MARSICO INVESTMENT FUND
485APOS, 1999-12-17
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   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON DECEMBER 17, 1999

                                                              FILE NO. 333-36975
                                                               FILE NO. 811-8397
================================================================================

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                          ----------------------------

                                    FORM N-1A

            REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933        /X/

                         PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO.                       / /

                        POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 2                     /X/

                                     AND/OR

        REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940    /X/

                                AMENDMENT NO. 5                            /X/

                           THE MARSICO INVESTMENT FUND

               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

                          1200 17TH STREET, SUITE 1300
                                DENVER, CO 80202
               (Address of Principal Executive Office) (Zip Code)

       Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: 1-888-860-8686

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

                             BARBARA M. JAPHA, ESQ.
                           The Marsico Investment Fund
                          1200 17th Street, Suite 1300
                                Denver, CO 80202
               (Name and address of agent for service of process)

                                   COPIES TO:

                             SANDER M. BIEBER, ESQ.
                             Dechert Price & Rhoads
                              1775 Eye Street, N.W.
                             Washington, D.C. 20006
                        --------------------------------


It is  proposed  that this filing will  become  effective  75 days after  filing
pursuant  to  paragraph  (a)(2)  of  Rule  485 or on  such  earlier  date as the
Commission may designate pursuant to paragraph (a)(3) of Rule 485.

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





<PAGE>



Prospectus
January __, 2000

Marsico 21st Century Fund

For Investors Seeking Long-Term Growth of Capital

      The  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  has not approved or disapproved
these  securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete.  Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

                                                                          [LOGO]
                                                                   Marsico Funds
                                                             We do the work.(SM)
      Your Guide to the Prospectus

      This  Prospectus is designed to help you make an informed  decision  about
whether  investing in the Marsico 21st Century Fund (the "Fund") is  appropriate
for you. The investment adviser for the Fund is Marsico Capital Management,  LLC
(the "Adviser").

      We have divided the Prospectus into three sections to make it easy for you
to find what you are looking for.

      The first  section,  The Fund,  contains a  discussion  of the  objective,
principal  risks,  and fees of the Fund. In  particular,  this section tells you
four important things about the Fund:

*     The Fund's investment goal - what the Fund is trying to achieve.

*     The principal investment policies of the Fund - how the Fund tries to
      meet its investment goal.

*     The investment selection process used by the Fund - this section specifies
      the  Fund's  primary  types  of  investments   and  principal   investment
      strategies.

*     Risks you should be aware of - the principal risks associated with the
      Fund.

      The other two sections of the Prospectus - Who Manages the Fund and How to
Buy and  Sell  Shares  -  provide  detailed  information  about  how the Fund is
managed, the services and privileges  available to the Fund's shareholders,  how
shares are priced and how to buy and sell shares.


     THE INFORMATION IN THIS  PROSPECTUS IS NOT COMPLETE AND MAY BE CHANGED.  WE
MAY NOT SELL THESE SECURITIES  UNTIL THE  REGISTRATION  STATEMENT FILED WITH THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION IS EFFECTIVE. THIS PROSPECTUS IS NOT AN OFFER
TO SELL THESE  SECURITIES AND IS NOT SOLICITING AN OFFER TO BUY THESE SECURITIES
IN ANY STATE WHERE THE OFFER OR SALE IS NOT PERMITTED.

                              SUBJECT TO COMPLETION

                             DATED DECEMBER __, 1999







<PAGE>



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

THE FUND...............................................................  4

The Goal of the Fund...................................................  4
The Principal Investments and Policies of the Fund.....................  4
Other Investment Policies of the Fund..................................  5
The Investment Selection Process Used by the Fund......................  6
The Principal Risks of Investing in the Fund...........................  7
Expenses............................................................... 11

WHO MANAGES THE FUND................................................... 13

The Investment Adviser................................................. 13
The Portfolio Manager.................................................. 13

HOW TO BUY AND SELL SHARES............................................. 14

Pricing of Fund Shares................................................. 14
Instructions For Opening and Adding to an Account...................... 15
Telephone and Wire Transaction......................................... 16
Additional Purchase Information........................................ 17
Instructions For Selling Fund Shares................................... 19
Additional Redemption Information...................................... 20
How to Exchange Shares................................................. 22
Fund Transactions Through the Marsico Funds Web Site................... 22
Retirement Services Plan............................................... 23
Automatic Services for Fund Investors.................................. 25
Shareholder Communications............................................. 26
Dividends and Distributions............................................ 26
Taxes.................................................................. 26



<PAGE>



                                      23


THE FUND

The Goal of the Fund

*     The Fund seeks long-term growth of capital.

The Principal Investments and Policies of the Fund

*     The Fund invests  primarily  in common  stocks that are selected for their
      long-term growth potential. The Fund may invest in companies of any size.

*     The Fund may invest without limit in foreign securities. These investments
      may be publicly traded in the United States or on a foreign exchange,  and
      may be  bought  and sold in a  foreign  currency.  The  Adviser  generally
      selects  foreign  securities  on a  stock-by-stock  basis  based on growth
      potential.

*     Under adverse market conditions or in the event of exceptional
      redemption requests, the Fund may hold cash or cash-equivalents and
      invest without limit in money market securities, U.S. government
      obligations and short-term debt securities.  Under these circumstances,
      the Fund may not participate in stock market advances or declines to
      the same extent that it would if it remained more fully invested in
      common stocks.  The Fund may also purchase high-grade commercial paper,
      certificates of deposit, and may enter into repurchase agreements.

      The  Fund's  goal  may  be  changed  by  the  Board  of  Trustees  without
shareholder  approval.  You will receive  advance written notice of any material
changes to the Fund's  goal.

     A WORD  ABOUT  THE  FUND:  The  Fund is a  mutual  fund,  which is a pooled
investment  vehicle  that is  professionally  managed  and  that  gives  you the
opportunity to participate in financial  markets.  The Fund strives to reach its
stated goal,  although no assurances can be given that it will achieve its goal.
Investments in the Fund are not bank deposits and are not insured by the FDIC or
any  government  agency.  The Fund  does not  represent  a  complete  investment
program. You could lose money by investing in the Fund.

Other Investment Policies of the Fund

*     Primarily  for  hedging  purposes,  the  Fund may use  options,  including
      options  on  securities  and  securities  indices,  futures,  and  foreign
      currency contracts.

*     Under normal market conditions, the Fund may invest up to 10% of its total
      assets in all types of fixed income  securities  and up to 5% of its total
      assets in high-yield bonds and mortgage and asset backed securities.

*     The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in  illiquid  investments,
      which are  securities  that  cannot be sold or  disposed of quickly in the
      normal course of business.  The Fund may also invest in the  securities of
      other  investment  companies  to a limited  extent  and  intends  to do so
      primarily for cash management purposes.

      MORTGAGE  AND  ASSET  BACKED  SECURITIES  represent  shares  in a pool  of
mortgages or other debt, like car loans.  These  securities  involve  prepayment
risk,  which is the risk  that the  underlying  mortgages  or other  debt may be
refinanced  or paid off prior to their  maturities  during a period of declining
interest rates.

      HIGH-YIELD  BONDS are securities that involve the risk that the issuer may
not be able to meet its payment obligation.  For this reason,  high- yield bonds
are given a low to medium  credit rating by Moody's (Baa and lower) and Standard
& Poors (BBB and lower), and are considered to be mostly speculative in nature.
      The Fund may not  invest  more  than 25% of its  total  assets in a single
issuer (other than U.S. government  securities) and may not own more than 10% of
the outstanding voting shares of any issuer.

The Investment Selection Process Used by the Fund

      In selecting  investments  for the Fund, the Adviser uses an approach that
combines "top-down" economic analysis with "bottom-up" stock selection.

*     The "top-down" approach takes into consideration such macro-economic
      factors as interest rates, inflation, the regulatory environment, and
      the global competitive landscape.  In addition, the Adviser also
      examines such factors as the most attractive global investment
      opportunities, industry consolidation, and the sustainability of
      economic trends.  As a result of the "top-down" analysis, the Adviser
      identifies sectors, industries, and companies which should benefit from
      the overall trends the Adviser has observed.

*     The Adviser then looks for individual companies with earnings growth
      potential that may not be recognized by the market at large.  In
      determining whether a particular company is suitable for investment by
      the Fund, the Adviser focuses on a number of different attributes,
      including the company's specific market expertise or dominance; its
      franchise durability and pricing power; solid fundamentals (e.g., a
      strong balance sheet, improving returns on equity, and the ability to
      generate free cash flow); strong management, and reasonable valuations
      in the context of projected growth rates.  This is called bottom-up
      stock selection.

*     As part of this fundamental, bottom-up research, the Adviser may visit
      with various levels of a company's management, as well as with its
      customers, suppliers, and competitors.  The Adviser also prepares
      detailed earnings and cash flow models of companies.  These models
      permit the Adviser to project earnings growth and other important
      characteristics under different scenarios.  Each model is customized to
      follow a particular company and is intended to replicate and describe a
      company's past, present, and future performance.  The models are
      comprised of quantitative information and detailed narratives that
      reflect updated interpretations of corporate data.

*     The Fund's investments generally are anchored by stable growth
      companies.  However, the Fund's portfolio also typically includes more
      aggressive growth companies and companies undergoing significant
      changes: e.g., the introduction of a new product line, the appointment
      of a new management team, or an acquisition.  As a result, the Fund may
      invest in certain companies for relatively short-term periods.  Such
      short-term activity may cause the Fund to incur higher brokerage costs,
      which may adversely affect the Fund's performance, and may produce
      increased taxable distributions.

*     In  managing  the  Fund's  assets,  the  Adviser  is  mindful  of the  tax
      consequences that investment decisions may have on shareholders.


The Principal Risks of Investing in the Fund

RISKS IN GENERAL

      Domestic and foreign economic growth and market conditions,  interest rate
levels,  and political  events are among the factors  affecting  the  securities
markets  of the  Fund's  investments.  There  is a risk  the  Adviser  will  not
accurately  predict the  direction of these and other  factors and, as a result,
the Adviser's investment decisions may not accomplish what they were intended to
achieve.  You could lose money  investing in the Fund. You should  consider your
own investment goals,  time horizon,  and risk tolerance before investing in the
Fund.

COMMON STOCKS

      The Fund invests  primarily  in common  stocks of large  companies,  which
subjects the Fund and its shareholders to the risks associated with common stock
investing.  These  risks  include the  financial  risk of  selecting  individual
companies that do not perform as anticipated, the risk that the stock markets in
which the Fund invests may experience periods of turbulence and instability, and
the general risk that domestic and global  economies  may go through  periods of
decline and cyclical change.

      Many  factors  affect an  individual  company's  performance,  such as the
strength of its management or the demand for its products or services.  Negative
performance may affect the earnings growth potential  anticipated by the Adviser
in picking the individual stocks in the Fund's portfolio.

      There are  overall  stock  market  risks  that may affect the value of the
Fund. Over time,  stock markets tend to move in cycles,  with periods when stock
prices rise generally and periods when stock prices decline generally. The value
of the Fund's  investments may increase and decrease more than the stock markets
in general.

RISKS OF FOREIGN INVESTING

      The  Fund  may  invest  without  limit  in  foreign  securities.   Foreign
investments  may be riskier  than U.S.  investments  because of factors  such as
unstable international political and economic conditions, currency fluctuations,
foreign controls on investment and currency exchange,  withholding taxes, a lack
of adequate company  information,  less liquid and more volatile markets,  and a
lack of government  regulation.  Investments  in emerging  markets  involve even
greater risks such as immature economic structures and different legal systems.

FIXED INCOME INVESTING

     Credit  Risk:  The Fund could  lose  money if the issuer of a fixed  income
security cannot meet its financial obligations or goes bankrupt.

     Interest  Rate Risk:  The value of the Fund's  investments  in fixed income
securities may fall when interest rates rise.

     High-Yield  Securities:  High-yield  securities,  also referred to as "junk
bonds," are considered to be more  speculative  than higher quality  securities.
They are more susceptible to credit risk than investment- grade securities. This
is especially  true during periods of economic  uncertainty  or during  economic
downturns.  The  value  of  lower  quality  securities  is  subject  to  greater
volatility  and is generally more dependent on the ability of the issuer to meet
interest and principal payments than is the case for higher quality  securities.
Issuers  of  high-yield  securities  may not be as strong  financially  as those
issuing bonds with higher credit ratings.

OTHER RISKS

      The Fund may also invest in options, futures, and foreign currencies,  and
may enter into certain types of short sales.  If these practices are used by the
Fund,  the intent would be primarily  to hedge the Fund's  portfolio.  Investors
should  not  regard  the  possible  use by the  Fund  of  these  practices  as a
significant  factor in the performance of the Fund or in making their investment
decision. Investing for hedging purposes may result in certain transaction costs
which may reduce the Fund's performance. In addition, no assurances can be given
that each  derivative  position  will  achieve a  perfect  correlation  with the
security or currency that it is being hedged against.


Expenses

As an investor,  you pay certain fees and expenses in connection  with the Fund,
which are  described  in the table  below.  There are no sales loads or exchange
fees associated with an investment in the Fund. Fund operating expenses are paid
out of the assets of the Fund,  so their  effect is included in the Fund's share
price.  Annual Fund operating  expenses,  indicated in the table below,  reflect
estimated expenses for the Fund's first fiscal year.

SHAREHOLDER FEES (fees paid directly from your investment)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wire Redemption Fee                        $10

IRA Redemption Fee                           15


ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (expenses that are deducted from Fund assets)

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


Management Fee                        0.85%

Distribution 12b-1 Fees(a)            0.25%

Other Expenses(b)                     0.62%

Total Fund Operating Expenses(c)      1.72%

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

(a)   The Fund has  adopted  a Rule  12b-1  plan  which  allows  the Fund to pay
      distribution fees for the sale and distribution of its shares. The maximum
      level of distribution expenses is 0.25% per year of the Fund's average net
      assets.  As these  fees are paid out of the Fund's  assets on an  on-going
      basis,  over time these fees will increase the cost of your investment and
      may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges.

(b)   The expenses include custodian,  transfer agency, and administration  fees
      and other customary Fund expenses.

(c)   The Adviser has voluntarily agreed to limit the total expenses of the Fund
      (excluding interest,  taxes, brokerage,  and extraordinary expenses) to an
      annual  rate of 1.50% of the Fund's  average net assets  until  January 1,
      2001.  This fee waiver is voluntary and may be terminated at any time. The
      Adviser is  entitled  to  reimbursement  from the Fund of any fees  waived
      pursuant to this arrangement if such  reimbursements do not cause the Fund
      to exceed existing expense limitations.

EXAMPLE

      This  example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the
Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example should not be
considered indicative of future investment returns and operating expenses, which
may be more or less than those  shown.  This example is based on the Annual Fund
Operating  Expenses  described in the table, which do not reflect fee waivers in
effect for the Fund through January 1, 2001.

      This  example  assumes  that you  invest  $10,000 in the Fund for the time
periods  indicated  and  then  redeem  all of your  shares  at the end of  those
periods. The example also assumes that your investment has a 5% return each year
and that the Fund's  operating  expenses  remain the same.  Although your actual
costs may be higher or lower,  based on these  assumptions  your costs would be:
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES

One Year    Three Years    Five Years    Ten Years

  $175         $542          $933         $2,030

      Please note that the above  example is an  estimate of the  expenses to be
incurred by  shareholders  of the Fund.  Actual  expenses may be higher or lower
than those reflected above.

WHO MANAGES THE FUND

The Investment Adviser

      Marsico  Capital  Management,  LLC (the  "Adviser" or "Marsico  Capital"),
located  at 1200 17th  Street,  Suite  1300,  Denver,  CO  80202,  serves as the
investment  adviser  to the Fund under an  Investment  Advisory  and  Management
Agreement (the "Agreement") with The Marsico Investment Fund (the "Trust").  The
Agreement provides that the Adviser will furnish continuous  investment advisory
and management  services to the Fund. Marsico Capital was organized in September
1997 as a  registered  investment  adviser.  In  addition  to the Fund,  Marsico
Capital  provides  investment  management  services  to other  mutual  funds and
private  accounts and, as of December 31, 1999,  had  approximately  $__ billion
under  management.  Thomas F. Marsico is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
the Adviser.

      The  Adviser  manages the  investment  portfolio  of the Fund,  subject to
policies  adopted by the Trust's  Board of Trustees.  Under the  Agreement,  the
Adviser, at its own expense and without reimbursement from the Trust,  furnishes
office  space and all  necessary  office  facilities,  equipment  and  executive
personnel  necessary  for  managing  the  Fund.  Marsico  Capital  also pays the
salaries  and  fees of all  officers  and  trustees  of the  Trust  who are also
officers,  directors,  or  employees  of  Marsico  Capital.  The Trust  pays the
salaries  and fees of all other  trustees of the Trust.  For its  services,  the
Adviser  receives a fee of 0.85% per year of the average daily net assets of the
Fund.

The Portfolio Manager

     James A.  Hillary is the  portfolio  manager of the Fund.  Mr.  Hillary has
eleven years of experience as a securities  analyst and portfolio manager and is
a  founding  member of Marsico  Capital  Management.  Prior to  joining  Marsico
Capital in 1997,  Mr.  Hillary was a  portfolio  manager at W.H.  Reaves,  a New
Jersey-based  money management  firm. He holds a bachelor's  degree from Rutgers
University  and a law degree  from  Fordham  University.  Mr.  Hillary is also a
certified public accountant.

HOW TO BUY AND SELL SHARES

Pricing of Fund Shares

      The price you pay for a share of the Fund,  and the price you receive upon
selling or  redeeming a share of the Fund,  is called the Fund's net asset value
("NAV").  The NAV is calculated by taking the total value of the Fund's  assets,
subtracting its liabilities, and then dividing by the number of shares that have
already been issued. This is a standard calculation, and forms the basis for all
transactions  involving buying,  selling,  exchanging or reinvesting shares. The
NAV is  generally  calculated  as of the close of  trading on the New York Stock
Exchange  (usually 4:00 p.m.  Eastern time) every day the Exchange is open. Your
order will be priced at the next NAV calculated  after your order is accepted by
the Fund's  transfer  agent,  Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc.  (the  "Transfer
Agent").  The Fund's  investments  are valued  based on market  value,  or where
market quotations are not readily  available,  based on fair value as determined
in good faith by the Fund's Board of Trustees. The Fund may use pricing services
to determine market value.

Instructions For Opening and Adding to an Account

TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT                              TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BY MAIL                                   BY MAIL
Complete and sign the Account             Complete the investment slip that is
Application or an IRA Application.        included in your account statement,
                                          and write your account  number on your
                                          check.  If you  no  longer  have  your
                                          investment slip, please reference your
                                          name,  account number,  and address on
                                          your check.
Make your check payable to the Marsico
21st Century Fund
*     For IRA accounts, please specify
      the year for which the
      contribution is made.

MAIL YOUR APPLICATION AND CHECK TO:  MAIL THE SLIP AND THE CHECK TO:

The Marsico Funds                       The Marsico Funds
c/o Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.          c/o Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.
P.O. Box 3210                               P. O. Box 3210
Milwaukee, WI  53201-3210                   Milwaukee, WI  53201-3210

BY OVERNIGHT COURIER, SEND TO:

The Marsico Funds
c/o Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.
207 East Buffalo Street
Suite 315
Milwaukee, WI  53201-3210

TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT                        TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT

BY TELEPHONE                              BY TELEPHONE

Telephone transactions may not be     You must select this service on your
used for initial purchases.           account application before making your
                                      first telephone transaction. Thereafter,
                                      you may call 1-888-860-8686 to purchase
                                      shares in an existing account.
                                      Investments made by electronic funds
                                      transfer must be in amounts of at least
                                      $50 and not greater than $50,000, and will
                                      be effective at the NAV next computed
                                      after your instruction is accepted by the
                                      Transfer Agent.

BY INTERNET                         BY INTERNET
                                      You may purchase shares in an existing
You may open new accounts through     account through the Marsico Funds
the Marsico Funds Internet Site at    Internet Site at www.marsicofunds.com.
www.marsicofunds.com.  To establish   To establish on-line transaction
on-line transaction privileges, you   privileges, you must enroll through the
must enroll through the Web Site.     Web Site.  For important information on
For important information on this     this feature, see "Fund Transactions
feature, see "Fund Transactions       Through the Marsico Funds Web Site" on
Through theMarsico Funds Web  of      page 15 of this Prospectus.
Site" on page 15 this Prospectus.




<PAGE>




BY WIRE                                   BY WIRE
Call  1-888-860-8686 for instructions    Send your investment to UMB Bank, N.A.
and to obtain an investor account        by following the instructions listed in
number or an IRA account number prior    the column to the left.
to wiring the funds.

Send your investment to UMB Bank, N.A.
with these instructions:
*   UMB Bank, N.A.
*   ABA#:  101000695
*   For Credit to the Marsico Funds
*   A/C#:  987-085-8118
*   For further credit to:  investor
   account number; name(s) of
   investor(s); SSN or TIN; name of
   Fund to be purchased.


AUTOMATIC SERVICES

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


      WITH AN  INITIAL  INVESTMENT  indicate  on your  application  which of the
automatic  service(s)  described on p. 25 that you want. Return your application
with your investment.

TELEPHONE AND WIRE TRANSACTIONS
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

      Only  bank  accounts  held at  domestic  financial  institutions  that are
Automated  Clearing House (ACH) members can be used for telephone  transactions.
It takes 15  calendar  days  after  receipt  by the  Fund of your  bank  account
information to establish this feature. Purchases by ACH transfer may not be made
during this time. With respect to purchases made by telephone,  the Fund and its
agents  will  employ   reasonable   procedures  to  confirm  that   instructions
communicated  by  telephone  are genuine.  Such  procedures  may include,  among
others,  requiring  some form of  personal  identification  prior to acting upon
telephone instructions, providing written confirmation of all such transactions,
and/or tape recording all telephone  instructions.  If reasonable procedures are
followed,  the Fund will not be liable for any loss, cost, or expense for acting
upon an investor's  telephone  instructions  or for any  unauthorized  telephone
redemption.

      If you purchase your initial shares by wire, the Transfer Agent first must
have received a completed  Account  Application  and issued an account number to
you. The account  number must be included in the wiring  instructions  set forth
above.

      The Transfer  Agent must receive  your  Account  Application  to establish
shareholder  privileges  and to verify  your  account  information.  Payment  of
redemption  proceeds  may be delayed and taxes may be  withheld  unless the Fund
receives a properly completed and executed account application.

      Shares  purchased  by wire will be  purchased  at the NAV next  determined
after the Transfer Agent receives your wired funds and all required  information
is provided in the wire instructions. If the Transfer Agent is notified no later
than 3:00 p.m.  Eastern time of the wire  instructions,  and the wired funds are
received by the Transfer  Agent no later than 5:00 p.m.  Eastern time,  then the
shares  purchased  will be priced at the NAV determined on that business day. If
the wire is not  received  by 5:00  p.m.  Eastern  time,  the  purchase  will be
effective at the NAV next calculated after receipt of the wire.

      EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE: As a convenience, the Fund's shareholders may
exchange all or part of their investment in the Fund for the Marsico Shares
of Nations Prime Fund ("Nations Money Market Fund"), a money market fund
advised by NationsBanc Advisers, Inc. (and not by the Adviser) that invests
in a diversified portfolio of high quality money market instruments.  THE
SHARES OF THE NATIONS MONEY MARKET FUND ARE NOT OFFERED BY THIS PROSPECTUS.
For important information on this exchange feature, please see p. 22 of this
Prospectus.
Additional Purchase Information

      If you contemplate  needing to exchange or redeem your investment  shortly
after your  purchase,  you  should  purchase  shares by wire.  The Fund may hold
redemption  proceeds  until  the  proceeds  used to  purchase  shares  have been
collected  (e.g.  your  check  has  cleared,  or your  ACH  payments  have  been
received), but in no event for more than 10 calendar days.

      If you fail to provide and certify to the accuracy of your social security
number or tax  identification  number, the Fund will be required to withhold 31%
of all dividends, distributions, and payments, including redemption proceeds.

      Please note that the Fund is offered and sold only to persons  residing in
the United  States or Puerto  Rico.  Applications  will only be accepted if they
contain a U.S. or Puerto Rico address.  This Prospectus should not be considered
a solicitation to buy or an offer to sell shares of the Fund in any jurisdiction
where it would be unlawful under the securities laws of that jurisdiction.

      The Fund will not accept your  Purchase  Application  if you are investing
for another person as  attorney-in-fact.  The Fund will not accept accounts with
"Power  of  Attorney"  or  "POA" in the  registration  section  of the  Purchase
Application.

      All  purchases  must be made in U.S.  dollars  and checks must be drawn on
U.S. banks. No cash, credit cards or third party checks will be accepted.  A $20
fee will be charged  against your account for any payment check  returned to the
Transfer Agent or for any incomplete ACH or other electronic funds transfer,  or
for insufficient funds, stop payment, closed account, or other reasons. You will
also be responsible  for any losses  suffered by the Fund as a result.  The Fund
reserves the right to reject any purchase order for Fund shares.

MINIMUM INVESTMENTS

                                          INITIAL                 ADDITIONAL

Regular accounts                          $2,500                        $100

Traditional IRAs, and IRA Rollovers        1,000                         100

Spousal IRAs                                 500                         100

Roth IRAs                                  1,000                         100

SEP-IRAs                                     500                         100

Gifts to minors                              500                          50

Automatic Investment Plans                 1,000                          50

INVESTMENTS MADE THROUGH FINANCIAL SERVICES AGENTS

      If you invest  through a financial  services  agent  (rather than directly
with  the  Fund  through  the  Transfer  Agent),  the  policies  and fees may be
different than those described here. Financial advisers, financial supermarkets,
and other financial  services  agents may charge  transaction and other fees and
may set  different  minimum  investments  or  limitations  on buying or  selling
shares.  Consult a representative  of your financial  services agent if you have
any questions.  Your financial  services agent is responsible  for  transmitting
your orders in a timely manner.

      Certain financial  services agents may enter into agreements with the Fund
or its agents  which  permit them to confirm  orders on behalf of  customers  by
phone,  with payment to follow later,  in accordance  with the Transfer  Agent's
procedures.   If  payment  is  not  received  within  the  time  specified,  the
transaction  may be  rescinded,  and the financial  services  agent will be held
liable for any resulting fees or losses.

Instructions For Selling Fund Shares

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TO SELL SHARES

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


BY MAIL

Write a letter of instruction that includes:

* the name(s) and signature(s) of all account owners * your account number * the
Fund name * the dollar or share  amount you want to sell * how and where to send
the proceeds * if redeeming from your IRA,  please note  applicable  withholding
requirements.

Obtain a signature guarantee or other documentation, if required.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MAIL YOUR REQUEST TO:               BY OVERNIGHT COURIER, SEND TO:

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


The Marsico Funds                         The Marsico Funds
c/o Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.          c/o Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.
P.O. Box 3210                               207 East Buffalo Street, Suite 315
Milwaukee, WI  53201-3210                   Milwaukee, WI  53202

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BY TELEPHONE

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

*   You must select this service in      Unless you decline telephone privileges
   writing before making your first      on your account application, as long as
   telephone redemption.   Thereafter,   the Fund takes reasonable measures to
   you may redeem Fund shares by         verify the order, you may be
   calling 1-888-860-8686.  Redemption   responsible for any fraudulent
   proceeds will be mailed directly to   telephone order.
   you or wired to your predesignated
   bank account.

*   You may redeem as little as $500
   and as much as $50,000 by telephone
   redemptions.


BY INTERNET

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


      You  may  redeem  shares  through  the  Marsico  Funds  Internet  Site  at
www.marsicofunds.com.  To  establish  on-line  transaction  privileges  you must
enroll  through the Web Site.  For important  information  on this feature,  see
"Fund  Transactions  Through  the  Marsico  Funds  Web  Site" on page 15 of this
Prospectus.

SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Call us to request a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan. It may be set-up over the
phone or by letter of instruction.

     For specific information on how to redeem your account, and to determine if
a signature guarantee or other documentation is required,  please call toll free
in the U.S. 1-888-860-8686.

     As explained  under "How to Exchange  Shares," (p. 22)  shareholders in the
Fund may  exchange  all or part of their  investment  for shares of the  Nations
Money Market Fund. To redeem  shares from the Nations Money Market Fund,  follow
the same procedures that apply to redeeming  shares of the Fund. If you have any
questions about redeeming  shares of the Nations Money Market Fund,  please call
1-888-860-8686.  Please note that when redeeming less than all of your shares of
the Nations Money Market Fund,  your  proceeds  will exclude  accrued and unpaid
income from the Nations  Money Market Fund  through the date of the  redemption.
When redeeming  your entire balance from the Nations Money Market Fund,  accrued
income will  automatically  be paid to you when the income is collected and paid
from the Nations Money Market Fund, at the end of the month.

Additional Redemption Information

PAYMENT OF REDEMPTION PROCEEDS

     You may sell  shares at any time.  Your shares will be sold at the next NAV
per share  calculated  after your order is accepted by the Transfer Agent.  Your
order will be  processed  promptly and you will  generally  receive the proceeds
within seven days after receiving your properly  completed  request.  Payment of
the  redemption  proceeds  for shares of the Fund where you request wire payment
will normally be made in federal funds on the next business day.

     Before selling recently purchased shares,  please note that if the Transfer
Agent has not yet collected payment for the shares you are selling, it may delay
sending the proceeds for up to 15 calendar  days.  This procedure is intended to
protect the Fund and its shareholders from loss.

     The  Transfer  Agent  will wire  redemption  proceeds  only to the bank and
account  designated  on the  Purchase  Application  or in  written  instructions
subsequently received by the Transfer Agent, and only if the bank is a member of
the Federal Reserve System.  The Transfer Agent currently  charges a $10 fee for
each payment by wire of  redemption  proceeds,  which will be deducted from your
redemption proceeds.

     If the dollar or share amount  requested to be redeemed is greater than the
current value of your account,  your entire account balance will be redeemed. If
you choose to redeem your account in full,  any automatic  service  currently in
effect for the account  will be  terminated  unless you  indicate  otherwise  in
writing.

SIGNATURE GUARANTEES

      A signature  guarantee  of each owner is required to redeem  shares in the
following situations: (i) if you change ownership on your account; (ii) when you
want the redemption proceeds sent to a different address than that registered on
the account;  (iii) if the proceeds are to be made payable to someone other than
the account's owner(s); (iv) any redemption transmitted by federal wire transfer
to a bank other than your bank of record; and (v) if a change of address request
has been  received by the Transfer  Agent within the last 15 days.  In addition,
signature  guarantees  are required for all  redemptions of $50,000 or more from
any shareholder account.

      Signature  guarantees  are  designed to protect both you and the Fund from
fraud.  Signature  guarantees can be obtained from most banks,  credit unions or
savings   associations,    or   from   broker/dealers,    municipal   securities
broker/dealers,   government  securities  broker/dealers,   national  securities
exchanges,  registered securities exchanges or clearing agencies deemed eligible
by the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission.  Notaries  public  cannot  provide
signature guarantees.

CORPORATE, TRUST AND OTHER ACCOUNTS

      Redemption requests from corporate, trust, and institutional accounts, and
executors, administrators, and guardians, require documents in addition to those
described above,  evidencing the authority of the officers,  trustees or others.
In order to avoid delays in processing  redemption  requests for these accounts,
you should call the Fund at 1-888-860-8686  before making the redemption request
to determine what additional documents are required.

TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP

      In order to change the account  registration  or transfer  ownership of an
account,  additional  documents  will be  required.  In order to avoid delays in
processing  these requests,  you should call the Fund at  1-888-860-8686  before
making your request to determine what additional documents are required.

REDEMPTION INITIATED BY THE FUND

      If your account balance falls below $500, the Fund may ask you to increase
your  balance.  If your account  balance is still below $500 after 30 days,  the
Fund may close your  account and send you the  proceeds.  This  minimum  balance
requirement does not apply to IRAs and other tax-sheltered  investment accounts.
The right of  redemption by the Fund will not apply if the value of your account
drops below $500 because of market performance.

How to Exchange Shares

      You may exchange all or a portion of your investment from one Marsico Fund
to another. You may exchange shares by mail, by telephone or through the Marsico
Funds Web Site.  You may  establish  on-line  exchange  privileges  by enrolling
through  the Web Site.  For  important  information  on this  Internet  exchange
feature,  see "Fund Transactions  Through the Marsico Funds Web Site" on page 15
of this Prospectus.  Any new account  established  through an exchange will have
the same  privileges  as your  original  account and will also be subject to the
minimum  investment  requirements  described above. Aside from this requirement,
there is a $500  minimum  for  exchanging  shares  under the  program.  There is
currently no fee for an exchange. Exchanges will be executed on the basis of the
relative NAV of the shares exchanged.  An exchange is considered to be a sale of
shares for federal  income tax  purposes on which you may realize a taxable gain
or loss.

      In  addition  to  your  ability  to  exchange  all or a  portion  of  your
investment  between the Marsico  Funds,  you may also  exchange  Fund shares for
shares of the Nations Money Market Fund by sending a written exchange request to
Marsico Funds or, if you have established  telephone exchange  privileges,  call
1-888-860-8686.  Please read that Prospectus  before making an exchange into the
Nations Money Market Fund.  This exchange  privilege is offered as a convenience
to the Fund's  shareholders.  Please note that when  exchanging from the Fund to
the Nations Money Market Fund, you will begin  accruing  income from the Nations
Money Market Fund the day following the exchange.  When exchanging less than all
of the balance  from the Nations  Money Market Fund to the Fund,  your  exchange
proceeds  will exclude  accrued and unpaid  income from the Nations Money Market
Fund through the date of exchange.  When exchanging your entire balance from the
Nations Money Market Fund,  accrued income will  automatically be exchanged into
the Fund when the income is  collected  and paid from the Nations  Money  Market
Fund, at the end of the month.

      MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE EXCHANGE  PRIVILEGE:  The Fund is intended as a
long-term  investment  vehicle  and not to  provide  a means of  speculating  on
short-term market movements. In addition,  excessive trading can hurt the Fund's
performance and shareholders. Therefore, the Fund may terminate, without notice,
the  exchange  privilege  of  any  investor  who  uses  the  exchange  privilege
excessively  (more  than six times each  year).  This  policy  does not apply to
investors who have elected to  participate  in the Automatic  Exchange  Program,
described on page 25.

      The Fund may change or temporarily  suspend the exchange  privilege during
unusual market conditions.

      During  periods  of  significant  economic  or  market  change,  telephone
transactions may be difficult to complete. If you are unable to contact the Fund
by telephone,  you may also mail the requests to the Fund at the address  listed
under  Instructions  for Opening and Adding to an  Account,  page 15.

     ABOUT THE NATIONS  MONEY  MARKET  FUND:  Please be sure to read the Nations
Money Market Fund Prospectus before investing in that Fund.

      The  Nations  Money  Market  Fund  seeks  current  income  to  the  extent
consistent with the  preservation of capital and the maintenance of liquidity by
investing in a diversified  portfolio of high quality  money market  instruments
with remaining maturities of 397 days or less from the date of purchase.

      The Nations Money Market Fund is managed by NationsBanc Advisers, Inc.
and not by the Adviser. Stephens Inc. is the distributor of the Nations Money
Market Fund's shares.

Fund Transactions Through the Marsico Funds Web Site

      In  addition  to  checking  you Fund  account  balance(s)  and  historical
transactions,  you may purchase,  redeem or exchange  shares of the Fund through
the Marsico  Funds Web Site on the World Wide Web  (http://www.marsicofunds.com)
("Web Site"). You may establish on-line  transaction  privileges by enrolling on
the Web Site. You will be required to enter into a user's agreement  through the
Web Site in order to enroll for this privilege.

      Payment  for  purchases  of shares  through  the Web Site may be made only
through an ACH debit of your bank  account.  Redemptions  will be paid by check,
wire or ACH transfer only to the address or bank account of record.  Redemptions
from accounts  established  through the Fund's Web Site will be paid only to the
bank  account  of  record.   Only  bank  accounts  held  at  domestic  financial
institutions  that  are  Automated  Clearing  House  members  can  be  used  for
transactions through the Fund's Web Site.

      The  Fund  imposes  a  limit  of  $50,000  on  purchase   and   redemption
transactions through the Fund's Web Site.  Transactions through the Web Site are
subject to the same minimums as other transaction methods.

      You  should  be  aware  that  the  Internet  is  an  unsecured,  unstable,
unregulated and unpredictable environment.  Your ability to use the Web Site for
transactions  is dependent upon the Internet and equipment,  software,  systems,
data and services provided by various vendors and third parties.  While the Fund
and its service  providers have  established  certain security  procedures,  the
Fund, its distributor and its transfer agent cannot assure you that inquiries or
trading  activity  will  be  completely  secure.   There  may  also  be  delays,
malfunctions  or other  inconveniences  generally  associated  with this medium.
There may also be times when the Web Site is unavailable for Fund  transactions.
Should this happen,  you should  consider  purchasing,  redeeming or  exchanging
shares by another method.  Neither the Fund, its transfer agent,  distributor or
adviser  will be liable  for any such  delays or  malfunctions  or  unauthorized
interception or access to communications.

      In addition,  neither the Fund, its transfer agent, distributor or adviser
will  be  liable  for  any  loss,  liability,  cost  or  expense  for  following
instructions   communicated  through  the  Internet,   including  fraudulent  or
unauthorized instructions.

Retirement Services Plan

      The Fund offers a wide variety of  retirement  plans for  individuals  and
institutions,   including  large  and  small  businesses.   For  information  on
establishing  retirement accounts and for a complete list of retirement accounts
offered,  please  call  1-888-860-8686.   Complete  instructions  about  how  to
establish  and  maintain  your  plan and how to open  accounts  for you and your
employees will be included in the retirement plan kit you receive in the mail.

      The  retirement  plans  currently  available to  shareholders  of the Fund
include:

     TRADITIONAL IRA AND IRA ROLLOVERS:  an individual  retirement account. Your
contribution  may or may not be  deductible  depending  on  your  circumstances.
Rollovers are not  deductible.  Assets can grow tax-free and  distributions  are
taxable as income.

     SPOUSAL IRA: an IRA funded by a working spouse in the name of a non-earning
spouse.

     SEP-IRA: an individual retirement account funded by employer contributions.
Your assets grow tax-free and distributions are taxable as income.

     ROTH IRA:  an IRA with  non-deductible  contributions,  tax-free  growth of
assets, and tax-free distributions for qualified distributions.

     403(b):  an arrangement  that allows employers of charitable or educational
organizations to make voluntary salary reduction contributions to a tax deferred
account.

Automatic Services for Fund Investors
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

      Buying or selling shares automatically is easy with the services described
below.  With each  service,  you  select a schedule  and an  amount,  subject to
certain  restrictions.  You  can  set  up  most  of  these  services  with  your
application or by calling 1-888-860-8686.

FOR INVESTING

AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN                 PAYROLL DIRECT DEPOSIT PLAN

For making automatic investments from     For making automatic investments
a designated bank account.                from your payroll check.

DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT

If the investor does not specify an election,  all income  dividends and capital
gains distributions will be automatically reinvested in shares of the Fund.

FOR INVESTING AND FOR SELLING SHARES

AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE PLAN

For making regular  exchanges from the Fund into another Marsico Fund or between
a Marsico Fund and the Nations Money Market Fund.  This plan is available to IRA
accounts having a minimum balance of $1,000.

FOR SELLING SHARES

For making regular withdrawals from the Fund.

Shareholder Communications

      ACCOUNT STATEMENTS. Every quarter, Marsico investors automatically receive
regular account  statements.  You will also be sent a yearly statement detailing
the tax characteristics of any dividends and distributions you have received.

     CONFIRMATIONS.  Confirmation Statements will be sent after each transaction
that affects your account balance or account registration.

      REGULATORY MAILINGS. Financial reports will be sent at least semiannually.
Annual  reports  will  include  audited  financial  statements.  To reduce  fund
expenses, one copy of each report will be mailed to each taxpayer identification
number even though the investor may have more than one account in the Fund.

      You may  elect to  receive  statements,  confirmations  and/or  regulatory
mailings electronically in lieu of paper copies by electing this feature on your
account  application  or on the Web Site.  For  existing  accounts,  please call
1-800-860-8686 for instructions.

Dividends and Distributions

      The Fund intends to pay distributions on an annual basis. You may elect to
reinvest income  dividends and capital gain  distributions in shares of the Fund
or receive these distributions in cash. Dividends and any distributions from the
Fund are  automatically  reinvested in the Fund at NAV, unless you elect to have
dividends paid in cash.  Reinvested dividends and distributions receive the same
tax treatment as those paid in cash.

      If you are interested in changing your election, you may call the Transfer
Agent at 1-888-860-8686 or send written  notification to The Marsico  Investment
Fund, P.O. Box 3210, Milwaukee, WI 53201-3210.

Taxes

      Fund dividends and  distributions  are taxable to most  investors  (unless
your investment is in an IRA or other tax-advantaged account). Dividends paid by
the Fund out of net ordinary income and distributions of net short-term  capital
gains are taxable to the Fund's shareholders as ordinary income.  Dividends from
net  ordinary  income  may be  eligible  for  the  corporate  dividends-received
deduction.  Distributions  by the Fund of net  capital  gains (the excess of net
long-term capital gains over net short-term  capital losses) to shareholders are
generally taxable to the shareholders at the applicable  long-term capital gains
rate, regardless of how long the shareholder has held shares of the Fund.

      Shareholders that sell,  exchange,  or redeem shares generally will have a
capital gain or loss from the sale,  redemption,  or exchange. The amount of the
gain or loss and the rate of tax will depend mainly upon the amount paid for the
shares, the amount received from the sale, exchange, or redemption, and how long
the shares were held.

      A dividend or capital gains distribution  declared by the Fund in October,
November,  or December,  but paid during  January of the following  year will be
considered to be paid on December 31 of the year it was declared.

      If the value of shares is reduced below a  shareholder's  cost as a result
of a distribution by the Fund, the distribution  will be taxable even though it,
in effect, represents a return of invested capital. Investors considering buying
shares just prior to a dividend or capital gain distribution payment date should
be aware that,  although the price of shares  purchased at that time may reflect
the amount of the forthcoming distribution, those who purchase just prior to the
record date for a distribution may receive a distribution  which will be taxable
to them.

      Shareholders  will be advised  annually  as to the  federal  tax status of
dividends  and capital  gain  distributions  made by the Fund for the  preceding
year.  Distributions  by the Fund  generally  will be subject to state and local
taxes.

      Additional  tax  information  may be found in the  Statement of Additional
Information. Because everyone's tax situation is unique, always consult your tax
professional  about federal,  state, and local tax consequences of an investment
in the Fund.




<PAGE>




THE MARSICO INVESTMENT FUND

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


Offered By This Prospectus:
Marsico 21st Century Fund

Offered By a Separate Prospectus:
Marsico Focus Fund
Marsico Growth & Income Fund

INVESTMENT ADVISER
Marsico Capital Management, LLC

ADMINISTRATOR
Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.

DISTRIBUTOR
Sunstone Distribution Services, LLC

COUNSEL
Dechert Price & Rhoads

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

TRANSFER AND DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT
Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.

CUSTODIAN
State Street Bank and Trust Company


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

THE MARSICO INVESTMENT FUND  SEC file number 811-8397

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


Marsico Focus Fund
Marsico Growth & Income Fund
Marsico 21st Century Fund


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

WHERE TO GO FOR MORE INFORMATION

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


      You will find more information  about the Marsico 21st Century Fund in the
following documents:

ANNUAL AND SEMIANNUAL REPORTS

      Our annual and semiannual reports list the holdings in the Fund,  describe
Fund  performance,  include  financial  statements for the Fund, and discuss the
market  conditions  and  strategies  that  significantly   affected  the  Fund's
performance.

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

      The  Statement of  Additional  Information  contains  additional  and more
detailed  information  about the Fund,  and is  considered  to be a part of this
Prospectus.



<PAGE>




THERE ARE THREE WAYS TO GET A COPY OF THESE DOCUMENTS:

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


1. Call or write for one, and a copy will be sent without charge.

      THE MARSICO INVESTMENT FUND
      P.O. BOX 3210
      MILWAUKEE, WI 53201-3210
      1-888-860-8686
      www.marsicofunds.com

2.    Call or  write to the  Public  Reference  Section  of the  Securities  and
      Exchange  Commission  ("SEC")  and ask  them to mail  you a copy.  The SEC
      charges a fee for this service.  You can also drop by the Public Reference
      Section and copy the documents while you are there.  Information about the
      Public Reference Section may be obtained by calling the number below.

      PUBLIC REFERENCE SECTION OF THE SEC
      WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549-6009
      1-800-SEC-0330

3.    Go to the  SEC's  website  (www.sec.gov)  and  download  a free  text-only
      version.




<PAGE>



                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                                JANUARY __, 2000



      This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus and should be
read in conjunction  with the prospectus for The Marsico  Investment  Fund dated
January __, 2000,  as amended from time to time, a copy of which may be obtained
without charge by calling 1-888-860-8686 or writing to Sunstone Financial Group,
Inc., P.O. Box 3210, Milwaukee, WI 53201-3210.


                              TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                                            PAGE


INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES...........................................1


TYPES OF SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES................................4


INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND OTHER SERVICES......................................25


DISTRIBUTION PLAN...........................................................27


PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE........................................28


PERFORMANCE INFORMATION.....................................................29


AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN.................................................30


TAX STATUS..................................................................31


NET ASSET VALUE.............................................................36


CAPITAL STRUCTURE...........................................................37


HOW TO BUY AND SELL SHARES..................................................38


HOW TO EXCHANGE.............................................................40




                                  INTRODUCTION

                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

The  Marsico  Focus Fund  ("Focus  Fund") is a  non-diversified  fund that seeks
long-term growth of capital.

The Marsico Growth & Income Fund ("Growth & Income Fund") is a diversified  fund
that seeks  long-term  capital  growth with a limited  emphasis  on income.  The
Growth & Income Fund  places a stronger  emphasis  on the growth  objective  but
invests  at least  25% of its  total  assets  in  securities  that  have  income
potential.

