes to an investment in the
Fund.


                                            DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

         Dividends from the Fund's  investment  company  taxable income (whether
paid in cash or invested in additional  shares) will be taxable to  shareholders
as  ordinary   income  to  the  extent  of  the  Fund's  earnings  and  profits.
Distributions  of the Fund's net capital gain  (whether paid in cash or invested
in additional shares) will be taxable to shareholders as long-term capital gain,
regardless of how long they have held their Fund shares.

         Dividends declared by the Fund in October,  November or December of any
year and payable to  shareholders of record on a date in one of such months will
be deemed to have been paid by the Fund and received by the  shareholders on the
record date if the dividends are paid by the Fund during the following  January.
Accordingly,  such dividends will be taxed to shareholders for the year in which
the record date falls.

         The Fund or any securities  dealer effecting a redemption of the Fund's
shares by a shareholder  will be required to file  information  reports with the
IRS with respect to  distributions  and  payments  made to the  shareholder.  In
addition,  the Fund will be required to withhold  federal income tax at the rate
of 31% on taxable dividends, redemptions and other

                                                      B-19

<PAGE>



payments  made to accounts of individual or other  non-exempt  shareholders  who
have not  furnished  their  correct  taxpayer  identification  numbers  and made
certain required  certifications on the Account Application Form or with respect
to which the Fund or the securities dealer has been notified by the IRS that the
number  furnished  is  incorrect  or that the  account is  otherwise  subject to
withholding.  Amounts  withheld  under these rules will be creditable  against a
shareholder's federal income tax liability.

                                              PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

Total Return

         Average annual total return  quotations used in the Fund's  advertising
and promotional materials are calculated according to the following formula:

         P(1 + T)n = ERV

where "P" equals a  hypothetical  initial  payment of $1000;  "T" equals average
annual total return; "n" equals the number of years; and "ERV" equals the ending
redeemable  value at the end of the period of a hypothetical  $1000 payment made
at the beginning of the period.

         Under the foregoing formula,  the time periods used in advertising will
be based  on  rolling  calendar  quarters,  updated  to the last day of the most
recent quarter prior to submission of the advertising for  publication.  Average
annual total  return,  or "T" in the above  formula,  is computed by finding the
average annual  compounded rates of return over the period that would equate the
initial amount  invested to the ending  redeemable  value.  Average annual total
return assumes the reinvestment of all dividends and distributions.

Other information

         Performance   data  of  the  Fund  quoted  in  advertising   and  other
promotional materials represents past performance and is not intended to predict
or indicate future  results.  The return and principal value of an investment in
the Fund will fluctuate,  and an investor's  redemption  proceeds may be more or
less  than the  original  investment  amount.  In  advertising  and  promotional
materials  the Fund may compare its  performance  with data  published by Lipper
Analytical  Services,  Inc.  ("Lipper")  or CDA  Investment  Technologies,  Inc.
("CDA").  The Fund also may refer in such  materials to mutual fund  performance
rankings  and other data,  such as  comparative  asset,  expense and fee levels,
published by Lipper or CDA. Advertising and promotional materials also may refer
to discussions of the Fund and comparative mutual fund data and ratings reported
in  independent  periodicals  including,  but not  limited  to, The Wall  Street
Journal, Money Magazine, Forbes, Business Week, Financial World and Barron's.

                                                GENERAL INFORMATION

         The Trust has no business history prior to the offering of the first of
its series of shares.  The Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to issue an
unlimited  number of full and  fractional  shares of beneficial  interest and to
divide or combine the shares into a greater or lesser  number of shares  without
thereby changing the proportionate  beneficial  interest in the Fund. Each share
represents an interest in the Fund proportionately equal to the interest of each
other share. Upon the Fund's liquidation,  all shareholders would share pro rata
in the net assets of the Fund available for distribution to shareholders.

         The  Declaration  of  Trust  does not  require  the  issuance  of stock
certificates.  If stock  certificates  are issued,  they must be returned by the
registered  owners prior to the transfer or redemption of shares  represented by
such certificates.

         If they deem it advisable and in the best interest of shareholders, the
Board of Trustees may create  additional series of shares which differ from each
other only as to  dividends.  The Board of  Trustees  has  created two series of
shares,  and may create  additional  series in the future,  which have  separate
assets  and  liabilities.   Income  and  operating   expenses  not  specifically
attributable to a particular Fund are be allocated fairly among the Funds by the
Trustees, generally on the basis of the relative net assets of each Fund.

