EVERGREEN MUNICIPAL TRUST /DE/
497, 2000-03-24
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                            EVERGREEN MUNICIPAL TRUST

                               200 BERKELEY STREET
                           BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02116
                                 (800) 633-2700

                     EVERGREEN NATIONAL MUNICIPAL BOND FUNDS

                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                   JANUARY 10, 2000, AS AMENDED MARCH 20, 2000


                       EVERGREEN TAX-FREE HIGH INCOME FUND
                                   (THE"FUND")

        THE FUND IS A SERIES OF AN OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY
                KNOWN AS EVERGREEN MUNICIPAL TRUST (THE "TRUST")


         This Statement of Additional  Information (SAI) pertains to all classes
of shares of the Fund listed above. It is not a prospectus but should be read in
conjunction  with the  prospectus of the Fund dated January 10, 2000, as amended
March 20,  2000,  and as  supplemented  from time to time.  You may  obtain  the
prospectus without charge by calling (800) 343-2898 or by downloading it off our
website at  www.evergreen-funds.com.  The  information  in Part 1 of this SAI is
specific information about the Fund described in the prospectus. The information
in Part 2 of this SAI  contains  more  general  information  that may or may not
apply to the Fund or class of shares in which you are interested.


         Certain  information  may be  incorporated  by  reference to the Annual
Report of the Fund's  predecessor  fund,  Davis Tax-Free High Income Fund, dated
September  30,  1999.  You may obtain a copy of the document  without  charge by
calling (800) 343-2898.



<PAGE>





                                TABLE OF CONTENTS



PART 1

TRUST HISTORY..............................................................1-1
INVESTMENT POLICIES........................................................1-1
OTHER SECURITIES AND PRACTICES.............................................1-3
PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF FUND SHARES...........................................1-3
EXPENSES...................................................................1-4
PERFORMANCE................................................................1-7
COMPUTATION OF CLASS A OFFERING PRICE......................................1-7
SERVICE PROVIDERS..........................................................1-8
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.......................................................1-9


PART 2

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT PRACTICES..............2-1
PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF SHARES.........................................2-17
SALES CHARGE WAIVERS AND REDUCTIONS.......................................2-19
PRICING OF SHARES.........................................................2-22
PERFORMANCE CALCULATIONS..................................................2-23
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER.....................................................2-25
DISTRIBUTION EXPENSES UNDER RULE 12b-1....................................2-26
TAX INFORMATION...........................................................2-28
BROKERAGE.................................................................2-31
ORGANIZATION..............................................................2-32
INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT.............................................2-34
MANAGEMENT OF THE TRUST...................................................2-35
CORPORATE AND MUNICIPAL BOND RATINGS......................................2-38
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION....................................................2-49






<PAGE>




                                     PART 1

                                  TRUST HISTORY

         The  Trust is an  open-end  management  investment  company,  which was
organized  as a Delaware  business  trust on September  18, 1997.  The Fund is a
diversified  series of the Trust. A copy of the  Declaration of Trust is on file
as an  exhibit to the  Trust's  Registration  Statement,  of which this SAI is a
part.  The Fund was created to acquire  Davis  Tax-Free  High Income  Fund.  The
acquisition occurred on March 17, 2000.

                               INVESTMENT POLICIES

FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

         The Fund has adopted the fundamental investment  restrictions set forth
below  which may not be changed  without  the vote of a  majority  of the Fund's
outstanding  shares, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940
Act").  Where necessary,  an explanation  beneath a fundamental policy describes
the Fund's practices with respect to that policy,  as allowed by current law. If
the law governing a policy changes,  the Fund's practices may change accordingly
without a shareholder  vote.  Unless  otherwise  stated,  all  references to the
assets of the Fund are in terms of current market value.

         1. DIVERSIFICATION

          The Fund may not make any  investment  that is  inconsistent  with its
classification as a diversified investment company under the 1940 Act.

         FURTHER EXPLANATION OF DIVERSIFICATION POLICY:

         To remain classified as a diversified investment company under the 1940
Act, the Fund must conform with the following:  With respect to 75% of its total
assets,  a  diversified  investment  company  may not invest more than 5% of its
total assets,  determined at market or other fair value at the time of purchase,
in the  securities  of any  one  issuer,  or  invest  in  more  than  10% of the
outstanding  voting  securities  of any one  issuer,  determined  at the time of
purchase.  These limitations do not apply to investments in securities issued or
guaranteed  by  the  United   States  (U.S.)   government  or  its  agencies  or
instrumentalities.

         2.  CONCENTRATION

         The Fund may not  concentrate  its  investments  in the  securities  of
issuers primarily engaged in any particular industry (other than securities that
are  issued  or   guaranteed   by  the  U.S.   government  or  its  agencies  or
instrumentalities).

         FURTHER EXPLANATION OF CONCENTRATION POLICY:.

         The Fund may not  invest  more than 25% of its total  assets,  taken at
market value, in the securities of issuers  primarily  engaged in any particular
industry (other than securities  issued or guaranteed by the U.S.  government or
its agencies or instrumentalities).

         3.  ISSUING SENIOR SECURITIES

         Except as  permitted  under the 1940 Act, the Fund may not issue senior
securities.

         4.  BORROWING

         The Fund may not  borrow  money,  except  to the  extent  permitted  by
applicable law.

         FURTHER EXPLANATION OF BORROWING POLICY:

         The Fund may  borrow  from  banks and  enter  into  reverse  repurchase
agreements  in an  amount  up to 33 1/3% of its  total  assets,  taken at market
value.  The Fund may also borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets from
banks  or  others.  The  Fund  may  borrow  only  as  a  temporary  measure  for
extraordinary or emergency  purposes such as the redemption of Fund shares.  The
Fund may purchase  additional  securities so long as borrowings do not exceed 5%
of its  total  assets.  The Fund may  obtain  such  short-term  credit as may be
necessary for the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities.  The
Fund may purchase  securities  on margin and engage in short sales to the extent
permitted by applicable law.

         5.  UNDERWRITING

         The Fund may not underwrite securities of other issuers, except insofar
as  the  Fund  may  be  deemed  to be an  underwriter  in  connection  with  the
disposition of its portfolio securities.

         6.       REAL ESTATE

         The Fund may not  purchase or sell real  estate,  except  that,  to the
extent  permitted by applicable  law, the Fund may invest in (a) securities that
are directly or indirectly  secured by real estate,  or (b) securities issued by
issuers that invest in real estate.

         7.  COMMODITIES

         The  Fund  may  not  purchase  or  sell  commodities  or  contracts  on
commodities,  except to the extent that the Fund may engage in financial futures
contracts and related options and currency contracts and related options and may
otherwise do so in accordance with  applicable law and without  registering as a
commodity pool operator under the Commodity Exchange Act.

         8.  LENDING

         The Fund may not make loans to other persons,  except that the Fund may
lend its portfolio securities in accordance with applicable law. The acquisition
of investment securities or other investment  instruments shall not be deemed to
be the making of a loan.

         FURTHER EXPLANATION OF LENDING POLICY:

         To generate  income and offset  expenses,  the Fund may lend  portfolio
securities to broker-dealers and other financial institutions in an amount up to
33 1/3% of its total assets,  taken at market  value.  While  securities  are on
loan,  the borrower will pay the Fund any income  accruing on the security.  The
Fund may invest any collateral it receives in additional  portfolio  securities,
such  as  U.S.  Treasury  notes,  certificates  of  deposit,  other  high-grade,
short-term obligations or interest bearing cash equivalents.  Gains or losses in
the market value of a security lent will affect the Fund and its shareholders.

         When the Fund lends its  securities,  it will  require the  borrower to
give the Fund collateral in cash or government securities. The Fund will require
collateral  in an amount  equal to at least 100% of the current  market value of
the securities lent, including accrued interest.  The Fund has the right to call
a loan and obtain the  securities  lent any time on notice of not more than five
business days. The Fund may pay reasonable fees in connection with such loans.

         9.  INVESTMENT IN FEDERALLY TAX EXEMPT SECURITIES

         The Fund will, during periods of normal market  conditions,  invest its
assets in accordance  with  applicable  guidelines  issued by the Securities and
Exchange Commission or its staff concerning  investment in tax-exempt securities
for funds with the words "tax exempt," "tax free" or "municipal" in their names.


                         OTHER SECURITIES AND PRACTICES

         For  information   regarding  securities  the  Fund  may  purchase  and
investment  practices the Fund may use, see the following  sections in Part 2 of
this SAI under "Additional  Information on Securities and Investment Practices."
Information  provided in the sections  listed below expands upon and supplements
information provided in the Fund's prospectus.

Money Market Instruments
U.S. Government Securities               High Yield, High Risk Bonds
When-Issued, Delayed-Delivery and        Illiquid and Restricted Securities
 Forward Commitment Transactions         Investment in Other Investment
Repurchase Agreements                      Companies
Reverse Repurchase Agreements            Short Sales
Dollar Roll Transactions                 Municipal Bonds
Convertible Securities                   Payment-in-kind Securities
Warrants                                 Zero Coupon "Stripped" Bonds
Securities Lending                       Mortgage-Backed or Asset-Backed
Options and Futures Strategies             Securities


                        PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF FUND SHARES

         As of February 29,  2000,  the officers and Trustees of the Trust owned
as a group less than 1% of the outstanding shares of any class of the Fund.

         Set forth below is information  with respect to each person who, to the
Fund's  knowledge,  owned  beneficially  or  of  record  more  than  5%  of  the
outstanding shares of any class of the Fund as of February 29, 2000.


        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        CLASS A
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        MLPF&S For the Sole Benefit                                   3.85%
        Of Its Customers
        Attn: Fund Administration
        4800 Deer Lake Drive
        East 2nd Floor
        Jacksonville, FL 32246
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette                                     2.25%
        Securities Corporation, Inc.
        P.O. Box 2052
        Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        J.C. Bradford & Co. Cust. FBO                                 1.48%
        John A. Wilson Irrevocable Trust
        330 Commerce Street
        Nashville, TN 37201-1899
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        Prudential Securities Inc. FBO                                1.47%
        Mr. Joseph H. Kelley
        Mrs. Esther J. Kelley Co-Trustees
        Kelley Living Trust
        Las Vegas, NV 89107
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        CLASS B
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        MLPF&S For the Sole Benefit                                   21.44%
        Of Its Customers
        Attn: Fund Administration
        4800 Deer Lake Drive
        East 2nd Floor
        Jacksonville, FL 32246
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        Dain Rauscher Incorporated FBO                                1.09%
        Raymond C. Matteucci
        Mary E. Matteucci
        Raymond C. & Mary E. Matteucci
        500 Walters Street, NE
        Albuquerque, NM 87102-2534
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        CLASS C
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        MLPF&S For the Sole Benefit                                   42.54%
        Of Its Customers
        Attn: Fund Administration
        4800 Deer Lake Drive
        East 2nd Floor
        Jacksonville, FL 32246
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        Dean Witter For the Benefit                                   1.89%
        Of Albert T. Nassi Trustee
        P.O. Box 250
        Church Street Station
        New York, NY 10008-0250
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        First Clearing Corporation                                    1.69%
        John G. Roberts
        P.O. Box 642
        Bel Air, MD 21014-0642
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        Dean Witter For the Benefit                                   1.65%
        Of Herman Maier & Shreene Maier
        P.O. Box 250
        Church Street Station
        New York, NY 10008-0250
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        David W. Elliot Trustee                                       1.59%
        David W. Elliot Rev Trust
        1291 Sunnwood Place
        Rochester, MI 48306-2474
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        Prudential Securities, Inc.                                   1.56%
        Mr. Richard Simon Trustee
        Richard Simon Rev Trust
        Rochester, MI 48306-2474
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        Painwebber For the Benefit                                    1.55%
        Of Estate of Valerie B. Schwartz
        Bernard S. & Ida A. Schwartz
        Administrators
        P.O. Box 96
        New York, NY 10028-0015
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        U.S. Clearing Corporation                                     1.28%
        26 Broadway
        New York, NY 10004-1703
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        CLASS Y
        ---------------------------------------------------------------------
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
        None
        ----------------------------------------------------------- ---------


                                    EXPENSES


         The expense  information  in the following  sections  pertaining to the
Fund  reflects  operations  under a  previous  investment  advisor  and  service
providers.   The  Fund  was  formerly  Davis  Tax-Free  High  Income  Fund  (the
"Predecessor Fund") and was reorganized into an Evergreen fund in March 2000.


Advisory Fees

         Evergreen  Investment  Management  Company  (EIMC)  is  the  investment
advisor to the Fund.  EIMC is  entitled  to receive  from the Fund an annual fee
based on the average daily net assets, as follows:

                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                        AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS               FEE
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                           first $250 million                 0.55%
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                            next $250 million                 0.50%
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                            over $500 million                 0.45%
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------

         Stamper  Capital  &  Investments,   Inc.  (Stamper  Capital),  acts  as
sub-advisor to the Fund, and is paid by EIMC for providing sub-advisory services
at a rate equal to the following:

                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                        AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS               FEE
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                           first $250 million                 0.195%
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                            next $250 million                 0.180%
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------
                            over $500 million                 0.165%
                    ---------------------------------- ---------------------

         For more information, see "Investment Advisory Agreements" in Part 2 of
this SAI.

Advisory Fees Paid


         Below are the advisory  fees paid by the Fund for the last three fiscal
years.  EIMC became the Fund's  investment  advisor on March 17, 2000.  Prior to
that time, the Predecessor Fund was advised by Davis Selected Advisers, LP
(Davis Advisers).


- ----------------------- -------------------- ----------------- ================

                            YEAR ENDED           YEAR ENDED       YEAR ENDED
                            9/30/1999            9/30/1998        9/30/1997
- ----------------------- -------------------- ----------------- ================
- ----------------------- -------------------- ----------------- ================
ADVISORY FEE PAID           $3,107,801           $2,769,520       $1,065,546
- ----------------------- -------------------- ----------------- ================

Sub-Advisory Fees Paid

         Stamper  Capital acts as  sub-advisor  to the Fund and is reimbursed by
EIMC,  the  investment  advisor as of March 17, 2000, for the costs of providing
sub-advisory  services.  Stamper  Capital  receives a sub-advisory  fee equal to
0.195% of the first $250 million of the Fund's average daily net assets,  0.180%
of the next $250  million of such net  assets,  and 0.165% of such net assets in
excess of $500 million.


         Below are the  sub-advisory  fees  paid by Davis  Advisers  to  Stamper
Capital for the last three fiscal years:


- -------------- ---------------------- --------------------- ====================
               YEAR ENDED 9/30/1999   YEAR ENDED 9/30/1998  YEAR ENDED 9/30/1997
- -------------- ---------------------- --------------------- ====================
- -------------- ---------------------- --------------------- ====================
SUB-ADVISORY
FEE PAID             $933,268                $963,057               $444,708
- -------------- ---------------------- --------------------- ====================


Brokerage Commissions

         The Fund paid no brokerage commissions during the fiscal years ended
September 30, 1999, 1998 and 1997.  For more information regarding brokerage
commissions, see "Brokerage" in Part 2 of this SAI.

Portfolio Turnover

         The Fund  generally  does not take  portfolio  turnover into account in
making investment decisions. This means the Fund could experience a high rate of
portfolio turnover (100% or more) in any given fiscal year, resulting in greater
brokerage  and  other  transaction  costs  which  are  borne by the Fund and its
shareholders.  It may also result in the Fund  realizing  greater net short-term
capital gains,  distributions from which are taxable to shareholders as ordinary
income.

Underwriting Commissions


         Below  are  the  underwriting  commissions  paid  by  the  Fund  or the
Predecessor Fund and the amounts  retained by the principal  underwriter for the
last three fiscal years. For more  information,  see "Principal  Underwriter" in
Part 2 of this SAI.


- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================
                               TOTAL UNDERWRITING   UNDERWRITING
                               COMMISSIONS          COMMISSIONS
                                                    RETAINED
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================

YEAR ENDED 9/30/1999           $316,814             $51,835
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================

YEAR ENDED 9/30/1998           $4,936,465           $745,286
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================

YEAR ENDED 9/30/1997           $1,397,658           $228,998
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ==================

12b-1 Fees


         Below are the 12b-1 fees paid by the Fund or the  Predecessor  Fund for
the  fiscal  year  ended   September  30,  1999.  For  more   information,   see
"Distribution Expenses Under Rule 12b-1" in Part 2 of this SAI.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------ ================================ ================================ ===============================


                         CLASS A                          CLASS B                         CLASS C

             ================================ ================================ ===============================
             ---------------- --------------- ----------------- -------------- ---------------- ==============
              DISTRIBUTION     SERVICE FEES     DISTRIBUTION    SERVICE FEES    DISTRIBUTION    SERVICE FEES
                  FEES                              FEES                            FEES
- ------------ ---------------- --------------- ----------------- -------------- ---------------- ==============
- ------------ ---------------- --------------- ----------------- -------------- ---------------- ==============
<S>                <C>           <C>             <C>              <C>             <C>             <C>
FUND               $0            $515,625        $1,860,068       $604,685        $319,031        $106,343
- ------------ ---------------- --------------- ----------------- -------------- ---------------- ==============
</TABLE>

Trustee Compensation

          Listed   below  is  the  Trustee   compensation   paid  by  the  Trust
individually  for the fiscal year ended May 31,  1999,  and by the Trust and the
eleven other trusts in the  Evergreen  Fund complex for the calendar  year ended
December 31, 1999.  The Trustees do not receive  pension or retirement  benefits
from the Fund. For more information,  see "Management of the Trust" in Part 2 of
this SAI.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================

                                             AGGREGATE COMPENSATION      TOTAL COMPENSATION FROM THE EVERGREEN
                   TRUSTEE                  FROM TRUST FOR THE FISCAL    FUND COMPLEX PAID TO THE TRUSTEES FOR
                                              YEAR ENDED 5/31/1999        THE CALENDAR YEAR ENDED 12/31/1999*
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
    <S>                                      <C>                           <C>
     Laurence B. Ashkin                              $2,381                             $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,381
     Charles A. Austin, III                                                             $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                       N/A
     Arnold H. Dreyfuss**                                                                 N/A
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,321
     K. Dun Gifford                                                                     $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $3,046
     James S. Howell***                                                                 $97,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,321
     Leroy Keith Jr.                                                                    $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,381
     Gerald M. McDonnell                                                                $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,747
     Thomas L. McVerry                                                                  $85,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                       N/A
     Louis W. Moelchert, Jr. **                                                           N/A
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,321
     William Walt Pettit                                                                $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,313
     David M. Richardson                                                                $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,381
     Russell A. Salton, III                                                             $77,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,608
     Michael S. Scofield                                                               $102,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                     $2,321
     Richard J. Shima                                                                   $75,000
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
                                                       N/A
     Richard K. Wagoner**                                                                 N/A
     ------------------------------------- ---------------------------- ========================================
</TABLE>

                  *Certain  Trustees  have elected to defer all or part of their
                  total  compensation  for the calendar year ended  December 31,
                  1999.  The amounts listed below will be payable in later years
                  to the respective Trustees:

                  Austin            $11,250
                  Howell            $77,600
                  McDonnell         $75,500
                  McVerry           $85,000
                  Pettit            $75,000
                  Salton            $77,000
                  Scofield          $61,200
                  ** Arnold H. Dreyfuss, Louis W. Moelchert, Jr. and Richard K.
                     Wagoner were elected to the Board of Trustees on
                     December 16, 1999.
                  ***As of January 1, 2000, James S. Howell retired and became
                     Trustee Emeritus.


                                   PERFORMANCE

Total Return

         Below are the average  annual total returns for each class of shares of
the Fund (including applicable sales charges) as of September 30, 1999. For more
information,  see "Total Return" under  "Performance  Calculations" in Part 2 of
this SAI.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================

                                                                 TEN YEARS OR SINCE
                                                                  INCEPTION DATE OF
CLASS(a)                   ONE YEAR             FIVE YEARS              CLASS           INCEPTION DATE
                                                                                           OF CLASS
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
<S>                          <C>                  <C>                   <C>               <C>
Class A                     -5.34%                4.40%                 5.80%             12/1/1994
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
Class B                     -6.10%                4.32%                 5.92%             3/21/1985
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
Class C                     -3.22%                4.65%                 5.93%             8/18/1997
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
Class Y                     -0.51%                5.00%                 6.11%             10/6/1997
- --------------------- -------------------- --------------------- -------------------- ===================
</TABLE>

(a)  Historical  performance  shown  for  Classes  A,  C and Y  prior  to  their
     inception  is based on the  performance  of  Class  B, the  original  class
     offered,  of the predecessor  fund,  Davis Tax-Free High Income Fund. These
     historical  returns for  Classes A and Y have not been  adjusted to reflect
     the effect of each class' 12b-1 fees. These fees for Class A are 0.25%, for
     Class B are  1.00% and for  Class C are  1.00%.  Class Y does not pay 12b-1
     fees. If these fees had been  reflected,  returns for Classes A and Y would
     have been higher.