The Marsico 21st Century Fund ("21st Century  Fund") is a diversified  fund that
seeks long-term growth of capital.

FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

As indicated  in the  Prospectus,  the Funds are subject to certain  fundamental
policies and restrictions that may not be changed without shareholder  approval.
Shareholder  approval  means  approval by the lesser of (i) more than 50% of the
outstanding  voting  securities  of the Trust (or a particular  Fund if a matter
affects just that Fund), or (ii) 67% or more of the voting securities present at
a meeting if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding  voting  securities
of the Trust (or a  particular  Fund) are  present  or  represented  by proxy As
fundamental policies, each Fund may not:

      (1) Invest 25% or more of the value of their  respective  total  assets in
any particular industry (other than U.S. government securities).

      (2) Invest  directly in real  estate;  however,  the Funds may own debt or
equity securities issued by companies engaged in those businesses.

      (3) Purchase or sell physical  commodities  other than foreign  currencies
unless  acquired as a result of ownership  of  securities  (but this  limitation
shall not prevent the Funds from purchasing or selling options,  futures,  swaps
and forward  contracts or from  investing  in  securities  or other  instruments
backed by physical commodities).

      (4) Lend any  security  or make any other loan if, as a result,  more than
25% of a Fund's total assets would be lent to other parties (but this limitation
does not apply to purchases of commercial  paper,  debt securities or repurchase
agreements).

      (5) Act as an  underwriter of securities  issued by others,  except to the
extent  that  a Fund  may be  deemed  an  underwriter  in  connection  with  the
disposition of portfolio securities of such Fund.

      (6) Issue  senior  securities,  except as permitted  under the  Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act").

      (7) Borrow money,  except that the Funds may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not exceeding
33 1/3% of the value of their  respective  total  assets  (including  the amount
borrowed) less liabilities (other than borrowings). If borrowings exceed 33 1/3%
of the value of a Fund's total assets by reason of a decline in net assets,  the
Fund will reduce its  borrowings  within  three days to the extent  necessary to
comply with the 33 1/3%  limitation.  This  policy  shall not  prohibit  reverse
repurchase  agreements,  deposits of assets to margin or guarantee  positions in
futures,  options,  swaps or forward contracts,  or the segregation of assets in
connection with such contracts.  Neither Fund will purchase securities while its
borrowings exceed 5% of that Fund's total assets.

      In addition to the foregoing,  as a fundamental policy, neither the Growth
& Income Fund nor the 21st Century Fund may own more than 10% of the outstanding
voting securities of any one issuer and, as to seventy-five percent (75%) of the
value of its total assets,  purchase the  securities  of any one issuer  (except
cash  items and  "government  securities  " as defined  under the 1940 Act),  if
immediately after and as a result of such purchase, the value of the holdings of
the Fund in the  securities of such issuer exceeds 5% of the value of the Fund's
total assets.

      As a fundamental  policy,  the Focus Fund may not own more than 10% of the
outstanding  voting  securities of any one issuer and, as to fifty percent (50%)
of the value of its total  assets,  purchase  the  securities  of any one issuer
(except cash items and  "government  securities" as defined under the 1940 Act),
if immediately after and as a result of such purchase, the value of the holdings
of the Focus Fund in the  securities  of such issuer  exceeds 5% of the value of
the Focus Fund's total assets.

ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

      The  Trustees  have adopted  additional  investment  restrictions  for the
Funds. These restrictions are operating policies of the Funds and may be changed
by  the  Trustees  without  shareholder  approval.   The  additional  investment
restrictions adopted by the Trustees to date include the following:

      (a)   A  Fund will not (i) enter into any  futures  contracts  and related
options  for  purposes  other  than bona fide  hedging  transactions  within the
meaning of Commodity  Futures  Trading  Commission  ("CFTC")  regulations if the
aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish positions in futures
contracts  and related  options that do not fall within the  definition  of bona
fide  hedging  transactions  will exceed 5% of the fair market value of a Fund's
net assets,  after taking into account  unrealized profits and unrealized losses
on any such  contracts  it has  entered  into;  and (ii) enter into any  futures
contracts if the aggregate amount of such Fund's  commitments  under outstanding
futures contracts positions would exceed the market value of its total assets.

      (b)   The Funds do not currently intend to sell securities  short,  unless
they own or have the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities  sold short without the payment of any  additional  consideration
therefor, and provided that transactions in futures,  options, swaps and forward
contracts are not deemed to constitute selling securities short.

      (c)   The Funds do not currently intend to purchase  securities on margin,
except that the Funds may obtain such  short-term  credits as are  necessary for
the  clearance  of  transactions,  and provided  that margin  payments and other
deposits in connection with transactions in futures,  options, swaps and forward
contracts shall not be deemed to constitute purchasing securities on margin.

      (d)   A  Fund may not mortgage or pledge any  securities  owned or held by
such Fund in amounts that exceed, in the aggregate, 15% of that Fund's net asset
value,  provided  that  this  limitation  does not apply to  reverse  repurchase
agreements,  deposits  of assets to margin,  guaranteed  positions  in  futures,
options, swaps or forward contracts,  or the segregation of assets in connection
with such contracts.

      (e)   The  Funds do not  currently  intend to purchase any  securities  or
enter  into a  repurchase  agreement  if,  as a  result,  more than 15% of their
respective  net assets would be invested in repurchase  agreements not entitling
the  holder to  payment  of  principal  and  interest  within  seven days and in
securities  that are illiquid by virtue of legal or contractual  restrictions on
resale or the absence of a readily available market. The Trustees, or the Funds'
investment adviser acting pursuant to authority  delegated by the Trustees,  may
determine that a readily  available  market exists for  securities  eligible for
resale  pursuant  to Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as  amended,
("Rule 144A  Securities"),  or any  successor  to such rule,  and  Section  4(2)
commercial  paper.  Accordingly,  such  securities  may  not be  subject  to the
foregoing limitation.

      (f)   The  Funds may not invest in companies for the purpose of exercising
control of management.  For purposes of the Funds' restriction on investing in a
particular industry,  the Funds will rely primarily on industry  classifications
as published by Bloomberg L.P. To the extent that Bloomberg L.P. classifications
are so broad that the primary  economic  characteristics  in a single  class are
materially different,  the Funds may further classify issuers in accordance with
industry  classifications as published by the Securities and Exchange Commission
("SEC").

      Except as otherwise  noted herein and in the Funds'  prospectus,  a Fund's
investment  objectives  and  policies  may be changed by a vote of the  Trustees
without a vote of shareholders.

                TYPES OF SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES

ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS

      Each Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in  illiquid  securities,
for which there is a limited  trading  market and for which a low trading volume
of a particular  security may result in abrupt and erratic  price  movements.  A
Fund may be  unable  to  dispose  of its  holdings  in  illiquid  securities  at
acceptable  prices  and may have to  dispose of such  securities  over  extended
periods of time. Marsico Capital will take reasonable steps to bring a Fund into
compliance  with this policy if the level of illiquid  investments  exceeds 15%.
Each  Fund may  invest  in (i)  securities  that are sold in  private  placement
transactions  between  their issuers and their  purchasers  and that are neither
listed on an exchange nor traded over-the-counter,  and (ii) securities that are
sold in transactions  between  qualified  institutional  buyers pursuant to Rule
144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.  Such  securities are subject
to contractual or legal restrictions on subsequent transfer.  As a result of the
absence of a public trading market,  such  restricted  securities may in turn be
less  liquid  and more  difficult  to value  than  publicly  traded  securities.
Although these  securities may be resold in privately  negotiated  transactions,
the prices realized from the sales could, due to illiquidity, be less than those
originally  paid by a Fund or less than their fair value and in some  instances,
it may be  difficult  to  locate  any  purchaser.  In  addition,  issuers  whose
securities  are not  publicly  traded may not be subject to the  disclosure  and
other  investor  protection   requirements  that  may  be  applicable  if  their
securities were publicly traded. If any privately placed or Rule 144A securities
held by a Fund are required to be registered under the securities laws of one or
more  jurisdictions  before  being  resold,  a Fund may be  required to bear the
expenses of  registration.  Securities which are freely tradable under Rule 144A
may be treated as liquid if the Trustees of the Fund are satisfied that there is
sufficient  trading activity and reliable price  information.  Investing in Rule
144A securities  could have the effect of increasing the level of illiquidity of
the Fund's portfolio to the extent that qualified  institutional  buyers become,
for a time, uninterested in purchasing such 144A securities.

      See Appendix A for risks associated with certain other investments.

      The Trustees have  authorized  Marsico Capital  Management,  LLC ("Marsico
Capital")  to make  liquidity  determinations  with  respect to its  securities,
including  Rule 144A  Securities  and  commercial  paper.  Under the  guidelines
established  by the  Trustees,  Marsico  Capital  will  consider  the  following
factors:  1) the frequency of trades and quoted prices for the  obligation;  (2)
the number of dealers willing to purchase or sell the security and the number of
other potential purchasers; 3) the willingness of dealers to undertake to make a
market in the  security;  and 4) the  nature of the  security  and the nature of
marketplace  trades,  including the time needed to dispose of the security,  the
method of soliciting  offers and the  mechanics of the transfer.  In the case of
commercial paper, Marsico Capital will also consider whether the paper is traded
flat or in default as to principal  and interest and any ratings of the paper by
a nationally  recognized  statistical rating organization  ("NRSRO").  A foreign
security that may be freely  traded on or through the  facilities of an offshore
exchange or other established  offshore  securities market is not deemed to be a
restricted security subject to these procedures.

ZERO COUPON, PAY-IN-KIND AND STEP COUPON SECURITIES

      Each Fund may  invest up to 5% of its assets in zero  coupon,  pay-in-kind
and step  coupon  securities.  Zero  coupon  bonds are  issued  and  traded at a
discount  from their face value.  They do not entitle the holder to any periodic
payment of interest  prior to  maturity.  Step coupon  bonds trade at a discount
from their face value and pay  coupon  interest.  The coupon  rate is low for an
initial  period and then  increases  to a higher  coupon  rate  thereafter.  The
discount from the face amount or par value depends on the time  remaining  until
cash payments begin,  prevailing  interest rates,  liquidity of the security and
the perceived credit quality of the issuer.  Pay-in-kind bonds normally give the
issuer an option to pay cash at a coupon  payment date or give the holder of the
security a similar  bond with the same coupon rate and a face value equal to the
amount of the coupon payment that would have been made.

      Current federal income tax law requires holders of zero coupon  securities
and step coupon  securities to report the portion of the original issue discount
on such  securities  that accrues during a given year as interest  income,  even
though the holders  receive no cash  payments of  interest  during the year.  In
order to qualify as a "regulated investment company " under the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 and the regulations thereunder (the "Code"), a Fund must distribute
its investment  company  taxable  income,  including the original issue discount
accrued on zero  coupon or step  coupon  bonds.  BECAUSE A FUND WILL NOT RECEIVE
CASH PAYMENTS ON A CURRENT BASIS IN RESPECT OF ACCRUED  ORIGINAL-ISSUE  DISCOUNT
PAYMENTS,  IN SOME YEARS THAT FUND MAY HAVE TO  DISTRIBUTE  CASH  OBTAINED  FROM
OTHER SOURCES IN ORDER TO SATISFY THE DISTRIBUTION  REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE CODE.
A Fund might obtain such cash from selling other portfolio  holdings which might
cause  that Fund to incur  capital  gains or  losses on the sale.  Additionally,
these  actions are likely to reduce the assets to which Fund  expenses  could be
allocated and to reduce the rate of return for that Fund. In some circumstances,
such sales might be necessary in order to satisfy cash distribution requirements
even though investment  considerations might otherwise make it undesirable for a
Fund to sell the securities at the time.

      Generally,  the market prices of zero coupon,  step coupon and pay-in-kind
securities  are more volatile  than the prices of  securities  that pay interest
periodically  and in cash and are likely to respond to changes in interest rates
to a  greater  degree  than  other  types  of  debt  securities  having  similar
maturities and credit quality.

PASS-THROUGH SECURITIES

      The Growth & Income Fund may invest up to 25%,  and the Focus Fund and the
21st  Century  Fund may  invest  up to 5% of their  respective  total  assets in
various types of pass-through securities, such as mortgage-backed securities and
asset-backed  securities.  A pass-through  security is a share or certificate of
interest  in a  pool  of  debt  obligations  that  have  been  repackaged  by an
intermediary,  such as a bank or broker-dealer.  The purchaser of a pass-through
security  receives an undivided  interest in the underlying  pool of securities.
The issuers of the underlying securities make interest and principal payments to
the intermediary which are passed through to purchasers,  such as the Funds. The
most common type of pass- through  securities  are  mortgage-backed  securities.
Government   National   Mortgage   Association    ("GNMA")    Certificates   are
mortgage-backed  securities  that  evidence an  undivided  interest in a pool of
mortgage loans.  GNMA  Certificates  differ from bonds in that principal is paid
back monthly by the borrowers  over the term of the loan rather than returned in
a lump sum at maturity.  A Fund will generally purchase "modified  pass-through"
GNMA  Certificates,  which entitle the holder to receive a share of all interest
and principal  payments paid and owned on the mortgage pool, net of fees paid to
the  "issuer " and GNMA,  regardless  of whether or not the  mortgagor  actually
makes the  payment.  GNMA  Certificates  are backed as to the timely  payment of
principal  and  interest  by the full faith and  Freddie Mac issues two types of
mortgage pass-through  securities:  mortgage participation  certificates ("PCs")
and guaranteed mortgage certificates ("GMCs"). PCs resemble GNMA Certificates in
that each PC represents a pro rata share of all interest and principal  payments
made and owned on the underlying pool. Freddie Mac guarantees timely payments of
interest on PCs and the full return of principal. GMCs also represent a pro rata
interest  in a pool  of  mortgages.  However,  these  instruments  pay  interest
semiannually  and return principal once a year in guaranteed  minimum  payments.
This type of security is guaranteed  by FHLMC as to timely  payment of principal
and interest but it is not  guaranteed  by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
government.

      Fannie Mae issues guaranteed mortgage  pass-through  certificates ("Fannie
Mae Certificates").  Fannie Mae Certificates  resemble GNMA Certificates in that
each Fannie Mae  Certificate  represents  a pro rata share of all  interest  and
principal  payments made and owned on the underlying pool. This type of security
is guaranteed  by Fannie Mae as to timely  payment of principal and interest but
it is not guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.

      Except for GMCs, each of the mortgage-backed securities described above is
characterized by monthly payments to the holder, reflecting the monthly payments
made by the borrowers who received the underlying  mortgage loans.  The payments
to the security holders (such as the Funds), like the payments on the underlying
loans,  represent both principal and interest.  Although the underlying mortgage
loans are for a specified  period of time, such as 20 or 30 years, the borrowers
can,  and  typically  do,  pay them  off  sooner.  Thus,  the  security  holders
frequently receive prepayments of principal in addition to the principal that is
part  of the  regular  monthly  payments.  A  portfolio  manager  will  consider
estimated  prepayment  rates in calculating the average  weighted  maturity of a
Fund.  A borrower  is more likely to prepay a mortgage  that bears a  relatively
high rate of  interest.  This means that in times of declining  interest  rates,
higher yielding mortgage-backed  securities held by a Fund might be converted to
cash and that a Fund would be forced to accept  lower  interest  rates when that
cash is used to purchase additional securities in the mortgage-backed securities
sector or in other investment  sectors.  Additionally,  prepayments  during such
periods will limit a Fund's  ability to participate in as large a market gain as
may be experienced with a comparable security not subject to prepayment.

      Asset-backed securities represent interests in pools of consumer loans and
are backed by paper or accounts  receivables  originated  by banks,  credit card
companies  or other  providers of credit.  Generally,  the  originating  bank or
credit  provider is neither the obligor nor the guarantor of the  security,  and
interest and principal payments ultimately depend upon payment of the underlying
loans by individuals.

OTHER INCOME-PRODUCING SECURITIES

      Other types of income  producing  securities  that the Funds may  purchase
include, but are not limited to, the following types of securities:

      VARIABLE AND FLOATING  RATE  OBLIGATIONS.  These types of  securities  are
relatively long-term instruments that often carry demand features permitting the
holder to demand  payment of  principal  at any time or at  specified  intervals
prior to maturity.

      STANDBY COMMITMENTS. These instruments, which are similar to a put, give a
Fund the option to obligate a broker,  dealer or bank to  repurchase  a security
held by that Fund at a specified price.

      TENDER OPTION BONDS.  Tender option bonds are relatively  long-term  bonds
that are coupled with the  agreement of a third party (such as a broker,  dealer
or bank) to grant the  holders  of such  securities  the  option  to tender  the
securities to the institution at periodic intervals.

      INVERSE  FLOATERS.  Inverse floaters are debt  instruments  whose interest
bears an inverse  relationship  to the interest  rate on another  security.  The
Funds will not  invest  more than 5% of their  respective  net assets in inverse
floaters.

      The Funds will  purchase  standby  commitments,  tender  option  bonds and
instruments  with demand  features  primarily for the purpose of increasing  the
liquidity of their portfolios.

FUTURES, OPTIONS AND OTHER DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS

      FUTURES  CONTRACTS.  To the extent described in the Prospectus,  each Fund
may enter  into  contracts  for the  purchase  or sale for  future  delivery  of
fixed-income  securities,  foreign  currencies  or contracts  based on financial
indices,  including indices of U.S.  government  securities,  foreign government
securities, equity or fixed-income securities. U.S. futures contracts are traded
on exchanges which have been designated  "contract markets" by the CFTC and must
be executed through a futures  commission  merchant ("FCM"),  or brokerage firm,
which is a member  of the  relevant  contract  market.  Through  their  clearing
corporations,  the exchanges  guarantee  performance of the contracts as between
the clearing members of the exchange.

      The buyer or seller of a futures  contract  is not  required to deliver or
pay for the underlying instrument unless the contract is held until the delivery
date.  However,  both the buyer and seller  are  required  to  deposit  "initial
margin" for the benefit of the FCM when the  contract is entered  into.  Initial
margin deposits are equal to a percentage of the contract's value, as set by the
exchange  on which the  contract  is traded,  and may be  maintained  in cash or
certain other liquid assets by the Funds'  custodian for the benefit of the FCM.
Initial margin payments are similar to good faith deposits or performance bonds.
Unlike margin  extended by a securities  broker,  initial margin payments do not
constitute purchasing securities on margin for purposes of the Fund's investment
limitations.  If the value of either party's position declines,  that party will
be required to make additional  "variation  margin " payments for the benefit of
the FCM to settle  the  change in value on a daily  basis.  The party that has a
gain may be entitled to receive all or a portion of this amount. In the event of
the  bankruptcy of the FCM that holds margin on behalf of a Fund,  that Fund may
be  entitled  to return of margin  owed to such Fund only in  proportion  to the
amount  received by the FCM's other  customers.  Marsico Capital will attempt to
minimize the risk by careful monitoring of the creditworthiness of the FCMs with
which the Funds do business and by  depositing  margin  payments in a segregated
account with the Funds' custodian.

      The Funds intend to comply with  guidelines of  eligibility  for exclusion
from the definition of the term  "commodity  pool operator"  adopted by the CFTC
and the National  Futures  Association,  which  regulate  trading in the futures
markets.  The Funds will use futures contracts and related options primarily for
bona fide hedging purposes within the meaning of CFTC regulations. To the extent
that the Funds hold positions in futures  contracts and related  options that do
not fall within the definition of bona fide hedging transactions,  the aggregate
initial margin and premiums required to establish such positions will not exceed
5% of the fair market  value of a Fund's net assets,  after  taking into account
unrealized  profits and  unrealized  losses on any such contracts it has entered
into.

      Although  a Fund  will  segregate  cash and  liquid  assets  in an  amount
sufficient to cover its open futures obligations, the segregated assets would be
available to that Fund immediately upon closing out the futures position,  while
settlement of securities transactions could take several days. However,  because
a Fund's  cash  that may  otherwise  be  invested  would be held  uninvested  or
invested in other liquid  assets so long as the futures  position  remains open,
such  Fund's  return  could  be  diminished  due to the  opportunity  losses  of
foregoing other potential investments.

      A Fund's primary purpose in entering into futures  contracts is to protect
that Fund from fluctuations in the value of securities or interest rates without
actually buying or selling the underlying debt or equity security.  For example,
if the Fund  anticipates  an increase in the price of stocks,  and it intends to
purchase stocks at a later time,  that Fund could enter into a futures  contract
to purchase a stock index as a temporary  substitute for stock purchases.  If an
increase in the market occurs that  influences  the stock index as  anticipated,
the value of the futures  contracts  will increase,  thereby  serving as a hedge
against  that Fund not  participating  in a market  advance.  This  technique is
sometimes  known as an  anticipatory  hedge.  To the extent a Fund  enters  into
futures  contracts for this purpose,  the segregated  assets maintained to cover
such Fund's  obligations  with respect to the futures  contracts will consist of
other liquid  assets from its  portfolio  in an amount  equal to the  difference
between the contract price and the aggregate  value of the initial and variation
margin payments made by that Fund with respect to the futures contracts.

      Conversely,  if a Fund holds  stocks and seeks to  protect  itself  from a
decrease in stock  prices,  the Fund might sell stock index  futures  contracts,
thereby  hoping to offset the  potential  decline in the value of its  portfolio
securities  by a  corresponding  increase in the value of the  futures  contract
position.  A Fund could  protect  against a decline  in stock  prices by selling
portfolio  securities and investing in money market instruments,  but the use of
futures contracts enables it to maintain a defensive  position without having to
sell portfolio securities.

      If a Fund owns Treasury bonds and the portfolio  manager expects  interest
rates to increase,  that Fund may take a short position in interest rate futures
contracts.  Taking such a position  would have much the same effect as that Fund
selling  Treasury  bonds  in  its  portfolio.  If  interest  rates  increase  as
anticipated,  the value of the Treasury  bonds would  decline,  but the value of
that Fund's interest rate futures  contract would increase,  thereby keeping the
net asset value of that Fund from  declining  as much as it may have  otherwise.
If, on the other hand, a portfolio  manager  expects  interest rates to decline,
that  Fund may take a long  position  in  interest  rate  futures  contracts  in
anticipation of later closing out the futures position and purchasing the bonds.
Although a Fund can accomplish  similar  results by buying  securities with long
maturities  and  selling  securities  with short  maturities,  given the greater
liquidity  of the  futures  market than the cash  market,  it may be possible to
accomplish  the same  result  more  easily  and more  quickly  by using  futures
contracts as an investment tool to reduce risk.

      The ordinary spreads between prices in the cash and futures  markets,  due
to  differences  in the nature of those  markets,  are  subject to  distortions.
First,  all participants in the futures market are subject to initial margin and
variation margin  requirements.  Rather than meeting additional variation margin
requirements,  investors  may close out  futures  contracts  through  offsetting
transactions which could distort the normal price relationship  between the cash
and futures  markets.  Second,  the liquidity of the futures  market  depends on
participants entering into offsetting  transactions rather than making or taking
delivery  of the  instrument  underlying  a  futures  contract.  To  the  extent
participants  decide to make or take  delivery,  liquidity in the futures market
could be reduced and prices in the futures  market  distorted.  Third,  from the
point of view of  speculators,  the margin deposit  requirements  in the futures
market are less  onerous  than margin  requirements  in the  securities  market.
Therefore,  increased  participation  by  speculators  in the futures market may
cause  temporary  price  distortions.  Due to the  possibility  of the foregoing
distortions, a correct forecast of general price trends by the portfolio manager
still may not result in a successful use of futures.