         Rule  18f-2  under  the 1940  Act  provides  that as to any  investment
company which has two or more series  outstanding  and as to any matter required
to be  submitted  to  shareholder  vote,  such matter is not deemed to have been
effectively  acted upon  unless  approved  by the  holders of a  "majority"  (as
defined in the Rule) of the voting securities of

                                                      B-20

<PAGE>



each series  affected by the matter.  Such separate  voting  requirements do not
apply to the  election of  Trustees  or the  ratification  of the  selection  of
accountants. The Rule contains special provisions for cases in which an advisory
contract is approved by one or more, but not all, series. A change in investment
policy may go into effect as to one or more series whose  holders so approve the
change even though the required  vote is not obtained as to the holders of other
affected series.

         The Fund's custodian,  Star Bank, 425 Walnut Street,  Cincinnati,  Ohio
45202 is responsible for holding the Funds' assets. American Data Services, P.O.
Box 5536, Hauppauge,  NY 11788 acts as the Fund's accounting services agent. The
Fund's  independent  accountants,  , LLP, 555 Fifth Avenue,  New York, NY 10017,
assist in the  preparation  of certain  reports to the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission and the Fund's tax returns.

         Shares of the Fund owned by the  Trustees  and officers as a group were
less than 1% at September 15, 1997.

                                                     APPENDIX

                                              Description of Ratings

Moody's Investors Service, Inc.: Corporate Bond Ratings

         Aaa--Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality and
carry the smallest degree of investment risk. Interest payments are protected by
a large or by an exceptionally stable margin, and principal is secure. While the
various  protective  elements  are  likely to  change,  such  changes  as can be
visualized are most unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such
issues.

         Aa---Bonds  which are rated Aa are judged to be of high  quality by all
standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high grade bonds.  They are rated lower than the best bonds  because  margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements  may be of greater  amplitude  or there may be other  elements  present
which make the long term risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.

         Moody's  applies  numerical  modifiers "1", "2" and "3" to both the Aaa
and Aa rating  classifications.  The  modifier "1"  indicates  that the security
ranks in the  higher  end of its  generic  rating  category;  the  modifier  "2"
indicates a mid-range  ranking;  and the modifier "3"  indicates  that the issue
ranks in the lower end of its generic rating category.

         A--Bonds which are rated A possess many favorable investment attributes
and are to be  considered  as upper medium  grade  obligations.  Factors  giving
security to principal and interest are  considered  adequate but elements may be
present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.

         Baa--Bonds   which  are  rated  Baa  are  considered  as  medium  grade
obligations,  i.e.,  they are  neither  highly  protected  nor  poorly  secured.
Interest  payments and principal  security  appear  adequate for the present but
certain  protective  elements  may  be  lacking  or  may  be  characteristically
unreliable over any great period of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment
characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.

Standard & Poor's Corporation: Corporate Bond Ratings

         AAA--This is the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's to a debt
obligation  and  indicates an extremely  strong  capacity to pay  principal  and
interest.

         AA--Bonds  rated AA also  qualify  as  high-quality  debt  obligations.
Capacity to pay  principal  and interest is very strong,  and in the majority of
instances they differ from AAA issues only in small degree.

         A--Bonds rated A have a strong  capacity to pay principal and interest,
although they are somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in
circumstances and economic conditions.

         BBB--Bonds rated BBB are regarded as having an adequate capacity to pay
principal  and  interest.  Whereas they  normally  exhibit  adequate  protection
parameters,  adverse  economic  conditions  or changing  circumstances  are more
likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay principal and interest for bonds in
this category than for bonds in the A category.

Commercial Paper Ratings

         Moody's  commercial  paper  ratings  are  assessments  of the  issuer's
ability  to  repay  punctually  promissory  obligations.   Moody's  employs  the
following three designations, all judged to be investment grade, to indicate the
relative

                                                      B-21

<PAGE>



repayment capacity of rated issuers:  Prime 1--highest quality;  Prime 2--higher
quality; Prime 3--high quality.

         A Standard & Poor's commercial paper rating is a current  assessment of
the  likelihood  of timely  payment.  Ratings are graded  into four  categories,
ranging from "A" for the highest quality obligations to "D" for the lowest.