Yields

         Below are the  current  and tax  equivalent  yields of the Fund for the
30-day period ended September 30, 1999. For more information, see "30-Day Yield"
and "Tax Equivalent  Yield" under  "Performance  Calculations" in Part 2 of this
SAI.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
============================= ============================================= =============================================

                                              30-DAY YIELD                              TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELD
============================= ============================================= =============================================

             FEDERAL  TAX
             RATE (1)         CLASS A    CLASS B     CLASS C    CLASS Y     CLASS A     CLASS B    CLASS C     CLASS Y
- ------------ ================ ---------- ----------- ---------- =========== ----------- ---------- ----------- ==========
============ ================ ---------- ----------- ---------- =========== ----------- ---------- ----------- ==========
<S>               <C>           <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>
FUND              39.6%         5.37%      4.89%       4.87%      5.85%       8.89%       8.10%      8.06%       9.69%
============ ================ ---------- ----------- ---------- =========== ----------- ---------- ----------- ==========
</TABLE>
 (1) Assumed for purposes of this chart. Your tax rate may vary.


                      COMPUTATION OF CLASS A OFFERING PRICE

         Class A  shares  are sold at the net  asset  value  (NAV)  plus a sales
charge.  Below is an example of the method of computing  the  offering  price of
Class A shares of the Fund. The example  assumes a purchase of Class A shares of
the Fund aggregating less than $100,000 based upon the NAV of the Fund's Class A
shares at September 30, 1999. For more  information,  see "Pricing of Shares" in
Part 2 of this SAI.

- ------------------------------ -------------------- ============================

 NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE        SALES CHARGE         OFFERING PRICE PER SHARE
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ============================
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ============================
           $8.66                      4.75%                      $9.09
- ------------------------------ -------------------- ============================


                                SERVICE PROVIDERS

Administrator

         Evergreen  Investment  Services,  Inc. (EIS) serves as administrator to
the Fund,  subject  to the  supervision  and  control  of the  Trust's  Board of
Trustees. EIS provides the Fund with facilities,  equipment and personnel and is
entitled to receive from the Fund an annual fee at a rate of 0.10% of the Fund's
average daily net assets.


         Below  are the  administrative  service  fees  paid by the  Fund or the
Predecessor Fund (under a prior fee arrangement) for the last three fiscal years
ending:


- --------------------------- --------------------------- =======================
   SEPTEMBER 30,1999             SEPTEMBER 30, 1998        SEPTEMBER 30, 1997
- --------------------------- --------------------------- =======================
- --------------------------- --------------------------- =======================
        $15,996                        $15,996                   $64,586
- --------------------------- --------------------------- =======================


Transfer Agent

         Evergreen Service Company (ESC), P.O. Box 2121,  Boston,  Massachusetts
02106-2121,  a subsidiary  of First Union  Corporation,  is the Fund's  transfer
agent.  ESC issues and redeems shares,  pays dividends and performs other duties
in connection  with the maintenance of shareholder  accounts.  The Fund pays ESC
annual fees as follows:

                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

                 FUND TYPE                       ANNUAL FEE     ANNUAL FEE
                                                  PER OPEN      PER CLOSED
                                                  ACCOUNT*       ACCOUNT**
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

                 Monthly Dividend Funds            $25.50          $9.00
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

                 Quarterly Dividend Funds          $24.50          $9.00
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

                 Semiannual Dividend Funds         $23.50          $9.00
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

                 Annual Dividend Funds             $23.50          $9.00
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

                 Money Market Funds                $25.50          $9.00
                 ----------------------------- --------------- ==============

           *For shareholder accounts only. The Fund pays ESC cost plus 15% for
               broker accounts.
         ** Closed accounts are maintained on the system in order to facilitate
               historical and tax information.

Distributor

         Evergreen  Distributor,  Inc. (EDI), 90 Park Avenue, New York, New York
10016,   markets   the  Fund   through   broker-dealers   and  other   financial
representatives.

Independent Auditors

         KPMG LLP,  99 High  Street,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02110,  audits the
financial statements of the Fund.

Custodian

         State  Street Bank and Trust  Company,  225  Franklin  Street,  Boston,
Massachusetts  02110,  keeps  custody  of the  Fund's  securities  and  cash and
performs other related duties.

Legal Counsel

         Sullivan & Worcester LLP, 1025 Connecticut  Avenue,  N.W.,  Washington,
D.C. 20036, provides legal advice to the Fund.


                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

         The audited financial  statements and the independent  auditors' report
thereon are hereby  incorporated by reference to the  Predecessor  Fund's Annual
Report,  a copy of which may be obtained  without charge by writing to ESC, P.O.
Box 2121,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02106-2121,  or by calling ESC  toll-free  at
1-800-343-2898.

<PAGE>


                                 EVERGREEN FUNDS
                   Statement of Additional Information ("SAI")

                                     PART 2

                      ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON SECURITIES
                            AND INVESTMENT PRACTICES

         The  prospectus  describes  the  Fund's  investment  objective  and the
securities  in  which  it  primarily  invests.  The  following  describes  other
securities the Fund may purchase and  investment  strategies it may use. SOME OF
THE  INFORMATION  BELOW WILL NOT APPLY TO THE FUND OR THE CLASS IN WHICH YOU ARE
INTERESTED.  SEE THE LIST UNDER OTHER SECURITIES AND PRACTICES IN PART 1 OF THIS
SAI TO DETERMINE WHICH OF THE SECTIONS BELOW ARE APPLICABLE.

Money Market Instruments

         The Fund may  invest  up to 100% of its  assets in high  quality  money
market instruments,  such as notes,  certificates of deposit,  commercial paper,
banker's  acceptances,  bank deposits or U.S.  government  securities if, in the
opinion  of the  investment  advisor,  market  conditions  warrant  a  temporary
defensive investment  strategy.  Evergreen Equity Income Fund may also invest in
debt securities and high grade preferred stocks for defensive  purposes when its
investment advisor determines a temporary defensive strategy is warranted.

U.S. Government Securities

         The  Fund  may  invest  in  securities  issued  or  guaranteed  by U.S.
Government agencies or instrumentalities.

         These securities are backed by (1) the  discretionary  authority of the
U.S. Government to purchase certain obligations of agencies or instrumentalities
or (2) the credit of the agency or instrumentality issuing the obligations.

         Some government agencies and instrumentalities may not receive
financial support from the U.S. Government.  Examples of such agencies are:

          (i)  Farm Credit System, including the National Bank for Cooperatives,
               Farm Credit Banks and Banks for Cooperatives;

          (ii) Farmers Home Administration;

        (iii)  Federal Home Loan Banks;

         (iv)  Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation;

          (v)  Federal National Mortgage Association; and Student Loan Marketing
               Association.

SECURITIES ISSUED BY THE GOVERNMENT NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION ("GNMA").  The
Fund may invest in securities issued by the GNMA, a corporation  wholly-owned by
the U.S. Government.  GNMA securities or "certificates" represent ownership in a
pool of underlying  mortgages.  The timely payment of principal and interest due
on these securities is guaranteed.

         Unlike  conventional  bonds, the principal on GNMA  certificates is not
paid at  maturity  but  over  the  life of the  security  in  scheduled  monthly
payments. While mortgages pooled in a GNMA certificate may have maturities of up
to 30 years,  the certificate  itself will have a shorter  average  maturity and
less principal volatility than a comparable 30-year bond.

         The market value and interest yield of GNMA  certificates  can vary due
not only to market  fluctuations,  but also to early  prepayments  of  mortgages
within  the pool.  Since  prepayment  rates vary  widely,  it is  impossible  to
accurately  predict  the  average  maturity  of a GNMA pool.  In addition to the
guaranteed  principal  payments,  GNMA  certificates  may also make  unscheduled
principal payments resulting from prepayments on the underlying mortgages.

         Although GNMA certificates may offer yields higher than those available
from other types of U.S. Government securities,  they may be less effective as a
means of  locking  in  attractive  long-term  rates  because  of the  prepayment
feature.  For instance,  when interest rates decline,  prepayments are likely to
increase as the  holders of the  underlying  mortgages  seek  refinancing.  As a
result,  the value of a GNMA  certificate  is not  likely to rise as much as the
value of a  comparable  debt  security  would in  response to same  decline.  In
addition, these prepayments can cause the price of a GNMA certificate originally
purchased at a premium to decline in price compared to its par value,  which may
result in a loss.

When-Issued, Delayed-Delivery and Forward Commitment Transactions

         The Fund may purchase  securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery
basis  and may  purchase  or sell  securities  on a  forward  commitment  basis.
Settlement of such transactions normally occurs within a month or more after the
purchase or sale commitment is made.

         The Fund may purchase  securities  under such  conditions only with the
intention of actually acquiring them, but may enter into a separate agreement to
sell the securities  before the settlement  date.  Since the value of securities
purchased may  fluctuate  prior to  settlement,  the Fund may be required to pay
more at settlement than the security is worth. In addition, the purchaser is not
entitled to any of the interest earned prior to settlement.

         Upon  making a  commitment  to  purchase a security  on a  when-issued,
delayed  delivery or forward  commitment  basis the Fund will hold liquid assets
worth at least the  equivalent  of the amount  due.  The liquid  assets  will be
monitored on a daily basis and  adjusted as necessary to maintain the  necessary
value.

         Purchases  made under such  conditions may involve the risk that yields
secured at the time of commitment may be lower than  otherwise  available by the
time  settlement  takes  place,  causing  an  unrealized  loss to the  Fund.  In
addition,  when the Fund engages in such purchases, it relies on the other party
to consummate the sale. If the other party fails to perform its obligations, the
Fund may miss the  opportunity  to obtain a  security  at a  favorable  price or
yield.


Repurchase Agreements

         The Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with entities that are
registered as U.S. Government securities dealers,  including member banks of the
Federal Reserve System having at least $1 billion in assets,  primary dealers in
U.S.  government  securities  or other  financial  institutions  believed by the
investment  advisor  to be  creditworthy.  In a  repurchase  agreement  the Fund
obtains a security  and  simultaneously  commits to return the  security  to the
seller at a set price (including principal and interest) within a period of time
usually not exceeding  seven days.  The resale price reflects the purchase price
plus an agreed upon market rate of  interest  which is  unrelated  to the coupon
rate or maturity of the underlying security. A repurchase agreement involves the
obligation  of the seller to pay the agreed upon price,  which  obligation is in
effect secured by the value of the underlying security.

         The  Fund's  custodian  or a third  party will take  possession  of the
securities subject to repurchase agreements, and these securities will be marked
to market daily.  To the extent that the original seller does not repurchase the
securities from the Fund, the Fund could receive less than the repurchase  price
on any sale of such securities. In the event that such a defaulting seller filed
for bankruptcy or became  insolvent,  disposition of such securities by the Fund
might be delayed pending court action.  The Fund's  investment  advisor believes
that under the regular  procedures  normally in effect for custody of the Fund's
portfolio  securities  subject to  repurchase  agreements,  a court of competent
jurisdiction  would rule in favor of the Fund and allow retention or disposition
of such  securities.  The Fund will only enter into  repurchase  agreements with
banks and other recognized financial institutions, such as broker-dealers, which
are deemed by the investment  advisor to be creditworthy  pursuant to guidelines
established by the Board of Trustees.

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

         As described  herein,  the Fund may also enter into reverse  repurchase
agreements.  These  transactions  are similar to  borrowing  cash.  In a reverse
repurchase agreement, the Fund transfers possession of a portfolio instrument to
another person,  such as a financial  institution,  broker, or dealer, in return
for a percentage of the instrument's  market value in cash, and agrees that on a
stipulated date in the future the Fund will repurchase the portfolio  instrument
by remitting the original consideration plus interest at an agreed upon rate.

         The use of reverse  repurchase  agreements may enable the Fund to avoid
selling  portfolio  instruments  at a  time  when a sale  may  be  deemed  to be
disadvantageous,  but the ability to enter into  reverse  repurchase  agreements
does  not  ensure  that  the  Fund  will  be  able to  avoid  selling  portfolio
instruments at a disadvantageous time.

         When  effecting  reverse  repurchase  agreements,  liquid assets of the
Fund, in a dollar amount  sufficient to make payment for the  obligations  to be
purchased,  are  segregated at the trade date.  These  securities  are marked to
market daily and maintained until the transaction is settled.

Dollar Roll Transactions

         The Fund may enter into dollar rolls in which the Fund sells securities
and simultaneously contracts to repurchase substantially similar securities on a
specified  future date. In the case of dollar rolls  involving  mortgage-related
securities, the mortgage-related securities that are purchased typically will be
of the same type and will have the same or similar interest rate and maturity as
those sold,  but will be  supported by different  pools of  mortgages.  The Fund
forgoes  principal  and interest  paid during the roll period on the  securities
sold in a dollar  roll,  but it is  compensated  by the  difference  between the
current  sales  price and the price for the  future  purchase  as well as by any
interest  earned on the proceeds of the securities  sold. The Fund could also be
compensated through receipt of fee income.

Dollar rolls may be viewed as a borrowing  by the Fund,  secured by the security
which is the subject of the agreement. In addition to the general risks involved
in  leveraging,  dollar  rolls are subject to the same risks as  repurchase  and
reverse repurchase agreements.

Securities Lending

         The Fund may lend  portfolio  securities to brokers,  dealers and other
financial   institutions  to  earn  additional   income  for  the  Fund.   These
transactions  must be fully  collateralized at all times with cash or short-term
debt  obligations,  but involve  some risk to the Fund if the other party should
default on its obligation  and the Fund is delayed or prevented from  exercising
its rights in respect of the  collateral.  Any  investment  of collateral by the
Fund  would be made in  accordance  with the  Fund's  investment  objective  and
policies described in the prospectus.

Convertible Securities

         The Fund may invest in convertible  securities.  Convertible securities
include  fixed-income  securities  that may be  exchanged  or  converted  into a
predetermined  number of shares of the issuer's  underlying  common stock at the
option of the holder during a specified period.  Convertible securities may take
the form of convertible preferred stock, convertible bonds or debentures,  bonds
with warrants attached or bonds with a combination of the features of several of
these securities.  The investment  characteristics of each convertible  security
vary widely, which allow convertible  securities to be employed for a variety of
investment strategies.

         The Fund will exchange or convert convertible securities into shares of
underlying  common stock when,  in the opinion of its  investment  advisor,  the
investment  characteristics of the underlying common shares will assist the Fund
in achieving its investment objective.  The Fund may also elect to hold or trade
convertible  securities.  In selecting  convertible  securities,  the investment
advisor evaluates the investment  characteristics of the convertible security as
a fixed-income instrument, and the investment potential of the underlying equity
security for capital appreciation. In evaluating these matters with respect to a
particular  convertible  security,  the investment  advisor  considers  numerous
factors, including the economic and political outlook, the value of the security
relative to other  investment  alternatives,  trends in the  determinants of the
issuer's profits, and the issuer's management capability and practices.

Preferred Stocks

         The Fund may purchase preferred stock.  Preferred stock,  unlike common
stock,  has a stated  dividend  rate  payable from the  corporation's  earnings.
Preferred stock dividends may be cumulative or non-cumulative, participating, or
auction rate. "Cumulative" dividend provisions require all or a portion of prior
unpaid dividends to be paid.

         If interest rates rise,  the fixed dividend on preferred  stocks may be
less  attractive,  causing the price of preferred  stocks to decline.  Preferred
stock may have mandatory  sinking fund  provisions,  as well as  call/redemption
provisions  prior to maturity,  which can be a negative  feature  when  interest
rates decline. Preferred stock also generally has a preference over common stock
on the distribution of a corporation's assets in the event of liquidation of the
corporation.  Preferred stock may be "participating"  stock, which means that it
may be entitled to a dividend  exceeding the stated  dividend in certain  cases.
The rights of preferred stock on  distribution of a corporation's  assets in the
event of a liquidation are generally subordinate to the rights associated with a
corporation's debt securities.

Warrants

         The Fund may invest in  warrants.  Warrants  are  options  to  purchase
common stock at a specific price (usually at a premium above the market value of
the  optioned  common stock at  issuance)  valid for a specific  period of time.
Warrants  may have a life ranging  from less than one year to twenty  years,  or
they may be perpetual.  However, most warrants have expiration dates after which
they are worthless.  In addition,  a warrant is worthless if the market price of
the common stock does not exceed the warrant's exercise price during the life of
the warrant.  Warrants  have no voting  rights,  pay no  dividends,  and have no
rights  with  respect  to  the  assets  of the  corporation  issuing  them.  The
percentage  increase or decrease in the market  price of the warrant may tend to
be greater than the  percentage  increase or decrease in the market price of the
optioned common stock.

Swaps, Caps, Floors and Collars

         The Fund may enter into interest rate, currency and index swaps and the
purchase or sale of related caps, floors and collars.  The Fund expects to enter
into these transactions primarily to preserve a return or spread on a particular
investment  or  portion  of  its   portfolio,   to  protect   against   currency
fluctuations,  as a duration  management  technique  or to protect  against  any
increase in the price of securities the Fund  anticipates  purchasing at a later
date.  The Fund would use these  transactions  as hedges and not as  speculative
investments  and would not sell  interest  rate caps or floors where it does not
own securities or other instruments  providing the income stream the Fund may be
obligated  to pay.  Interest  rate swaps  involve the  exchange by the Fund with
another party of their respective commitments to pay or receive interest,  e.g.,
an exchange of floating  rate payments for fixed rate payments with respect to a
notional  amount of principal.  A currency swap is an agreement to exchange cash
flows on a notional amount of two or more currencies based on the relative value
differential  among them and an index swap is an agreement to swap cash flows on
a notional amount based on changes in the values of the reference  indices.  The
purchase  of a cap  entitles  the  purchaser  to receive  payments on a notional
principal  amount from the party selling such cap to the extent that a specified
index exceeds a predetermined  interest rate or amount.  The purchase of a floor
entitles the purchaser to receive  payments on a notional  principal amount from
the party selling such floor to the extent that a specified  index falls below a
predetermined  interest rate or amount. A collar is a combination of a cap and a
floor that preserves a certain return within a  predetermined  range of interest
rates or values.

         The Fund will usually  enter into swaps on a net basis,  i.e.,  the two
payment streams are netted out in a cash settlement on the payment date or dates
specified in the instrument,  with the Fund receiving or paying, as the case may
be,  only the net amount of the two  payments.  The Fund will not enter into any
swap, cap, floor or collar transaction unless, at the time of entering into such
transaction, the unsecured long-term debt of the counterparty, combined with any
credit  enhancements,  is rated at least A by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services
("S&P") or Moody's  Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  or has an equivalent
rating from another nationally  recognized  securities rating organization or is
determined to be of equivalent credit quality by the Fund's investment  advisor.
If there  is a  default  by the  counterparty,  the  Fund  may have  contractual
remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction. As a result, the
swap  market has become  relatively  liquid.  Caps,  floors and collars are more
recent innovations for which  standardized  documentation has not yet been fully
developed and, accordingly, they are less liquid than swaps.

Indexed Securities

         The Fund may  invest in  indexed  securities,  the  values of which are
linked to currencies,  interest rates,  commodities,  indices or other financial
indicators ("reference instruments"). Most indexed securities have maturities of
three years or less.

         Indexed  securities differ from other types of debt securities in which
the Fund may invest in several  respects.  First,  the interest  rate or, unlike
other debt  securities,  the principal  amount payable at maturity of an indexed
security  may  vary  based  on  changes  in  one  or  more  specified  reference
instruments, such as an interest rate compared with a fixed interest rate or the
currency  exchange  rates between two  currencies  (neither of which need be the
currency in which the instrument is denominated).  The reference instrument need
not be related to the terms of the indexed security.  For example, the principal
amount of a U.S.  dollar  denominated  indexed  security  may vary  based on the
exchange rate of two foreign  currencies.  An indexed security may be positively
or negatively indexed;  that is, its value may increase or decrease if the value
of the  reference  instrument  increases.  Further,  the change in the principal
amount payable or the interest rate of an indexed  security may be a multiple of
the  percentage  change  (positive or  negative) in the value of the  underlying
reference instrument(s).

         Investment in indexed securities involves certain risks. In addition to
the credit risk of the  security's  issuer and the normal risks of price changes
in  response  to changes in  interest  rates,  the  principal  amount of indexed
securities  may  decrease  as a result  of  changes  in the  value of  reference
instruments.  Further,  in the case of certain  indexed  securities in which the
interest  rate is linked to a reference  instrument,  the  interest  rate may be
reduced to zero, and any further  declines in the value of the security may then
reduce the principal amount payable on maturity. Finally, indexed securities may
be more volatile than the reference instruments underlying indexed securities.