      Futures  contracts  entail  risks.  Although the Funds believe that use of
such contracts will benefit the Funds,  a Fund's  overall  performance  could be
adversely  affected by entering into such  contracts if the portfolio  manager's
investment judgment proves incorrect.  For example, if a Fund has hedged against
the effects of a possible decrease in prices of securities held in its portfolio
and prices increase  instead,  that Fund will lose part or all of the benefit of
the increased  value of these  securities  because of  offsetting  losses in its
futures positions.  In addition, if a Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to
sell securities from its portfolio to meet daily variation margin  requirements.
Those  sales may be, but will not  necessarily  be, at  increased  prices  which
reflect  the  rising  market  and  may  occur  at a  time  when  the  sales  are
disadvantageous to such Fund.

      The prices of futures  contracts  depend  primarily  on the value of their
underlying  instruments.  Because there are a limited number of types of futures
contracts, it is possible that the standardized futures contracts available to a
Fund will not match exactly such Fund's current or potential investments. A Fund
may  buy and  sell  futures  contracts  based  on  underlying  instruments  with
different characteristics from the securities in which it typically invests--for
example, by hedging investments in portfolio  securities with a futures contract
based on a broad  index of  securities--which  involves a risk that the  futures
position  will not  correlate  precisely  with the  performance  of such  Fund's
investments.

      Futures  prices  can also  diverge  from the  prices  of their  underlying
instruments,  even if the underlying instruments closely correlate with a Fund's
investments.  Futures  prices  are  affected  by  factors  such as  current  and
anticipated  short-term interest rates,  changes in volatility of the underlying
instruments  and the time  remaining  until  expiration of the  contract.  Those
factors may affect securities prices differently from futures prices.  Imperfect
correlations  between a Fund's  investments  and its futures  positions also may
result from differing levels of demand in the futures markets and the securities
markets,  from structural  differences in how futures and securities are traded,
and from imposition of daily price fluctuation limits for futures  contracts.  A
Fund may buy or sell futures  contracts  with a greater or lesser value than the
securities it wishes to hedge or is  considering  purchasing in order to attempt
to  compensate  for  differences  in historical  volatility  between the futures
contract and the  securities,  although this may not be successful in all cases.
If price changes in a Fund's futures  positions are poorly  correlated  with its
other  investments,  its futures  positions may fail to produce desired gains or
result  in  losses  that  are not  offset  by the  gains  in that  Fund's  other
investments.

      Because futures contracts are generally settled within a day from the date
they are closed out,  compared  with a settlement  period of three days for some
types of securities,  the futures markets can provide superior  liquidity to the
securities markets. Nevertheless,  there is no assurance that a liquid secondary
market will exist for any particular futures contract at any particular time. In
addition,  futures  exchanges may establish daily price  fluctuation  limits for
futures  contracts  and may halt trading if a  contract's  price moves upward or
downward  more than the limit in a given day. On volatile  trading days when the
price  fluctuation  limit is reached,  it may be impossible  for a Fund to enter
into new positions or close out existing positions.  If the secondary market for
a  futures  contract  is not  liquid  because  of price  fluctuation  limits  or
otherwise,  a Fund may not be able to  promptly  liquidate  unfavorable  futures
positions  and  potentially  could be  required  to  continue  to hold a futures
position  until the  delivery  date,  regardless  of changes in its value.  As a
result,  such Fund's access to other assets held to cover its futures  positions
also could be impaired.

      OPTIONS  ON  FUTURES  CONTRACTS.  The Funds may buy and write put and call
options on futures contracts.  An option on a future gives a Fund the right (but
not the obligation) to buy or sell a futures contract at a specified price on or
before a specified date. The purchase of a call option on a futures  contract is
similar in some  respects  to the  purchase  of a call  option on an  individual
security. Depending on the pricing of the option compared to either the price of
the  futures  contract  upon  which it is based or the  price of the  underlying
instrument,  ownership of the option may or may not be less risky than ownership
of the futures  contract or the underlying  instrument.  As with the purchase of
futures contracts, when a Fund is not fully invested it may buy a call option on
a futures contract to hedge against a market advance.

      The writing of a call option on a futures  contract  constitutes a partial
hedge  against  declining  prices of the security or foreign  currency  which is
deliverable  under, or of the index  comprising,  the futures  contract.  If the
futures'  price at the  expiration of the option is below the exercise  price, a
Fund will retain the full amount of the option  premium which provides a partial
hedge  against any  decline  that may have  occurred  in that  Fund's  portfolio
holdings.  The  writing  of a put  option on a futures  contract  constitutes  a
partial  hedge  against  increasing  prices of the security or foreign  currency
which is deliverable under, or of the index comprising, the futures contract. If
the  futures'  price at  expiration  of the option is higher  than the  exercise
price, a Fund will retain the full amount of the option premium which provides a
partial hedge against any increase in the price of securities which that Fund is
considering buying If a call or put option a Fund has written is exercised, such
Fund will incur a loss  which  will be  reduced by the amount of the  premium it
received. Depending on the degree of correlation between the change in the value
of its portfolio securities and changes in the value of the futures positions, a
Fund's losses from existing  options on futures may to some extent be reduced or
increased by changes in the value of portfolio securities.

      The  purchase  of a put  option on a futures  contract  is similar in some
respects to the purchase of protective put options on portfolio securities.  For
example,  a Fund  may buy a put  option  on a  futures  contract  to  hedge  its
portfolio  against  the risk of falling  prices or rising  interest  rates.  The
amount of risk a Fund  assumes  when it buys an option on a futures  contract is
the premium paid for the option plus related  transaction  costs. In addition to
the correlation  risks discussed  above,  the purchase of an option also entails
the risk that changes in the value of the underlying  futures  contract will not
be fully reflected in the value of the options bought.

      FORWARD CONTRACTS.  A forward contract is an agreement between two parties
in which one party is obligated to deliver a stated  amount of a stated asset at
a  specified  time in the  future  and the  other  party is  obligated  to pay a
specified  amount  for the assets at the time of  delivery.  The Funds may enter
into forward  contracts to purchase and sell  government  securities,  equity or
income securities, foreign currencies or other financial instruments.  Forward -
contracts generally are traded in an interbank market conducted directly between
traders  (usually large commercial  banks) and their  customers.  Unlike futures
contracts,   which  are  standardized   contracts,   forward  contracts  can  be
specifically  drawn to meet the needs of the parties  that enter into them.  The
parties to a forward  contract  may agree to offset or  terminate  the  contract
before its  maturity,  or may hold the  contract to maturity  and  complete  the
contemplated exchange.

      The following  discussion  summarizes the Fund's principal uses of forward
foreign currency exchange contracts ("forward currency  contracts").  A Fund may
enter into forward  currency  contracts with stated contract values of up to the
value of that Fund's assets. A forward currency contract is an obligation to buy
or sell an amount of a specified  currency  for an agreed price (which may be in
U.S. dollars or a foreign currency). A Fund will exchange foreign currencies for
U.S.  dollars and for other foreign  currencies in the normal course of business
and may buy and sell currencies  through forward currency  contracts in order to
fix a price for securities it has agreed to buy or sell ("transaction hedge"). A
Fund  also may hedge  some or all of its  investments  denominated  in a foreign
currency or exposed to foreign  currency  fluctuations  against a decline in the
value of that  currency  relative to the U.S.  dollar by entering  into  forward
currency contracts to sell an amount of that currency (or a proxy currency whose
performance is expected to replicate or exceed the  performance of that currency
relative  to the  U.S.  dollar)  approximating  the  value of some or all of its
portfolio  securities  denominated  in that  currency  ("position  hedge") or by
participating  in options or futures  contracts with respect to the currency.  A
Fund also may enter into a forward currency  contract with respect to a currency
where the Fund is considering the purchase or sale of investments denominated in
that currency but has not yet selected the specific  investments  ("anticipatory
hedge"). In any of these circumstances a Fund may,  alternatively,  enter into a
forward currency  contract to purchase or sell one foreign currency for a second
currency that is expected to perform more favorably  relative to the U.S. dollar
if the portfolio  manager  believes there is a reasonable  degree of correlation
between movements in the two currencies ("cross-hedge").  These types of hedging
minimize the effect of currency appreciation as well as depreciation, but do not
eliminate  fluctuations in the underlying U.S.  dollar  equivalent  value of the
proceeds  of or  rates  of  return  on a  Fund's  foreign  currency  denominated
portfolio  securities.  The  matching  of the  increase  in value  of a  forward
contract  and the  decline in the U.S.  dollar  equivalent  value of the foreign
currency  denominated  asset that is the subject of the hedge generally will not
be precise.  Shifting a Fund's  currency  exposure from one foreign  currency to
another removes that Fund's opportunity to profit from increases in the value of
the original  currency  and involves a risk of increased  losses to such Fund if
its portfolio manager's projection of future exchange rates is inaccurate. Proxy
hedges and  cross-hedges may result in losses if the currency used to hedge does
not  perform   similarly  to  the  currency  in  which  hedged   securities  are
denominated.  Unforeseen changes in currency prices may result in poorer overall
performance for a Fund than if it had not entered into such contracts.

      The Funds will cover outstanding forward currency contracts by maintaining
liquid  portfolio  securities  denominated  in or whose  value  is tied to,  the
currency  underlying the forward  contract or the currency being hedged.  To the
extent  that a Fund is not able to cover its  forward  currency  positions  with
underlying  portfolio  securities,  the Funds'  custodian will segregate cash or
other liquid assets having a value equal to the aggregate  amount of such Fund's
commitments  under  forward  contracts  entered  into with  respect to  position
hedges,  cross-hedges  and anticipatory  hedges.  If the value of the securities
used to cover a position or the value of segregated assets declines, a Fund will
find alternative cover or segregate  additional cash or liquid assets on a daily
basis so that the value of the  covered and  segregated  assets will be equal to
the amount of such Fund's  commitments  with  respect to such  contracts.  As an
alternative to segregating  assets, a Fund may buy call options  permitting such
Fund to buy the  amount of  foreign  currency  being  hedged  by a forward  sale
contract  or a Fund may buy put  options  permitting  it to sell the  amount  of
foreign currency subject to a forward buy contract.

      While forward contracts are not currently  regulated by the CFTC, the CFTC
may in the future assert authority to regulate forward contracts. In such event,
the Funds' ability to utilize forward contracts may be restricted.  In addition,
a Fund may not  always be able to enter into  forward  contracts  at  attractive
prices and may be limited in its  ability to use these  contracts  to hedge Fund
assets.

      OPTIONS  ON  FOREIGN  CURRENCIES.  The Funds may buy and write  options on
foreign  currencies  in a manner  similar  to that in which  futures  or forward
contracts on foreign currencies will be utilized.  For example, a decline in the
U.S.  dollar  value of a foreign  currency  in which  portfolio  securities  are
denominated will reduce the U.S. dollar value of such securities,  even if their
value in the foreign currency remains constant. In order to protect against such
diminutions in the value of portfolio securities,  a Fund may buy put options on
the foreign currency. If the value of the currency declines, such Fund will have
the right to sell such  currency  for a fixed  amount in U.S.  dollars,  thereby
offsetting, in whole or in part, the adverse effect on its portfolio.

      Conversely,  when a rise in the U.S.  dollar  value of a currency in which
securities to be acquired are denominated is projected,  thereby  increasing the
cost of such securities, a Fund may buy call options on the foreign currency.

      The purchase of such options could offset, at least partially, the effects
of the adverse  movements  in exchange  rates.  As in the case of other types of
options,  however,  the  benefit to a Fund from  purchases  of foreign  currency
options  will be reduced by the amount of the premium  and  related  transaction
costs. In addition,  if currency  exchange rates do not move in the direction or
to the extent  desired,  a Fund could sustain losses on  transactions in foreign
currency  options that would require such Fund to forego a portion or all of the
benefits of advantageous changes in those rates.

      The Funds may also write options on foreign  currencies.  For example,  to
hedge against a potential  decline in the U.S. dollar value of foreign  currency
denominated  securities due to adverse  fluctuations  in exchange  rates, a Fund
could,  instead of purchasing a put option,  write a call option on the relevant
currency.  If the expected  decline  occurs,  the option will most likely not be
exercised and the decline in value of portfolio securities will be offset by the
amount of the premium received.

      Similarly,  instead  of  purchasing  a call  option  to  hedge  against  a
potential increase in the U.S. dollar cost of securities to be acquired,  a Fund
could write a put option on the relevant  currency  which,  if rates move in the
manner  projected,  will  expire  unexercised  and allow  that Fund to hedge the
increased cost up to the amount of the premium. As in the case of other types of
options,  however, the writing of a foreign currency option will constitute only
a partial hedge up to the amount of the premium.  If exchange  rates do not move
in the  expected  direction,  the  option may be  exercised  and a Fund would be
required  to buy or sell the  underlying  currency  at a loss  which  may not be
offset by the amount of the  premium.  Through the writing of options on foreign
currencies,  a Fund also may lose all or a portion of the  benefits  which might
otherwise have been obtained from favorable movements in exchange rates.

      The Funds may write  covered  call options on foreign  currencies.  A call
option  written on a foreign  currency by a Fund is "covered " if that Fund owns
the foreign currency  underlying the call or has an absolute and immediate right
to acquire that foreign currency without  additional cash  consideration (or for
additional  cash  consideration  held in a segregated  account by its custodian)
upon conversion or exchange of other foreign currencies held in its portfolio. A
call option is also covered if a Fund has a call on the same foreign currency in
the same principal  amount as the call written if the exercise price of the call
held (i) is equal to or less than the exercise price of the call written or (ii)
is greater than the exercise  price of the call  written,  if the  difference is
maintained by such Fund in cash or other liquid  assets in a segregated  account
with the Funds' custodian.

      The  Funds  also  may  write  call  options  on  foreign   currencies  for
cross-hedging purposes. A call option on a foreign currency is for cross-hedging
purposes  if it is  designed  to  provide a hedge  against  a decline  due to an
adverse change in the exchange rate in the U.S. dollar value of a security which
a Fund owns or has the right to acquire and which is denominated in the currency
underlying the option. Call options on foreign currencies which are entered into
for cross-hedging  purposes are not covered.  However, in such circumstances,  a
Fund will collateralize the option by segregating cash or other liquid assets in
an amount not less than the value of the  underlying  foreign  currency  in U.S.
dollars marked-to-market daily.

      OPTIONS ON SECURITIES. In an effort to increase current income, the Growth
& Income  Fund may  write  covered  put and  call  options  and buy put and call
options on securities  that are traded on United  States and foreign  securities
exchanges  and  over-the-counter.  The  Growth & Income  Fund may  write and buy
options on the same types of securities that the Fund may purchase directly.

      A put option  written by a Fund is "covered " if that Fund (i)  segregates
cash not available  for  investment or other liquid assets with a value equal to
the exercise  price of the put with the Funds'  custodian or (ii) holds a put on
the same  security and in the same  principal  amount as the put written and the
exercise price of the put held is equal to or greater than the exercise price of
the put written. The premium paid by the buyer of an option will reflect,  among
other things, the relationship of the exercise price to the market price and the
volatility of the underlying security,  the remaining term of the option, supply
and demand and interest rates.

      A call  option  written  by a Fund is  "covered  " if that  Fund  owns the
underlying  security  covered by the call or has an absolute and immediate right
to  acquire  that  security  without   additional  cash  consideration  (or  for
additional  cash  consideration  held  in a  segregated  account  by the  Funds'
custodian)  upon  conversion  or  exchange  of  other  securities  held  in  its
portfolio.  A call option is also deemed to be covered if a Fund holds a call on
the same security and in the same  principal  amount as the call written and the
exercise  price of the call held (i) is equal to or less than the exercise price
of the call  written  or (ii) is  greater  than the  exercise  price of the call
written if the  difference  is  maintained by that Fund in cash and other liquid
assets in a segregated account with its custodian.

      The  Funds  also  may  write  call   options  that  are  not  covered  for
cross-hedging  purposes.  A Fund  collateralizes  its obligation under a written
call option for  cross-hedging  purposes  by  segregating  cash or other  liquid
assets in an amount not less than the market value of the  underlying  security,
marked-to-market  daily.  A Fund would  write a call  option  for  cross-hedging
purposes,  instead  of writing a covered  call  option,  when the  premium to be
received  from the  cross-hedge  transaction  would  exceed  that which would be
received from writing a covered call option and its portfolio  manager  believes
that writing the option would achieve the desired hedge.

      The  writer  of an option  may have no  control  over when the  underlying
securities must be sold, in the case of a call option, or bought, in the case of
a put option,  since with regard to certain options,  the writer may be assigned
an  exercise  notice at any time  prior to the  termination  of the  obligation.
Whether or not an option expires  unexercised,  the writer retains the amount of
the premium.  This amount, of course, may, in the case of a covered call option,
be offset by a decline in the market value of the underlying security during the
option period. If a call option is exercised, the writer experiences a profit or
loss from the sale of the underlying security. If a put option is exercised, the
writer  must  fulfill  the  obligation  to buy the  underlying  security  at the
exercise price,  which will usually exceed the then-current  market value of the
underlying security.

      The writer of an option that wishes to terminate its obligation may effect
a "closing  purchase  transaction."  This is accomplished by buying an option of
the same series as the option previously written.  The effect of the purchase is
that  the  writer's  position  will be  canceled  by the  clearing  corporation.
However,  a writer may not effect a closing  purchase  transaction  after  being
notified of the exercise of an option.  Likewise,  an investor who is the holder
of  an  option  may   liquidate  its  position  by  effecting  a  "closing  sale
transaction."  This is  accomplished  by selling an option of the same series as
the  option  previously  bought.  There is no  guarantee  that  either a closing
purchase or a closing sale transaction can be effected.

      In the case of a written call option, effecting a closing transaction will
permit a Fund to write  another  call  option on the  underlying  security  with
either a different  exercise price or expiration  date or both. In the case of a
written put option,  such  transaction  will permit a Fund to write  another put
option to the extent that the exercise  price is secured by other liquid assets.
Effecting  a  closing  transaction  also  will  permit a Fund to use the cash or
proceeds from the concurrent  sale of any  securities  subject to the option for
other  investments.  If a Fund  desires to sell a particular  security  from its
portfolio on which it has written a call option, such Fund will effect a closing
transaction  prior to or concurrent  with the sale of the security.  A Fund will
realize  a profit  from a  closing  transaction  if the  price  of the  purchase
transaction  is less than the premium  received  from  writing the option or the
price received from a sale  transaction is more than the premium paid to buy the
option.  A Fund will realize a loss from a closing  transaction  if the price of
the  purchase  transaction  is more than the premium  received  from writing the
option or the price received from a sale  transaction is a less than the premium
paid to buy  the  option.  Because  increases  in the  market  of a call  option
generally will reflect increases in the market price of the underlying security,
any loss  resulting  from the repurchase of a call option is likely to be offset
in whole or in part by appreciation of the underlying security owned by a Fund.

      An option position may be closed out only where a secondary  market for an
option of the same series exists. If a secondary market does not exist, the Fund
may not be able to effect  closing  transactions  in particular  options and the
Fund would have to exercise  the  options in order to realize  any profit.  If a
Fund is unable to effect a closing purchase  transaction in a secondary  market,
it will not be able to sell the underlying  security until the option expires or
it delivers  the  underlying  security  upon  exercise.  The absence of a liquid
secondary market may be due to the following:  (i) insufficient trading interest
in certain options,  (ii) restrictions imposed by a national securities exchange
("Exchange") on which the option is traded on opening or closing transactions or
both,  (iii)  trading  halts,  suspensions  or other  restrictions  imposed with
respect to  particular  classes or series of options or  underlying  securities,
(iv) unusual or unforeseen  circumstances that interrupt normal operations on an
Exchange,  (v)  the  facilities  of an  Exchange  or  of  the  Options  Clearing
Corporation  ("OCC") may not at all times be adequate to handle current  trading
volume,  or (vi) one or more  Exchanges  could,  for economic or other  reasons,
decide or be compelled at some future date to discontinue the trading of options
(or a  particular  class or series of  options),  in which  event the  secondary
market on that  Exchange (or in that class or series of options)  would cease to
exist, although outstanding options on that Exchange that had been issued by the
OCC as a result of trades on that Exchange  would  continue to be exercisable in
accordance with their terms.

      A Fund may write options in connection with buy-and-write transactions. In
other words, a Fund may buy a security and then write a call option against that
security.  The exercise  price of such call will depend upon the expected  price
movement of the underlying security.  The exercise price of a call option may be
below ("in-the-money"),  equal to ("at-the-money") or above ("out-of-the-money")
the current value of the underlying security at the time the option is written.

      Buy-and-write  transactions  using  in-the-money  call options may be used
when it is expected that the price of the  underlying  security will remain flat
or decline moderately during the option period. Buy-and-write transactions using
at-the-money  call options may be used when it is expected that the price of the
underlying  security will remain fixed or advance  moderately  during the option
period.  Buy-and-write  transactions using  out-of-the-money call options may be
used when it is expected that the premiums received from writing the call option
plus the  appreciation in the market price of the underlying  security up to the
exercise  price  will be  greater  than  the  appreciation  in the  price of the
underlying   security   alone.  If  the  call  options  are  exercised  in  such
transactions,  a Fund's  maximum  gain will be the  premium  received  by it for
writing the option, adjusted upwards or downwards by the difference between that
Fund's purchase price of the security and the exercise price. If the options are
not exercised and the price of the underlying  security declines,  the amount of
such decline will be offset by the amount of premium received.

      The  writing of covered put options is similar in terms of risk and return
characteristics  to  buy-and-write  transactions.  If the  market  price  of the
underlying  security  rises or otherwise is above the  exercise  price,  the put
option  will expire  worthless  and a Fund's gain will be limited to the premium
received.  If the market price of the underlying  security declines or otherwise
is below the  exercise  price,  a Fund may elect to close the  position  or take
delivery of the  security at the exercise  price and that Fund's  return will be
the premium  received  from the put options minus the amount by which the market
price of the security is below the exercise price.

      A Fund may buy put options to hedge  against a decline in the value of its
portfolio.  By using put  options in this way, a Fund will  reduce any profit it
might  otherwise have realized in the  underlying  security by the amount of the
premium paid for the put option and by transaction costs.

      A Fund may buy call  options to hedge  against an increase in the price of
securities  that it may buy in the future.  The premium paid for the call option
plus any  transaction  costs will reduce the benefit,  if any,  realized by such
Fund upon  exercise  of the  option,  and,  unless  the price of the  underlying
security rises sufficiently, the option may expire worthless to that Fund.