         Issues  assigned  the  highest  rating,  A, are  regarded as having the
greatest  capacity for timely  payment.  Issues in this category are  delineated
with the numbers "1", "2" and "3" to indicate the relative degree of safety. The
designation A-1 indicates that the degree of safety  regarding timely payment is
either overwhelming or very strong. A "+" designation is applied to those issues
rated "A-1" which possess extremely strong safety characteristics.  Capacity for
timely  payment on issues with the  designation  "A-2" is strong.  However,  the
relative  degree of safety is not as high as for issues  designated  A-1. Issues
carrying the designation "A-3" have a satisfactory  capacity for timely payment.
They are, however,  somewhat more vulnerable to the adverse effect of changes in
circumstances than obligations carrying the higher designations.



                                                      B-22
    

<PAGE>



                                                      PART C
                                                 OTHER INFORMATION

Item 24.  Financial Statements and Exhibits.
         (a)      Financial Statements:

         The  following   financial   statements  are  included  in  Part  B  of
Pre-Effective  Amendment No. 2 to the  Registration  Statement and  incorporated
herein by reference:

         Statement of Assets and Liabilities, February 25, 1997
         Notes to Statement of Assets and Liabilities

         (b)      Exhibits:
                  (1)      Agreement and Declaration of Trust (1)
                  (2)      By-Laws (1)
                  (3)      Not applicable
                  (4)      Specimen stock certificates (3)
                  (5)      Form of Investment Advisory Agreement (2)
                  (6)      Distribution Agreement (2)
                  (7)      Not applicable
                  (8)      Custodian Agreement (3)
                  (9)      (1) Administration Agreement with Investment Company
                           Administration Corporation (2)
                           (2) Fund Accounting Service Agreement (2)
                           (3) Transfer Agency and Service Agreement (2)
                  (10)     Opinion and consent of counsel (3)
                  (11)     Consent of Independent Auditors (3)
                  (12)     Not applicable
                  (13)     Investment letters (3)
                  (14)     Individual Retirement Account forms (5)
                  (15)     Distribution Plan (4)
                  (16)     Not applicable

         (1) Previously filed with the Registration Statement on Form N-
1A(File No. 333-17391) on December 6, 1996 and incorporated herein by
reference.

         (2) Previously filed with Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A(File No. 333-17391) on January 29, 1997
and incorporated herein by reference.

         (3) Previously filed with Pre-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A(File No. 333-17391) on February 28,
1997 and incorporated herein by reference.

         (4) Previously filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A(File No. 333-17391) on May 1, 1997 and
incorporated herein by reference.

         (5) To be filed by amendment.

Item 25.  Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant.

                                                      C-1

<PAGE>



         None.

Item 26.  Number of Holders of Securities.


         As of August 31, 1997,  there were 117 holders of shares of  beneficial
interest of the  American  Trust  Allegiance  Fund series of the  Registrant,  9
holders of shares of the  InformationTech 100 Fund series, 160 holders of shares
of  the   Kaminski   Poland  Fund  series  and  92  holders  of  shares  of  the
Ridgeway-Helms Millenium Fund series.

Item 27.  Indemnification.

         Article VI of Registrant's By-Laws states as follows:
         Section 1.  AGENTS, PROCEEDINGS AND EXPENSES.  For the purpose of
this  Article,  "agent"  means  any  person  who is or was a  Trustee,  officer,
employee  or other  agent of this Trust or is or was  serving at the  request of
this Trust as a Trustee, director, officer, employee or agent of another foreign
or domestic corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust or other enterprise
or was a Trustee, director,  officer, employee or agent of a foreign or domestic
corporation which was a predecessor of another enterprise at the request of such
predecessor  entity;  "proceeding"  means any  threatened,  pending or completed
action or proceeding, whether civil, criminal,  administrative or investigative;
and "expenses"  includes without limitation  attorney's fees and any expenses of
establishing a right to indemnification under this Article.