         To reduce the effect of currency  fluctuations on the value of existing
or  anticipated  holdings of portfolio  securities,  the Fund may also engage in
proxy  hedging.  Proxy hedging is often used when the currency to which the Fund
is exposed is difficult to hedge or to hedge  against the dollar.  Proxy hedging
entails  entering  into a forward  contract to sell a currency  whose changes in
value are generally considered to be linked to a currency or currencies in which
some or all of the Fund's securities are or are expected to be denominated,  and
to buy U.S.  dollars.  The amount of the contract  would not exceed the value of
the Fund's  securities  denominated in linked  currencies.  For example,  if the
Fund's investment advisor considers that the Austrian schilling is linked to the
German  deutschmark  (the "D-mark"),  the Fund holds  securities  denominated in
schillings and the investment advisor believes that the value of schillings will
decline  against  the U.S.  dollar,  the  investment  advisor  may enter  into a
contract to sell D-marks and buy dollars.

Options and Futures Strategies

         The Fund may at times  seek to hedge  against  either a decline  in the
value of its  portfolio  securities  or an increase  in the price of  securities
which the investment  advisor plans to purchase through the writing and purchase
of options and the purchase or sale of futures  contracts  and related  options.
Expenses and losses incurred as a result of such hedging  strategies will reduce
the Fund's current return.

         The ability of the Fund to engage in the options and futures strategies
described  below  will  depend on the  availability  of liquid  markets  in such
instruments. It is impossible to predict the amount of trading interest that may
exist in various  types of options or futures.  Therefore,  no assurance  can be
given that the Fund will be able to utilize these  instruments  effectively  for
the purposes stated below.

WRITING COVERED  OPTIONS ON SECURITIES.  The Fund may write covered call options
and  covered put options on  optionable  securities  of the types in which it is
permitted to invest from time to time as the  investment  advisor  determines is
appropriate in seeking to attain the Fund's investment  objective.  Call options
written  by the Fund give the holder  the right to buy the  underlying  security
from the Fund at a stated exercise price;  put options give the holder the right
to sell the underlying security to the Fund at a stated price.

         The  Fund  may  only  write  call  options  on a  covered  basis or for
cross-hedging  purposes and will only write  covered put  options.  A put option
would be considered  "covered" if the Fund owns an option to sell the underlying
security subject to the option having an exercise price equal to or greater than
the exercise  price of the "covered"  option at all time while the put option is
outstanding.  A call  option  is  covered  if the Fund  owns or has the right to
acquire the  underlying  securities  subject to the call  option (or  comparable
securities  satisfying the cover  requirements  of securities  exchanges) at all
times during the option period. A call option is for  cross-hedging  purposes if
it is not covered,  but is designed to provide a hedge against another  security
which the Fund owns or has the right to acquire.  In the case of a call  written
for  cross-hedging  purposes  or a put  option,  the  Fund  will  maintain  in a
segregated  account  at the  Fund's  custodian  bank  cash  or  short-term  U.S.
government  securities  with  a  value  equal  to or  greater  than  the  Fund's
obligation  under the option.  The Fund may also write  combinations  of covered
puts and covered calls on the same underlying security.

         The Fund will receive a premium from writing an option, which increases
the Fund's return in the event the option  expires  unexercised or is terminated
at a profit.  The amount of the premium will reflect,  among other  things,  the
relationship  of the market  price of the  underlying  security to the  exercise
price of the option,  the term of the option,  and the  volatility of the market
price of the underlying security.  By writing a call option, the Fund will limit
its  opportunity  to  profit  from  any  increase  in the  market  value  of the
underlying  security  above the exercise  price of the option.  By writing a put
option,  the Fund will assume the risk that it may be  required to purchase  the
underlying  security for an exercise  price higher than its then current  market
price,  resulting  in a potential  capital loss if the  purchase  price  exceeds
market price plus the amount of the premium received.

         The Fund may  terminate  an option  which it has  written  prior to its
expiration,  by  entering  into a  closing  purchase  transaction  in  which  it
purchases an option having the same terms as the option  written.  The Fund will
realize a profit (or loss) from such transaction if the cost of such transaction
is less (or more) than the  premium  received  from the  writing of the  option.
Because  increases in the market price of a call option will  generally  reflect
increases in the market price of the  underlying  security,  any loss  resulting
from  the  repurchase  of a call  option  may be  offset  in whole or in part by
unrealized appreciation of the underlying security owned by the Fund.

PURCHASING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS ON SECURITIES. The Fund may purchase put options
to protect its portfolio holdings in an underlying security against a decline in
market  value.  This  protection  is provided  during the life of the put option
since the Fund, as holder of the put, is able to sell the underlying security at
the exercise price regardless of any decline in the underlying security's market
price.  For the purchase of a put option to be  profitable,  the market price of
the underlying  security must decline  sufficiently  below the exercise price to
cover the premium and  transaction  costs.  By using put options in this manner,
any profit  which the Fund  might  otherwise  have  realized  on the  underlying
security  will  be  reduced  by the  premium  paid  for the  put  option  and by
transaction costs.

         The Fund may also  purchase a call option to hedge  against an increase
in price of a security that it intends to purchase.  This protection is provided
during the life of the call  option  since the Fund,  as holder of the call,  is
able to buy the  underlying  security at the exercise  price  regardless  of any
increase in the underlying  security's  market price. For the purchase of a call
option to be profitable,  the market price of the underlying  security must rise
sufficiently  above the  exercise  price to cover the  premium  and  transaction
costs.  By using call  options in this  manner,  any profit which the Fund might
have realized had it bought the underlying security at the time it purchased the
call  option  will be reduced  by the  premium  paid for the call  option and by
transaction costs.

         The Fund may enter into financial  futures  contracts and write options
on such  contracts.  The Fund intends to enter into such  contracts  and related
options for hedging purposes.  The Fund will enter into futures on securities or
index-based  futures  contracts in order to hedge against changes in interest or
exchange  rates or  securities  prices.  A futures  contract on securities is an
agreement  to buy or sell  securities  at a specified  price during a designated
month.  A futures  contract  on a  securities  index does not involve the actual
delivery of  securities,  but merely  requires the payment of a cash  settlement
based on  changes in the  securities  index.  The Fund does not make  payment or
deliver securities upon entering into a futures contract.  Instead, it puts down
a margin  deposit,  which is  adjusted  to  reflect  changes in the value of the
contract and which continues until the contract is terminated.

         The  Fund  may  sell or  purchase  futures  contracts.  When a  futures
contract is sold by the Fund,  the value of the contract  will tend to rise when
the value of the  underlying  securities  declines and to fall when the value of
such securities  increases.  Thus, the Fund sells futures  contracts in order to
offset a possible decline in the value of its securities.  If a futures contract
is purchased by the Fund,  the value of the contract  will tend to rise when the
value of the underlying  securities increases and to fall when the value of such
securities declines.  The Fund intends to purchase futures contracts in order to
establish what is believed by the investment  advisor to be a favorable price or
rate of return for securities the Fund intends to purchase.

         The Fund also  intends  to  purchase  put and call  options  on futures
contracts for hedging purposes. A put option purchased by the Fund would give it
the right to assume a  position  as the  seller  of a futures  contract.  A call
option purchased by the Fund would give it the right to assume a position as the
purchaser of a futures contract. The purchase of an option on a futures contract
requires  the Fund to pay a  premium.  In  exchange  for the  premium,  the Fund
becomes  entitled  to exercise  the  benefits,  if any,  provided by the futures
contract,  but is not  required to take any action  under the  contract.  If the
option cannot be exercised profitably before it expires, the Fund's loss will be
limited to the amount of the premium and any transaction costs.

         The Fund may enter into closing purchase and sale transactions in order
to  terminate  a  futures  contract  and may sell put and call  options  for the
purpose of closing out its options  positions.  The Fund's ability to enter into
closing  transactions  depends on the  development  and  maintenance of a liquid
secondary  market.  There is no assurance  that a liquid  secondary  market will
exist for any particular contract or at any particular time. As a result,  there
can be no  assurance  that the Fund  will be able to  enter  into an  offsetting
transaction  with respect to a particular  contract at a particular time. If the
Fund is not able to enter into an offsetting transaction, the Fund will continue
to be required to maintain  the margin  deposits on the contract and to complete
the  contract  according to its terms,  in which case it would  continue to bear
market risk on the transaction.

         Although  futures and options  transactions  are intended to enable the
Fund to manage  market,  interest  rate or  exchange  rate  risk,  unanticipated
changes in interest  rates or market  prices could result in poorer  performance
than if it had not  entered  into  these  transactions.  Even if the  investment
advisor  correctly   predicts   interest  rate  movements,   a  hedge  could  be
unsuccessful  if  changes in the value of the Fund's  futures  position  did not
correspond to changes in the value of its investments.  This lack of correlation
between the Fund's futures and securities positions may be caused by differences
between  the  futures  and  securities  markets or by  differences  between  the
securities  underlying the Fund's futures position and the securities held by or
to be  purchased  for the Fund.  The Fund's  investment  advisor will attempt to
minimize  these risks through  careful  selection  and  monitoring of the Fund's
futures and options positions.

         The Fund does not intend to use futures transactions for speculation or
leverage.  The Fund has the ability to write  options on futures,  but currently
intends to write such options  only to close out options  purchased by the Fund.
The Fund will not change these policies without supplementing the information in
the prospectus and SAI.

         The Fund will not maintain open  positions in futures  contracts it has
sold or call options it has written on futures  contracts if, in the  aggregate,
the value of the open  positions  (marked to market)  exceeds the current market
value of its securities  portfolio plus or minus the unrealized  gain or loss on
those open  positions,  adjusted for the  correlation of volatility  between the
hedged securities and the futures  contracts.  If this limitation is exceeded at
any time,  the Fund will take prompt action to close out a sufficient  number of
open  contracts  to bring its open  futures  and options  positions  within this
limitation.

"MARGIN" IN FUTURES TRANSACTIONS. Unlike the purchase or sale of a security, the
Fund  does not pay or  receive  money  upon the  purchase  or sale of a  futures
contract.  Rather the Fund is required to deposit an amount of "initial  margin"
in cash or U.S.  Treasury  bills with its custodian  (or the broker,  if legally
permitted).  The nature of initial margin in futures  transactions  is different
from that of margin in securities  transactions in that futures contract initial
margin  does not  involve  the  borrowing  of funds by the Fund to  finance  the
transactions.  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.

         A futures  contract  held by the Fund is valued  daily at the  official
settlement  price of the exchange on which it is traded.  Each day the Fund pays
or receives cash, called "variation  margin," equal to the daily change in value
of the futures contract. This process is known as "marking to market". Variation
margin  does not  represent  a  borrowing  or loan by the  Fund  but is  instead
settlement between the Fund and the broker of the amount one would owe the other
if the futures contract expired. In computing its daily net asset value the Fund
will  mark-to-market  its open futures  positions.  The Fund is also required to
deposit and maintain margin when it writes call options on futures contracts.


Limitations.  The Fund will not purchase or sell futures contracts or options on
futures contracts if, as a result, the sum of the initial margin deposits on its
existing futures  contracts and related options  positions and premiums paid for
options  on  futures  contracts  would  exceed 5% of the net  assets of the Fund
unless the transaction meets certain "bona fide hedging" criteria.


Risks of Options  and  Futures  Strategies.  The  effective  use of options  and
futures  strategies  depends,  among  other  things,  on the  Fund's  ability to
terminate  options and futures  positions at times when the  investment  advisor
deems it desirable to do so.  Although the Fund will not enter into an option or
futures  position  unless the investment  advisor  believes that a liquid market
exists for such option or future,  there can be no assurance  that the Fund will
be  able  to  effect  closing  transactions  at  any  particular  time  or at an
acceptable  price.  The investment  advisor  generally  expects that options and
futures transactions for the Fund will be conducted on recognized exchanges.  In
certain  instances,  however,  the Fund may  purchase  and sell  options  in the
over-the-counter market. The staff of the SEC considers over-the-counter options
to be illiquid.  The Fund's ability to terminate option positions established in
the  over-the-counter  market may be more  limited  than in the case of exchange
traded  options  and  may  also  involve  the  risk  that   securities   dealers
participating in such  transactions  would fail to meet their obligations to the
Fund.

         The  use  of  options  and  futures  involves  the  risk  of  imperfect
correlation between movements in options and futures prices and movements in the
price of the securities that are the subject of the hedge. The successful use of
these strategies also depends on the ability of the Fund's investment advisor to
forecast  correctly  interest  rate  movements  and general  stock  market price
movements.  The risk increases as the  composition of the securities held by the
Fund diverges from the composition of the relevant option or futures contract.

Foreign Securities

         The Fund may invest in foreign securities or U.S.  securities traded in
foreign  markets.  In  addition  to  securities  issued  by  foreign  companies,
permissible  investments may also consist of obligations of foreign  branches of
U.S. banks and of foreign banks,  including  European  certificates  of deposit,
European  time  deposits,  Canadian  time  deposits and Yankee  certificates  of
deposit.  The Fund may also invest in Canadian  commercial  paper and Europaper.
These  instruments may subject the Fund to investment  risks that differ in some
respects from those related to investments in obligations of U.S. issuers.  Such
risks include the  possibility of adverse  political and economic  developments;
imposition  of  withholding   taxes  on  interest  or  other  income;   seizure,
nationalization, or expropriation of foreign deposits; establishment of exchange
controls or taxation at the source; greater fluctuations in value due to changes
in exchange  rates, or the adoption of other foreign  governmental  restrictions
which might  adversely  affect the  payment of  principal  and  interest on such
obligations.  Such  investments may also entail higher  custodial fees and sales
commissions  than  domestic  investments.   Foreign  issuers  of  securities  or
obligations  are often  subject to  accounting  treatment and engage in business
practices different from those respecting domestic issuers of similar securities
or obligations.  Foreign branches of U.S. banks and foreign banks may be subject
to less  stringent  reserve  requirements  than  those  applicable  to  domestic
branches of U.S. banks.

         The Fund may also invest in the stocks of companies located in emerging
markets.  These  countries  generally  have  economic  structures  that are less
diverse and mature,  and  political  systems  that are less stable than those of
developed  countries.  Emerging markets may be more volatile than the markets of
more mature  economies,  and the  securities  of  companies  located in emerging
markets are often subject to rapid and large price fluctuations;  however, these
markets may also provide higher long-term rates of return.

Foreign Currency Transactions

         As one way of  managing  exchange  rate  risk,  the Fund may enter into
forward currency exchange  contracts  (agreements to purchase or sell currencies
at a specified  price and date).  The  exchange  rate for the  transaction  (the
amount of  currency  the Fund will  deliver  and  receive  when the  contract is
completed)  is fixed when the Fund enters into the  contract.  The Fund  usually
will enter into these contracts to stabilize the U.S. dollar value of a security
it has agreed to buy or sell.  The Fund intends to use these  contracts to hedge
the U.S.  dollar value of a security it already owns,  particularly  if the Fund
expects a decrease in the value of the currency in which the foreign security is
denominated.  Although  the Fund will  attempt  to benefit  from  using  forward
contracts,  the success of its hedging  strategy  will depend on the  investment
advisor's  ability  to predict  accurately  the future  exchange  rates  between
foreign  currencies  and the U.S.  dollar.  The value of the Fund's  investments
denominated in foreign currencies will depend on the relative strengths of those
currencies  and the  U.S.  dollar,  and the Fund may be  affected  favorably  or
unfavorably  by changes in the exchange  rates or exchange  control  regulations
between  foreign  currencies and the U.S.  dollar.  Changes in foreign  currency
exchange rates also may affect the value of dividends and interest earned, gains
and losses  realized on the sale of  securities  and net  investment  income and
gains,  if any, to be distributed to shareholders by the Fund. The Fund may also
purchase and sell  options  related to foreign  currencies  in  connection  with
hedging strategies.

Premium Securities

         The Fund may at times invest in premium securities which are securities
bearing  coupon  rates  higher than  prevailing  market  rates.  Such  "premium"
securities are typically  purchased at prices greater than the principal  amount
payable on maturity.  Although the Fund  generally  amortizes  the amount of any
such premium into income,  the Fund may recognize a capital loss if such premium
securities  are called or sold prior to  maturity  and the call or sale price is
less than the purchase  price.  Additionally,  the Fund may  recognize a capital
loss if it holds such securities to maturity.
High Yield, High Risk Bonds

         The Fund may invest a portion of its assets in lower rated bonds. Bonds
rated below BBB by S&P or Fitch IBCA,  Inc.  ("Fitch")  or below Baa by Moody's,
commonly  known as "junk  bonds," offer high yields,  but also high risk.  While
investment in junk bonds provides  opportunities  to maximize  return over time,
they are considered predominantly speculative with respect to the ability of the
issuer to meet principal and interest payments.
Investors should be aware of the following risks:

         (1) The lower ratings of junk bonds reflect a greater  possibility that
adverse changes in the financial  condition of the issuer or in general economic
conditions,  or both, or an unanticipated  rise in interest rates may impair the
ability of the issuer to make payments of interest and principal,  especially if
the  issuer  is  highly  leveraged.  Such  issuer's  ability  to meet  its  debt
obligations  may also be adversely  affected by the  issuer's  inability to meet
specific  forecasts or the  unavailability  of  additional  financing.  Also, an
economic  downturn or an increase in interest  rates may increase the  potential
for default by the issuers of these securities.

         (2)  The  value  of  junk  bonds  may be  more  susceptible  to real or
perceived  adverse  economic  or  political  events  than is the case for higher
quality bonds.

         (3) The  value  of  junk  bonds,  like  those  of  other  fixed  income
securities,  fluctuates  in  response to changes in  interest  rates,  generally
rising when interest  rates decline and falling when  interest  rates rise.  For
example,  if interest rates increase after a fixed income security is purchased,
the  security,  if sold prior to  maturity,  may return less than its cost.  The
prices of junk bonds,  however,  are generally  less  sensitive to interest rate
changes than the prices of  higher-rated  bonds,  but are more sensitive to news
about an issuer or the economy which is, or investors perceive as, negative.

         (4) The  secondary  market for junk bonds may be less liquid at certain
times than the secondary  market for higher quality  bonds,  which may adversely
effect (a) the bond's market price, (b) the Fund's ability to sell the bond, and
(c) the Fund's  ability to obtain  accurate  market  quotations  for purposes of
valuing its assets.

         For bond  ratings  descriptions,  see  "Corporate  and  Municipal  Bond
Ratings" below.

Illiquid and Restricted Securities

         The Fund may not invest more than 15% (10% for money  market  funds) of
its net assets in securities that are illiquid.  A security is illiquid when the
Fund cannot dispose of it in the ordinary  course of business  within seven days
at approximately the value at which the Fund has the investment on its books.

         The  Fund may  invest  in  "restricted"  securities,  i.e.,  securities
subject to restrictions on resale under federal securities laws. Rule 144A under
the Securities Act of 1933 ("Rule 144A") allows certain restricted securities to
trade freely among qualified institutional investors. Since Rule 144A securities
may have limited  markets,  the Board of Trustees  will  determine  whether such
securities  should be  considered  illiquid for the purpose of  determining  the
Fund's  compliance  with the limit on illiquid  securities  indicated  above. In
determining the liquidity of Rule 144A  securities,  the Trustees will consider:
(1) the  frequency  of trades  and quotes  for the  security;  (2) the number of
dealers  willing  to  purchase  or sell the  security  and the  number  of other
potential buyers; (3) dealer undertakings to make a market in the security;  and
(4) the nature of the security and the nature of the marketplace trades.

Investment in Other Investment Companies

         The Fund may purchase the shares of other  investment  companies to the
extent  permitted under the 1940 Act.  Currently,  the Fund may not (1) own more
than 3% of the  outstanding  voting stocks of another  investment  company,  (2)
invest  more than 5% of its assets in any  single  investment  company,  and (3)
invest more than 10% of its assets in investment  companies.  However,  the Fund
may invest  all of its  investable  assets in  securities  of a single  open-end
management investment company with substantially the same fundamental investment
objectives,  policies and limitations as the Fund. Investing in other investment
companies may expose a Fund to duplicate expenses and lower its value.

Short Sales

         A short sale is the sale of a security the Fund has borrowed.  The Fund
expects to profit from a short sale by selling the  borrowed  security  for more
than the cost of buying it to repay the lender. After a short sale is completed,
the value of the  security  sold short may rise.  If that  happens,  the cost of
buying it to repay the lender may exceed the amount originally  received for the
sale by the Fund.

         The Fund may engage in short sales,  but it may not make short sales of
securities  or  maintain  a short  position  unless,  at all times  when a short
position is open,  it owns an equal amount of such  securities  or of securities
which,  without payment of any further  consideration,  are convertible  into or
exchangeable  for  securities  of the same issue as, and equal in amount to, the
securities  sold short.  The Fund may effect a short sale in connection  with an
underwriting in which the Fund is a participant.