      EURODOLLAR  INSTRUMENTS.   A  Fund  may  make  investments  in  Eurodollar
instruments.   Eurodollar  instruments  are  U.S.   dollar-denominated   futures
contracts or options  thereon which are linked to the London  Interbank  Offered
Rate ("LIBOR"), although foreign currency-denominated  instruments are available
from time to time.  Eurodollar  futures  contracts enable purchasers to obtain a
fixed  rate for the  lending  of funds and  sellers  to obtain a fixed  rate for
borrowings. A Fund might use Eurodollar futures contracts and options thereon to
hedge  against  changes  in  LIBOR,  to  which  many  interest  rate  swaps  and
fixed-income instruments are linked.

      SWAPS AND SWAP-RELATED  PRODUCTS.  The Growth & Income Fund may enter into
interest rate swaps, caps and floors on either an asset-based or liability-based
basis,  depending upon whether it is hedging its assets or its liabilities,  and
will  usually  enter  into  interest  rate swaps on a net basis  (i.e.,  the two
payment  streams are netted out, with the Fund receiving or paying,  as the case
may be, only the net amount of the two payments).  The net amount of the excess,
if any,  of a Fund's  obligations  over its  entitlement  with  respect  to each
interest  rate swap will be calculated on a daily basis and an amount of cash or
other liquid  assets  having an aggregate  net asset value at least equal to the
accrued  excess  will  be  maintained  in a  segregated  account  by the  Funds'
custodian.  If a Fund  enters  into an  interest  rate swap on other  than a net
basis,  it would  maintain a segregated  account in the full amount accrued on a
daily basis of its  obligations  with respect to the swap. A Fund will not enter
into any  interest  rate swap,  cap or floor  transaction  unless the  unsecured
senior debt or the claims-paying  ability of the other party thereto is rated in
one of the three highest rating  categories of at least one NRSRO at the time of
entering   into   such   transaction.   Marsico   Capital   will   monitor   the
creditworthiness  of all  counterparties  on an  ongoing  basis.  If  there is a
default by the other party to such a transaction,  a Fund will have  contractual
remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction.

      The swap  market  has grown  substantially  in recent  years  with a large
number of banks and  investment  banking firms acting both as principals  and as
agents  utilizing   standardizing  swap   documentation.   Marsico  Capital  has
determined that, as a result, the swap market has become relatively liquid. Caps
and floors are more recent innovations for which standardized  documentation has
not yet been developed and, accordingly, they are less liquid than swaps. To the
extent a Fund sells (i.e.,  writes) caps and floors,  it will  segregate cash or
other liquid  assets  having an aggregate  net asset value at least equal to the
full amount  accrued on a daily basis,  of its  obligations  with respect to any
caps or floors.

      There is no limit on the amount of interest  rate swap  transactions  that
may be entered into by a Fund. These  transactions may in some instances involve
the  delivery  of  securities  or  other  underlying  assets  by a  Fund  or its
counterparty   to   collateralize   obligations   under  the  swap.   Under  the
documentation  currently used in those markets, the risk of loss with respect to
interest  rate swaps is limited to the net amount of the payments that a Fund is
contractually  obligated  to make.  If the other party to an interest  rate swap
that is not  collateralized  defaults,  a Fund  would  risk  the loss of the net
amount of the payments that it contractually is entitled to receive.  A Fund may
buy and sell (i.e.,  write) caps and floors without  limitation,  subject to the
segregation requirement described above.

      ADDITIONAL RISKS OF OPTIONS ON FOREIGN  CURRENCIES,  FORWARD CONTRACTS AND
FOREIGN  INSTRUMENTS.  Unlike transactions  entered into by the Funds in futures
contracts, options on foreign currencies and forward contracts are not traded on
contract markets regulated by the CFTC or (with the exception of certain foreign
currency  options)  by the SEC. To the  contrary,  such  instruments  are traded
through  financial  institutions  acting  as  market-makers,   although  foreign
currency options are also traded on certain Exchanges,  such as the Philadelphia
Stock  Exchange  and  the  Chicago  Board  Options  Exchange,   subject  to  SEC
regulation. Similarly, options on currencies may be traded over-the-counter.  In
an over-the-counter  trading  environment,  many of the protections  afforded to
Exchange  participants  will not be available.  For example,  there are no daily
price fluctuation  limits, and adverse market movements could therefore continue
to an  unlimited  extent over a period of time.  Although the buyer of an option
cannot lose more than the amount of the premium plus related  transaction costs,
this entire amount could be lost. Moreover, an option writer and buyer or seller
of futures or forward  contracts could lose amounts  substantially  in excess of
any premium received or initial margin or collateral posted due to the potential
additional margin and collateral requirements associated with such positions.

      Options  on  foreign   currencies  traded  on  Exchanges  are  within  the
jurisdiction  of the SEC,  as are other  securities  traded on  Exchanges.  As a
result, many of the protections  provided to traders on organized Exchanges will
be  available  with respect to such  transactions.  In  particular,  all foreign
currency option positions entered into on an Exchange are cleared and guaranteed
by the OCC, thereby reducing the risk of counterparty default. Further, a liquid
secondary market in options traded on an Exchange may be more readily  available
than in the over-the-counter market,  potentially permitting a Fund to liquidate
open positions at a profit prior to exercise or  expiration,  or to limit losses
in the event of adverse market movements.

      The  purchase  and  sale  of  exchange-traded  foreign  currency  options,
however,  is  subject  to the risks of the  availability  of a liquid  secondary
market described above, as well as the risks regarding adverse market movements,
margining  of  options  written,  the  nature of the  foreign  currency  market,
possible  intervention  by  governmental  authorities  and the  effects of other
political and economic events. In addition,  exchange-traded  options on foreign
currencies involve certain risks not presented by the  over-the-counter  market.
For example,  exercise and  settlement of such options must be made  exclusively
through the OCC,  which has  established  banking  relationships  in  applicable
foreign countries for this purpose.  As a result,  the OCC may, if it determines
that  foreign  governmental  restrictions  or taxes  would  prevent  the orderly
settlement  of  foreign  currency  option  exercises,  or would  result in undue
burdens on the OCC or its clearing member, impose special procedures on exercise
and  settlement,  such as  technical  changes in the  mechanics  of  delivery of
currency, the fixing of dollar settlement prices or prohibitions on exercise.

      In addition,  options on U.S.  government  securities,  futures contracts,
options  on  futures  contracts,   forward  contracts  and  options  on  foreign
currencies may be traded on foreign  exchanges and  over-the-counter  in foreign
countries.  Such  transactions  are subject to the risk of governmental  actions
affecting  trading in or the prices of foreign  currencies  or  securities.  The
value of such  positions  also could be adversely  affected by (i) other complex
foreign  political and economic  factors,  (ii) lesser  availability than in the
United  States of data on which to make  trading  decisions,  (iii)  delays in a
Fund's ability to act upon economic  events  occurring in foreign markets during
non-business  hours in the  United  States,  (iv) the  imposition  of  different
exercise and settlement terms and procedures and margin requirements than in the
United States, and (v) low trading volume.

ADDITIONAL DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENT RISKS

Additional risks inherent in the use of derivative instruments include:

      *     the risk that  interest  rates,  securities  prices  and  currency
            markets will not move in the direction that the Portfolio  Manager
            anticipates;

      *     imperfect correlation between the price of derivative  instruments
            and movement in the prices of the  securities,  interest  rates or
            currencies being hedged;

      *     the fact that skills needed to use these  strategies are different
            from those needed to select portfolio securities;

      *     inability to close out certain  hedged  positions to avoid adverse
            tax consequences;

      *     the possible absence of a liquid secondary market for any particular
            instrument and possible  exchange-imposed  price fluctuation limits,
            either of which may make it difficult or  impossible  to close out a
            position when desired;

      *     leverage  risk,  or the risk  that  adverse  price  movements  in an
            instrument can result in a loss substantially  greater than a Fund's
            initial  investment in that instrument (in some cases, the potential
            loss is unlimited); and

      *     particularly in the case of privately  negotiated  instruments,  the
            risk that the  counterparty  will fail to perform  its  obligations,
            which could  leave a Fund worse off than if it had not entered  into
            the position.

      Although the Funds believe the use of derivative  instruments will benefit
the Funds, the Funds'  performance could be worse than if the Funds had not used
such instruments if the Portfolio  Manager's  judgment proves incorrect.  When a
Fund invests in a derivative  instrument,  it may be required to segregate  cash
and other liquid assets or certain  portfolio  securities  with its custodian to
"cover" the Fund's position. Assets segregated or set aside generally may not be
disposed of so long as a Fund maintains the positions  requiring  segregation or
cover.   Segregating  assets  could  diminish  the  Fund's  return  due  to  the
opportunity losses of foregoing other potential  investments with the segregated
assets.

SHORT SALES

      Each Fund may engage in "short  sales  against  the box. " This  technique
involves selling either a security that a Fund owns, or a security equivalent in
kind and amount to the security  sold short that a Fund has the right to obtain,
for  delivery  at a  specified  date  in the  future,  without  the  payment  of
additional  cost.  A Fund will enter into a short sale  against the box to hedge
against anticipated declines in the market price of portfolio securities. If the
value of the securities  sold short  increases  prior to the scheduled  delivery
date, a Fund loses the opportunity to participate in the gain.

DEPOSITARY RECEIPTS

      The Funds may invest in  sponsored  and  unsponsored  American  Depositary
Receipts  ("ADRs"),  which  are  receipts  issued by an  American  bank or trust
company  evidencing  ownership  of  underlying  securities  issued  by a foreign
issuer.  ADRs,  in  registered  form,  are designed  for use in U.S.  securities
markets.  Unsponsored  ADRs may be  created  without  the  participation  of the
foreign  issuer.  Holders of these ADRs  generally bear all the costs of the ADR
facility,  whereas foreign  issuers  typically bear certain costs in a sponsored
ADR. The bank or trust company  depositary of an unsponsored ADR may be under no
obligation to distribute  shareholder  communications  received from the foreign
issuer or to pass through voting  rights.  The Funds may also invest in European
Depositary  Receipts ("EDRs"),  Global Depositary Receipts ("GDRs") and in other
similar  instruments  representing  securities  of foreign  companies.  EDRs are
receipts issued by a European  financial  institution  evidencing an arrangement
similar to that of ADRs.  EDRs, in bearer form, are designed for use in European
securities markets.

REPURCHASE AND REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

      In a repurchase agreement,  a Fund purchases a security and simultaneously
commits to resell  that  security  to the seller at an  agreed-upon  price on an
agreed upon date within a number of days  (usually not more than seven) from the
date of purchase.  The resale price  reflects the purchase price plus an agreed-
upon incremental  amount that is unrelated to the coupon rate or maturity of the
purchased 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
(at  least   equal  to  the  amount  of  the   agreed-upon   resale   price  and
marked-to-market  daily) of the underlying  security or "collateral." A Fund may
engage in a  repurchase  agreement  with  respect to any security in which it is
authorized  to invest.  A risk  associated  with  repurchase  agreements  is the
failure of the seller to repurchase the securities as agreed,  which may cause a
Fund to suffer a loss if the market value of such securities decline before they
can be liquidated  on the open market.  In the event of bankruptcy or insolvency
of the seller,  a Fund may encounter  delays and incur costs in liquidating  the
underlying security.  Repurchase  agreements that mature in more than seven days
will be  subject  to the 15%  limit  on  illiquid  investments.  While it is not
possible to eliminate all risks from these transactions, it is the policy of the
Funds to limit repurchase agreements to those parties whose creditworthiness has
been reviewed and found satisfactory by Marsico Capital.

      A Fund may use reverse  repurchase  agreements  to provide cash to satisfy
unusually heavy redemption requests or for other temporary or emergency purposes
without the necessity of selling  portfolio  securities,  or to earn  additional
income on portfolio  securities,  such as Treasury bills or notes.  In a reverse
repurchase  agreement,  a Fund sells a portfolio security to another party, such
as a bank or  broker-dealer,  in return  for cash and agrees to  repurchase  the
instrument at a particular price and time. While a reverse repurchase  agreement
is  outstanding,  a Fund will maintain cash and  appropriate  liquid assets in a
segregated  custodial  account to cover its obligation under the agreement.  The
Funds will enter into  reverse  repurchase  agreements  only with  parties  that
Marsico Capital deems creditworthy.  Using reverse repurchase agreements to earn
additional  income  involves the risk that the  interest  earned on the invested
proceeds  is  less  than  the  expense  of  the  reverse  repurchase   agreement
transaction.  This  technique  may also have a  leveraging  effect on the Fund's
portfolio,  although the Fund's intent to segregate  assets in the amount of the
reverse repurchase agreement minimizes this effect.

HIGH-YIELD/HIGH-RISK SECURITIES

      The Growth & Income Fund may invest up to 25%,  and the Focus Fund and the
21st Century Fund may invest up to 5% of their  respective  total assets in debt
securities that are rated below investment  grade (i.e.,  securities rated BB or
lower by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services ("Standard & Poor's") or Ba or lower
by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's")).  Lower-rated securities involve
a higher degree of credit risk,  which is the risk that the issuer will not make
interest  or  principal  payments  when due.  In the  event of an  unanticipated
default,  a Fund would experience a reduction in its income,  and could expect a
decline in the market value of the  securities  so affected.  The Funds will not
purchase debt securities rated lower than "CCC" by Standard & Poor's or "Caa" by
Moody's.

      Each Fund may invest in unrated  debt  securities  of foreign and domestic
issuers.  Unrated  debt,  while not  necessarily  of lower  quality  than  rated
securities,  may not have as broad a market.  Unrated  debt  securities  will be
included in the stated limit for  investments in high-yield  investments by each
Fund unless the portfolio  manager deems such securities to be the equivalent of
investment grade securities.

      FINANCIAL AND MARKET RISKS. Investments in high-yield/high risk securities
involve  a high  degree  of  financial  and  market  risks  that can  result  in
substantial  or, at times,  even total losses.  High-yield  securities  are more
vulnerable to real or perceived  economic changes,  political changes or adverse
developments  specific  to the  issuer.  Issuers  of such  securities  may  have
substantial   capital   needs  and  may  become   involved  in   bankruptcy   or
reorganization  proceedings.  Among the problems involved in investments in such
issuers is the fact that it may be  difficult  to obtain  information  about the
condition of such issuers. The market prices of such securities also are subject
to abrupt and erratic  movements  and above average  price  volatility,  and the
spread  between the bid and asked prices of such  securities may be greater than
normally expected.

      DISPOSITION  OF PORTFOLIO  SECURITIES.  Although the Funds  generally will
purchase  securities for which the portfolio manager expects an active market to
be maintained,  high-yield/high-risk securities may be less actively traded than
other  securities and it may be difficult to dispose of substantial  holdings of
such  securities at prevailing  market prices.  The Funds will limit holdings of
any securities to amounts that the portfolio  manager  believes could be readily
sold, and holdings of such securities  would, in any event, be limited so as not
to  limit  the  Funds'  ability  to  readily   dispose  of  securities  to  meet
redemptions.

      CREDIT  RISK.  The value of lower  quality  securities  generally  is more
dependent on the ability of the issuer to meet interest and  principal  payments
than is the case for higher quality securities.  Conversely, the value of higher
quality  securities  may be more sensitive to interest rate movements than lower
quality  securities.  Issuers  of  high-yield  securities  may not be as  strong
financially  as those issuing bonds with higher credit  ratings.  Investments in
such  companies  are  considered  to be more  speculative  than  higher  quality
investments.

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF FOREIGN SECURITIES.

      Foreign  securities involve certain inherent risks that are different from
those of domestic issuers,  including  political or economic  instability of the
issuer or the country of issue,  diplomatic developments which could affect U.S.
investments in those  countries,  changes in foreign currency and exchange rates
and the  possibility  of  adverse  changes in  investment  or  exchange  control
regulations.  As a  result  of  these  and  other  factors,  foreign  securities
purchased  by the  Funds  may be  subject  to  greater  price  fluctuation  than
securities of U.S. companies.

      Most  foreign  stock  markets  are not as large or liquid as in the United
States,  fixed  commissions on foreign stock exchanges are generally higher than
the  negotiated  commissions  on U.S.  exchanges,  and there is  generally  less
government  supervision and regulation of foreign stock  exchanges,  brokers and
companies than in the United  States.  Investors  should  recognize that foreign
markets  have  different  clearance  and  settlement  procedures  and in certain
markets  there have been times when  settlements  have been  unable to keep pace
with the volume of securities transactions,  making it difficult to conduct such
transactions. Delays in settlement could result in temporary periods when assets
of the Funds are  uninvested and no return is earned  thereon.  The inability of
the Funds to make intended security  purchases due to settlement  problems could
cause  the  Funds to miss  attractive  investment  opportunities.  Inability  to
dispose of portfolio  securities due to settlement  problems either could result
in  losses to the Funds due to  subsequent  declines  in value of the  portfolio
security  or, if the Funds have  entered  into a contract to sell the  security,
could result in a possible  liability to the  purchaser.  Payment for securities
without delivery may be required in certain foreign markets.  Further,  the Fund
may  encounter  difficulties  or be unable to pursue  legal  remedies and obtain
judgments  in foreign  courts.  Foreign  governments  can also levy  confiscator
taxes, expropriate assets, and limit repatriations of assets.  Typically,  there
is less publicly available information about a foreign company than about a U.S.
company,  and  foreign  companies  may be  subject  to less  stringent  reserve,
auditing and  reporting  requirements.  It may be more  difficult for the Funds'
agents  to keep  currently  informed  about  corporate  actions  such  as  stock
dividends or other matters which may affect the prices of portfolio securities.

      Communications between the United States and foreign countries may be less
reliable  than within the United  States,  thus  increasing  the risk of delayed
settlements  of portfolio  transactions  or loss of  certificates  for portfolio
securities.  Individual  foreign  economies may differ  favorably or unfavorably
from the U.S. economy in such respects as growth of gross national product, rate
of inflation,  capital  reinvestment,  resource  self-sufficiency and balance of
payments position.

      Because  investments in foreign securities will usually involve currencies
of foreign  countries,  and because the Funds may hold foreign  currencies,  the
value of the assets of the Funds as  measured  in U.S.  dollars  may be affected
favorably  or  unfavorably  by changes in foreign  currency  exchange  rates and
exchange control  regulations,  and the Funds may incur costs in connection with
conversions  between various  currencies.  Although the Funds value their assets
daily in terms of U.S. dollars,  they do not intend to convert their holdings of
foreign currencies into U.S. dollars on a daily basis. The Funds will do so from
time to time, and investors should be aware of the costs of currency conversion.

      Although foreign exchange dealers do not charge a fee for conversion, they
do realize a profit based on the difference (the "spread") between the prices at
which they are buying and selling various  currencies.  Thus, a dealer may offer
to sell a foreign  currency  to the Funds at one rate,  while  offering a lesser
rate of exchange should the Funds desire to resell that currency to the dealer.

      The Funds will conduct their foreign currency exchange transactions either
on a spot (i.e., cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign currency
exchange  market,  or through  entering into forward foreign  currency  exchange
contracts or purchasing or writing put or call options on foreign currencies.

INVESTMENTS IN THE SHARES OF OTHER INVESTMENT COMPANIES

      To limited extent,  each Fund may purchase  securities of other investment
companies. The Adviser does not expect either Fund to invest more that 5% of its
total assets in shares issued by other investment companies and, in no instance,
will such investments exceed the levels set forth in Section  12(d)(1)(A) of the
1940 Act.  The  Adviser  anticipates  investing  in  shares of other  investment
companies  primarily as a means to invest cash in Funds consisting of short-term
money market instruments and U.S. government securities.  To the extent that the
Funds  invest in other  investment  companies,  the  Funds  may incur  duplicate
investment advisory and other fees.

      Trustees.  The Trustees  and  Officers of the Funds and their  principal
occupations during the past five years are set forth below.

NAME, ADDRESS AND AGE   POSITIONS HELD WITH THE FUND   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
                                                     DURING THE PAST FIVE YEARS

Thomas F. Marsico       Trustee, President and       Chairman and Chief
(1)                       Chief Executive Officer      Executive Officer,
1200 17th Street                                       Marsico Capital
Suite 1300                                             Management, LLC
Denver, CO  80202                                      (September 1997 -
DOB:  1955                                             present); Executive
                                                       Vice President, Janus
                                                       Investment Fund (1990 -
                                                       1997).

J. Jeffrey Riggs (1)    Trustee                      President, Essex
8400 East Prentice                                     Financial Group, Inc.
Avenue                                                 (Commercial Mortgage
Suite 1310                                             Bank) (More than five
Englewood, CO  80111                                   years); Principal,
DOB:  1953                                             Metropolitan Homes,
                                                       Inc. (January 1992 -
                                                       Present); Principal,
                                                       Baron Properties, LLC
                                                       (January 1997 -
                                                       Present).

Rono Dutta              Trustee                      Senior Vice President -
1200 E. Algonquin Road                                 Planning, United
Elk Grove Village, IL                                  Airlines (November 1994
60007                                                  - Present); other
DOB:  1951                                             positions with United
                                                       Airlines  (19875 - 1994);
                                                       previously,  manager  for
                                                       planning,  Bell & Howell,
                                                       and management
                                                       consultant,  Booz,  Allen
                                                       and Hamilton.

Theodore S. Halaby      Trustee                      Partner, Halaby, Cross, &
1873 South Ballaire                                    Schluter (law firm)
Suite 1400                                             (October 1998 -
Denver, CO  80222                                      present); Partner,
DOB:  1940                                             Halaby, Cross, Lichty &
                                                       Schluter    (law    firm)
                                                       (January 1996 - September
                                                       1998);  Partner,  Halaby,
                                                       Cross, Lichty, Schluter &
                                                       Buck (law firm)  (October
                                                       1994 -  December  1995)p;
                                                       Partner, Halaby, McCrea &
                                                       Cross)  (law firm)  (more
                                                       than five years).

(1)  Trustees  who are  "interested  persons"  of the  Funds,  as defined in the
     Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended,  (the "1940 Act"). The Trustees
     of the  Funds who are  officers  or  employees  of the  investment  adviser
     receive no remuneration  from the Funds. Each of the other Trustees is paid
     an annual retainer of $12,000 and a fee of $1,000 for each meeting attended
     and is reimbursed for the expenses of attending meetings.

NAME, ADDRESS AND AGE   POSITIONS HELD WITH THE FUND   PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
                                                     DURING THE PAST FIVE YEARS
Walter A. Koelbel, Jr.  Trustee                      President, and other
5291 Yale Circle                                       positions, Koelbel and
Denver, CO  80222                                      Company (Real Estate
DOB:  1952                                             Development Company)
                                                       (December 1976 -
                                                       present)

Larry A. Mizel          Trustee                      President, M.D.C.
Suite 900                                              Holdings, Inc.
3600 South Yosemite                                    (Homebuilding and
Street                                                 Mortgage Banking)
Denver, CO  80237                                      (March 1996 - present);
DOB:  1942                                             Chairman and Chief
                                                       Executive Officer,
                                                       M.D.C. Holdings, Inc.
                                                       (More than five years).

Federico Pena           Trustee                      Senior Adviser, Vestar
1225 17th Street                                       Capital Partners,
Denver, CO  80202                                      (August 1998 -
DOB:  1947                                             present); Secretary ,
                                                       U.S. Department of
                                                       Energy (March 1997 -
                                                       July 1998); Secretary,
                                                       U.S. Department of
                                                       Transportation (January
                                                       1993 - February 1997).