         Section 2. ACTIONS OTHER THAN BY TRUST.  This Trust shall indemnify any
person  who  was or is a  party  or is  threatened  to be  made a  party  to any
proceeding  (other than an action by or in the right of this Trust) by reason of
the fact that such  person is or was an agent of this Trust,  against  expenses,
judgments, fines, settlements and other amounts actually and reasonably incurred
in connection  with such  proceeding,  if it is determined  that person acted in
good faith and reasonably believed:

         (a)      in the case of conduct in his official capacity as a Trustee
                  of the Trust, that his conduct was in the Trust's best
                  interests, and

         (b)      in all other cases, that his conduct was at least not opposed
                  to the Trust's best interests, and

         (c)      in the case of a criminal proceeding, that he had no
                  reasonable cause to believe the conduct of that person was
                  unlawful.

         The  termination  of any  proceeding  by judgment,  order,  settlement,
conviction or upon a plea of nolo contendere or its equivalent shall not

                                                      C-2

<PAGE>



of itself create a presumption  that the person did not act in good faith and in
a manner  which the person  reasonably  believed to be in the best  interests of
this Trust or that the person had reasonable  cause to believe that the person's
conduct was unlawful.

         Section 3. ACTIONS BY THE TRUST.  This Trust shall indemnify any person
who was or is a party or is  threatened  to be made a party  to any  threatened,
pending  or  completed  action  by or in the  right of this  Trust to  procure a
judgment  in its favor by reason of the fact that that person is or was an agent
of this Trust,  against expenses actually and reasonably incurred by that person
in connection with the defense or settlement of that action if that person acted
in good faith,  in a manner that person  believed to be in the best interests of
this Trust and with such care,  including  reasonable  inquiry, as an ordinarily
prudent person in a like position would use under similar circumstances.

         Section 4. EXCLUSION OF INDEMNIFICATION.  Notwithstanding any provision
to the contrary contained herein, there shall be no right to indemnification for
any  liability  arising  by reason of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross
negligence,  or the reckless  disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of
the agent's office with this Trust.

         No indemnification shall be made under Sections 2 or 3 of this Article:


         (a)      In  respect of any  claim,  issue,  or matter as to which that
                  person shall have been adjudged to be liable on the basis that
                  personal  benefit was improperly  received by him,  whether or
                  not the benefit  resulted from an action taken in the person's
                  official capacity; or


         (b)      In respect of any claim, issue or matter as to which that
                  person shall have been adjudged to be liable in the
                  performance of that person's duty to this Trust, unless and
                  only to the extent that the court in which that action was
                  brought shall determine upon application that in view of all
                  the circumstances of the case, that person was not liable by
                  reason of the disabling conduct set forth in the preceding
                  paragraph and is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnity
                  for the expenses which the court shall determine; or

         (c)      of  amounts  paid in  settling  or  otherwise  disposing  of a
                  threatened or pending action,  with or without court approval,
                  or of expenses  incurred in defending a threatened  or pending
                  action which is settled or otherwise disposed of without court
                  approval,  unless the required approval set forth in Section 6
                  of this Article is obtained.

                                                      C-3

<PAGE>



         Section 5. SUCCESSFUL  DEFENSE BY AGENT. To the extent that an agent of
this  Trust has been  successful  on the  merits in  defense  of any  proceeding
referred to in Sections 2 or 3 of this Article or in defense of any claim, issue
or matter therein, before the court or other body before whom the proceeding was
brought, the agent shall be indemnified against expenses actually and reasonably
incurred  by the  agent in  connection  therewith,  provided  that the  Board of
Trustees,  including a majority who are disinterested,  non-party Trustees, also
determines  that based  upon a review of the facts,  the agent was not liable by
reason of the disabling conduct referred to in Section 4 of this Article.

         Section 6. REQUIRED  APPROVAL.  Except as provided in Section 5 of this
Article, any indemnification under this Article shall be made by this Trust only
if authorized in the specific case on a determination  that  indemnification  of
the  agent  is  proper  in the  circumstances  because  the  agent  has  met the
applicable  standard of conduct set forth in Sections 2 or 3 of this Article and
is not  prohibited  from  indemnification  because of the disabling  conduct set
forth in Section 4 of this Article, by:


         (a)      A majority vote of a quorum consisting of Trustees who are
                  not parties to the proceeding and are not interested persons
                  of the Trust (as defined in the Investment Company Act of
                  1940); or


         (b)      A written opinion by an independent legal counsel.