Municipal Bonds

         The Fund may  invest in  municipal  bonds of any  state,  territory  or
possession  of the United States  ("U.S."),  including the District of Columbia.
The Fund may also invest in municipal bonds of any political subdivision, agency
or  instrumentality  (e.g.,  counties,   cities,  towns,  villages,   districts,
authorities)  of  the  U.S.  or  its  possessions.   Municipal  bonds  are  debt
instruments  issued by or for a state or local government to support its general
financial  needs  or to pay for  special  projects  such as  airports,  bridges,
highways, public transit, schools, hospitals, housing and water and sewer works.
Municipal bonds may also may be issued to refinance public debt.

         Municipal  bonds are mainly divided  between  "general  obligation" and
"revenue"  bonds.  General  obligation  bonds are  backed by the full  faith and
credit of  governmental  issuers with the power to tax. They are repaid from the
issuer's general revenues.  Payment,  however, may be dependent upon legislative
approval  and may be  subject  to  limitations  on the  issuer's  taxing  power.
Enforcement of payments due under general  obligation  bonds varies according to
the law applicable to the issuer. In contrast,  revenue bonds are supported only
by the revenues generated by the project or facility.

         The Fund may also invest in industrial  development  bonds.  Such bonds
are usually  revenue bonds issued to pay for  facilities  with a public  purpose
operated by private corporations.  The credit quality of industrial  development
bonds is usually directly related to the credit standing of the owner or user of
the  facilities.  To  qualify  as a  municipal  bond,  the  interest  paid on an
industrial  development  bond must qualify as fully  exempt from federal  income
tax. However, the interest paid on an industrial development bond may be subject
to the federal alternative minimum tax.

         The  yields  on  municipal  bonds  depend  on such  factors  as  market
conditions, the financial condition of the issuer and the issue's size, maturity
date and  rating.  Municipal  bonds are rated by S&P,  Moody's  and Fitch.  Such
ratings,  however,  are opinions,  not absolute standards of quality.  Municipal
bonds with the same  maturity,  interest  rates and  rating  may have  different
yields,  while  municipal  bonds with the same maturity and interest  rate,  but
different  ratings,  may have the same  yield.  Once  purchased  by the Fund,  a
municipal  bond may cease to be rated or receive a new rating  below the minimum
required for purchase by the Fund.  Neither event would require the Fund to sell
the bond,  but the Fund's  investment  advisor  would  consider  such  events in
determining whether the Fund should continue to hold it.

         The ability of the Fund to achieve  its  investment  objective  depends
upon the  continuing  ability of issuers of municipal  bonds to pay interest and
principal when due. Municipal bonds are subject to the provisions of bankruptcy,
insolvency and other laws  affecting the rights and remedies of creditors.  Such
laws extend the time for payment of principal and/or interest, and may otherwise
restrict the Fund's ability to enforce its rights in the event of default. Since
there is generally  less  information  available on the  financial  condition of
municipal  bond issuers  compared to other domestic  issuers of securities,  the
Fund's  investment   advisor  may  lack  sufficient   knowledge  of  an  issue's
weaknesses. Other influences, such as litigation, may also materially affect the
ability of an issuer to pay principal  and interest  when due. In addition,  the
market for  municipal  bonds is often thin and can be  temporarily  affected  by
large purchases and sales, including those by the Fund.

         From time to time,  Congress has considered  restricting or eliminating
the federal income tax exemption for interest on municipal  bonds.  Such actions
could  materially  affect the  availability  of municipal bonds and the value of
those already owned by the Fund. If such  legislation  were passed,  the Trust's
Board of Trustees may recommend changes in the Fund's investment  objectives and
policies or dissolution of the Fund.

U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam and Puerto Rico

         The Fund may  invest  in  obligations  of the  governments  of the U.S.
Virgin Islands,  Guam and Puerto Rico to the extent such  obligations are exempt
from the income or intangibles taxes, as applicable,  of the state for which the
Fund is named. The Fund does not presently intend to invest more than (a) 10% of
its net assets in the obligations of each of the U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam or
(b) 25% of its net assets in the  obligations of Puerto Rico.  Accordingly,  the
Fund may be adversely  affected by local  political and economic  conditions and
developments within the U.S. Virgin Islands,  Guam and Puerto Rico affecting the
issuers of such obligations.

Master Demand Notes

         The Fund may  invest  in  master  demand  notes.  These  are  unsecured
obligations  that permit the  investment of  fluctuating  amounts by the Fund at
varying rates of interest pursuant to direct  arrangements  between the Fund, as
lender,  and the issuer,  as  borrower.  Master  demand  notes may permit  daily
fluctuations in the interest rate and daily changes in the amounts borrowed. The
Fund has the right to increase  the amount  under the note at any time up to the
full amount  provided by the note  agreement,  or to  decrease  the amount.  The
borrower  may repay up to the full amount of the note  without  penalty.  Master
demand notes permit the Fund to demand payment of principal and accrued interest
at any time (on not more than seven days'  notice).  Notes  acquired by the Fund
may  have  maturities  of more  than  one  year,  provided  that (1) the Fund is
entitled to payment of principal  and accrued  interest upon not more than seven
days'  notice,  and  (2)  the  rate  of  interest  on  such  notes  is  adjusted
automatically at periodic intervals, which normally will not exceed 31 days, but
may extend up to one year.  The notes are deemed to have a maturity equal to the
longer of the period  remaining  to the next  interest  rate  adjustment  or the
demand  notice  period.   Because  these  types  of  notes  are  direct  lending
arrangements between the lender and borrower,  such instruments are not normally
traded and there is no  secondary  market  for these  notes,  although  they are
redeemable  and thus  repayable  by the  borrower  at face  value  plus  accrued
interest at any time.  Accordingly,  the Fund's  right to redeem is dependent on
the  ability of the  borrower  to pay  principal  and  interest  on  demand.  In
connection with master demand note  arrangements,  the Fund`s investment advisor
considers,  under standards established by the Board of Trustees, earning power,
cash flow and  other  liquidity  ratios of the  borrower  and will  monitor  the
ability of the borrower to pay principal and interest on demand. These notes are
not typically rated by credit rating agencies. Unless rated, the Fund may invest
in them only if at the time of an  investment  the  issuer  meets  the  criteria
established for high quality  commercial paper,  i.e., rated A-1 by S&P, Prime-1
by Moody's or F-1 by Fitch.

Brady Bonds

         The Fund may also  invest  in Brady  Bonds.  Brady  Bonds  are  created
through the exchange of existing  commercial bank loans to foreign  entities for
new obligations in connection with debt  restructurings  under a plan introduced
by former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury,  Nicholas F. Brady (the "Brady Plan").
Brady Bonds have been issued only recently, and, accordingly, do not have a long
payment history.  They may be collateralized or  uncollateralized  and issued in
various  currencies  (although  most are U.S.  dollar-denominated)  and they are
actively traded in the over-the-counter secondary market.

         U.S.  dollar-denominated,  collateralized  Brady  Bonds,  which  may be
fixed-rate   par  bonds  or  floating   rate  discount   bonds,   are  generally
collateralized  in full as to principal  due at maturity by U.S.  Treasury  zero
coupon  obligations  that have the same  maturity as the Brady  Bonds.  Interest
payments on these Brady Bonds generally are collateralized by cash or securities
in an amount  that,  in the case of fixed rate  bonds,  is equal to at least one
year of rolling interest payments based on the applicable  interest rate at that
time and is adjusted at regular  intervals  thereafter.  Certain Brady Bonds are
entitled to "value recovery payments" in certain circumstances,  which in effect
constitute supplemental interest payments, but generally are not collateralized.
Brady  Bonds are often  viewed as having up to four  valuation  components:  (1)
collateralized  repayment  of principal at final  maturity,  (2)  collateralized
interest  payments,   (3)  uncollateralized   interest  payments,  and  (4)  any
uncollateralized  repayment  of principal  at maturity  (these  uncollateralized
amounts  constitute the "residual risk"). In the event of a default with respect
to  collateralized  Brady Bonds as a result of which the payment  obligations of
the issuer are accelerated,  the U.S.  Treasury zero coupon  obligations held as
collateral  for the payment of principal  will not be  distributed to investors,
nor will such obligations be sold and the proceeds  distributed.  The collateral
will be held by the collateral agent to the scheduled  maturity of the defaulted
Brady  Bonds,  which will  continue  to be  outstanding,  at which time the face
amount of the collateral will equal the principal  payments that would have then
been due on the Brady Bonds in the normal course.  In addition,  in light of the
residual risk of Brady Bonds and, among other  factors,  the history of defaults
with  respect  to  commercial  bank  loans by public  and  private  entities  of
countries  issuing Brady Bonds,  investments  in Brady Bonds are to be viewed as
speculative.

Obligations of Foreign Branches of United States Banks

         The Fund may invest in obligations of foreign  branches of U.S.  banks.
These may be general  obligations  of the parent bank in addition to the issuing
branch,  or  may be  limited  by  the  terms  of a  specific  obligation  and by
government regulation.  Payment of interest and principal upon these obligations
may also be  affected by  governmental  action in the country of domicile of the
branch  (generally  referred to as sovereign  risk).  In addition,  evidences of
ownership  of such  securities  may be held outside the U.S. and the Fund may be
subject to the risks  associated  with the  holding of such  property  overseas.
Examples of governmental  actions would be the imposition of currency  controls,
interest limitations, withholding taxes, seizure of assets or the declaration of
a moratorium.  Various  provisions of federal law governing domestic branches do
not apply to foreign branches of domestic banks.

Obligations of United States Branches of Foreign Banks

         The Fund may invest in obligations  of U.S.  branches of foreign banks.
These may be general  obligations  of the parent bank in addition to the issuing
branch,  or may be limited by the terms of a specific  obligation and by federal
and state  regulation as well as by governmental  action in the country in which
the foreign bank has its head office.  In addition,  there may be less  publicly
available  information  about a U.S.  branch  of a  foreign  bank  than  about a
domestic bank.

Payment-in-kind Securities

         The Fund may invest in  payment-in-kind  ("PIK")  securities.  PIKs pay
interest in either cash or additional securities,  at the issuer's option, for a
specified period. The issuer's option to pay in additional  securities typically
ranges  from one to six  years,  compared  to an  average  maturity  for all PIK
securities  of eleven  years.  Call  protection  and sinking  fund  features are
comparable to those offered on traditional debt issues.

         PIKs,  like  zero  coupon  bonds,   are  designed  to  give  an  issuer
flexibility in managing cash flow. Several PIKs are senior debt. In other cases,
where  PIKs  are   subordinated,   most  senior  lenders  view  them  as  equity
equivalents.

         An advantage  of PIKs for the issuer -- as with zero coupon  securities
- -- is that interest  payments are automatically  compounded  (reinvested) at the
stated coupon rate, which is not the case with cash-paying securities.  However,
PIKs are gaining  popularity  over zeros since  interest  payments in additional
securities can be monetized and are more tangible than accretion of a discount.

         As a group,  PIK bonds trade flat  (i.e.,  without  accrued  interest).
Their  price is  expected to reflect an amount  representing  accredit  interest
since the last payment.  PIKs generally  trade at higher yields than  comparable
cash-paying  securities of the same issuer. Their premium yield is the result of
the lesser  desirability  of non-cash  interest,  the more limited  audience for
non-cash  paying  securities,  and the fact that  many PIKs have been  issued to
equity investors who do not normally own or hold such securities.

         Calculating the true yield on a PIK security requires a discounted cash
flow  analysis  if the  security  (ex  interest)  is  trading  at a premium or a
discount  because the  realizable  value of additional  payments is equal to the
current market value of the underlying security, not par.

         Regardless of whether PIK securities are senior or deeply subordinated,
issuers are highly  motivated to retire them because they are usually their most
costly form of capital.

Zero Coupon "Stripped" Bonds

         The Fund may invest in zero coupon  "stripped"  bonds.  These represent
ownership  in  serially  maturing  interest  payments or  principal  payments on
specific  underlying notes and bonds,  including  coupons relating to such notes
and bonds.  The interest and principal  payments are direct  obligations  of the
issuer.  Interest zero coupon bonds of any series mature  periodically  from the
date of issue of such series through the maturity date of the securities related
to such  series.  Principal  zero  coupon  bonds  mature  on the date  specified
therein,  which is the final maturity date of the related securities.  Each zero
coupon bond entitles the holder to receive a single  payment at maturity.  There
are no periodic  interest  payments on a zero coupon bond. Zero coupon bonds are
offered at discounts from their face amounts.

         In general,  owners of zero  coupon  bonds have  substantially  all the
rights  and  privileges  of  owners  of the  underlying  coupon  obligations  or
principal  obligations.  Owners of zero coupon bonds have the right upon default
on the  underlying  coupon  obligations  or  principal  obligations  to  proceed
directly  and  individually  against  the issuer and are not  required to act in
concert with other holders of zero coupon bonds.

         For federal  income tax purposes,  a purchaser of principal zero coupon
bonds or interest  zero  coupon  bonds  (either  initially  or in the  secondary
market) is treated as if the buyer had purchased a corporate  obligation  issued
on the purchase date with an original  issue discount equal to the excess of the
amount payable at maturity over the purchase price. The purchaser is required to
take into  income  each year as  ordinary  income an  allocable  portion of such
discounts determined on a "constant yield" method. Any such income increases the
holder's tax basis for the zero coupon  bond,  and any gain or loss on a sale of
the zero coupon bonds  relative to the  holder's  basis,  as so  adjusted,  is a
capital gain or loss.  If the holder owns both  principal  zero coupon bonds and
interest zero coupon bonds representing an interest in the same underlying issue
of securities, a special basis allocation rule (requiring the aggregate basis to
be allocated  among the items sold and  retained  based on their  relative  fair
market value at the time of sale) may apply to  determine  the gain or loss on a
sale of any such zero coupon bonds.

Mortgage-Backed or Asset-Backed Securities

         The Fund may  invest in  mortgage-backed  securities  and  asset-backed
securities. Two principal types of mortgage-backed securities are collateralized
mortgage  obligations  ("CMOs")  and real estate  mortgage  investment  conduits
("REMICs").   CMOs  are  securities   collateralized   by  mortgages,   mortgage
pass-throughs,  mortgage  pay-through bonds (bonds representing an interest in a
pool of mortgages  where the cash flow  generated  from the mortgage  collateral
pool is  dedicated  to  bond  repayment),  and  mortgage-backed  bonds  (general
obligations  of the  issuers  payable  out of the  issuers'  general  funds  and
additionally  secured  by a  first  lien  on a pool of  single  family  detached
properties).  Many CMOs are issued with a number of classes or series which have
different maturities and are retired in sequence.

         Investors  purchasing  CMOs in the shortest  maturities  receive or are
credited with their pro rata portion of the  scheduled  payments of interest and
principal  on the  underlying  mortgages  plus all  unscheduled  prepayments  of
principal up to a predetermined portion of the total CMO obligation.  Until that
portion of such CMO  obligation  is repaid,  investors in the longer  maturities
receive interest only.  Accordingly,  the CMOs in the longer maturity series are
less  likely  than other  mortgage  pass-throughs  to be prepaid  prior to their
stated maturity. Although some of the mortgages underlying CMOs may be supported
by various types of insurance,  and some CMOs may be backed by GNMA certificates
or other mortgage pass-throughs issued or guaranteed by U.S. government agencies
or instrumentalities, the CMOs themselves are not generally guaranteed.

         REMICs,  which were  authorized  under the Tax Reform Act of 1986,  are
private  entities  formed for the  purpose of holding a fixed pool of  mortgages
secured by an interest in real property. REMICs are similar to CMOs in that they
issue multiple classes of securities.

         In  addition  to  mortgage-backed  securities,  the Fund may  invest in
securities secured by other assets including company receivables, truck and auto
loans,  leases,  and  credit  card  receivables.  These  issues  may  be  traded
over-the-counter  and typically  have a  short-intermediate  maturity  structure
depending on the pay down  characteristics  of the underlying  financial  assets
which are passed through to the security holder.

         Credit card  receivables  are  generally  unsecured and the debtors are
entitled  to the  protection  of a number of state and federal  consumer  credit
laws,  many of which give such debtors the right to set off certain amounts owed
on the  credit  cards,  thereby  reducing  the  balance  due.  Most  issuers  of
asset-backed securities backed by automobile receivables permit the servicers of
such  receivables  to retain  possession of the underlying  obligations.  If the
servicers were to sell these obligations to another party,  there is a risk that
the purchaser  would acquire an interest  superior to that of the holders of the
related  asset-backed  securities.  In addition,  because of the large number of
vehicles involved in a typical issuance and technical  requirements  under state
laws, the trustee for the holders of related  asset-backed  securities backed by
automobile  receivables  may not have a proper  security  interest in all of the
obligations backing such receivables.  Therefore,  there is the possibility that
recoveries on  repossessed  collateral  may not, in some cases,  be available to
support payments on these securities.

         In general, issues of asset-backed securities are structured to include
additional  collateral  and/or  additional credit support to protect against the
risk that a portion of the collateral supporting the asset-backed securities may
default  and/or may suffer from these  defects.  In  evaluating  the strength of
particular issues of asset-backed  securities,  the investment advisor considers
the financial strength of the guarantor or other provider of credit support, the
type and extent of credit enhancement  provided as well as the documentation and
structure of the issue itself and the credit support.

Collateralized Mortgage Obligation "Residual" Interests

         The Fund may  invest  in other  types of  mortgage-related  securities,
including any securities  that directly or indirectly  represent a participation
in,  or are  secured  by and  payable  from,  mortgage  loans or real  property,
including  collateralized  mortgage obligation  "residual"  interests.  Residual
interests   are   derivative   mortgage   securities   issued  by   agencies  or
instrumentalities  of the U.S.  Government  or by  private  originators  of,  or
investors in,  mortgage  loans.  The cash flow generated by the mortgage  assets
underlying a series of mortgage  securities  is applied  first to make  required
payments of principal of and interest on the mortgage  securities  and second to
pay the related  administrative  expenses of the issuer.  The residual generally
represents  the  right to any  excess  cash  flow  remaining  after  making  the
foregoing  payments.  Each  payment of such  excess cash flow to a holder of the
related  residual  represents  income and/or a return of capital.  The amount of
residual cash flow  resulting from a series of mortgage  securities  will depend
on, among other things,  the  characteristics of the mortgage assets, the coupon
rate of each class of the mortgage  securities,  prevailing  interest rates, the
amount of administrative expenses, and the prepayment experience on the mortgage
assets.  The values of residuals are extremely  sensitive to changes in interest
rates. The yield to maturity on residual interests may be extremely sensitive to
prepayments on the related  underlying  mortgage assets in the same manner as an
interest-only class of stripped  mortgaged-backed  securities. In addition, if a
series of  mortgage  securities  includes  a class  that  bears  interest  at an
adjustable rate, the yield to maturity on the related residual interest may also
be extremely  sensitive to changes in the level of the index upon which interest
rate adjustments are based. In certain circumstances,  there may be little or no
excess cash flow payable to residual holders.  The Fund may fail to recoup fully
its initial investment in a residual.

         Residuals are generally  purchased and sold by institutional  investors
through  several  investment  banking  firms  acting as brokers or dealers.  The
residual interest market has only recently developed and residuals currently may
not have the  liquidity of other more  established  securities  trading in other
markets.   Residuals   also  may  be   subject  to   certain   restrictions   on
transferability.  As a  result,  the  Fund may be  unable  to  dispose  of these
interests at prices approximating the values the Fund had previously assigned to
them.

Variable or Floating Rate Instruments

         The Fund may invest in variable or floating rate instruments  which may
involve a demand  feature and may include  variable  amount  master demand notes
which may or may not be backed by bank  letters of credit.  Variable or floating
rate  instruments  bear  interest at a rate which  varies with changes in market
rates.  The  holder  of an  instrument  with a demand  feature  may  tender  the
instrument back to the issuer at par prior to maturity. A variable amount master
demand note is issued pursuant to a written agreement between the issuer and the
holder,  its amount may be increased by the holder or decreased by the holder or
issuer,  it is payable on demand,  and the rate of interest varies based upon an
agreed formula. The quality of the underlying credit must, in the opinion of the
investment  advisor,  be equivalent to the  long-term  bond or commercial  paper
ratings applicable to permitted investments for the Fund. The investment advisor
will monitor,  on an ongoing basis, the earning power,  cash flow, and liquidity
ratios of the issuers of such instruments and will similarly monitor the ability
of an issuer of a demand instrument to pay principal and interest on demand.

Real Estate Investment Trusts

         The Fund may invest in  investments  related to real  estate  including
real estate investment  trusts  ("REITs").  Risks associated with investments in
securities  of companies  in the real estate  industry  include:  decline in the
value of real estate;  risks related to general and local  economic  conditions,
overbuilding  and  increased  competition;   increases  in  property  taxes  and
operating  expenses;  changes in zoning laws;  casualty or condemnation  losses;
variations  in rental  income;  changes in  neighborhood  values;  the appeal of
properties to tenants;  and  increases in interest  rates.  In addition,  equity
REITs may be affected by changes in the values of the underlying  property owned
by the trusts,  while mortgage real estate  investment trusts may be affected by
the quality of credit extended.  REITs are dependent upon management skills, may
not be  diversified  and are subject to the risks of  financing  projects.  Such
REITs are also  subject to heavy cash flow  dependency,  defaults by  borrowers,
self  liquidation  and the  possibility  of  failing  to  qualify  for  tax-free
pass-through of income under the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code") and to maintain  exemption  from the 1940 Act. In the event an issuer of
debt securities  collateralized by real estate defaults,  it is conceivable that
the REITs could end up holding the underlying real estate.