Michael D. Rierson      Trustee                      Vice President,
P. O. Box 248073                                       University Advancement
Coral Gables, FL  33124                                at University of Miami
DOB:  1952                                             (September 1998 -
                                                       present); Associate Dean,
                                                       Kenan-Flagler    Business
                                                       School at  University  of
                                                       North  Carolina at Chapel
                                                       Hill   (November  1993  -
                                                       September 1998);  Various
                                                       positions     at     Duke
                                                       University,  Durham, N.C.
                                                       (October  1983 - November
                                                       1993).

Barbara M. Japha        Vice President, Treasurer    President and General
1200 17th Street          and Secretary                Counsel, Marsico
Suite 1300                                             Capital Management, LLC
Denver, CO  80202                                      (September 1997 -
DOB:  1953                                             Present); Vice
                                                       President  -  Legal , U S
                                                       West,   Inc.   (September
                                                       1989 - September 1997).

Sander M. Bieber        Assistant Secretary          Partner, Dechert Price &
1775 Eye Street, NW                                    Rhoads (law firm) (more
Washington, D.C.  20005                                than five years).
DOB:  1950




<PAGE>




                        COMPENSATION RECEIVED FROM FUNDS
                            AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1999

                      Aggregate      Pension or     Estimated        Total
                     Compensation    Retirement       Annual      Compensation
                    From the Funds    Benefits    Benefits Upon    From Funds
                                     Accrued As     Retirement
                                     Part of
                                     Funds'
                                    Expenses

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

Thomas F. Marsico           $0           $0             $0               $0
Barbara M. Japha*           $0           $0             $0               $0
J. Jeffrey Riggs             X           $0             $0                X
Rono Dutta                   X           $0             $0                X
Theodore S. Halaby           X           $0             $0                X
Walter A. Koelbel,           X           $0             $0                X
Jr.
Larry A. Mizel               X           $0             $0                X
Federico Pena               $0           $0             $0               $0
Michael D. Rierson          $0           $0             $0               $0

* Ms. Japha resigned from the Board of Trustees effective February 1, 1999.

As of September 30, 1999, the Trustees and Executive Officers of the Trust owned
less than 1% of the outstanding shares of the Focus Fund and approximately ____%
of the outstanding shares of the Growth & Income Fund. As of September 30, 1999,
the Funds  were not aware of any  entities  that  owned a  controlling  interest
(ownership  of  greater  than  25%)  or  beneficially  owned  5% or  more of the
outstanding shares of either Fund.

                     INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND OTHER SERVICES

      INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT. The Adviser of the Funds is Marsico Capital
Management,  LLC.  Under the terms of the Advisory  Agreement,  Marsico  Capital
furnishes  overall  investment  management for the Funds,  provides research and
credit  analysis,  oversees  the  purchase  and sales of  portfolio  securities,
maintains books and records with respect to the Funds'  securities  transactions
and provides periodic and special reports to the Board of Trustees as required.

      For the advisory services provided and expenses assumed by it, the Adviser
has agreed to a fee from each Fund,  computed daily and payable  monthly,  at an
annual rate of 0.85% of average daily net assets.  For the year ended  September
30, 1998, the Adviser was paid  $2,590,083 by the Focus Fund and $774,854 by the
Growth & Income Fund, of which $249,672 was waived and  subsequently  reimbursed
during the fiscal year ended  September 30, 1999.  For the year ended  September
30, 1999,  the Adviser was paid $________ by the Focus Fund and $________ by the
Growth & Income Fund.

      The  Investment  Advisory  Agreement,  with  respect  to each  Fund,  will
continue in effect for a period of two years from its effective  date,  unless a
period of shorter  duration  is agreed to by the Trust and the  Adviser.  If not
sooner terminated, the Advisory Agreement will continue in effect for successive
one year periods  thereafter,  provided that each  continuance  is  specifically
approved annually by (a) the vote of a majority of the Board of Trustees who are
not parties to the Advisory  Agreement or interested  persons (as defined in the
1940  Act),  cast in person at a meeting  called  for the  purpose  of voting on
approval,  and (b) either (i) with respect to a Fund,  the vote of a majority of
the outstanding  voting  securities of that Fund, or (ii) the vote of a majority
of the Board of Trustees.  The Advisory  Agreement is  terminable by vote of the
Board of Trustees,  or with  respect to a Fund,  by the holders of a majority of
the outstanding voting securities of that Fund, at any time without penalty,  on
60 days'  written  notice to the  Adviser.  The Adviser may also  terminate  its
advisory  relationship with a Fund without penalty on 90 days' written notice to
the Trust. The Advisory Agreement  terminates  automatically in the event of its
assignment  (as defined in the 1940 Act).  As described in the  Prospectus,  the
Adviser  has  voluntarily  agreed  to limit  the  total  expenses  of each  Fund
(excluding interest,  taxes, brokerage and extraordinary  expenses) to an annual
rate of 1.60% for the Focus Fund and to an annual rate of 1.50% for the Growth &
Income Fund and the 21st Century  Fund.  Pursuant to this  agreement,  each Fund
will  reimburse the Adviser for any fee waivers or expense  reimbursements  made
pursuant to this agreement,  since the inception of each Fund, provided that any
such waivers or reimbursements  made by a Fund will not cause the Fund's expense
limitation to exceed the amounts set forth above.  Under this  arrangement,  the
Adviser  may be  reimbursed  for fee  waivers  or  expense  reimbursements  that
occurred from the inception of each respective Fund.

      For  purposes  of  the  Investment   Company  Act  of  1940,  as  amended,
BankAmerica  Corporation  is deemed to have a  controlling  interest  in Marsico
Capital  Management,   LLC  ("MCM"),   the  investment  adviser  to  the  Trust.
BankAmerica Corporation maintains a 50% ownership interest in MCM.

      ADMINISTRATION  AGREEMENT.  Pursuant to an  Administration  Agreement (the
"Administration    Agreement"),    Sunstone    Financial   Group,    Inc.   (the
"Administrator"),  207 East Buffalo  Street,  Suite 400,  Milwaukee,  WI, 53202,
prepares  and files all federal  income and excise tax returns and state  income
tax returns  (other than those  required to be made by the Trust's  Custodian or
Transfer Agent), oversees the Trust's insurance relationships, reviews drafts of
the Trust's  registration  statement and proxy statements,  prepares  securities
registration compliance filings pursuant to state securities laws, compiles data
for and prepares  required  notices and reports to the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission,  prepares financial  statements for annual and semiannual reports to
investors,   monitors   compliance  with  the  Funds'  investment  policies  and
restrictions,  prepares and monitors the Funds' expense  accruals and causes all
appropriate expenses to be paid from Fund assets,  monitors the Funds' status as
a regulated  investment  company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986,  maintains  and/or  coordinates  with the other  service  providers the
maintenance of the accounts, books and other documents required pursuant to Rule
31a-1 under the 1940 Act and  generally  assists in the  Trust's  administrative
operations. The Administrator, at its own expense and without reimbursement from
the  Trust,   furnishes  office  space  and  all  necessary  office  facilities,
equipment,  supplies and clerical and  executive  personnel for  performing  the
services required to be performed by it under the Administration  Agreement. For
the foregoing,  the Administrator  receives from the Funds a fee, computed daily
and payable  monthly,  based on the Funds' average net assets at the annual rate
beginning  at 0.14% and  decreasing  as the  assets of each Fund  reach  certain
levels,  subject  to a  minimum  fee of  $62,500  per Fund.  For the year  ended
September 30, 1998,  the  Administrator  received fees under the  Administration
Agreement  of $168,841  from the Focus Fund and $96,299 from the Growth & Income
Fund.  For the year ended  September 30, 1999, the  Administrator  received fees
under the Administration  Agreement of $_______ from the Focus Fund and $_______
from the Growth & Income Fund.

      The Trust pays all of its own expenses,  including without limitation, the
cost of preparing and printing its  registration  statements  required under the
Securities Act of 1933 and the 1940 Act and any amendments thereto,  the expense
of registering its shares with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in the
various states,  advisory and  administration  fees,  costs of organization  and
maintenance  of corporate  existence,  the printing  and  distribution  costs of
prospectuses  mailed to existing  investors,  reports to  investors,  reports to
government authorities and proxy statements,  costs of meetings of shareholders,
fees paid to trustees who are not  interested  persons of the Adviser,  interest
charges, taxes, legal expenses,  association membership dues, auditing services,
insurance  premiums,  brokerage  commissions  and  expenses in  connection  with
portfolio  transactions,  fees and  expenses  of the  custodian  of the  Trust's
assets,  charges of securities  pricing services,  printing and mailing expenses
and charges and expenses of dividend disbursing agents,  accounting services and
stock transfer agents.

DISTRIBUTION PLAN

      The Funds  have  adopted a  Distribution  and  Service  Plan (the  "Plan")
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The Plan  authorizes  payments by the
Funds in connection with the  distribution of their shares at an annual rate, as
determined  from  time-to-time  by the Board of Trustees,  or up to 0.25% of the
Funds'  average  daily net assets.  Payments  may be made by the Funds under the
Plan for the purpose of financing any activity  primarily  intended to result in
the sales of shares of the Funds as  determined  by the Board of Trustees.  Such
activities  typically  include  advertising;  compensation  for  sales and sales
marketing  activities of Financial Service Agents and others, such as dealers or
distributors;  shareholder  account  servicing;  production and dissemination of
prospectuses and sales and marketing materials; and capital or other expenses of
associated equipment,  rent, salaries,  bonuses, interest and other overhead. To
the extent any activity is one which the Funds may finance  without a Plan,  the
Funds may also make  payments to finance such  activity  outside of the Plan and
not subject to its limitations. Payments under the Plan are not tied exclusively
to actual  distribution  and  service  expenses,  and the  payments  may  exceed
distribution and service expenses actually incurred.

      For the fiscal year ended September 30, 1999, the following 12b-1 payments
were made under the Plan:




<PAGE>



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

                           Focus Fund      Growth & Income         Total
                                                 Fund

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

     Advertising          $__________        $__________        $__________

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

 Printing and Mailing     $__________        $__________        $__________
  of Prospectuses to
  other than current
     shareholders

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

   Compensation to        $__________        $__________        $__________
     Underwriters

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

   Compensation to        $__________        $__________        $__________
    Broker-Dealers

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

        Other*            $__________        $__________        $__________

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

        Total             $__________        $__________        $__________

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



* This  includes  consulting  fees,  miscellaneous  shipping,  filing and travel
expenses, and storage of printed items.

      Administration  of the Plan is regulated by Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act,
which  includes  requirements  that the Board of Trustees  receive and review at
least  quarterly  reports  concerning the nature and  qualification  of expenses
which are made, that the Board of Trustees  approve all agreements  implementing
the Plan and that the Plan may be continued from  year-to-year only if the Board
of Trustees  concludes at least annually that continuation of the Plan is likely
to benefit shareholders.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

      Subject to the  supervision  of the  Trustees,  decisions  to buy and sell
securities for the Funds and negotiation of their brokerage commission rates are
made by the Adviser.  Transactions on United States stock exchanges  involve the
payment by the Funds of negotiated brokerage commissions.  There is generally no
stated  commission  in the case of  securities  traded  in the  over-the-counter
market but the price paid by the Funds usually  includes an  undisclosed  dealer
commission or mark-up.  In certain  instances,  the Funds may make  purchases of
underwritten issues at prices which include underwriting fees.

      In selecting a broker to execute each particular transaction,  the Adviser
takes  the  following  into  consideration:  the best net price  available;  the
reliability,  integrity  and  financial  condition  of the broker;  the size and
difficulty  in  executing  the  order;  the use of  brokerage  credits to reduce
service fees as contemplated in a board approved  program,  and the value of the
expected  contribution of the broker to the investment  performance of the Funds
on a continuing basis. Accordingly, the cost of the brokerage commissions to the
Funds in any  transaction  may be greater than that available from other brokers
if the  difference  is  reasonably  justified by other  aspects of the portfolio
execution services offered.  For example, the Adviser will consider the research
and investment services provided by brokers or dealers who effect or are parties
to portfolio  transactions  of the Funds or the Adviser's  other  clients.  Such
research and  investment  services  include  statistical  and economic  data and
research  reports on  particular  companies  and  industries as well as research
software. Subject to such policies and procedures as the Trustees may determine,
the Adviser shall not be deemed to have acted unlawfully or to have breached any
duty  solely by  reason  of its  having  caused  the Funds to pay a broker  that
provides research services to the investment adviser an amount of commission for
effecting a portfolio  investment  transaction  in excess of the amount  another
broker would have charged for  effecting  that  transaction,  if the  investment
adviser  determines in good faith that such amount of commission  was reasonable
in relation to the value of the research  service provided by such broker viewed
in terms of either  that  particular  transaction  or the  investment  adviser's
ongoing responsibilities with respect to the Funds.

      Research and investment information is provided by these and other brokers
at no cost to the Adviser  and is  available  for the benefit of other  accounts
advised  by the  investment  adviser  and  its  affiliates,  and  not all of the
information  will be used in connection with the Funds.  While this  information
may be useful in varying degrees and may tend to reduce the Adviser's  expenses,
it is not  possible to  estimate  its value and in the opinion of the Adviser it
does not reduce the Adviser's  expenses in a determinable  amount. The extent to
which  the  Adviser  makes  use of  statistical,  research  and  other  services
furnished by brokers is considered by the  investment  adviser in the allocation
of  brokerage  business  but  there is no  formula  by which  such  business  is
allocated.  The  Adviser  does so in  accordance  with its  judgment of the best
interests of the Funds and their shareholders.

      For the year ended September 30, 1999, the Focus Fund paid $__________ and
the Growth & Income Fund paid $__________,  in commissions to brokers. The Funds
did not pay any  commissions  to  brokers  who were  affiliated  with the  Fund,
Marsico Capital, or Sunstone Distribution Services, and any affiliated person of
the foregoing.

      During the fiscal year  ending  September  30,  1999,  the Funds  directed
brokerage  transactions to brokers because of research  services  provided.  The
amount of such  transactions and related  commissions  were as follows:  for the
Focus Fund,  $__________  in research  commissions  and  $__________ in research
commission  transactions;  for the Growth & Income Fund, $__________ in research
commissions and $__________ in research commission transactions.

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

      From time to time, quotations of the Funds' performance may be included in
advertisements,  sales  literature  or reports to  shareholders  or  prospective
investors. These performance figures are calculated in the following manner.

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN

      Average  annual  total  return is the average  annual  compounded  rate of
return for periods of one year, five years and ten years,  all ended on the last
day of a recent calendar quarter. Average annual total return quotations reflect
changes  in the price of a Fund's  shares  and  assume  that all  dividends  and
capital gains  distributions  during the respective  periods were  reinvested in
Fund shares.  Average annual total return is calculated by computing the average
annual  compounded  rates of  return  of a  hypothetical  investment  over  such
periods, according to the following formula (average annual total return is then
expressed as a percentage):



                        T =       1/n
                              --------------
                              (ERV/P-1)


      Where

      T     =  average annual total return

      P     =  a hypothetical initial investment of $1,000

      n     =  number of years

      ERV      = ending  redeemable  value:  ERV is the value, at the end of the
               applicable  period,  of a hypothetical  $1,000 investment made at
               the beginning of the applicable period.

      It should be noted that average annual total return is based on historical
earnings  and is not intended to indicate  future  performance.  Average  annual
total  return for the Fund will vary based on changes in market  conditions  and
the level of the Fund's expenses.

      In  connection  with  communicating  its average  annual  total  return to
current or prospective shareholders, the Funds also may compare these figures to
the  performance of other mutual funds tracked by mutual fund rating services or
to unmanaged indices which may assume reinvestment of dividends but generally do
not reflect deductions for administrative and management costs.

COMPARISON OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE

      Comparison  of  the  quoted   non-standardized   performance   of  various
investments is valid only if performance is calculated in the same manner. Since
there  are  different  methods  of  calculating  performance,  investors  should
consider the effect of the methods used to calculate  performance when comparing
performance of a Fund with  performance  quoted with respect to other investment
companies or types of investments.

      In connection with communicating its performance to current or prospective
shareholders,  a Fund also may  compare  these  figures  to the  performance  of
unmanaged  indices  which may assume  reinvestment  of dividends or interest but
generally do not reflect  deductions for  administrative  and management  costs.
Examples include,  but are not limited to the Dow Jones Industrial Average,  the
Consumer  Price Index,  Standard & Poor's 500  Composite  Stock Price Index (S&P
500), the NASDAQ OTC Composite  Index,  the NASDAQ  Industrials  Index,  and the
Russell 2000 Index.

      From time to time, in  advertising,  marketing and other Fund  literature,
the  performance of a Fund may be compared to the performance of broad groups of
mutual  funds  with  similar   investment   goals,  as  tracked  by  independent
organizations such as Investment Company Data, Inc., Lipper Analytical Services,
Inc., CDA Investment  Technologies,  Inc., Morningstar,  Inc., Value Line Mutual
Fund  Survey and other  independent  organizations.  When  these  organizations'
tracking  results  are used,  a Fund will be compared  to the  appropriate  fund
category,  that is, by fund objective and portfolio  holdings or the appropriate
volatility  grouping,  where volatility is a measure of a Fund's risk. From time
to time, the average  price-earnings  ratio and other  attributes of a Fund's or
the model portfolio's securities,  may be compared to the average price-earnings
ratio and other attributes of the securities that comprise the S&P 500 Index.

      Statistical  and other  information,  as provided  by the Social  Security
Administration,  may be used in marketing  materials  pertaining  to  retirement
planning  in order to  estimate  future  payouts  of social  security  benefits.
Estimates may be used on demographic and economic data.

      Marketing  and other Fund  literature  may  include a  description  of the
potential  risks  and  rewards  associated  with an  investment  in a Fund.  The
description may include a "risk/return  spectrum" which compares a Fund to broad
categories  of funds,  such as money market,  bond or equity funds,  in terms of
potential  risks and  returns.  Money  market  funds are  designed to maintain a
constant $1.00 share price and have a fluctuating  yield. Share price, yield and
total  return of a bond fund will  fluctuate.  The share  price and return of an
equity fund also will fluctuate. The description may also compare a Fund to bank
products, such as certificates of deposit. Unlike mutual funds,  certificates of
deposit are insured up to $100,000 by the U.S.
government and offer a fixed rate of return.

      Risk/return  spectrums  also may depict funds that invest in both domestic
and foreign securities or a combination of bond and equity securities.

      The total  return for the fiscal  year ended  September  30,  1999 for the
Focus Fund and Growth & Income Fund were 41.02% and  41.16%,  respectively.  The
average  annual total return for each fund for the period from  commencement  of
operations  (December  31, 1997)  through  September 30, 1999 was 37.42% for the
Focus Fund and 32.20% for the Growth & Income Fund.  The aggregate  total return
for each fund for the period from commencement of operations (December 31, 1997)
through  September  30,  1999 was  74.30%  for the Focus Fund and 62.90% for the
Growth & Income Fund. The investment return and principal value of an investment
in the Funds will fluctuate so that an investor's shares, when redeemed,  may be
worth more or less than their original cost.

TAX STATUS

      Each Fund  intends to  qualify as a  regulated  investment  company  under
Subchapter M of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended (the  "Code").
Accordingly,  each Fund generally must,  among other things,  (a) derive in each
taxable year at least 90% of its gross income from dividends, interest, payments
with  respect  to  certain  securities  loans,  and gains from the sale or other
disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies,  or other income derived
with  respect  to its  business  of  investing  in  such  stock,  securities  or
currencies;  and (b)  diversify  its holdings so that, at the end of each fiscal
quarter,  (i) at least 50% of the market value of its assets is  represented  by
cash, U.S. Government  securities,  the securities of other regulated investment
companies and other securities,  with such other securities  limited, in respect
of any one issuer,  to an amount not greater  than 5% of the value of the Fund's
total assets and 10% of the outstanding  voting  securities of such issuer,  and
(ii) 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 the
securities of other regulated investment companies).

      As a regulated investment company, a Fund generally will not be subject to
U.S. federal income tax on income and gains that it distributes to shareholders,
if at  least  90% of  each  Fund's  investment  company  taxable  income  (which
includes,  among  other  items,  dividends,  interest  and the excess of any net
short-term capital gains over net long-term capital losses) for the taxable year
is  distributed.  Each Fund  intends  to  distribute  substantially  all of such
income.

      Amounts not  distributed  on a timely basis in accordance  with a calendar
year  distribution  requirement are subject to a nondeductible  4% excise tax at
the Fund level. To avoid the tax, each Fund must distribute during each calendar
year an amount equal to the sum of (1) at least 98% of its ordinary  income (not
taking into account any capital gains or losses) for the calendar  year,  (2) at
least 98% of its capital  gains in excess of its capital  losses  (adjusted  for
certain ordinary losses) for a one-year period generally ending on October 31 of
the calendar  year,  and (3) all ordinary  income and capital gains for previous
years that were not distributed  during such years. To avoid  application of the
excise tax,  each Fund  intends to make  distributions  in  accordance  with the
calendar year distribution requirement.

      A  distribution  will be treated  as paid on  December  31 of the  current
calendar  year if it is declared  by a Fund in October,  November or December of
that  year  with a  record  date in such a month  and paid by that  Fund  during
January  of  the  following  year.  Such   distributions   will  be  taxable  to
shareholders  in the  calendar  year in which the  distributions  are  declared,
rather than the calendar year in which the distributions are received.

      ORIGINAL ISSUE DISCOUNT. Certain debt securities acquired by the Funds may
be  treated  as debt  securities  that were  originally  issued  at a  discount.
Original issue  discount can generally be defined as the difference  between the
price  at  which a  security  was  issued  and its  stated  redemption  price at
maturity. Although no cash income is actually received by a Fund, original issue
discount  that accrues on a debt  security in a given year  generally is treated
for federal income tax purposes as interest and, therefore, such income would be
subject to the  distribution  requirements  applicable  to regulated  investment
companies.

      Some debt  securities  may be  purchased  by the Funds at a discount  that
exceeds the  original  issue  discount  on such debt  securities,  if any.  This
additional  discount represents market discount for federal income tax purposes.
The gain realized on the  disposition of any taxable debt security having market
discount  generally will be treated as ordinary income to the extent it does not
exceed the accrued  market  discount on such debt  security.  Generally,  market
discount  accrues on a daily  basis for each day the debt  security is held by a
Fund at a constant rate over the time remaining to the debt security's  maturity
or, at the election of a Fund, at a constant  yield to maturity which takes into
account the semi-annual compounding of interest.

      OPTIONS,  FUTURES AND FOREIGN CURRENCY  FORWARD  CONTRACTS;  STRADDLES.  A
Fund's  transactions  in foreign  currencies,  forward  contracts,  options  and
futures   contracts   (including   options  and  futures  contracts  on  foreign
currencies) will be subject to special  provisions of the Code that, among other
things, may affect the character of gains and losses realized by the Fund (i.e.,
may  affect  whether  gains or  losses  are  ordinary  or  capital),  accelerate
recognition  of  income  to  the  Fund,  defer  Fund  losses,   and  affect  the
determination of whether capital gains and losses are characterized as long-term
or short-term  capital gains or losses.  These rules could  therefore,  in turn,
affect the character, amount, and timing of distributions to shareholders. These
provisions  also may require  the Fund to  mark-to-market  certain  types of the
positions in its portfolio (i.e.,  treat them as if they were closed out), which
may cause the Fund to recognize income without receiving cash with which to make
distributions in amounts necessary to satisfy its distribution  requirements for
relief from income and excise taxes. Each Fund will monitor its transactions and
may make such tax elections as Fund management deems appropriate with respect to
foreign currency,  options,  futures  contracts,  forward  contracts,  or hedged
investments. The Funds' status as regulated investment companies may limit their
transactions   involving  foreign  currency,   futures,   options,  and  forward
contracts.