         Section 7. ADVANCE OF  EXPENSES.  Expenses  incurred in  defending  any
proceeding  may be advanced by this Trust  before the final  disposition  of the
proceeding upon a written undertaking by or on behalf of the agent, to repay the
amount  of the  advance  if it is  ultimately  determined  that he or she is not
entitled to  indemnification,  together  with at least one of the following as a
condition to the advance: (i)security for the undertaking; or (ii) the existence
of insurance protecting the Trust against losses arising by reason of any lawful
advances; or (iii) a determination by a majority of a quorum of Trustees who are
not parties to the proceeding and are not interested persons of the Trust, or by
an independent legal counsel in a written opinion,  based on a review of readily
available  facts that there is reason to believe that the agent  ultimately will
be found  entitled to  indemnification.  Determinations  and  authorizations  of
payments under this Section must be made in the manner specified in Section 6 of
this Article for determining that the indemnification is permissible.

         Section 8. OTHER CONTRACTUAL RIGHTS.  Nothing contained in this Article
shall affect any right to  indemnification  to which persons other than Trustees
and officers of this Trust or any subsidiary  hereof may be entitled by contract
or otherwise.

                                                      C-4

<PAGE>



         Section 9.  LIMITATIONS.  No indemnification or advance shall be
made under this Article, except as provided in Sections 5 or 6 in any
circumstances where it appears:

         (a)      that  it  would  be  inconsistent  with  a  provision  of  the
                  Agreement and  Declaration of Trust of the Trust, a resolution
                  of the shareholders,  or an agreement in effect at the time of
                  accrual  of  the  alleged  cause  of  action  asserted  in the
                  proceeding  in  which  the  expenses  were  incurred  or other
                  amounts  were  paid  which   prohibits  or  otherwise   limits
                  indemnification; or

         (b)      that it would be inconsistent with any condition expressly
                  imposed by a court in approving a settlement.

         Section 10. INSURANCE.  Upon and in the event of a determination by the
Board of  Trustees of this Trust to purchase  such  insurance,  this Trust shall
purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any agent of this Trust against any
liability  asserted against or incurred by the agent in such capacity or arising
out of the agent's  status as such, but only to the extent that this Trust would
have  the  power to  indemnify  the  agent  against  that  liability  under  the
provisions  of this Article and the Agreement  and  Declaration  of Trust of the
Trust.

         Section 11.                FIDUCIARIES OF EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLAN.  This
                                    ------------------------------------
Article does not apply to any proceeding against any Trustee, investment
manager or other fiduciary of an employee benefit plan in that person's
capacity as such, even though that person may also be an agent of this
Trust as defined in Section 1 of this Article.  Nothing contained in
this Article shall limit any right to indemnification to which such a
Trustee, investment manager, or other fiduciary may be entitled by
contract or otherwise which shall be enforceable to the extent permitted
by applicable law other than this Article.

Item 28.  Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser.
         The information required by this item with respect to American
Trust Company is as follows:

                  American Trust Company is a trust company chartered under the
         laws of the State of New Hampshire.  Its President and Director,
         Paul H. Collins, is a director of:
                  MacKenzie-Childs, Ltd.
                  3260 State Road 90
                  Aurora, New York 13026

                  Great Northern Arts
                  Castle Music, Inc.
                  World Family Foundation

                                                      C-5

<PAGE>



                  all with an address at
                  Gordon Road, Middletown, New York

         Robert E. Moses, a Director of American  Trust  Company,  is a director
         of:

                  Mascoma Mutual Hold Corp.
                  One The Green
                  Lebanon, NH 03766

         Information  required by this item is  contained in the Form ADV of the
following entities and is incorporated herein by reference:

   
         Name of investment adviser              File No.

         Bay Isle Financial Corporation          801-27563
         Kaminski Asset Management, Inc.         801-53485
         Ridgeway Helms Investment Management    801-49884
         Rockhaven Asset Management, LLC         801-54084
         Chase Investment Counsel Corp.          801-3396
         Avatar Investors Associates Corp.       801-7061
    

Item 29.  Principal Underwriters.

         (a) The  Registrant's  principal  underwriter  also  acts as  principal
underwriter for the following investment companies:

                  Fremont Mutual Funds
                  Guinness Flight Investment Funds, Inc.
                  Jurika & Voyles Mutual Funds
                  Kayne Anderson Mutual Funds
                  LMH Fund, Inc. Masters' Select Investment Trust PIC Investment
                  Trust  Professionally  Managed  Portfolios  Rainier Investment
                  Management  Mutual  Funds RNC Mutual Fund Group  O'Shaughnessy
                  Funds, Inc.