Limited Partnerships

         The Fund may  invest in  limited  and master  limited  partnerships.  A
limited partnership is a partnership consisting of one or more general partners,
jointly and severally responsible as ordinary partners, and by whom the business
is conducted, and one or more limited partners who contribute cash as capital to
the  partnership  and  who  generally  are  not  liable  for  the  debts  of the
partnership beyond the amounts contributed. Limited partners are not involved in
the day-to-day management of the partnership. They receive income, capital gains
and other tax benefits  associated  with the  partnership  project in accordance
with  terms   established  in  the   partnership   agreement.   Typical  limited
partnerships  are in real estate,  oil and gas and equipment  leasing,  but they
also finance movies, research and development, and other projects.

         For an  organization  classified as a partnership  under the Code, each
item  of  income,  gain,  loss,  deduction,  and  credit  is  not  taxed  at the
partnership  level but flows through to the holder of the partnership unit. This
allows the  partnership  to avoid double  taxation and to pass through income to
the holder of the partnership unit at lower individual rates.

         A master limited partnership is a publicly traded limited  partnership.
The partnership units are registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
("SEC")  and  are  freely   exchanged  on  a  securities   exchange  or  in  the
over-the-counter market.


                        PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF SHARES

         You may buy  shares of the Fund  through  Evergreen  Distributor,  Inc.
("EDI"),  broker-dealers  that have entered into special  agreements with EDI or
certain other  financial  institutions.  With certain  exceptions,  the Fund may
offer up to four different  classes of shares that differ primarily with respect
to sales charges and distribution fees.  Depending upon the class of shares, you
will pay an initial  sales charge when you buy the Fund's  shares,  a contingent
deferred  sales charge (a "CDSC") when you redeem the Fund's  shares or no sales
charges at all.  Each Fund  offers  different  classes  of shares.  Refer to the
prospectus to determine which classes of shares are offered by each Fund.

Class A Shares

         With certain exceptions,  when you purchase Class A shares you will pay
a maximum sales charge of 4.75%.  The  prospectus  contains a complete  table of
applicable sales charges and a discussion of sales charge  reductions or waivers
that may apply to purchases.  If you purchase Class A shares in the amount of $1
million or more, without an initial sales charge, the Fund will charge a CDSC of
1.00% if you redeem  during the month of your  purchase or the  12-month  period
following  the month of your purchase (see  "Contingent  Deferred  Sales Charge"
below).

         No front-end  sales charges are imposed on Class A shares  purchased by
(a)  institutional  investors,  which may  include  bank trust  departments  and
registered  investment  advisors;   (b)  investment  advisors,   consultants  or
financial  planners  who place  trades for their own accounts or the accounts of
their clients and who charge such clients a management,  consulting, advisory or
other fee; (c) clients of  investment  advisors or financial  planners who place
trades for their own accounts if the  accounts are linked to the master  account
of  such  investment  advisors  or  financial  planners  on  the  books  of  the
broker-dealer  through whom shares are purchased;  (d) institutional  clients of
broker-dealers,  including  retirement and deferred  compensation  plans and the
trusts used to fund these plans,  which place trades through an omnibus  account
maintained  with the Fund by the  broker-dealer;  (e)  shareholders of record on
October 12, 1990 in any series of  Evergreen  Investment  Trust in  existence on
that date, and the members of their immediate families;  (f) current and retired
employees of First Union National Bank ("FUNB") and its affiliates,  EDI and any
broker-dealer  with whom EDI has entered into an agreement to sell shares of the
Fund, and members of the immediate families of such employees;  and (g) upon the
initial purchase of an Evergreen Fund by investors reinvesting the proceeds from
a  redemption  within the  preceding  30 days of shares of other  mutual  funds,
provided such shares were initially  purchased with a front-end  sales charge or
subject to a CDSC. These provisions are generally intended to provide additional
job-related  incentives  to  persons  who serve  the Fund or work for  companies
associated  with the Fund and  selected  dealers  and agents of the Fund.  Since
these persons are in a position to have a basic  understanding  of the nature of
an investment  company as well as a general  familiarity with the Fund, sales to
these  persons,  as  compared to sales in the normal  channels of  distribution,
require substantially less sales effort. Similarily, these provisions extend the
privilege  of  purchasing  shares  at net  asset  value to  certain  classes  of
institutional investors who, because of their investment sophistication,  can be
expected to require  significantly  less than normal sales effort on the part of
the Fund and the Distributor.  In addition, the provisions allow the Funds to be
competitive in the mutual fund industry, where similar allowances are common.


Class B Shares

         The Fund offers  Class B shares at net asset  value  without an initial
sales charge. With certain exceptions,  however,  the Fund will charge a CDSC on
shares  you  redeem  within 72  months  after  the  month of your  purchase,  in
accordance with the following schedule:

         REDEMPTION TIME                                               CDSC RATE

         Month of purchase and the first 12-month
         period following the month of purchase.........................   5.00%
         Second 12-month period following the month of purchase.........   4.00%
         Third 12-month period following the month of purchase..........   3.00%
         Fourth 12-month period following the month of purchase.........   3.00%
         Fifth 12-month period following the month of purchase..........   2.00%
         Sixth 12-month period following the month of purchase..........   1.00%
         Thereafter.....................................................   0.00%

         Class B shares  that have been  outstanding  for seven  years after the
month  of  purchase  will  automatically  convert  to  Class  A  shares  without
imposition of a front-end  sales charge or exchange  fee.  Conversion of Class B
shares  represented by stock  certificates  will require the return of the stock
certificate to ESC.

Class C Shares

         Class C shares  are  available  only  through  broker-dealers  who have
entered into special  distribution  agreements with EDI. The Fund offers Class C
shares  at net asset  value  without  an  initial  sales  charge.  With  certain
exceptions,  however, the Fund will charge a CDSC on shares you redeem within 24
months  after the  month of your  purchase,  in  accordance  with the  following
schedule:

         REDEMPTION TIME                                               CDSC RATE

         Month of purchase and the first 12-month
         period following the month of purchase                           2.00%
         Second 12-month period following the month of purchase           1.00%
         Thereafter                                                       0.00%

         See "Contingent Deferred Sales Charge" below.

         Class C shares purchased  through an omnibus account with Merrill Lynch
will be charged a 1.00%  CDSC if  redeemed  within 12 months  after the month of
purchase. Redemptions made thereafter will not be charged a CDSC.


Class Y Shares

         No CDSC is imposed on the redemption of Class Y shares.  Class Y shares
are not offered to the general  public and are available only to (1) persons who
at or prior to December  31, 1994 owned  shares in a mutual fund  advised by (2)
certain  institutional  investors  and (3)  investment  advisory  clients  of an
investment  advisor of an Evergreen  Fund or the advisor's  affiliates.  Class Y
shares are offered at net asset  value  without a  front-end  or back-end  sales
charge and do not bear any Rule 12b-1 distribution expenses.

Institutional Shares, Institutional Service Shares

         Each  institutional  class of shares is sold without a front-end  sales
charge or contingent deferred sales charge.  Institutional Service shares pay an
ongoing service fee. The minimum initial  investment in any institutional  class
of shares is $1 million, which may be waived in certain circumstances.  There is
no minimum amount required for subsequent purchases.

Contingent Deferred Sales Charge

         The Fund charges a CDSC as reimbursement for certain expenses,  such as
commissions or shareholder  servicing  fees,  that it has incurred in connection
with the sale of its shares  (see  "Distribution  Expenses  Under  Rule  12b-1,"
below).  Institutional and Institutional Service shares do not charge a CDSC. If
imposed,  the Fund  deducts  the CDSC  from the  redemption  proceeds  you would
otherwise  receive.  The CDSC is a percentage of the lesser of (1) the net asset
value of the shares at the time of redemption or (2) the shareholder's  original
net  cost for such  shares.  Upon  request  for  redemption,  to keep the CDSC a
shareholder  must pay as low as  possible,  the Fund will  first  seek to redeem
shares not subject to the CDSC and/or  shares held the  longest,  in that order.
The  CDSC  on  any  redemption  is,  to the  extent  permitted  by the  National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., paid to EDI or its predecessor.


                       SALES CHARGE WAIVERS AND REDUCTIONS

         The  following  information  is not  applicable  to  Institutional  and
Institutional Service shares.

         If you are  making a large  purchase,  there are  several  ways you can
combine  multiple  purchases  of  Class A shares  in  Evergreen  Funds  and take
advantage of lower sales charges. These are described below.

Combined Purchases

         You can reduce  your sales  charge by  combining  purchases  of Class A
shares of multiple Evergreen Funds. For example, if you invested $75,000 in each
of two  different  Evergreen  Funds,  you  would pay a sales  charge  based on a
$150,000 purchase (i.e., 3.75% of the offering price, rather than 4.75%).

Rights of Accumulation

         You can reduce your sales  charge by adding the value of Class A shares
of  Evergreen  Funds  you  already  own to the  amount  of  your  next  Class  A
investment.  For  example,  if you hold  Class A shares  valued at  $99,999  and
purchase an additional $5,000, the sales charge for the $5,000 purchase would be
at the next lower sales charge of 3.75%, rather than 4.75%.

         Your account, and therefore your rights of accumulation,  can be linked
to immediate  family  members  which  includes  father and mother,  brothers and
sisters,  and  sons and  daughters.  The  same  rule  applies  with  respect  to
individual  retirement  plans.  Please  note,  however,  that  retirement  plans
involving employees stand alone and do not pass on rights of accumulation.

Letter of Intent

         You  can,  by  completing  the  "Letter  of  Intent"   section  of  the
application, purchase Class A shares over a 13-month period and receive the same
sales  charge as if you had  invested  all the money at once.  All  purchases of
Class A shares of an Evergreen  Fund during the period will qualify as Letter of
Intent purchases.

Waiver of Initial Sales Charges

         The Fund may sell its  shares at net asset  value  without  an  initial
sales charge to:

                  1.    purchasers of shares in the amount of $1 million or
                  more;

                  2. a corporate or certain other qualified retirement plan or a
                  non-qualified   deferred   compensation  plan  or  a  Title  1
                  tax-sheltered annuity or TSA plan sponsored by an organization
                  having 100 or more eligible employees (a "Qualifying Plan") or
                  a TSA plan  sponsored by a public  educational  entity  having
                  5,000 or more eligible employees (an "Educational TSA Plan");

                  3.  institutional  investors,  which may  include  bank  trust
                  departments and registered investment advisors;

                  4. investment advisors,  consultants or financial planners who
                  place  trades for their own  accounts or the accounts of their
                  clients and who charge such clients a management,  consulting,
                  advisory or other fee;

                  5. clients of  investment  advisors or financial  planners who
                  place trades for their own accounts if the accounts are linked
                  to a master account of such  investment  advisors or financial
                  planners on the books of the broker-dealer through whom shares
                  are purchased;

                  6.   institutional   clients  of   broker-dealers,   including
                  retirement and deferred compensation plans and the trusts used
                  to fund these  plans,  which place  trades  through an omnibus
                  account maintained with the Fund by the broker-dealer;

                  7. employees of FUNB, its affiliates,  EDI, any  broker-dealer
                  with whom EDI has entered  into an agreement to sell shares of
                  the  Fund,  and  members  of the  immediate  families  of such
                  employees;

                  8. certain Directors,  Trustees, officers and employees of the
                  Evergreen  Funds, EDI or their affiliates and to the immediate
                  families of such persons; or

                  9. a bank or trust  company  acting  as  trustee  for a single
                  account  in the  name of such  bank or  trust  company  if the
                  initial investment in any of the Evergreen Funds made pursuant
                  to this waiver is at least $500,000 and any commission paid at
                  the time of such  purchase  is not more than 1% of the  amount
                  invested.

         With respect to items 8 and 9 above,  the Fund will only sell shares to
these parties upon the  purchasers  written  assurance  that the purchase is for
their  personal  investment  purposes only.  Such  purchasers may not resell the
securities  except through  redemption by the Fund. The Fund will not charge any
CDSC on redemptions by such purchasers.

Waiver of CDSCs

         The Fund  does not  impose a CDSC  when the  shares  you are  redeeming
represent:

                  1. an increase in the share value above the net cost of such
                  shares;

                  2. certain  shares for which the Fund did not pay a commission
                  on issuance, including shares acquired through reinvestment of
                  dividend income and capital gains distributions;

                  3. shares that are in the  accounts of a  shareholder  who has
                  died or become disabled;

                  4. a lump-sum distribution from a 401(k) plan or other benefit
                  plan qualified under the Employee  Retirement  Income Security
                  Act of 1974 ("ERISA");

                  5. an automatic withdrawal from the ERISA plan of a
                  shareholder who is at least 59 years old;

                  6.  shares  in an  account  that we have  closed  because  the
                  account has an aggregate net asset value of less than $1,000;

                  7. an automatic  withdrawal under a Systematic  Income Plan of
                  up to 1.0% per month of your initial account balance;

                  8. a withdrawal  consisting  of loan  proceeds to a retirement
                  plan participant;

                  9. a financial  hardship  withdrawal made by a retirement plan
                  participant;

                  10. a withdrawal consisting of returns of excess contributions
                  or excess deferral amounts made to a retirement plan; or

                  11. a redemption by an individual  participant in a Qualifying
                  Plan  that  purchased  Class  C  shares  (this  waiver  is not
                  available in the event a Qualifying Plan, as a whole,  redeems
                  substantially all of its assets).

Exchanges

         Investors may exchange  shares of the Fund for shares of the same class
of any other Evergreen Fund which offers the same class of shares. Shares of any
class of the  Evergreen  Select  Funds may be  exchanged  for the same  class of
shares of any other  Evergreen  Select Fund. See "By Exchange" under "How to Buy
Shares" in the  prospectus.  Before you make an  exchange,  you should  read the
prospectus  of the Evergreen  Fund into which you want to exchange.  The Trust's
Board of Trustees reserves the right to discontinue, alter or limit the exchange
privilege at any time.

Automatic Reinvestment

         As  described in the  prospectus,  a  shareholder  may elect to receive
dividends and capital gains  distributions  in cash instead of shares.  However,
ESC will  automatically  reinvest all dividends and  distributions in additional
shares  when it learns  that the postal or other  delivery  service is unable to
deliver  checks or transaction  confirmations  to the  shareholder's  address of
record.  When a check is  returned,  the Fund will  hold the  check  amount in a
no-interest  account in the shareholder's name until the shareholder updates his
or her address or automatic reinvestment begins. Uncashed or returned redemption
checks will also be handled in the manner described above.


                                PRICING OF SHARES

Calculation of Net Asset Value

         The Fund  calculates  its net asset value  ("NAV") once daily (or twice
daily,  for Money Market Funds) on Monday  through  Friday,  as described in the
prospectus.  The Fund will not  compute  its NAV on the days the New York  Stock
Exchange is closed:  New Year's Day,  Martin Luther King,  Jr. Day,  Presidents'
Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence Day, Labor Day,  Thanksgiving Day
and Christmas Day.

         The NAV of the Fund is  calculated  by dividing the value of the Fund's
net  assets  attributable  to that  class by all of the  shares  issued for that
class.

Valuation of Portfolio Securities

         Current  values for the Fund's  portfolio  securities are determined as
follows:

                  (1) Securities  that are traded on an  established  securities
                  exchange  or  the  over-the-counter   National  Market  System
                  ("NMS") are valued on the basis of the last sales price on the
                  exchange  where  primarily  traded  or on the NMS prior to the
                  time of the valuation, provided that a sale has occurred.

                  (2) Securities traded on an established securities exchange or
                  in the  over-the-counter  market  for which  there has been no
                  sale  and  other  securities  traded  in the  over-the-counter
                  market are  valued at the mean of the bid and asked  prices at
                  the time of valuation.

                  (3) Short-term  investments maturing in more than 60 days, for
                  which market quotations are readily  available,  are valued at
                  current market value.

                  (4) Short-term  investments maturing in sixty days or less are
                  valued at amortized cost, which approximates market.

                  (5) Securities,  including  restricted  securities,  for which
                  market quotations are not readily available; listed securities
                  or those on NMS if, in the investment  advisor's opinion,  the
                  last sales price does not reflect an accurate  current  market
                  value;  and other  assets are valued at prices  deemed in good
                  faith to be fair under procedures  established by the Board of
                  Trustees.

                  (6)  Municipal  bonds  are  valued by an  independent  pricing
                  service  at fair value  using a variety  of factors  which may
                  include yield, liquidity,  interest rate risk, credit quality,
                  coupon, maturity and type of issue.

Foreign securities are generally valued on the basis of valuations provided by a
pricing  service,  approved  by  the  Trust's  Board  of  Trustees,  which  uses
information  with respect to  transactions in such  securities,  quotations from
broker-dealers,  market  transactions  in  comparable  securities,  and  various
relationships between securities and yield to maturity in determining value.


                            PERFORMANCE CALCULATIONS

Total Return

         Total return  quotations  for a class of shares of the Fund as they may
appear from time to time in advertisements are calculated by finding the average
annual  compounded  rates of return over one, five and ten year periods,  or the
time  periods for which such class of shares has been  effective,  whichever  is
relevant,  on a  hypothetical  $1,000  investment  that would equate the initial
amount  invested  in the class to the ending  redeemable  value.  To the initial
investment  all dividends and  distributions  are added,  and all recurring fees
charged to all shareholder  accounts are deducted.  The ending  redeemable value
assumes a complete redemption at the end of the relevant periods.

         The  following is the formula used to  calculate  average  annual total
return:

                                                 [OBJECT OMITTED]

         P =  initial  payment  of $1,000 T = average  annual  total  return N =
         number of years
         ERV = ending redeemable value of the initial $1,000

Yield

         Described  below  are  yield  calculations  the  Fund  may  use.  Yield
quotations  are expressed in annualized  terms and may be quoted on a compounded
basis.  Yields based on these calculations do not represent the Fund's yield for
any future period.

30-DAY YIELD

         If the Fund invests  primarily in bonds,  it may quote its 30-day yield
in advertisements or in reports or other  communications to shareholders.  It is
calculated  by dividing the net  investment  income per share earned  during the
period by the  maximum  offering  price per share on the last day of the period,
according to the following formula:

                                         [OBJECT OMITTED] [OBJECT OMITTED]

         Where:
         a =  Dividends  and  interest  earned  during  the  period b = Expenses
         accrued for the period (net of  reimbursements)  c = The average  daily
         number of shares outstanding during the period
                that were entitled to receive dividends
         d = The maximum offering price per share on the last day of the period

7-DAY CURRENT AND EFFECTIVE YIELD

         If the Fund invests primarily in money market instruments, it may quote
its 7-day current yield or effective  yield in  advertisements  or in reports or
other communications to shareholders.

         The  current  yield  is  calculated  by  determining  the  net  change,
excluding capital changes and income other than investment  income, in the value
of a  hypothetical,  pre-existing  account  having a balance of one share at the
beginning of the 7-day base period, subtracting a hypothetical charge reflecting
deductions from shareholder  accounts,  and dividing the difference by the value
of the  account at the  beginning  of the base  period to obtain the base period
return, and then multiplying the base period return by (365/7).

         The  effective  yield is based on a compounding  of the current  yield,
according to the following formula:

                                                 [OBJECT OMITTED]


TAX EQUIVALENT YIELD

         If the Fund  invests  primarily  in  municipal  bonds,  it may quote in
advertisements  or in  reports or other  communications  to  shareholders  a tax
equivalent yield,  which is what an investor would generally need to earn from a
fully  taxable  investment in order to realize,  after income  taxes,  a benefit
equal to the tax free  yield  provided  by the  Fund.  Tax  equivalent  yield is
calculated using the following formula:

                                                 [OBJECT OMITTED]

         The quotient is then added to that portion, if any, of the Fund's yield
that is not tax exempt.  Depending on the Fund's objective,  the income tax rate
used in the formula above may be federal or a combination of federal and state.


                              PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER

         EDI is the principal underwriter for the Trust and with respect to each
class of shares of the Fund. The Trust has entered into a Principal Underwriting
Agreement ("Underwriting  Agreement") with EDI with respect to each class of the
Fund. EDI is a subsidiary of The BISYS Group, Inc.

         EDI, as agent,  has agreed to use its best  efforts to find  purchasers
for  the  shares.   EDI  may  retain  and  employ   representatives  to  promote
distribution  of the shares  and may  obtain  orders  from  broker-dealers,  and
others,  acting as  principals,  for sales of shares to them.  The  Underwriting
Agreement  provides that EDI will bear the expense of preparing,  printing,  and
distributing advertising and sales literature and prospectuses used by it.