      Certain  transactions  undertaken by a Fund may result in "straddles " for
federal  income tax  purposes.  The straddle  rules may affect the  character of
gains  (or  losses)  realized  by a Fund,  and  losses  realized  by the Fund on
positions that are part of a straddle may be deferred under the straddle  rules,
rather than being taken into account in  calculating  the taxable income for the
taxable year in which the losses are  realized.  In addition,  certain  carrying
charges (including interest expense) associated with positions in a straddle may
be required to be capitalized rather than deducted currently.  Certain elections
that a Fund may make with respect to its straddle  positions may also affect the
amount,  character  and timing of the  recognition  of gains or losses  from the
affected positions.

      Under  certain   circumstances,   the  Fund  may  recognize  gain  from  a
constructive sale of an "appreciated  financial position " it holds if it enters
into a short sale,  forward  contract or other  transaction  that  substantially
reduces  the risk of loss with  respect  to the  appreciated  position.  In that
event,  the Fund would be treated as if it had sold and immediately  repurchased
the property and would be taxed on any gain (but not loss) from the constructive
sale.  The  character  of gain from a  constructive  sale would  depend upon the
Fund's  holding period in the property.  Loss from a constructive  sale would be
recognized  when the property was  subsequently  disposed of, and its  character
would depend on the Fund's  holding  period and the  application of various loss
deferral  provisions of the Code.  Constructive sale treatment does not apply to
transactions  closed in the  90-day  period  ending  with the 30th day after the
close of the taxable year, if certain conditions are met.

      CURRENCY  FLUCTUATIONS--  "SECTION  988 " GAINS OR LOSSES.  Each Fund will
maintain  accounts and calculate income by reference to the U.S. dollar for U.S.
federal income tax purposes. Some of a Fund's investments will be maintained and
income therefrom calculated by reference to certain foreign currencies, and such
calculations will not necessarily  correspond to the Fund's distributable income
and  capital  gains  for  U.S.  federal  income  tax  purposes  as a  result  of
fluctuations  in  currency   exchange  rates.   Furthermore,   exchange  control
regulations may restrict the ability of a Fund to repatriate  investment  income
or the proceeds of sales of securities.  These  restrictions and limitations may
limit a Fund's  ability to make  sufficient  distributions  to  satisfy  the 90%
distribution  requirement for qualification as a regulated  investment  company.
Even if a fund so  qualified,  these  restrictions  could inhibit its ability to
distribute all of its income in order to be fully relieved of tax liability.

      Gains or losses attributable to fluctuations in exchange rates which occur
between  the  time  a  Fund  accrues  income  or  other  receivables  (including
dividends) or accrues  expenses or other  liabilities  denominated  in a foreign
currency and the time a Fund  actually  collects such  receivables  or pays such
liabilities   generally  are  treated  as  ordinary  income  or  ordinary  loss.
Similarly,  on disposition of some  investments,  including debt  securities and
certain forward  contracts  denominated in a foreign  currency,  gains or losses
attributable to fluctuations  in the value of the foreign  currency  between the
date of the  acquisition  of the  security or other  instrument  and the date of
disposition  also are treated as ordinary gain or loss.  These gains and losses,
referred  to under  the Code as  "section  988 " gains or  losses,  increase  or
decrease the amount of the Funds' investment company taxable income available to
be distributed to its  shareholders  as ordinary  income.  If section 988 losses
exceed other  investment  company  taxable  income during a taxable year, a Fund
would not be able to make any ordinary dividend distributions,  or distributions
made before the losses were  realized  would be  recharacterized  as a return of
capital to shareholders,  or, in some cases, as capital gain,  rather than as an
ordinary dividend.

      PASSIVE FOREIGN  INVESTMENT  COMPANIES.  Each Fund may invest in shares of
foreign  corporations  which may be classified under the Code as passive foreign
investment companies ("PFICs").  In general, a foreign corporation is classified
as a PFIC if at least one-half of its assets constitute  investment-type assets,
or 75% or more of its  gross  income  is  investment-type  income.  If the  Fund
receives a so-called "excess distribution " with respect to PFIC stock, the Fund
itself may be subject to a tax on a portion of the excess distribution,  whether
or not the corresponding  income is distributed by the Fund to shareholders.  In
general,  under the PFIC rules, an excess distribution is treated as having been
realized ratably over the period during which the Fund held the PFIC shares. The
Fund  itself  will  be  subject  to tax on the  portion,  if any,  of an  excess
distribution  that is so allocated  to prior Fund taxable  years and an interest
factor  will be added to the tax,  as if the tax had been  payable in such prior
taxable years.  Certain  distributions from a PFIC as well as gain from the sale
of PFIC shares are treated as excess  distributions.  Excess  distributions  are
characterized  as ordinary  income even though,  absent  application of the PFIC
rules, certain distributions might have been classified as capital gain.

      The Fund may be eligible to elect  alternative  tax treatment with respect
to  PFIC  shares.  Under  an  election  that  currently  is  available  in  some
circumstances,  the Fund  generally  would be  required  to include in its gross
income its share of the  earnings of a PFIC on a current  basis,  regardless  of
whether  distributions  were  received  from  the  PFIC in a given  year If this
election were made, the special rules, discussed above, relating to the taxation
of excess  distributions,  would not apply. In addition,  another election would
involve  marking  to market the Fund's  PFIC  shares at the end of each  taxable
year, with the result that unrealized gains would be treated as though they were
realized and reported as ordinary income. Any mark-to-market losses and any loss
from an actual disposition of Fund shares would be deductible as ordinary losses
to the extent of any net mark-to-market gains included in income in prior years.

      Because the application of the PFIC rules may affect,  among other things,
the  character  of  gains,  the  amount  of gain or loss and the  timing  of the
recognition  of income with respect to PFIC shares,  as well as subject the Fund
itself to tax on  certain  income  from PFIC  shares,  the  amount  that must be
distributed to shareholders, and which will be taxed to shareholders as ordinary
income or long-term  capital gains, may be increased or decreased  substantially
as compared to a fund that did not invest in PFIC shares.

      DISTRIBUTIONS.  Distributions  of investment  company  taxable  income are
taxable  to a U.S.  shareholder  as  ordinary  income,  whether  paid in cash or
shares. Dividends paid by a Fund to a corporate shareholder,  to the extent such
dividends are  attributable  to dividends  received from U.S.  corporations by a
Fund, may qualify for the dividends  received  deduction.  However,  the revised
alternative  minimum tax applicable to corporations  may reduce the value of the
dividends received deduction.  Distributions of net capital gains (the excess of
net  long-term  capital  gains  over net  short-term  capital  losses),  if any,
designated by a Fund as capital gain  dividends,  are taxable to shareholders at
the applicable mid-term or long-term capital gains rate, whether paid in cash or
in shares,  regardless of how long the shareholder has held a Fund's shares, and
they are not eligible for the dividends received deduction. Shareholders will be
notified  annually  as to the U.S.  federal  tax  status of  distributions,  and
shareholders  receiving  distributions  in the form of newly issued  shares will
receive a report as to the net asset value of the shares received.

      If the net asset value of shares is reduced below a shareholder's  cost as
a result  of a  distribution  by a Fund,  such  distribution  generally  will be
taxable even though it represents a return of invested capital. Investors should
be careful to  consider  the tax  implications  of buying  shares of a Fund just
prior to a distribution.  The price of shares purchased at this time may reflect
the amount of the  forthcoming  distribution.  Those  purchasing just prior to a
distribution  will receive a  distribution  which  generally  will be taxable to
them.

      DISPOSITION OF SHARES. Upon a redemption,  sale or exchange of shares of a
Fund,  a  shareholder  will realize a taxable  gain or loss  depending  upon the
amount realized and the  shareholder's  basis in the shares. A gain or loss will
be  treated as capital  gain or loss if the  shares  are  capital  assets in the
shareholder's  hands and generally  will be long-term or  short-term,  depending
upon the  shareholder's  holding  period for the shares.  Any loss realized on a
redemption,  sale or  exchange  will be  disallowed  to the  extent  the  shares
disposed of are replaced (including through  reinvestment of dividends) within a
period of 61 days  beginning  30 days before and ending 30 days after the shares
are  disposed  of. In such a case,  the  basis of the  shares  acquired  will be
adjusted to reflect the  disallowed  loss. Any loss realized by a shareholder on
the  disposition  of a Fund's shares held by the  shareholder  for six months or
less will be treated for tax purposes as a long-term  capital loss to the extent
of any  distributions  of capital gain  dividends  received or treated as having
been received by the shareholder with respect to such shares.

      BACKUP  WITHHOLDING.  The Funds will be required to report to the Internal
Revenue  Service  (the  "IRS") all  distributions  and gross  proceeds  from the
redemption  of  the  Funds'  shares,  except  in  the  case  of  certain  exempt
shareholders.  All  distributions  and proceeds from the  redemption of a Fund's
shares  will be subject to  withholding  of federal  income tax at a rate of 31%
("backup  withholding")  in the  case  of  non-exempt  shareholders  if (1)  the
shareholder  fails to furnish  the Funds with and to certify  the  shareholder's
correct taxpayer  identification  number or social security number,  (2) the IRS
notifies the  shareholder or the Funds that the shareholder has failed to report
properly  certain  interest  and  dividend  income to the IRS and to  respond to
notices to that effect,  or (3) when required to do so, the shareholder fails to
certify that he or she is not subject to backup withholding.  If the withholding
provisions  are  applicable,   any  such  distributions  or  proceeds,   whether
reinvested in additional shares or taken in cash, will be reduced by the amounts
required to be withheld.

      OTHER  TAXATION.  Distributions  may also be subject to additional  state,
local and foreign taxes depending on each  shareholder's  particular  situation.
Non-  U.S.   shareholders   may  be  subject  to  U.S.  tax  rules  that  differ
significantly  from those summarized above. This discussion does not address all
of  the  tax  consequences   applicable  to  the  Funds  or  shareholders,   and
shareholders  are advised to consult  their own tax advisers with respect to the
particular tax consequences to them of an investment in a Fund.

NET ASSET VALUE

      Shares  are  purchased  at their net  asset  value  per  share.  Each Fund
calculates its net asset value (NAV) as follows:



                           (Value of Fund Assets) - (Fund Liabilities)
        NAV Per Share:     -------------------------------------------
                                  Number of Outstanding Shares


      Net asset value is  determined  as of the end of trading hours on the NYSE
(currently 4:00 p.m. New York City time) on days that the NYSE is open.

      A security  listed or traded on a recognized  stock  exchange or quoted on
NASDAQ is valued at its last sale price prior to the time when assets are valued
on the  principal  exchange on which the security is traded or on NASDAQ.  If no
sale is reported at that time the most current bid price will be used. All other
securities for which  over-the-counter  market  quotations are readily available
are valued at the most  current  bid price.  Where  quotations  are not  readily
available,  the Funds'  investments  are valued at fair value as  determined  by
management  and approved in good faith by the Trustees.  Debt  securities  which
will  mature in more than 60 days are  valued at prices  furnished  by a pricing
service  approved by the  Trustees  subject to review and  determination  of the
appropriate   price  by  Marsico   Capital,   whenever  a  furnished   price  is
significantly  different from the previous  day's  furnished  price.  Securities
which  will  mature  in 60 days or less are  valued  at  amortized  cost,  which
approximates market value.

      Generally,  trading  in  foreign  securities,  as well as U.S.  Government
securities  and  certain  cash   equivalents  and  repurchase   agreements,   is
substantially  completed  each day at  various  times  prior to the close of the
NYSE. The values of such  securities use in computing the net asset value of the
shares of the Funds are determined as of such times.  Foreign currency  exchange
rates  are  also  generally   determined   prior  to  the  close  of  the  NYSE.
Occasionally,  events  affecting the value of such  securities and such exchange
rates may occur between the times at which they are  determined and at the close
of the NYSE,  which will not be reflected in the computation of net asset value.
If during such periods,  events occur which materially  affect the value of such
securities,  the  securities  will be  valued  at  their  fair  market  value as
determined by management and approved in good faith by the Trustees.

      For  purposes of  determining  the net asset value per share of each Fund,
all assets and  liabilities  initially  expressed in foreign  currencies will be
converted  into  United  States  dollars at the mean  between  the bid and offer
prices of such currencies  against United States dollars  furnished by a pricing
service approved by the Trustees.

      A Fund's net asset value per share will be calculated  separately from the
per share net asset value of the other fund of the Trust.  "Assets belonging to"
a fund consist of the consideration  received upon the issuance of shares of the
particular  fund together with all net  investment  income,  earnings,  profits,
realized   gains/losses  and  proceeds  derived  from  the  investment  thereof,
including any proceeds from the sale of such investments,  any funds or payments
derived from any  reinvestment  of such  proceeds,  and a portion of any general
assets of the Trust not  belonging  to a  particular  series.  Each fund will be
charged with the direct liabilities of that fund and with a share of the general
liabilities  of the Trust's  funds.  Subject to the  provisions  of the Charter,
determinations by the Trustees as to the direct and allocable expenses,  and the
allocable  portion of any general assets,  with respect to a particular fund are
conclusive.

                                CAPITAL STRUCTURE

      DESCRIPTION  OF SHARES.  The Trust is an  open-end  management  investment
company  organized as a Delaware  Business Trust on October 1, 1997. The Trust's
Trust  Instrument  authorizes the Board of Trustees to issue an unlimited number
of shares of  beneficial  interest.  Each  share of the Funds has equal  voting,
dividend, distribution and liquidation rights.

      Shares of the Trust have no preemptive  rights and only such conversion or
exchange  rights  as the  Board may grant in its  discretion.  When  issued  for
payment as described in the  Prospectus,  the Trust's  shares will be fully paid
and non-assessable.

      Shareholders  are  entitled  to one vote for each  full  share  held,  and
fractional votes for fractional  shares held, and will vote in the aggregate and
not by  class  or  series  except  as  otherwise  required  by the  1940  Act or
applicable Delaware law.

      Rule 18f-2  under the 1940 Act  provides  that any matter  required  to be
submitted to the holders of the outstanding  voting  securities of an investment
company  such as the Trust  shall not be deemed to have been  effectively  acted
upon  unless  approved  by a  majority  of the  outstanding  shares of each fund
affected by the matter.  A fund is affected by a matter  unless it is clear that
the interests of each Fund in the matter are substantially identical or that the
matter does not affect any  interest of the Fund.  Under Rule 18f-2 the approval
of an investment  advisory agreement or 12b-1 distribution plan or any change in
a fundamental  investment policy would be effectively acted upon with respect to
a fund only if approved by a majority  of the  outstanding  shares of such Fund.
However,   the  rule  also  provides  that  the   ratification   of  independent
accountants,  the approval of principal  underwriting contracts and the election
of directors may be effectively  acted upon by  shareholders of the Trust voting
without regard to particular funds.

      Notwithstanding  any  provision of Delaware law  requiring for any purpose
the concurrence of a proportion greater than a majority of all votes entitled to
be cast at a meeting at which a quorum is present,  the affirmative  vote of the
holders of a majority of the total number of shares of the Trust outstanding (or
of a class or series of the Trust, as applicable)  will be effective,  except to
the extent otherwise required by the 1940 Act and rules thereunder. In addition,
the Trust Instrument  provides that, to the extent  consistent with Delaware law
and other applicable law, the By-Laws may provide for  authorization to be given
by the  affirmative  vote of the  holders of less than a  majority  of the total
number of shares of the Trust outstanding (or of a class or series).

      If  requested  to do so by the  holders  of at  least  10% of the  Trust's
outstanding  shares,  the  Trust  will call a meeting  of  shareholders  for the
purpose of voting upon the  question  of removal of a Trustee,  and to assist in
communications  with other shareholders as required by Section 16(c) of the 1940
Act.

                           HOW TO BUY AND SELL SHARES

      The right of redemption may be suspended, or the date of payment postponed
beyond the normal seven-day period by the Funds, under the following  conditions
authorized  by the 1940 Act:  (1) for any period  (a) during  which the New York
Stock Exchange is closed,  other than customary weekend or holiday closings,  or
(b) during which trading on the New York Stock Exchange is  restricted;  (2) for
any period during which an emergency exists as a result of which (a) disposal by
the Fund of securities owned by it is not reasonably practical, or (b) it is not
reasonably  practical  for a Fund to determine the fair value of its net assets;
and (3) for such other periods as the Securities and Exchange  Commission may by
order permit for the protection of the Fund's shareholders.

      The value of shares of a Fund on  redemption  may be more or less than the
shareholder's cost, depending upon the market value of that Fund's assets at the
time.  Shareholders  should note that if a loss has been realized on the sale of
shares of a Fund,  the loss may be disallowed  for tax purposes if shares of the
same Fund are purchased within (before or after) 30 days of the sale.

      It is possible that conditions may exist in the future which would, in the
opinion of the Board of Trustees,  make it undesirable  for the Funds to pay for
redemptions in cash. In such cases the Board may authorize payment to be made in
portfolio  securities of the Funds.  However,  the Funds are obligated under the
1940 Act to redeem  for cash all  shares  presented  for  redemption  by any one
shareholder up to $250,000 (or 1% of a Fund's net assets if that is less) in any
90-day period.  Securities delivered in payment of redemptions are valued at the
same  value  assigned  to them in  computing  the net  asset  value  per  share.
Shareholders  receiving such securities  generally will incur brokerage costs on
their sales.

      Any  redemption or transfer of ownership  request for  corporate  accounts
will require the following written documentation:

      1. A  written  Letter of  Instruction  signed  by the  required  number of
authorized  officers,  along with their  respective  positions.  For  redemption
requests in excess of $50,000, the written request must be signature guaranteed.
Signature  guarantees can be obtained from most banks,  credit unions or savings
associations, or from broker/dealers,  national securities exchanges, registered
securities  associations or clearing  agencies deemed eligible by the Securities
and Exchange Commission. Notaries public cannot provide signature guarantees.

      2. A certified  Corporate  Resolution  that states the date the Resolution
was adopted and who is  empowered  to act,  transfer or sell assets on behalf of
the corporation.

      3. If the  Corporate  Resolution is more than 60 days old from the date of
the  transaction  request,  a  Certificate  of  Incumbency  from  the  Corporate
Secretary  which  specifically  states that the officer or officers named in the
resolution  have  the  authority  to act  on the  account.  The  Certificate  of
Incumbency  must be dated within 60 days of the  requested  transaction.  If the
Corporate Resolution confers authority on officers by title and not by name, the
Certificate of Incumbency must name the officer(s) and their title(s).

      When redeeming  shares from the Money Market Fund, if you redeem less than
all of the  balance of your  account,  your  redemption  proceeds  will  exclude
accrued and unpaid income  through the date of the  redemption.  When  redeeming
your entire  balance  from the Money Market  Fund,  accrued  income will be paid
separately  when the income is collected and paid from the Money Market Fund, at
the end of the month.

      AUTOMATIC  INVESTMENT  PLAN. The Funds offer an Automatic  Investment Plan
whereby an investor may automatically  purchase shares of the Funds on a regular
basis ($50 minimum per  transaction).  Under the Automatic  Investment  Plan, an
investor's   designated   bank  or   other   financial   institution   debits  a
pre-authorized  amount on the  investor's  account  each  designated  period and
applies the amount to the purchase of a Fund's shares. The Automatic  Investment
Plan must be implemented  with a financial  institution  that is a member of the
Automated  Clearing House (ACH). Also, the designated Fund must have a currently
effective  registration in those states in which it is required.  You may enroll
in the Automatic  Investment Plan by completing the  appropriate  section of the
Account Application. If you wish to establish an Automatic Investment Plan after
your  account  has  been   opened,   please   contact  the  Transfer   Agent  at
1-888-860-8686.

      Automatic  Investment Plan  transactions  are scheduled for the 5th, 10th,
15th,  and 20th of every  month.  Transactions  also may be  scheduled  monthly,
quarterly, semi-annually or annually. No service fee is currently charged by the
Funds for  participation  in the  Automatic  Investment  Plan. A $20 fee will be
imposed by the Funds if  sufficient  funds are not  available in your account or
your account has been closed at the time of the automatic  transaction  and your
purchase will be canceled.  You will also be responsible for any losses suffered
by the Funds as a result.  You may adopt the  Automatic  Investment  Plan at the
time the account is opened by completing the appropriate  section of the Account
Application.  Changes to bank  information must be made in writing and signed by
all  registered  holders  of the  account  with  signatures  guaranteed.  A full
redemption  of all  funds  from  your  account  will  automatically  discontinue
Automatic Investment Plan privileges.  Termination instructions must be received
by the Funds five business days prior to the effective date of termination.

      SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWAL PLAN. The Funds offer a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan
which allows you to designate that a fixed amount ($100 minimum per  transaction
limited  to those  shareholders  with a  balance  of  $10,000  or  greater  upon
commencement of participation in the Systematic  Withdrawal Plan) be distributed
to you at regular intervals.  The redemption takes place on the 5th, 10th, 15th,
or 20th of the month but if the day you designate  falls on a Saturday,  Sunday,
or legal holiday,  the distribution shall be made on the prior business day. Any
changes made to the distribution  information must be made in writing and signed
by each registered holder of the account with signatures guaranteed.

      The  Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan  may be  terminated  by you at any  time
without  charge or  penalty,  and the Funds  reserve the right to  terminate  or
modify the Systematic Withdrawal Plan upon 60 days' written notice.  Withdrawals
involve  redemption of funds and may result in a gain or loss for federal income
tax purposes. An application for participation in the Systematic Withdrawal Plan
may be obtained from the Transfer Agent by calling 1-888-860-8686.

      RETIREMENT  PLANS.  The  Funds  offer  retirement  plans  that  may  allow
investors to shelter some of their income from taxes. Descriptions of the plans,
application  forms,  as well as  descriptions  of  applicable  service  fees and
certain  limitations on contributions and withdrawals,  are available by calling
the Transfer Agent at 1-888-860-8686.

                                 HOW TO EXCHANGE

      As  explained  in the  Prospectus,  the Trust  offers an exchange  program
whereby  shares of any  Marsico  Fund may be  exchanged  for  shares of  another
Marsico  Fund  that is  available  for  investment  at any  time.  In  addition,
shareholders  may exchange all or a portion of their  investment  from each Fund
for Marsico shares of Nations Prime Fund, as described in the Prospectus.

                                  ----------

      Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc., the Funds' transfer  agent,  receives a
service fee from the Nations  Prime Fund at the annual rate of 0.25 of 1% of the
average  daily net asset  value of the  shares of the Funds  exchanged  into the
Marsico  shares of Nations  Prime Fund.  Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc. is an
affiliate of the Funds' distributor.