         (b) The following information is furnished with respect to the officers
and directors of First Fund Distributors, Inc.:

                               Position and Offices    Position and
Name and Principal             with Principal          Offices with
Business Address               Underwriter             Registrant
- ------------------             --------------------    -----------
Robert H. Wadsworth            President               Vice
4455 E. Camelback Road         and Treasurer           President
Suite 261E
Phoenix, AZ  85018

Eric M. Banhazl                Vice President          President,
2025 E. Financial Way                                  Treasurer
Glendora, CA 91741                                     and Trustee

Steven J. Paggioli             Vice President &        Vice
479 West 22nd Street           Secretary               President
New York, New York 10011

         (c)  Not applicable.

Item 30. Location of Accounts and Records.


         The accounts,  books and other  documents  required to be maintained by
Registrant  pursuant to Section 31(a) of the Investment  Company Act of 1940 and
the rules promulgated thereunder are in the possession of the following persons:

         (a) the documents required to be maintained by paragraph (4) of Rule
31a-1(b) will be maintained by the Registrant;

         (b) the documents  required to be  maintained  by paragraphs  (5), (6),
(10) and (11) of Rule 31a-1(b) will be maintained by the  respective  investment
advisors:

   
         American Trust Company, One Court Street, Lebanon, NH 03766
         Avatar Investors Associates Corp., 900 Third Ave., New York, NY 10022
         Bay Isle Financial Corporation,  160 Sansome Street, San Francisco,  CA
               94104
         Chase Investment Counsel Corp., 300 Preston Avenue, Charlottesville, VA
               22902
         Kaminski  Asset  Management,   Inc.,  210  snd  Street,   North,  #050,
               Minneapolis, MN 55401
         Ridgeway Helms Investment  Management,  303 Twin Dolphin Drive, Redwood
               Shores, CA 94065
         Rockhaven Asset Management,  100 First Avenue, Suite 1050,  Pittsburgh,
               PA 15222
    

         (c) all other documents will be maintained by  Registrant's  custodian,
Star Bank, 425 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202.


                                                      C-6

<PAGE>



Item 31. Management Services.


         Not applicable.

Item 32. Undertakings.

         Registrant hereby undertakes to:

   
         (a)      File a  post-effective  amendment  for  the  Avatar  Advantage
                  Equity  Allocation  Fund series,  using  financial  statements
                  which may not be  certified,  within four to six months of the
                  effective  date  of  this   Registration   Statement  as  such
                  requirement is interpreted by the staff of the Commission; and
    

         (b)      Furnish each person to whom a  Prospectus  is delivered a copy
                  of  Registrant's  latest annual report to  shareholders,  upon
                  request and without charge.

         (c)      If  requested  to do so by the  holders of at least 10% of the
                  Trust's outstanding shares, call a meeting of shareholders for
                  the  purposes  of voting  upon the  question  of  removal of a
                  director and assist in communications with other shareholders.

   
         (d)      On behalf of each of its series,  to change any  disclosure of
                  past  performance  of an  Advisor  to a series to  conform  to
                  changes in the  position of the staff of the  Commission  with
                  respect to such presentation.
    




                                                      C-7

<PAGE>


                                                    SIGNATURES

   
         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Amendment to
the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of Advisors Series Trust to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned,  thereunto duly authorized in the City of Phoenix
and State of Arizona on the 18th day of August, 1997.
    

                                   ADVISORS SERIES TRUST


                                   By   /s/ Eric M. Banhazl*
                                   Eric M. Banhazl
                                   President

   
         This Amendment to the  Registration  Statement on Form N-1A of Advisors
Series Trust has been signed below by the  following  persons in the  capacities
indicated on August 18, 1997.
    




/s/ Eric M. Banhazl*               President, Principal Financial
Eric M. Banhazl                    and Accounting Officer, and Trustee



/s/ Walter E. Auch Sr.*            Trustee
Walter E. Auch, Sr.


/s/ Donald E. O'Connor*            Trustee
Donald E. O'Connor


/s/ George T. Wofford III*         Trustee
George T. Wofford III

* /s/ Robert H. Wadsworth
By: Robert H. Wadsworth
      Attorney in Fact



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