         All subscriptions and sales of shares by EDI are at the public offering
price of the shares,  which is determined in accordance  with the  provisions of
the Trust's  Declaration of Trust,  By-Laws,  current  prospectuses and SAI. All
orders are subject to acceptance by the Fund and the Fund reserves the right, in
its sole  discretion,  to reject  any  order  received.  Under the  Underwriting
Agreement, the Fund is not liable to anyone for failure to accept any order.

         EDI has agreed that it will,  in all  respects,  duly  conform with all
state and federal laws applicable to the sale of the shares. EDI has also agreed
that it will indemnify and hold harmless the Trust and each person who has been,
is, or may be a Trustee  or  officer of the Trust  against  expenses  reasonably
incurred  by any of  them  in  connection  with  any  claim,  action,  suit,  or
proceeding  to which any of them may be a party that arises out of or is alleged
to arise out of any  misrepresentation  or omission to state a material  fact on
the part of EDI or any other  person  for whose  acts EDI is  responsible  or is
alleged to be responsible, unless such misrepresentation or omission was made in
reliance upon written information furnished by the Trust.

         The  Underwriting  Agreement  provides that it will remain in effect as
long as its terms  and  continuance  are  approved  annually  (i) by a vote of a
majority of the Trust's Trustees who are not interested  persons of the Fund, as
defined  in the  1940 Act (the  "Independent  Trustees"),  and (ii) by vote of a
majority  of the  Trust's  Trustees,  in each case,  cast in person at a meeting
called for that purpose.

         The Underwriting  Agreement may be terminated,  without penalty,  on 60
days'  written  notice by the Board of  Trustees  or by a vote of a majority  of
outstanding  shares subject to such agreement.  The Underwriting  Agreement will
terminate  automatically  upon its  "assignment," as that term is defined in the
1940 Act.

         From time to time, if, in EDI's judgment, it could benefit the sales of
shares,  EDI may provide to selected  broker-dealers  promotional  materials and
selling  aids,  including,  but not  limited  to,  personal  computers,  related
software, and data files.


                     DISTRIBUTION EXPENSES UNDER RULE 12B-1

         The Fund bears some of the costs of selling its Class A, Class B, Class
C  and   Institutional   Service  shares,   as  applicable,   including  certain
advertising,  marketing and shareholder service expenses, pursuant to Rule 12b-1
of the 1940 Act. These 12b-1 fees are  indirectly  paid by the  shareholder,  as
shown by the Fund's expense table in the prospectus.

         Under the  Distribution  Plans (each a "Plan,"  together,  the "Plans")
that the Fund has  adopted  for its Class A, Class B, Class C and  Institutional
Service shares, as applicable,  the Fund may incur expenses for 12b-1 fees up to
a maximum annual  percentage of the average daily net assets  attributable  to a
class, as follows:

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

                                   Class A                  0.75%*
                        ------------------------------- ---------------
                        ------------------------------- ---------------

                                   Class B                  1.00%
                        ------------------------------- ---------------
                        ------------------------------- ---------------

                                   Class C                  1.00%
                        ------------------------------- ---------------
                        ------------------------------- ---------------

                            Institutional Service           0.75%*
                        ------------------------------- ---------------

                  * Currently limited to 0.25% or less to be used exclusively as
                    a  shareholder  service  fee.  See the expense  table in the
                    prospectus of the Fund in which you are interested.

         Of the  amounts  above,  each  class  may pay  under its Plan a maximum
service fee of 0.25% to compensate  organizations,  which may include the Fund's
investment  advisor  or  its  affiliates,  for  personal  services  provided  to
shareholders  and the  maintenance  of shareholder  accounts.  The Fund may not,
during any fiscal  period,  pay  distribution  or service  fees greater than the
amounts above.

         Amounts  paid under the Plans are used to  compensate  EDI  pursuant to
Distribution  Agreements (each an "Agreement,"  together, the "Agreements") that
the Fund has  entered  into with  respect  to its Class A,  Class B, Class C and
Institutional  Service  shares,  as applicable.  The  compensation is based on a
maximum  annual  percentage  of the average daily net assets  attributable  to a
class, as follows:

                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  Class A                       0.25%*
                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  Class B                       1.00%
                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  Class C                       1.00%
                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  ----------------------------- -------------
                                  Institutional Service         0.25%*
                                  ----------------------------- -------------

                  *May be lower. See the expense table in the prospectus of the
                   Fund in which you are interested.

         The Agreements provide that EDI will use the distribution fees received
from the Fund for the following purposes:

         (1)      to compensate broker-dealers or other persons for distributing
                  Fund shares;

         (2)      to  compensate  broker-dealers,  depository  institutions  and
                  other financial  intermediaries for providing  administrative,
                  accounting  and other  services  with  respect  to the  Fund's
                  shareholders; and

         (3)      to otherwise promote the sale of Fund shares.

         The Agreements also provide that EDI may use distribution  fees to make
interest and principal payments in respect of amounts that have been financed to
pay broker-dealers or other persons for distributing Fund shares. EDI may assign
its rights to receive  compensation  under the Plans to secure such  financings.
FUNB  or  its  affiliates  may  finance  payments  made  by  EDI  to  compensate
broker-dealers or other persons for distributing shares of the Fund.

         In the event the Fund  acquires  the  assets of  another  mutual  fund,
compensation  paid  to EDI  under  the  Agreements  may be  paid  by the  Fund's
Distributor to the acquired fund's distributor or its predecessor.

         Since EDI's  compensation  under the Agreements is not directly tied to
the  expenses  incurred  by EDI,  the  compensation  received  by it  under  the
Agreements  during any fiscal year may be more or less than its actual  expenses
and may result in a profit to EDI.  Distribution expenses incurred by EDI in one
fiscal year that exceed the  compensation  paid to EDI for that year may be paid
from distribution fees received from the Fund in subsequent fiscal years.

         Distribution fees are accrued daily and paid at least annually on Class
B and  Class C  shares  and are  charged  as class  expenses,  as  accrued.  The
distribution fees attributable to the Class B and Class C shares are designed to
permit an investor to purchase such shares  through  broker-dealers  without the
assessment of a front-end sales charge, while at the same time permitting EDI to
compensate broker-dealers in connection with the sale of such shares.

Service fees are accrued  daily and paid at least  annually on Class A, Class B,
Class C, and Institutional  Service shares and are charged as class expenses, as
accrued.
         Under the  Plans,  the  Treasurer  of the  Trust  reports  the  amounts
expended under the Plans and the purposes for which such  expenditures were made
to the Trustees of the Trust for their review on a quarterly  basis.  Also, each
Plan provides that the selection and nomination of the Independent  Trustees are
committed to the discretion of such Independent Trustees then in office.

         The investment advisor may from time to time from its own funds or such
other  resources  as may be  permitted  by rules of the SEC  make  payments  for
distribution  services  to EDI;  the  latter may in turn pay part or all of such
compensation to brokers or other persons for their distribution assistance.

         Each Plan and the  Agreement  will  continue  in effect for  successive
12-month  periods  provided,  however,  that such  continuance  is  specifically
approved  at  least  annually  by the  Trustees  of the  Trust or by vote of the
holders of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of that class and, in
either case, by a majority of the Independent Trustees of the Trust.

         The  Plans  permit  the  payment  of fees to  brokers  and  others  for
distribution   and   shareholder-related    administrative   services   and   to
broker-dealers,    depository   institutions,   financial   intermediaries   and
administrators for  administrative  services as to Class A, Class B, Class C and
Institutional Service shares. The Plans are designed to (i) stimulate brokers to
provide distribution and administrative support services to the Fund and holders
of Class A, Class B, Class C and Institutional Service shares and (ii) stimulate
administrators to render administrative support services to the Fund and holders
of  Class  A,  Class  B,  Class  C  and   Institutional   Service  shares.   The
administrative  services are provided by a  representative  who has knowledge of
the shareholder's  particular  circumstances and goals, and include, but are not
limited to providing office space, equipment,  telephone facilities, and various
personnel  including  clerical,  supervisory,  and  computer,  as  necessary  or
beneficial  to  establish  and  maintain   shareholder   accounts  and  records;
processing  purchase and redemption  transactions  and automatic  investments of
client account cash balances; answering routine client inquiries regarding Class
A, Class B,  Class C and  Institutional  Service  shares;  assisting  clients in
changing dividend options,  account designations,  and addresses;  and providing
such other  services as the Fund  reasonably  requests for its Class A, Class B,
Class C and Institutional Service shares.

         In the event that the Plan or  Distribution  Agreement is terminated or
not  continued  with  respect  to one  or  more  classes  of  the  Fund,  (i) no
distribution fees (other than current amounts accrued but not yet paid) would be
owed by the Fund to EDI with respect to that class or classes, and (ii) the Fund
would  not  be  obligated  to  pay  EDI  for  any  amounts  expended  under  the
Distribution  Agreement not  previously  recovered by the EDI from  distribution
services  fees in respect of shares of such  class or classes  through  deferred
sales charges.

         All material  amendments to any Plan or Agreement must be approved by a
vote of the  Trustees  of the Trust or the  holders  of the  Fund's  outstanding
voting securities, voting separately by class, and in either case, by a majority
of the Independent Trustees,  cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose
of voting on such approval;  and any Plan or  Distribution  Agreement may not be
amended in order to increase  materially  the costs that a  particular  class of
shares  of the Fund  may bear  pursuant  to the Plan or  Distribution  Agreement
without the  approval of a majority  of the  holders of the  outstanding  voting
shares  of the  class  affected.  Any  Plan  or  Distribution  Agreement  may be
terminated (i) by the Fund without penalty at any time by a majority vote of the
holders of the outstanding  voting  securities of the Fund, voting separately by
class or by a majority  vote of the  Independent  Trustees,  or (ii) by EDI.  To
terminate any Distribution  Agreement,  any party must give the other parties 60
days' written notice;  to terminate a Plan only, the Fund need give no notice to
EDI. Any Distribution Agreement will terminate automatically in the event of its
assignment.  For more  information  about  12b-1  fees,  see  "Expenses"  in the
prospectus and "12b-1 Fees" under "Expenses" in Part 1 of this SAI.


                                 TAX INFORMATION

Requirements for Qualifications as a Regulated Investment Company

         The Fund intends to qualify for and elect the tax treatment  applicable
to regulated  investment  companies  ("RIC") under  Subchapter M of the Code, as
amended.  (Such  qualification  does not involve  supervision  of  management or
investment  practices or policies by the Internal Revenue  Service.) In order to
qualify as a RIC, the Fund must, among other things,  (i) derive at least 90% of
its gross income from  dividends,  interest,  payments  with respect to proceeds
from securities loans, gains from the sale or other disposition of securities or
foreign  currencies and other income  (including gains from options,  futures or
forward  contracts)  derived  with  respect to its business of investing in such
securities;  and (ii) diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each quarter
of its taxable  year,  (a) at least 50% of the market  value of the Fund's total
assets is represented by cash, U.S.  government  securities and other securities
limited in respect of any one issuer,  to an amount not  greater  than 5% of the
Fund's total assets and 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer,
and (b) not more than 25% of the value of its total  assets is  invested  in the
securities  of any  one  issuer  (other  than  U.S.  government  securities  and
securities of other regulated investment companies). By so qualifying,  the Fund
is not subject to federal  income tax if it timely  distributes  its  investment
company  taxable income and any net realized  capital gains. A 4%  nondeductible
excise tax will be  imposed  on the Fund to the extent it does not meet  certain
distribution requirements by the end of each calendar year. The Fund anticipates
meeting such distribution requirements.

Taxes on Distributions

         Unless the Fund is a municipal bond fund, distributions will be taxable
to  shareholders  whether  made in shares or in cash.  Shareholders  electing to
receive  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.

         To  calculate   ordinary   income  for  federal  income  tax  purposes,
shareholders  must  generally  include  dividends  paid  by the  Fund  from  its
investment  company  taxable  income  (net  taxable  investment  income plus net
realized  short-term  capital gains, if any). The Fund will include dividends it
receives  from  domestic   corporations  when  the  Fund  calculates  its  gross
investment income.  Unless the Fund is a municipal bond fund or U.S. Treasury or
U.S.  Government  money market fund, it anticipates that all or a portion of the
ordinary  dividends  which it pays will  qualify for the 70%  dividends-received
deduction for  corporations.  The Fund will inform  shareholders  of the amounts
that so qualify.  If the Fund is a municipal bond fund or U.S.  Treasury or U.S.
Government  money  market  fund,  none of its income will  consist of  corporate
dividends;  therefore,  none  of its  distributions  will  qualify  for  the 70%
dividends-received deduction for corporations.

         From  time to time,  the Fund  will  distribute  the  excess of its net
long-term capital gains over its short-term capital loss to shareholders  (i.e.,
capital gain  dividends).  For federal tax purposes,  shareholders  must include
such capital gain dividends when calculating  their net long-term capital gains.
Capital  gain  dividends  are  taxable  as  net  long-term  capital  gains  to a
shareholder, no matter how long the shareholder has held the shares.

         Distributions  by the Fund reduce its NAV. A distribution  that reduces
the Fund's NAV below a shareholder's  cost basis is taxable as described  above,
although  from  an  investment  standpoint,  it  is  a  return  of  capital.  In
particular,  if a  shareholder  buys Fund  shares  just  before the Fund makes a
distribution,  when the Fund makes the distribution the shareholder will receive
what is in effect a return of capital.  Nevertheless,  the shareholder may incur
taxes on the distribution. Therefore, shareholders should carefully consider the
tax consequences of buying Fund shares just before a distribution.

         All distributions, whether received in shares or cash, must be reported
by each  shareholder on his or her federal income tax return.  Each  shareholder
should  consult a tax advisor to determine the state and local tax  implications
of Fund distributions.

         If more than 50% of the value of the Fund's  total assets at the end of
a fiscal year is represented by securities of foreign  corporations and the Fund
elects to make foreign tax credits available to its shareholders,  a shareholder
will be required  to include in his gross  income  both cash  dividends  and the
amount the Fund advises him is his pro rata portion of income taxes  withheld by
foreign  governments from interest and dividends paid on the Fund's investments.
The  shareholder  may be entitled,  however,  to take the amount of such foreign
taxes withheld as a credit against his U.S.  income tax, or to treat the foreign
tax withheld as an itemized  deduction from his gross income,  if that should be
to his advantage.  In substance,  this policy enables the shareholder to benefit
from the same foreign tax credit or deduction  that he would have received if he
had been the individual owner of foreign  securities and had paid foreign income
tax on the income  therefrom.  As in the case of  individuals  receiving  income
directly from foreign sources, the credit or deduction is subject to a number of
limitations.

Special Tax Information for Shareholders of Municipal Bond Funds

         The  Fund  expects  that  substantially  all of its  dividends  will be
"exempt interest  dividends," which should be treated as excludable from federal
gross income.  In order to pay exempt  interest  dividends,  at least 50% of the
value of the Fund's assets must consist of federally  tax-exempt  obligations at
the close of each quarter.  An exempt interest  dividend is any dividend or part
thereof  (other than a capital gain  dividend)  paid by the Fund with respect to
its net federally  excludable municipal obligation interest and designated as an
exempt  interest  dividend in a written  notice mailed to each  shareholder  not
later than 60 days after the close of its taxable  year.  The  percentage of the
total dividends paid by the Fund with respect to any taxable year that qualifies
as exempt interest  dividends will be the same for all  shareholders of the Fund
receiving  dividends  with respect to such year.  If a  shareholder  receives an
exempt interest  dividend with respect to any share and such share has been held
for six months or less,  any loss on the sale or  exchange of such share will be
disallowed to the extent of the exempt interest dividend amount.

         Any shareholder of the Fund who may be a "substantial user" (as defined
by the Code,  as amended.) of a facility  financed  with an issue of  tax-exempt
obligations or a "related  person" to such a user should consult his tax advisor
concerning his  qualification  to receive exempt interest  dividends  should the
Fund hold obligations financing such facility.

         Under  regulations to be  promulgated,  to the extent  attributable  to
interest paid on certain  private  activity  bonds,  the Fund's exempt  interest
dividends, while otherwise tax-exempt,  will be treated as a tax preference item
for  alternative  minimum tax purposes.  Corporate  shareholders  should also be
aware that the  receipt  of exempt  interest  dividends  could  subject  them to
alternative  minimum  tax  under the  provisions  of  Section  56(g) of the Code
(relating to "adjusted current earnings").

         Interest on  indebtedness  incurred or  continued  by  shareholders  to
purchase or carry shares of the Fund will not be deductible  for federal  income
tax  purposes to the extent of the portion of the interest  expense  relating to
exempt interest  dividends.  Such portion is determined by multiplying the total
amount of  interest  paid or  accrued on the  indebtedness  by a  fraction,  the
numerator of which is the exempt interest dividends received by a shareholder in
his taxable year and the  denominator of which is the sum of the exempt interest
dividends and the taxable  distributions out of the Fund's investment income and
long-term capital gains received by the shareholder.

Taxes on The Sale or Exchange of Fund Shares

         Upon a sale or exchange of Fund shares,  a  shareholder  will realize a
taxable gain or loss depending on his or her basis in the shares.  A shareholder
must  treat such  gains or losses as a capital  gain or loss if the  shareholder
held the shares as capital assets.  Capital gain on assets held for more than 12
months is generally  subject to a maximum  federal income tax rate of 20% for an
individual.  Generally,  the Code will not allow a shareholder to realize a loss
on shares he or she has sold or exchanged  and replaced  within a 61-day  period
beginning  30 days  before and ending 30 days after he or she sold or  exchanged
the shares.  The Code will not allow a shareholder to realize a loss on the sale
of Fund shares held by the  shareholder for six months or less to the extent the
shareholder  received exempt interest  dividends on such shares.  Moreover,  the
Code will treat a shareholder's  loss on shares held for six months or less as a
long-term capital loss to the extent the shareholder  received  distributions of
net capital gains on such shares.

         Shareholders who fail to furnish their taxpayer  identification numbers
to the Fund and to certify as to its correctness and certain other  shareholders
may be subject to a 31% federal  income tax backup  withholding  requirement  on
dividends,  distributions of capital gains and redemption  proceeds paid to them
by the Fund. If the withholding provisions are applicable, any such dividends or
capital  gain  distributions  to these  shareholders,  whether  taken in cash or
reinvested in additional shares, and any redemption  proceeds will be reduced by
the amounts required to be withheld. Investors may wish to consult their own tax
advisors about the applicability of the backup withholding provisions.

Other Tax Considerations

         The foregoing  discussion relates solely to U.S. federal income tax law
as  applicable  to U.S.  persons  (i.e.,  U.S.  citizens and  residents and U.S.
domestic  corporations,  partnerships,  trusts and estates). It does not reflect
the  special tax  consequences  to certain  taxpayers  (e.g.,  banks,  insurance
companies,  tax exempt  organizations  and foreign  persons).  Shareholders  are
encouraged  to  consult  their own tax  advisors  regarding  specific  questions
relating to federal,  state and local tax consequences of investing in shares of
the Fund.  Each  shareholder  who is not a U.S. person should consult his or her
tax advisor  regarding  the U.S.  and foreign tax  consequences  of ownership of
shares of the Fund,  including the  possibility  that such a shareholder  may be
subject to a U.S.  withholding  tax at a rate of 30% (or at a lower rate under a
tax treaty) on amounts treated as income from U.S. sources under the Code.


                                    BROKERAGE

Brokerage Commissions

         If the Fund  invests in equity  securities,  it expects to buy and sell
them through brokerage transactions for which commissions are payable. Purchases
from  underwriters will include the underwriting  commission or concession,  and
purchases from dealers serving as market makers will include a dealer's  mark-up
or  reflect  a  dealer's   mark-down.   Where   transactions  are  made  in  the
over-the-counter  market,  the Fund will deal with primary  market makers unless
more favorable prices are otherwise obtainable.

         If the Fund invests in fixed income  securities,  it expects to buy and
sell them  directly  from the issuer or an  underwriter  or market maker for the
securities.  Generally,  the Fund will not pay  brokerage  commissions  for such
purchases. When the Fund buys a security from an underwriter, the purchase price
will usually  include an  underwriting  commission or  concession.  The purchase
price for securities bought from dealers serving as market makers will similarly
include  the  dealer's  mark up or reflect a dealer's  mark down.  When the Fund
executes transactions in the over-the-counter  market, it will deal with primary
market makers unless more favorable prices are otherwise obtainable.

         Masters Fund may incur higher brokerage costs than would be the case if
a single investment advisor or sub-advisor were managing the entire portfolio.

Selection of Brokers

         When buying and selling portfolio securities, the advisor seeks brokers
who can  provide the most  benefit to the Fund.  When  selecting  a broker,  the
investment  advisor  will  primarily  look  for the  best  price  at the  lowest
commission, but in the context of the broker's:

         1.       ability to provide the best net financial result to the Fund;
         2.       efficiency in handling trades;
         3.       ability to trade large blocks of securities;
         4.       readiness to handle difficult trades;
         5.       financial strength and stability; and
         6.       provision of "research services," defined as (a) reports and
                  analyses concerning issuers, industries, securities and
                  economic factors and (b) other information useful in making
                  investment decisions.

         The Fund may pay higher brokerage  commissions to a broker providing it
with research services,  as defined in item 6, above.  Pursuant to Section 28(e)
of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  this  practice is  permitted  if the
commission is  reasonable  in relation to the  brokerage  and research  services
provided.  Research services  provided by a broker to the investment  advisor do
not replace, but supplement,  the services the investment advisor is required to
deliver to the Fund. It is impracticable for the investment  advisor to allocate
the cost,  value and specific  application  of such research  services among its
clients because research services intended for one client may indirectly benefit
another.

         When selecting a broker for portfolio  trades,  the investment  advisor
may also  consider  the amount of Fund shares a broker has sold,  subject to the
other requirements described above.

         If the Fund is advised by Evergreen Asset  Management  Corp.  ("EAMC"),
Lieber & Company, an affiliate of EAMC and a member of the New York and American
Stock Exchanges,  will, to the extent practicable,  effect  substantially all of
the portfolio transactions effected on those exchanges for the Fund.

Simultaneous Transactions

         The  investment  advisor  makes  investment   decisions  for  the  Fund
independently  of  decisions  made for its other  clients.  When a  security  is
suitable for the investment objective of more than one client, it may be prudent
for the investment advisor to engage in a simultaneous transaction, that is, buy
or sell the same  security  for more than one  client.  The  investment  advisor
strives for an  equitable  result in such  transactions  by using an  allocation
formula.  The high volume involved in some simultaneous  transactions can result
in greater  value to the Fund,  but the ideal  price or  trading  volume may not
always be achieved for the Fund.


                                  ORGANIZATION

         The  foregoing is qualified in its entirety by reference to the Trust's
Declaration of Trust.

Description of Shares

         The Declaration of Trust authorizes the issuance of an unlimited number
of shares of beneficial  interest of series and classes of shares. Each share of
the Fund  represents  an equal  proportionate  interest with each other share of
that series and/or class.  Upon  liquidation,  shares are entitled to a pro rata
share of the Trust based on the relative net assets of each series and/or class.
Shareholders have no preemptive or conversion rights.  Shares are redeemable and
transferable.

Voting Rights

         Under the terms of the Declaration of Trust,  the Trust is not required
to hold annual meetings. At meetings called for the initial election of Trustees
or to consider other matters, each share is entitled to one vote for each dollar
of "NAV"applicable to such share. Shares generally vote together as one class on
all  matters.  Classes  of shares  of the Fund  have  equal  voting  rights.  No
amendment may be made to the  Declaration  of Trust that  adversely  affects any
class of shares  without the approval of a majority of the votes  applicable  to
the shares of that class. Shares have non-cumulative  voting rights, which means
that the holders of more than 50% of the votes  applicable  to shares voting for
the  election  of  Trustees  can elect 100% of the  Trustees  to be elected at a
meeting and, in such event,  the holders of the remaining shares voting will not
be able to elect any Trustees.

         After the initial meeting as described  above,  no further  meetings of
shareholders for the purpose of electing  Trustees will be held, unless required
by law (for such reasons as electing or removing Trustees,  changing fundamental
policies,  and approving advisory  agreements or 12b-1 plans),  unless and until
such time as less than a  majority  of the  Trustees  holding  office  have been
elected by shareholders,  at which time, the Trustees then in office will call a
shareholders' meeting for the election of Trustees.

Limitation of Trustees' Liability

         The Declaration of Trust provides that a Trustee will not be liable for
errors of judgment or mistakes of fact or law, but nothing in the Declaration of
Trust  protects a Trustee  against any liability to which he would  otherwise be
subject  by reason of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross  negligence  or
reckless disregard of his duties involved in the conduct of his office.


Code of Ethics

         The Trust and its various  advisors  have each adopted a code of ethics
per Rule 17j-1 of the 1940 Act ("Code of Ethics"). Each of these Codes of Ethics
permits Fund  personnel to invest in securities for their own accounts and is on
file with, and available from, the SEC.


                          INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT

         On behalf  of the  Fund,  the  Trust  has  entered  into an  investment
advisory   agreement   with  the  Fund's   investment   advisor  (the  "Advisory
Agreement"). Under the Advisory Agreement, and subject to the supervision of the
Trust's Board of Trustees,  the investment advisor furnishes to the Fund (unless
the  Fund  is  Evergreen  Masters  Fund)  investment  advisory,  management  and
administrative services, office facilities, and equipment in connection with its
services for managing the investment and reinvestment of the Fund's assets.  The
investment  advisor pays for all of the expenses incurred in connection with the
provision of its services.

         If the Fund is  Evergreen  Masters  Fund,  the  Advisory  Agreement  is
similar to the above except that the  investment  advisor  selects  sub-advisors
(hereinafter referred to as "Managers") for the Fund and monitors each Manager's
investment   program   and   results.   The   investment   advisor  has  primary
responsibility  under  the  multi-manager  strategy  to  oversee  the  Managers,
including making recommendations to the Trust regarding the hiring,  termination
and replacement of Managers.

          The  Fund  pays  for  all  charges  and  expenses,  other  than  those
specifically  referred to as being borne by the investment  advisor,  including,
but not limited to, (1) custodian  charges and  expenses;  (2)  bookkeeping  and
auditors'  charges and expenses;  (3) transfer  agent charges and expenses;  (4)
fees and expenses of Independent Trustees; (5) brokerage  commissions,  brokers'
fees and  expenses;  (6) issue and  transfer  taxes;  (7)  applicable  costs and
expenses under the  Distribution  Plan (as described  above) (8) taxes and trust
fees payable to governmental agencies; (9) the cost of share certificates;  (10)
fees and  expenses of the  registration  and  qualification  of the Fund and its
shares with the SEC or under state or other  securities  laws;  (11) expenses of
preparing,  printing and mailing prospectuses,  SAIs, notices, reports and proxy
materials  to  shareholders  of the Fund;  (12)  expenses of  shareholders'  and
Trustees' meetings;  (13) charges and expenses of legal counsel for the Fund and
for the Independent  Trustees on matters  relating to the Fund; (14) charges and
expenses of filing annual and other reports with the SEC and other  authorities;
and (15) all extraordinary  charges and expenses of the Fund. For information on
advisory fees paid by the Fund, see "Expenses" in Part 1 of this SAI.

         The  Advisory  Agreement  continues  in effect  for two years  from its
effective  date and,  thereafter,  from year to year only if  approved  at least
annually by the Board of Trustees of the Trust or by a vote of a majority of the
Fund's  outstanding  shares. In either case, the terms of the Advisory Agreement
and  continuance  thereof  must be  approved  by the vote of a  majority  of the
Independent  Trustees  cast in person at a meeting  called  for the  purpose  of
voting on such  approval.  The Advisory  Agreement  may be  terminated,  without
penalty,  on 60 days'  written  notice by the Trust's  Board of Trustees or by a
vote of a majority of outstanding  shares. The Advisory Agreement will terminate
automatically upon its "assignment" as that term is defined in the 1940 Act.

Managers (Evergreen Masters Fund only)

         Evergreen  Masters  Fund's   investment   program  is  based  upon  the
investment advisor's multi-manager concept. The investment advisor allocates the
Fund's  portfolio  assets  on an  equal  basis  among  a  number  of  investment
management  organizations  - currently  four in number - each of which employs a
different  investment  style, and  periodically  rebalances the Fund's portfolio
among the  Managers so as to maintain an  approximate  equal  allocation  of the
portfolio among them throughout all market cycles.  Each Manager  provides these
services under a Portfolio  Management  Agreement.  Each Manager has discretion,
subject to oversight by the Trustees and the investment advisor, to purchase and
sell portfolio assets consistent with the Fund's investment objectives, policies
and restrictions and specific investment  strategies developed by the investment
advisor. The Fund's current Managers are EAMC, MFS Institutional Advisors, Inc.,
OppenheimerFunds, Inc. and Putnam Investment Management, Inc.

         The Trust and FUNB have received an order from the SEC that permits the
investment advisor to employ a "manager of managers" strategy in connection with
its management of the Fund. The exemptive order permits the investment  advisor,
subject to certain conditions,  and without shareholder approval, to: (a) select
new Managers who are unaffiliated with the investment  advisor with the approval
of the Trust's Board of Trustees; (b) change the material terms of the Portfolio
Management  Agreements  with the Managers;  and (c) continue the employment of a
Manager after an event which would otherwise cause the automatic  termination of
a Portfolio Management Agreement.  Shareholders would be notified of any Manager
changes. Shareholders have the right to terminate arrangements with a Manager by
vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund. The order also permits
the Fund to disclose the Managers' fees only in the aggregate.

Transactions Among Advisory Affiliates

         The Trust has adopted procedures pursuant to Rule 17a-7 of the 1940 Act
("Rule 17a-7  Procedures").  The Rule 17a-7 Procedures permit the Fund to buy or
sell securities from another  investment company for which a subsidiary of First
Union Corporation is an investment advisor. The Rule 17a-7 Procedures also allow
the  Fund to buy or sell  securities  from  other  advisory  clients  for whom a
subsidiary of First Union  Corporation  is an investment  advisor.  The Fund may
engage in such transaction if it is equitable to each participant and consistent
with each participant's investment objective.


                             MANAGEMENT OF THE TRUST

         The Trust is supervised by a Board of Trustees that is responsible  for
representing the interest of the  shareholders.  The Trustees meet  periodically
throughout  the year to oversee the Fund's  activities,  reviewing,  among other
things,  the Fund's  performance and its contractual  arrangements  with various
service  providers.  Each  Trustee  is paid a fee for his or her  services.  See
"Expenses-Trustee Compensation" in Part 1 of this SAI.

         The Trust has an Executive  Committee which consists of the Chairman of
the Board, Michael S. Scofield,  K. Dun Gifford and Russell Salton, each of whom
is an Independent  Trustee.  The Executive Committee recommends Trustees to fill
vacancies,  prepares the agenda for Board  Meetings and acts on routine  matters
between scheduled Board meetings.

         Set forth below are the  Trustees  and  officers of the Trust and their
principal  occupations  and  affiliations  over  the  last  five  years.  Unless
otherwise  indicated,  the address for each  Trustee and officer is 200 Berkeley
Street,  Boston,  Massachusetts 02116. Each Trustee is also a Trustee of each of
the other Trusts in the Evergreen Fund complex.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME                                 POSITION WITH TRUST         PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS FOR LAST FIVE YEARS
<S>                                  <C>                         <C>
Laurence B. Ashkin                   Trustee                     Real estate developer and construction consultant; and
(DOB: 2/28/28)                                                   President of Centrum Equities (real estate development) and
                                                                 Centrum Properties, Inc.(real estate development).

Charles A. Austin III                Trustee                     Investment Counselor to Appleton Partners, Inc.(investment
(DOB: 10/23/34)                                                  advice); former Director, Executive Vice President and
                                                                 Treasurer, State Street Research & Management Company
                                                                 (investment advice); Director, The Andover Companies
                                                                 (insurance); and Trustee, Arthritis Foundation of New
                                                                 England.

Arnold H. Dreyfuss                   Trustee                     Chairman, Eskimo Pie Corporation (food manufacturer);
(DOB: 9/2/28)                                                    Trustee, Mentor Funds, Mentor Variable Investment
                                                                 Portfolios, Mentor Institutional Trust, and Cash
                                                                 Resource Trust; Director, America's Utility Fund, Inc.;
                                                                 Formerly, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
                                                                 Hamilton Beach/Proctor-Silex, Inc. (small appliance
                                                                 manufacturer).

K. Dun Gifford                       Trustee                     Trustee, Treasurer and Chairman of the Finance Committee,
(DOB: 10/23/38)                                                  Cambridge College; Chairman Emeritus and Director, American
                                                                 Institute of Food and Wine; Chairman and President,
                                                                 Oldways Preservation and Exchange Trust (education);
                                                                 former Chairman of the Board, Director, and Executive
                                                                 Vice President, The London Harness Company (leather
                                                                 goods purveyor); former Managing Partner, Roscommon
                                                                 Capital Corp.; former Chief Executive Officer, Gifford
                                                                 Gifts of Fine Foods; former Chairman, Gifford, Drescher
                                                                 & Associates (environmental consulting).


Leroy Keith, Jr.                     Trustee                     Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Carson
(DOB: 2/14/39)                                                   Products Company (manufacturing); Director of Phoenix Total
                                                                 Return Fund and Equifax, Inc. (worldwide information
                                                                 management); Trustee of Phoenix Series Fund, Phoenix
                                                                 Multi-Portfolio Fund, and The Phoenix Big Edge Series Fund;
                                                                 and former President, Morehouse College.

Gerald M. McDonnell                  Trustee                     Sales and Marketing Management with Nucor-Yamoto, Inc.
(DOB: 7/14/39)                                                   (steel producer).

Thomas L. McVerry                    Trustee                     Former Vice President and Director of Rexham Corporation
(DOB: 8/2/39)                                                    (manufacturing); and Director of Carolina Cooperative
                                                                 Credit Union.

Louis W. Moelchert, Jr. (DOB:        Trustee                     President, Private Advisors, LLC; Vice President for
12/20/41)                                                        Investments, University of Richmond; Director, America's
                                                                 Utility Fund, Inc.; Trustee, The Common Fund, Mentor
                                                                 Variable Investment Portfolios, Mentor Funds, Mentor In
                                                                 stitutional Trust, and Cash Resource Trust.

William Walt Pettit                  Trustee                     Partner in the law firm of William Walt Pettit, P.A.
(DOB: 8/26/55)

David M. Richardson                  Trustee                     President, Richardson & Runden & Company (executive search
(DOB: 9/14/41)                                                   and advisory services); former Vice Chairman, DHR
                                                                 International, Inc. (executive recruitment); former Senior
                                                                 Vice President, Boyden International Inc. (executive
                                                                 recruitment); and Director, Commerce and Industry
                                                                 Association of New Jersey, 411 International, Inc.
                                                                 (communications), and J&M Cumming Paper Co.

Russell A. Salton, III MD            Trustee                     Medical Director, U.S. Health Care/Aetna Health Services;
(DOB: 6/2/47)                                                    former Managed Health Care Consultant; and former
                                                                 President, Primary Physician Care.

Michael S. Scofield                  Chairman of the Board       Attorney, Law Offices of Michael S. Scofield.
(DOB: 2/20/43)                       of Trustees

Richard J. Shima                     Trustee                     Independent Consultant; former Chairman, Environmental
(DOB: 8/11/39)                                                   Warranty, Inc. (insurance agency); former Executive
                                                                 Consultant, Drake Beam Morin, Inc. (executive
                                                                 outplacement); Director of CTG Resources, Inc. (natural
                                                                 gas), Hartford Hospital, Old State House Association, and
                                                                 Enhance Financial Services, Inc.; former Director Middlesex
                                                                 Mutual Assurance Company; former Chairman, Board of
                                                                 Trustees, Hartford Graduate Center; Trustee, Greater
                                                                 Hartford YMCA.

Richard K. Wagoner, CFA              Trustee                     Former Chief Investment Officer, Executive Vice President
(DOB: 12/12/37)                                                  and Head of Capital Management Group, First Union
                                                                 Corporation; former consultant to the Board of Trustees
                                                                 of the Evergreen Funds; former member, New York Stock
                                                                 Exchange; member, North Carolina Securities Traders
                                                                 Association; member, Financial Analysts Society.

William M. Ennis                     President                   President and Chief Executive Officer, Evergreen Investment
(DOB: 6/26/60)                                                   Company and Chief Operating Officer, Capital Management
                                                                 Group, First Union Corporation.

Carol Kosel                          Treasurer                   Vice President Evergreen Investment Services, Inc. and
(DOB: 12/25/63)                                                  Treasurer, Vestaur Securities, Inc.; former Senior Manager,
                                                                 KPMG LLP.


Nimish S. Bhatt*                     Vice President and          Vice President, Tax, BISYS Fund Services; former Assistant
(DOB: 6/6/63)                        Assistant Treasurer         Vice President, EAMC/First Union National Bank; former
                                                                 Senior Tax Consulting/Acting Manager, Investment Companies
                                                                 Group, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, New York.

Bryan Haft*                          Vice President              Team Leader, Fund Administration, BISYS Fund Services.
(DOB: 1/23/65)
                                                                 Senior Vice President and Assistant General Counsel, First
Michael H. Koonce                    Secretary                   Union Corporation; former Senior Vice President and General
(DOB: 4/20/60)                                                   Counsel, Colonial Management Associates, Inc.
</TABLE>
*      Address: BISYS, 3435 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Ohio 43219-8001


                      CORPORATE AND MUNICIPAL BOND RATINGS

         The Fund relies on ratings  provided by independent  rating services to
help  determine  the  credit  quality  of bonds and other  obligations  the Fund
intends to  purchase  or  already  owns.  A rating is an opinion of an  issuer's
ability to pay interest and/or  principal when due.  Ratings reflect an issuer's
overall  financial  strength and whether it can meet its  financial  commitments
under various economic conditions.

         If a  security  held by the Fund  loses its  rating  or has its  rating
reduced  after the Fund has  purchased  it, the Fund is not  required to sell or
otherwise dispose of the security, but may consider doing so.

         The principal rating services,  commonly used by the Fund and investors
generally,  are S&P and Moody's.  The Fund may also rely on ratings  provided by
Fitch. Rating systems are similar among the different  services.  As an example,
the chart below compares basic ratings for long-term bonds. The "Credit Quality"
terms in the chart are for quick  reference  only.  Following  the chart are the
specific definitions each service provides for its ratings.


                    COMPARISON OF LONG-TERM BOND RATINGS

- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

MOODY'S      S&P           FITCH       CREDIT QUALITY
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

Aaa          AAA           AAA         Excellent Quality (lowest risk)
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

Aa           AA            AA          Almost Excellent Quality (very low risk)
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

A            A             A           Good Quality (low risk)
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

Baa          BBB           BBB         Satisfactory Quality (some risk)
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

Ba           BB            BB          Questionable Quality (definite risk)
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

B            B             B           Low Quality (high risk)
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

Caa/Ca/C     CCC/CC/C      CCC/CC/C    In or Near Default
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================

             D             DDD/DD/D    In Default
- ------------ ------------- ----------- =========================================


                           CORPORATE BONDS

                          LONG-TERM RATINGS

Moody's Corporate Long-Term Bond Ratings

AAA Bonds which are rated AAA are judged to be of the best  quality.  They carry
the smallest  degree of investment  risk and are generally  referred to as "gilt
edged." 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 risk appear somewhat larger than the Aaa securities.

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 some time 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
length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding  investment  characteristics  and in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.

BA Bonds  which are  rated BA are  judged to have  speculative  elements;  their
future cannot be considered as  well-assured.  Often the  protection of interest
and principal  payments may be very moderate,  and thereby not well  safeguarded
during  both  good  and bad  times  over the  future.  Uncertainty  of  position
characterizes bonds in this class.

B Bonds  which are  rated B  generally  lack  characteristics  of the  desirable
investment.  Assurance of interest and principal  payments or of  maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.

CAA  Bonds  which  are rated CAA are of poor  standing.  Such  issues  may be in
default or there may be present  elements of danger with respect to principal or
interest.

CA Bonds which are rated CA represent  obligations  which are  speculative  in a
high degree. Such issues are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.

C Bonds  which are rated C are the lowest  rated  class of bonds,  and issues so
rated can be regarded as having  extremely  poor prospects of ever attaining any
real investment standing.

NOTE:  MOODY'S APPLIES  NUMERICAL  MODIFIERS,  1, 2 AND 3 IN EACH GENERIC RATING
CLASSIFICATION  FROM Aa TO Caa. THE MODIFIER 1 INDICATES  THAT THE COMPANY RANKS
IN THE HIGHER END OF ITS GENERIC  RATING  CATEGORY;  THE  MODIFIER 2 INDICATES A
MID-RANGE  RAKING AND THE  MODIFIER 3 INDICATES  THAT THE  COMPANY  RANKS IN THE
LOWER END OF ITS GENERIC RATING CATEGORY.

S&P  Corporate Long-Term Bond Ratings

AAA An  obligation  rated  AAA has  the  highest  rating  assigned  by S&P.  The
obligor's  capacity  to meet  its  financial  commitment  on the  obligation  is
extremely strong.

AA An obligation  rated AA differs from the  highest-rated  obligations  only in
small  degree.  The obligor's  capacity to meet its financial  commitment on the
obligation is very strong.

A An obligation  rated A is somewhat more  susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes  in   circumstances   and  economic   conditions  than   obligations  in
higher-rated  categories.  However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial
commitment on the obligation is still strong.

BBB An obligation rated BBB exhibits adequate  protection  parameters.  However,
adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to
a weakened  capacity  of the  obligor to meet its  financial  commitment  on the
obligation.

BB, B, CCC, CC AND C: AS DESCRIBED BELOW,  OBLIGATIONS RATED BB, B, CCC, CC, AND
C ARE REGARDED AS HAVING SIGNIFICANT SPECULATIVE  CHARACTERISTICS.  BB INDICATES
THE LEAST DEGREE OF SPECULATION AND C THE HIGHEST.  WHILE SUCH  OBLIGATIONS WILL
LIKELY HAVE SOME QUALITY AND PROTECTIVE CHARACTERISTICS, THESE MAY BE OUTWEIGHED
BY LARGE UNCERTAINTIES OR MAJOR EXPOSURES TO ADVERSE CONDITIONS.

BB  An  obligation  rated  BB  is  less  vulnerable  to  nonpayment  than  other
speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to
adverse business,  financial,  or economic  conditions,  which could lead to the
obligor's   inadequate  capacity  to  meet  its  financial   commitment  on  the
obligation.

B An obligation rated B is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations  rated
BB, but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial  commitment
on the obligation.  Adverse  business,  financial,  or economic  conditions will
likely  impair  the  obligor's  capacity  or  willingness  to meet it  financial
commitment on the obligation.

CCC An  obligation  rated  CCC is  currently  vulnerable  to  nonpayment  and is
dependent upon favorable  business,  financial,  and economic conditions for the
obligor to meet its  financial  commitment  on the  obligation.  In the event of
adverse business,  financial, or economic conditions,  the obligor is not likely
to have the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

CC An obligation rated CC is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.

C The C rating may be used to cover a situation where a bankruptcy  petition has
been filed or similar action has been taken, but payments on this obligation are
being continued.

D The D rating,  unlike other ratings,  is not prospective;  rather,  it is used
only  where a default  has  actually  occurred--and  not where a default is only
expected. S&P changes ratings to D either:

- -        On the day an interest and/or principal payment is due and is not paid.
         An exception is made if there is a grace period and S&P believes that a
         payment will be made, in which case the rating can be maintained; or

- -        Upon voluntary  bankruptcy  filing or similar  action.  An exception is
         made if S&P expects that debt service payments will continue to be made
         on a specific  issue. In the absence of a payment default or bankruptcy
         filing,  a  technical  default  (i.e.,   covenant   violation)  is  not
         sufficient for assigning a D rating.

PLUS (+) OR MINUS (-) The ratings from AA to CCC may be modified by the addition
of a plus or minus  sign to show  relative  standing  within  the  major  rating
categories.

Fitch Corporate Long-Term Bond Ratings

INVESTMENT GRADE

AAA Highest credit quality.  AAA ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit
risk. They are assigned only in case of exceptionally strong capacity for timely
payment  of  financial  commitments.  This  capacity  is highly  unlikely  to be
adversely affected by foreseeable events.

AA Very high credit quality.  AA ratings denote a very low expectation of credit
risk.  They  indicate  very  strong  capacity  for timely  payment of  financial
commitments.  This  capacity  is not  significantly  vulnerable  to  foreseeable
events.

A High credit quality.  A ratings denote a lower expectation of credit risk. The
capacity for timely payment of financial  commitments is considered strong. This
capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to changes in circumstances or in
economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

BBB Good credit  quality.  BBB ratings  indicate  that there is  currently a low
expectation  of credit  risk.  The  capacity  for timely  payment  of  financial
commitments is considered adequate,  but adverse changes in circumstances and in
economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.  This is the lowest
investment-grade category.


SPECULATIVE GRADE

BB Speculative.  BB ratings  indicate that there is a possibility of credit risk
developing,  particularly  as the result of adverse  economic  change over time;
however,  business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial
commitments  to be met.  Securities  rated in this  category are not  investment
grade.

B Highly  speculative.  B  ratings  indicate  that  significant  credit  risk is
present,  but a limited  margin of safety  remains.  Financial  commitments  are
currently being met; however,  capacity for continued payment is contingent upon
a sustained, favorable business and economic environment.

CCC,  CC, C High  default  risk.  Default is a real  possibility.  Capacity  for
meeting  financial  commitment  is  solely  reliant  upon  sustained,  favorable
business or economic  developments.  A CC rating  indicates that default of some
kind appears probable. C ratings signal imminent default.

DDD,  DD, D Default.  Securities  are not meeting  current  obligations  and are
extremely  speculative.  DDD  designates  the highest  potential for recovery of
amounts  outstanding  on any  securities  involved.  For  U.S.  corporates,  for
example,  DD indicates expected recovery of 50%-90% of such outstandings,  and D
the lowest recovery potential, i.e. below 50%.

+ OR - may be appended to a rating to denote relative status within major rating
categories.  Such  suffixes  are not  added  to the AAA  rating  category  or to
categories below CCC.

                          CORPORATE SHORT-TERM RATINGS

Moody's Corporate Short-Term Issuer Ratings

PRIME-1  Issuers  rated  PRIME-1 (or  supporting  institutions)  have a superior
ability for repayment of senior short-term debt  obligations.  PRIME-1 repayment
ability will often be evidenced by many of the following characteristics.

- --  Leading market positions in well-established industries.

- --  High rates of return on funds employed.

- --  Conservative  capitalization  structure  with moderate  reliance on debt and
ample asset protection.

- -- Broad  margins in  earnings  coverage  of fixed  financial  changes  and high
internal cash generation.

- --  Well-established  access to a range of financial markets and assured sources
of alternate liquidity.

PRIME-2 Issuers rated PRIME-2 (or supporting institutions) have a strong ability
for  repayment of senior  short-term  debt  obligations.  This will  normally be
evidenced  by many of the  characteristics  cited above but to a lesser  degree.
Earnings  trends  and  coverage  ratios,  while  sound,  may be more  subject to
variation. Capitalization characteristics,  while still appropriate, may be more
affected by external conditions. Ample alternate liquidity is maintained.

PRIME-3  Issuers rated PRIME-3 (or supporting  institutions)  have an acceptable
ability for repayment of senior short-term  obligations.  The effect of industry
characteristics and market  compositions may be more pronounced.  Variability in
earnings and profitability may result in changes in the level of debt protection
measurements  and may  require  relatively  high  financial  leverage.  Adequate
alternate liquidity is maintained.

NOT PRIME  Issuers  rated NOT PRIME do not fall  within any of the Prime  rating
categories.


S&P Corporate Short-Term Obligation Ratings

A-1 A short-term  obligation  rated A-1 is rated in the highest category by S&P.
The  obligor's  capacity to meet its financial  commitment on the  obligation is
strong. Within this category certain obligations are designated with a plus sign
(+). This indicates that the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment
on these obligations is extremely strong.

A-2 A  short-term  obligation  rated A-2 is  somewhat  more  susceptible  to the
adverse  effects  of changes  in  circumstances  and  economic  conditions  than
obligations in higher rating categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet
its financial commitment on the obligation is satisfactory.

A-3 A short-term  obligation rated A-3 exhibits adequate protection  parameters.
However,  adverse economic conditions or changing  circumstances are more likely
to lead to a weakened  capacity of the obligor to meet its financial  commitment
on the obligation.

B A short-term obligation rated B is regarded as having significant  speculative
characteristics.  The obligor  currently  has the capacity to meet its financial
commitment on the  obligation;  however,  it faces major  ongoing  uncertainties
which could lead to the  obligor's  inadequate  capacity  to meet its  financial
commitment on the obligation.

C A short-term  obligation rated C is currently  vulnerable to nonpayment and is
dependent upon favorable  business,  financial,  and economic conditions for the
obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

D The D rating,  unlike other ratings,  is not prospective;  rather,  it is used
only  where a default  has  actually  occurred--and  not where a default is only
expected. S&P changes ratings to D either:

!        On the day an interest and/or principal payment is due and is not paid.
         An exception is made if there is a grace period and S&P believes that a
         payment will be made, in which case the rating can be maintained; or

!        Upon voluntary  bankruptcy  filing or similar  action,  An exception is
         made if S&P expects that debt service payments will continue to be made
         on a specific  issue. In the absence of a payment default or bankruptcy
         filing,  a  technical  default  (i.e.,   covenant   violation)  is  not
         sufficient for assigning a D rating.

Fitch Corporate Short-Term Obligation Ratings

F1 Highest credit quality.  Indicates the strongest  capacity for timely payment
of  financial  commitments;  may have an added "+" to denote  any  exceptionally
strong credit feature.

F2 Good credit quality. A satisfactory  capacity for timely payment of financial
commitments,  but the  margin  of  safety  is not as great as in the case of the
higher ratings.

F3 Fair credit quality. The capacity for timely payment of financial commitments
is adequate;  however,  near-term adverse changes could result in a reduction to
non-investment grade.

B Speculative.  Minimal  capacity for timely  payment of financial  commitments,
plus  vulnerability  to  near-term  adverse  changes in  financial  and economic
conditions.

C High  default  risk.  Default  is a real  possibility.  Capacity  for  meeting
financial commitments is solely reliant upon a sustained, favorable business and
economic environment.

D Default. Denotes actual or imminent payment default.



                                 MUNICIPAL BONDS

                                LONG-TERM RATINGS

Moody's Municipal Long-Term Bond Ratings

AAA  Bonds  rated  AAA are  judged  to be of the best  quality.  They  carry the
smallest degree of investment risk and are generally referred to as "gilt edge."
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 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 risk appear somewhat larger than the Aaa securities.

A Bonds  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 some time in the future.

BAA Bonds 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 length of time.
Such  bonds  lack  outstanding  investment  characteristics  and  in  fact  have
speculative characteristics as well.

BA Bonds rated BA are judged to have speculative  elements;  their future cannot
be considered as  well-assured.  Often the  protection of interest and principal
payments may be very moderate, and thereby not well safeguarded during both good
and bad times over the future.  Uncertainty of position  characterizes  bonds in
this class.

B Bonds rated B generally  lack  characteristics  of the  desirable  investment.
Assurance of interest and principal payments or of maintenance of other terms of
the contract over any long period of time may be small.

CAA Bonds rated CAA are of poor standing. Such issues may be in default or there
may be present elements of danger with respect to principal or interest.

CA Bonds rated CA represent  obligations which are speculative in a high degree.
Such issues are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.

C Bonds rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds,  and issues so rated can be
regarded  as  having  extremely  poor  prospects  of  ever  attaining  any  real
investment standing.

NOTE:  MOODY'S  APPLIES  NUMERICAL  MODIFIERS 1, 2 AND 3 IN EACH GENERIC  RATING
CLASSIFICATION  FROM Aa TO B. THE MODIFIER 1 INDICATES THAT THE COMPANY RANKS IN
THE HIGHER END OF ITS  GENERIC  RATING  CATEGORY;  THE  MODIFIER 2  INDICATES  A
MID-RANGE  RAKING AND THE  MODIFIER 3 INDICATES  THAT THE  COMPANY  RANKS IN THE
LOWER END OF ITS GENERIC RATING CATEGORY.

S&P Municipal Long-Term Bond Ratings

AAA An  obligation  rated  AAA has  the  highest  rating  assigned  by S&P.  The
obligor's  capacity  to meet  its  financial  commitment  on the  obligation  is
extremely strong.

AA An obligation  rated AA differs from the  highest-rated  obligations  only in
small  degree.  The obligor's  capacity to meet its financial  commitment on the
obligation is very strong.

A An obligation  rated A is somewhat more  susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes  in   circumstances   and  economic   conditions  than   obligations  in
higher-rated  categories.  However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial
commitment on the obligation is still strong.

BBB An obligation rated BBB exhibits adequate  protection  parameters.  However,
adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to
a weakened  capacity  of the  obligor to meet its  financial  commitment  on the
obligation.

         BB, B, CCC, CC AND C: AS DESCRIBED BELOW, OBLIGATIONS RATED BB, B, CCC,
CC, AND C ARE REGARDED AS HAVING  SIGNIFICANT  SPECULATIVE  CHARACTERISTICS.  BB
INDICATES  THE  LEAST  DEGREE  OF  SPECULATION  AND C THE  HIGHEST.  WHILE  SUCH
OBLIGATIONS WILL LIKELY HAVE SOME QUALITY AND PROTECTIVE CHARACTERISTICS,  THESE
MAY  BE  OUTWEIGHED  BY  LARGE  UNCERTAINTIES  OR  MAJOR  EXPOSURES  TO  ADVERSE
CONDITIONS.

BB  An  obligation  rated  BB  is  less  vulnerable  to  nonpayment  than  other
speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to
adverse business,  financial,  or economic  conditions,  which could lead to the
obligor's   inadequate  capacity  to  meet  its  financial   commitment  on  the
obligation.

B An obligation rated B is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations  rated
BB, but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial  commitment
on the obligation.  Adverse  business,  financial,  or economic  conditions will
likely  impair  the  obligor's  capacity  or  willingness  to meet it  financial
commitment on the obligation.


CCC An  obligation  rated  CCC is  currently  vulnerable  to  nonpayment  and is
dependent upon favorable  business,  financial,  and economic conditions for the
obligor to meet its  financial  commitment  on the  obligation.  In the event of
adverse business,  financial, or economic conditions,  the obligor is not likely
to have the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

CC An obligation rated CC is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.

C The C rating may be used to cover a situation where a bankruptcy  petition has
been filed or similar action has been taken, but payments on this obligation are
being continued.

D An obligation  rated D is in payment  default.  The D rating  category is used
when  payments  on an  obligation  are not  made  on the  date  due  even if the
applicable grace period has not expired,  unless S&P believes that such payments
will be made during such grace  period.  The D rating also will be used upon the
filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action if payments on
an obligation are jeopardized.

PLUS (+) OR MINUS (-) The ratings from AA to CCC may be modified by the addition
of a plus or minus  sign to show  relative  standing  within  the  major  rating
categories.

Fitch Municipal Long-Term Bond Ratings

INVESTMENT GRADE

AAA Highest credit quality.  AAA ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit
risk. They are assigned only in case of exceptionally strong capacity for timely
payment  of  financial  commitments.  This  capacity  is highly  unlikely  to be
adversely affected by foreseeable events.

AA Very high credit quality.  AA ratings denote a very low expectation of credit
risk.  They  indicate  very  strong  capacity  for timely  payment of  financial
commitments.  This  capacity  is not  significantly  vulnerable  to  foreseeable
events.

A High credit quality.  A ratings denote a lower expectation of credit risk. The
capacity for timely payment of financial  commitments is considered strong. This
capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to changes in circumstances or in
economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

BBB Good credit  quality.  BBB ratings  indicate  that there is  currently a low
expectation  of credit  risk.  The  capacity  for timely  payment  of  financial
commitments is considered adequate,  but adverse changes in circumstances and in
economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.  This is the lowest
investment-grade category.

SPECULATIVE GRADE

BB Speculative.  BB ratings  indicate that there is a possibility of credit risk
developing,  particularly  as the result of adverse  economic  change over time;
however,  business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial
commitments  to be met.  Securities  rated in this  category are not  investment
grade.


B Highly  speculative.  B  ratings  indicate  that  significant  credit  risk is
present,  but a limited  margin of safety  remains.  Financial  commitments  are
currently being met; however,  capacity for continued payment is contingent upon
a sustained, favorable business and economic environment.

CCC,  CC, C High  default  risk.  Default is a real  possibility.  Capacity  for
meeting  financial  commitments  is solely  reliant  upon  sustained,  favorable
business or economic  developments.  A CC rating  indicates that default of some
kind appears probable. C ratings signal imminent default.

DDD,  DD, D Default.  Securities  are not meeting  current  obligations  and are
extremely  speculative.  DDD  designates  the highest  potential for recovery of
amounts  outstanding on any securities  involved.  DD designates  lower recovery
potential and D the lowest.

+ OR - may be appended to a rating to denote relative status within major rating
categories.  Such  suffixes  are not  added  to the AAA  rating  category  or to
categories below CCC.


                          SHORT-TERM MUNICIPAL RATINGS

Moody's Municipal Short-Term Issuer Ratings

PRIME-1  Issuers  rated  PRIME-1 (or  supporting  institutions)  have a superior
ability for repayment of senior short-term debt  obligations.  PRIME-1 repayment
ability will often be evidence by many of the following characteristics.

- --  Leading market positions in well-established industries.

- --  High rates of return on funds employed.

- --  Conservative  capitalization  structure  with moderate  reliance on debt and
ample asset protection.

- -- Broad  margins in  earnings  coverage  of fixed  financial  changes  and high
internal cash generation.

- --  Well-established  access to a range of financial markets and assured sources
of alternate liquidity.

PRIME-2 Issuers rated PRIME-2 (or supporting institutions) have a strong ability
for  repayment of senior  short-term  debt  obligations.  This will  normally be
evidenced  by many of the  characteristics  cited above but to a lesser  degree.
Earnings  trends  and  coverage  ratios,  while  sound,  may be more  subject to
variation. Capitalization characteristics,  while still appropriate, may be more
affected by external conditions. Ample alternate liquidity is maintained.

PRIME-3  Issuers rated PRIME-3 (or supporting  institutions)  have an acceptable
ability for repayment of senior short-term  obligations.  The effect of industry
characteristics and market  compositions may be more pronounced.  Variability in
earnings and profitability may result in changes in the level of debt protection
measurements  and may  require  relatively  high  financial  leverage.  Adequate
alternate liquidity is maintained.

NOT PRIME  Issuers  rated NOT PRIME do not fall  within any of the Prime  rating
categories.

Moody's Municipal Short-Term Loan Ratings

MIG 1 This  designation  denotes best  quality.  There is strong  protection  by
established cash flows, superior liquidity support, or demonstrated  broad-based
access to the market for refinancing.

MIG 2 This  designation  denotes high quality.  Margins of protection  are ample
although not so large as in the preceding group.

MIG 3 This  designation  denotes  favorable  quality.  Liquidity  and  cash-flow
protection may be narrow and market access for  refinancing is likely to be less
well established.

SG This  designation  denotes  speculative  quality.  Debt  instruments  in this
category may lack margins of protection.


S&P Commercial Paper Ratings

A-1 This  designation  indicates  that the  degree  of safety  regarding  timely
payment is strong.  Those issues  determined to possess  extremely strong safety
characteristics are denoted with a plus sign (+) designation.

A-2 Capacity for timely payment on issues with this designation is satisfactory.
However,  the relative degree of safety is not as high as for issues  designated
A-1.

A-3 Issues  carrying  this  designation  have an  adequate  capacity  for timely
payment. They are, however, more vulnerable to the adverse effects of changes in
circumstances than obligations carrying the higher designations.

B Issues  rated B are  regarded as having only  speculative  capacity for timely
payment.

C This  rating is  assigned  to  short-term  debt  obligations  with a  doubtful
capacity for payment.

D Debt  rated D is in  payment  default.  The D  rating  category  is used  when
interest  payments or principal  payments are not made on the date due,  even if
the applicable  grace period has not expired,  unless S&P believes such payments
will be made during such grace period.

S&P Municipal Short-Term Obligation Ratings

SP-1 Strong  capacity to pay  principal  and  interest.  An issue  determined to
possess  a very  strong  capacity  to pay  debt  service  is  given  a plus  (+)
designation.

SP-2   Satisfactory   capacity  to  pay  principal   and  interest,   with  some
vulnerability  to adverse  financial  and economic  changes over the term of the
notes.

SP-3 Speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.


Fitch Municipal Short-Term Obligation Ratings

F1 Highest credit quality.  Indicates the strongest  capacity for timely payment
of  financial  commitments;  may have an added "+" to denote  any  exceptionally
strong credit feature.

F2 Good credit quality. A satisfactory  capacity for timely payment of financial
commitments,  but the  margin  of  safety  is not as great as in the case of the
higher ratings.

F3 Fair credit quality. The capacity for timely payment of financial commitments
is adequate;  however,  near-term adverse changes could result in a reduction to
non-investment grade.

B Speculative.  Minimal  capacity for timely  payment of financial  commitments,
plus  vulnerability  to  near-term  adverse  changes in  financial  and economic
conditions.

C High  default  risk.  Default  is a real  possibility.  Capacity  for  meeting
financial commitments is solely reliant upon a sustained, favorable business and
economic environment.

D Default. Denotes actual or imminent payment default.



                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

         Except as otherwise  stated in its  prospectus  or required by law, the
Fund  reserves  the  right to  change  the  terms  of the  offer  stated  in its
prospectus without shareholder approval, including the right to impose or change
fees for services provided.

         No  dealer,  salesman  or  other  person  is  authorized  to  give  any
information  or  to  make  any   representation  not  contained  in  the  Fund's
prospectus,  SAI or in supplemental  sales literature issued by the Fund or EDI,
and no person is  entitled  to rely on any  information  or  representation  not
contained therein.

         The Fund's prospectus and SAI omit certain information contained in the
Trust's registration  statement,  which you may obtain for a fee from the SEC in
Washington, D.C.


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