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

      The  financial  statements  of the Focus Fund and the Growth & Income Fund
appearing  in the Annual  Report to  Shareholders  for those  funds for the year
ended  September  30,  1999 have been  audited  by  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP,
independent  public  accountants.  Such financial  statements  are  incorporated
herein by reference.

DISTRIBUTION

      The  Trust  has  entered  into  a  distribution  agreement  with  Sunstone
Distribution  Services,  LLC  (the  "Distributor").  Under  the  agreement,  the
Distributor  serves as each Fund's  principal  underwriter and acts as exclusive
agent for the Funds in selling their shares to the public. For the marketing and
distribution  services  provided,  the  Funds pay the  Distributor  a fee at the
annual  rate of 0.0175% of each  Fund's  average  daily net assets  subject to a
minimum  annual fee of $25,000 per Fund.  These fees are limited to .25% of each
Fund's average daily net assets.  If the fees exceed .25% of each Fund's average
daily net assets, neither Fund will pay the difference.  Any amount in excess of
 .25% will be borne by Marsico Capital, and not charged to the Funds thereafter.

      During the year ended  September  30, 1999,  The  Distributor  received as
compensation  $__________  from the Focus Fund and $__________ from the Growth &
Income Fund.

      Certain  officers and  directors of Marsico  Capital are also officers and
trustees of the Trust.

                                SERVICE PROVIDERS

Investment Adviser
Marsico Capital Management, LLC, 1200 17th Street, Suite 1300, Denver, CO 80202

Administrator
Sunstone Financial Group, Inc., 207 East Buffalo Street,  Suite 400,  Milwaukee,
WI, 53202.

Counsel
Dechert Price & Rhoads, 1775 Eye St., NW, Washington DC 20006-2401.

Custodian
State Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110.

Independent Accounts
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, 950 Seventeenth Street, Denver, CO 80202

Transfer And Dividend Disbursing Agent
Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc.,  LLC,  207 East  Buffalo  Street,  Suite 400,
Milwaukee, WI, 53202.




<PAGE>


                                  APPENDIX - A

GLOSSARY OF INVESTMENT TERMS

This  glossary  provides  a more  detailed  description  of some of the types of
securities and other  instruments  in which the Funds may invest.  The Funds may
invest in these instruments to the extent permitted by its investment  objective
and policies. The Funds are not limited by this discussion and may invest in any
other types of instruments not precluded by the policies discussed  elsewhere in
this  Prospectus.  Please  refer to the SAI for a more  detailed  discussion  of
certain  instruments.  An asterisk ("*") next to a security  indicates that each
Fund will invest less than 5% of its net assets in that security.

I.    EQUITY AND DEBT SECURITIES

BONDS are debt  securities  issued by a  company,  municipality,  government  or
government agency. The issuer of a bond is required to pay the holder the amount
of the  loan  (or par  value)  at a  specified  maturity  and to make  scheduled
interest payments.

COMMERCIAL  PAPER is a short-term debt obligation with a maturity ranging from 1
to 270 days  issued by banks,  corporations  and other  borrowers  to  investors
seeking to invest idle cash.  For  example,  the Funds may  purchase  commercial
paper issued under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933.

COMMON STOCK  represents  a share of ownership in a company and usually  carries
voting rights and earns dividends.  Unlike preferred stock,  dividends on common
stock are not fixed but are declared at the  discretion of the issuer's board of
directors.

CONVERTIBLE  SECURITIES are preferred  stocks or bonds that pay a fixed dividend
or interest  payment and are convertible into common stock at a specified price,
or conversion ratio.

DEPOSITARY RECEIPTS are receipts for shares of a foreign-based  corporation that
entitle the holder to dividends  and capital gains on the  underlying  security.
Receipts include those issued by domestic banks (American Depositary  Receipts),
foreign  banks  (Global or  European  Depositary  Receipts)  and  broker-dealers
(depositary shares).

FIXED-INCOME  SECURITIES are securities that pay a specified rate of return. The
term generally includes short- and long-term government, corporate and municipal
obligations  that pay a  specified  rate of  interest or coupons for a specified
period of time and preferred stock, which pays fixed dividends.

HIGH-YIELD/HIGH-RISK  SECURITIES are securities that are rated below  investment
grade by the primary rating agencies (e.g., BB or lower by Standard & Poor's and
Ba or lower by Moody's).  Other terms commonly used to describe such  securities
include "lower rated bonds, " "noninvestment grade bonds " and "junk bonds. "

INVERSE   FLOATERS*  are  debt  instruments  whose  interest  bears  an  inverse
relationship to the interest rate on another security. The Funds will not invest
more than 5% of their respective net assets in inverse floaters.

MORTGAGE - AND  ASSET-BACKED  SECURITIES  are shares in a pool of  mortgages  or
other debt. These securities are generally pass-through securities,  which means
that  principal  and  interest  payments  on  the  underlying  securities  (less
servicing fees) are passed through to  shareholders  on a pro rata basis.  These
securities  involve  prepayment  risk,  which  is the risk  that the  underlying
mortgages or other debt may be refinanced or paid off prior to their  maturities
during periods of declining  interest rates. In that case, the Portfolio Manager
may have to reinvest the proceeds from the securities at a lower rate. Potential
market gains on a security  subject to prepayment  risk may be more limited than
potential  market  gains  on a  comparable  security  that  is  not  subject  to
prepayment risk.

PASSIVE  FOREIGN  INVESTMENT  COMPANIES  ("PFICS") are any foreign  corporations
which  generate  certain  amounts of passive  income or hold certain  amounts of
assets for the production of passive income.  Passive income includes dividends,
interest, royalties, rents and annuities. Income tax regulations may require the
Fund to recognize income associated with the PFIC prior to the actual receipt of
any such income.

PAY-IN-KIND BONDS are debt securities that normally give the issuer an option to
pay cash at a coupon  payment  date or give the holder of the security a similar
bond  with the same  coupon  rate and a face  value  equal to the  amount of the
coupon payment that would have been made.

PREFERRED STOCK is a class of stock that generally pays dividends at a specified
rate and has  preference  over  common  stock in the  payment of  dividends  and
liquidation. Preferred stock generally does not carry voting rights.

REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS  involve  the  purchase  of a security  by the Fund and a
simultaneous  agreement by the seller (generally a bank or dealer) to repurchase
the security from the Fund at a specified  date or upon demand.  This  technique
offers a method of earning  income on idle cash.  These  securities  involve the
risk that the seller will fail to repurchase  the security,  as agreed.  In that
case,  the Fund  will  bear the risk of  market  value  fluctuations  until  the
security can be sold and may encounter delays and incur costs in liquidating the
security.

REVERSE  REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS*  involve  the sale of a security by the Fund to
another  party  (generally a bank or dealer) in return for cash and an agreement
by the  Fund to buy the  security  back at a  specified  price  and  time.  This
technique  will be used  primarily  to provide cash to satisfy  unusually  heavy
redemption requests.

RULE 144A  SECURITIES  are  securities  that are not  registered for sale to the
general  public  under  the  Securities  Act of 1933,  but that may be resold to
certain institutional investors.

STANDBY  COMMITMENTS  are  obligations  purchased by the Fund from a dealer that
give the Fund the option to sell a security to the dealer at a specified price.

STEP COUPON BONDS are debt  securities  that trade at a discount from their face
value and pay coupon  interest.  The discount from the face value depends on the
time remaining until cash payments begin,  prevailing interest rates,  liquidity
of the security and the perceived credit quality of the issuer.

STRIP BONDS are debt securities that are stripped of their interest  (usually by
a financial  intermediary)  after the securities are issued. The market value of
these  securities  generally  fluctuates more in response to changes in interest
rates than interest-paying securities of comparable maturity.

TENDER OPTION BONDS* are  relatively  long-term  bonds that are coupled with the
agreement  of a third  party  (such as a  broker,  dealer  or bank) to grant the
holders  of  such  securities  the  option  to  tender  the  securities  to  the
institution at periodic intervals.

U.S.  GOVERNMENT  SECURITIES include direct obligations of the U.S. government
that are supported by its full faith and credit.  Treasury  bills have initial
maturities of less than one year,  Treasury  notes have initial  maturities of
one to ten years,  and  Treasury  bonds may be issued  with any  maturity  but
generally have maturities of at least ten years.  U.S.  government  securities
also include  indirect  obligations of the U.S.  government that are issued by
federal   agencies  and  government   sponsored   entities.   Unlike  Treasury
securities,  agency securities  generally are not backed by the full faith and
credit of the U.S.  government.  Some agency  securities  are supported by the
right of the issuer to borrow from the  Treasury,  others are supported by the
discretionary  authority  of the U.S.  government  to  purchase  the  agency's
obligations  and others  are  supported  only by the credit of the  sponsoring
agency.

VARIABLE  AND  FLOATING  RATE  SECURITIES  have  variable or  floating  rates of
interest and, under certain limited  circumstances,  may have varying  principal
amounts.  These securities pay interest at rates that are adjusted  periodically
according to a specified  formula,  usually with reference to some interest rate
index  or  market  interest  rate.  The  floating  rate  tends to  decrease  the
security's price sensitivity to changes in interest rates.

WARRANTS are securities,  typically issued with preferred stocks or bonds,  that
give the holder  the right to buy a  proportionate  amount of common  stock at a
specified price,  usually at a price that is higher than the market price at the
time of  issuance  of the  warrant.  The right may last for a period of years or
indefinitely.

WHEN-ISSUED,  DELAYED DELIVERY AND FORWARD  TRANSACTIONS  generally  involve the
purchase  of  a  security  with  payment  and  delivery  at  some  time  in  the
future--i.e.,  beyond normal settlement.  The Funds do not earn interest on such
securities  until  settlement,  and the  Funds  bear  the risk of  market  value
fluctuations in between the purchase and settlement  dates. New issues of stocks
and bonds, private placements and U.S. government securities may be sold in this
manner.

ZERO  COUPON  BONDS are debt  securities  that do not pay  interest  at  regular
intervals,  but  are  issued  at  a  discount  from  face  value.  The  discount
approximates the total amount of interest the security will accrue from the date
of  issuance  to  maturity.  The  market  value  of these  securities  generally
fluctuates more in response to changes in interest rates than in interest-paying
securities of comparable maturity.

II.   FUTURES, OPTIONS AND OTHER DERIVATIVES

FORWARD  CONTRACTS  are  contracts  to purchase  or sell a  specified  amount of
property for an agreed upon price at a specified time. Forward contracts are not
currently  exchange traded and are typically  negotiated on an individual basis.
The Fund may enter into forward currency  contracts to hedge against declines in
the value of  securities  denominated  in, or whose value is tied to, a currency
other than the U.S.  dollar or to reduce the impact of currency  appreciation on
purchases  of such  securities.  It may also enter  into  forward  contracts  to
purchase or sell securities or other financial indices.

FUTURES  CONTRACTS  are  contracts  that  obligate  the buyer to receive and the
seller to deliver an  instrument  or money at a  specified  price on a specified
date.  The  Fund may buy and  sell  futures  contracts  on  foreign  currencies,
securities and financial  indices  including  interest rates or an index of U.S.
government,  foreign government, equity or fixed-income securities. The Fund may
also buy options on futures contracts. An option on a futures contract gives the
buyer the right, but not the obligation,  to buy or sell a futures contract at a
specified price on or before a specified date.  Futures contracts and options on
futures are standardized and traded on designated exchanges.

INDEXED/STRUCTURED  SECURITIES are typically  short- to  intermediate-term  debt
securities  whose value at maturity  or interest  rate is linked to  currencies,
interest rates, equity securities,  indices, commodity prices or other financial
indicators. Such securities may be positively or negatively indexed (i.e., their
value  may  increase  or  decrease  if  the   reference   index  or   instrument
appreciates).  Indexed/structured  securities  may have  return  characteristics
similar to direct  investments  in the  underlying  instruments  and may be more
volatile than the underlying  instruments.  The Fund bears the market risk of an
investment  in the  underlying  instruments,  as well as the credit  risk of the
issuer.

INTEREST  RATE SWAPS  involve the  exchange  by two parties of their  respective
commitments  to pay or receive  interest  (e.g.,  an exchange  of floating  rate
payments for fixed rate payments).

OPTIONS are the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a specified amount
of  securities  or other  assets  on or before a fixed  date at a  predetermined
price.  The Fund may  purchase  and write put and call  options  on  securities,
securities indices and foreign currencies.



<PAGE>


                                  APPENDIX - B

RATINGS OF INVESTMENT SECURITIES

      A rating of a rating service  represents  the service's  opinion as to the
credit quality of the security being rated. However, the ratings are general and
are not absolute  standards of quality or guarantees as to the  creditworthiness
of an issuer.  Consequently,  the Fund's  investment  adviser  believes that the
quality of debt  securities  in which the Fund  invests  should be  continuously
reviewed. A rating is not a recommendation to purchase, sell or hold a security,
because  it does  not take  into  account  market  value  or  suitability  for a
particular  investor.  When a security  has received a rating from more than one
service,  each rating  should be evaluated  independently.  Ratings are based on
current information  furnished by the issuer or obtained by the ratings services
from other  sources  which  they  consider  reliable.  Ratings  may be  changed,
suspended  or  withdrawn  as a result of  changes in or  unavailability  of such
information, or for other reasons.

      The following is a description of the  characteristics  of ratings used by
Moody's Investors Service, Inc. and Standard & Poor's Corporation.

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.  RATINGS

      Aaa--Bonds  rated Aaa are  judged to be 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.  Although 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 bonds.

      Aa--Bonds  rated  Aa are  judged  to be  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 bonds 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 in Aaa bonds.

      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 sometime 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 bonds 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 bonds are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION RATING

      AAA--Bonds  rated AAA have the highest  rating.  Capacity to pay principal
and interest is extremely strong.

      AA--Bonds  rated  AA have a very  strong  capacity  to pay  principal  and
interest and differ from AAA bonds only in small degree.

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

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

      BB--B--CCC--CC--Bonds rated BB, B, CCC and CC are regarded, on balance, as
predominantly  speculative with respect to the issuer's capacity to pay interest
and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation. BB indicates
the lowest degree of  speculation  among such bonds and CC the highest degree of
speculation.  Although  such bonds will likely have some quality and  protective
characteristics,  these are  outweighed  by large  uncertainties  or major  risk
exposures to adverse conditions.







<PAGE>


                                     PART C

                                OTHER INFORMATION

ITEM 23. EXHIBITS



      (a)(1)      Trust Instrument(1)

           (2)    Certificate of Trust(1)

      (b)         By-Laws(1)

      (c)         Not Applicable

      (d)         Investment  Advisory  Agreement between Registrant and Marsico
                  Capital  Management,  LLC with  respect  to the  Marsico  21st
                  Century Fund(2)

      (e)         Distribution Agreement (2)

      (f)         Not Applicable

      (g)         Custodian Agreement (2)

      (h)(1)      Administration Agreement (2)

         (2)      Transfer Agency Agreement (2)

         (3)      IRA Custodial Agreement and Disclosure Statement (3)

      (i)         Not Applicable

      (j)         Consent of Independent Accountants (2)

      (k)         Not Applicable

      (l)         Initial Capital Agreement (3)

      (m)(1)      Distribution Plan and form of dealer agreement (2)
         (2)      Revised form of Dealer Agreement (4)

      (n)         Not Applicable

      (o)         Not Applicable

      (p)         Powers of Attorney

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

(1) Filed in Registrant's initial Registration  Statement on October 1, 1997 and
    incorporated by reference herein.

(2) To be filed by amendment.

(3) Filed in Registrant's  Registration  Statement filed on December 2, 1997 and
    incorporated by reference herein.

(4) Filed in the Registrant's  Registration Statement filed on November 19, 1998
    and incorporated by reference herein.

ITEM 24.  PERSONS CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH REGISTRANT

      The Trust's  shares are sold  through  broker-dealer  intermediaries  that
establish single,  omnibus accounts with the Trust's transfer agent. As a result
of  this  arrangement,  Charles  Schwab  & Co.  and  Fidelity  Investments  each
technically  own  in  excess  of  25% of the  Trust's  outstanding  shares.  The
beneficial  owners of these shares,  however,  are the individual  investors who
maintain accounts with these broker-dealer intermediaries.

ITEM 25.  INDEMNIFICATION

      Reference  is made to Article  IX,  Section 2, of the  Registrant's  Trust
Instrument.

      Insofar as  indemnification  for liabilities  arising under the Securities
Act of 1933 may be permitted to trustees,  officers and  controlling  persons of
the Registrant by the Registrant  pursuant to the Trust Instrument or otherwise,
the  Registrant  is aware that in the  opinion of the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission,  such  indemnification  is against public policy as expressed in the
Act  and,  therefore,   is  unenforceable.   In  the  event  that  a  claim  for
indemnification  against  such  liabilities  (other  than  the  payment  by  the
Registrant  of expenses  incurred or paid by trustees,  officers or  controlling
persons of the Registrant in connection with the successful  defense of any act,
suit or  proceeding)  is asserted  by such  trustees,  officers  or  controlling
persons in connection  with the shares being  registered,  the Registrant  will,
unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by  controlling
precedent,  submit to a court of appropriate  jurisdiction  the question whether
such  indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and
will be governed by the final adjudication of such issues.

      Article  IX,  Section 2 of the Trust  Instrument  provides  in part that a
Trustee, officer, employee,  manager, or agent of the Trust shall be indemnified
by the Trust against liability and all expenses  reasonably  incurred or paid by
such person in connection with any claim,  action,  suit, or proceeding in which
such person becomes involved because of his or her official  relationship to the
Trust unless:  (i) such person was  adjudicated to be liable to the Trust or its
shareholders by reason of willful misfeasance,  bad faith, gross negligence,  or
reckless  disregard  for his  duties  to the  Trust;  or (ii) in the  event of a
Settlement  unless one of the  conditions  set forth in the Trust  Instrument is
satisfied.

      Section  5 of  the  Distribution  Agreement  between  the  Registrant  and
Sunstone  Distribution  Services,  LLC provides for  indemnification of Sunstone
Distribution Services, LLC, an affiliate of Sunstone, in connection with certain
claims and  liabilities to which  Sunstone  Distribution  Services,  LLC, in its
capacity as Registrant's Distributor, may be subject. A copy of the Distribution
Agreement is incorporated by reference herein as Exhibit 23(e).

ITEM 26. BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER

      Marsico Capital  Management,  LLC serves as the investment adviser for the
Registrant.  The business and other  connections of Marsico Capital  Management,
LLC are set forth in the Uniform Application for Investment Adviser Registration
("Form ADV") of Marsico Capital Management,  LLC as currently filed with the SEC
which is incorporated by reference herein.

ITEM 27. PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER

      (a) Sunstone Distribution Services, LLC currently serves as distributor of
the shares of The Haven Capital Management Trust, The Green Century Funds, First
Omaha Funds,  Inc.,  JohnsonFamily  Funds,  Inc., La Crosse Funds,  Inc., Choice
Funds and RREEF Securities Trust.

      (b) To the best of  Registrant's  knowledge,  the  officers and members of
Sunstone Distribution Services, LLC, distributor for Registrant, are as follows:


                              POSITIONS AND OFFICES
    NAME AND PRINCIPAL           WITH SUNSTONE          POSITIONS AND OFFICES
     BUSINESS ADDRESS      DISTRIBUTION SERVICES LLC       WITH REGISTRANT

Miriam M. Allison          President, Treasurer and             None
207 E. Buffalo Street      Member
Suite 400
Milwaukee, WI  53202

Daniel S. Allison          Member                               None
207 E. Buffalo Street
Suite 400
Milwaukee, WI  53202

Peter Hammond              Secretary                            None
207 E. Buffalo Street
Suite 400
Milwaukee, WI  53202

Terry Ladwig               Vice President                       None
207 E. Buffalo Street
Suite 400
Milwaukee, WI  53202


      (c) Commissions and other compensation  received,  directly or indirectly,
from the  Registrant  during the  fiscal  period  ended  September  30,  1999 by
Registrant's principal underwriter:

    Name of            Net        Compensation      Brokerage        Other
   Principal      Underwriting    on Redemption    Commissions    Compensation
  Underwriter     Discounts and  and Repurchase
                   Commissions
Sunstone               $ 0             $ 0             $ 0         $ 388,268
Distribution
Services, LLC

Sunstone Distribution  Services, LLC serves as each Fund's principal underwriter
and acts as exclusive agent for the Funds in selling their shares to the public.
For marketing and distribution services provided, Sunstone Distribution Services
receives a fee at the annual  rate of 0.0175% of each Fund's  average  daily net
assets subject to a minimum annual fee of $ 25,000 per Fund.

ITEM 28. LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS

      All  accounts,  books or other  documents  required  to be  maintained  by
Section 31(a) of the  Investment  Company Act of 1940 and the rules  promulgated
thereunder are in the possession of the Registrant,  at Registrant's  offices at
1200 17th  Street,  Suite 1300,  Denver,  CO 80202,  except (1) records held and
maintained by State Street Bank and Trust  Company  relating to its functions as
custodian;  (2) records held and maintained by Sunstone  Financial Group,  Inc.,
207 East Buffalo Street, Suite 400, Milwaukee,  Wisconsin 53202, relating to its
functions  as  administrator  and  transfer  agent,  and (3)  records  held  and
maintained by State Street Bank and Trust  Company  relating to its role as fund
accountant.

ITEM 29. MANAGEMENT SERVICES

      Not Applicable.

ITEM 30. UNDERTAKINGS

      None.



<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES


      Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933  and  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Registration
Statement  to be  signed  on its  behalf  by  the  undersigned,  thereunto  duly
authorized,  in the City of Washington in the District of Columbia, on this 17th
day of December, 1999.

                                                   THE MARSICO INVESTMENT FUND


                                    By:         / s /  THOMAS F. MARSICO
                                                   Thomas F. Marsico,*
                                                        PRESIDENT

                                    By:         / s /  SANDER M. BIEBER
                                                    Sander M. Bieber
                                                   As ATTORNEY-IN-FACT

      Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  this
Registration  Statement  has been signed below by the  following  persons in the
capacities and on the date indicated:

           SIGNATURE                       TITLE                   DATE
    / s / THOMAS F. MARSICO      Trustee and President     December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------   (Principal Executive
                                   Officer)
       Thomas F. Marsico*
     / s / J. JEFFREY RIGGS      Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

       J. Jeffrey Riggs*
        / s / RONO DUTTA         Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

          Rono Dutta*
    / s / THEODORE S. HALABY     Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

      Theodore S. Halaby*
  / s / WALTER A. KOELBEL, JR.   Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

    Walter A. Koelbel, Jr.*
      / s / LARRY A. MIZEL       Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

        Larry A. Mizel*
      / s / FEDERICO PENA        Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

         Federico Pena*
    / s / MICHAEL D. RIERSON     Trustee                   December 17, 1999
- --------------------------------

      Michael D. Rierson*        Treasurer (Principal
     / s / BARBARA M. JAPHA      Financial and Accounting    December 17, 1999
- -------------------------------- Officer)
       Barbara M. Japha*


    *By:   / s / SANDER M. BIEBER
- ---------------------------------
        Sander M. Bieber
      As ATTORNEY-IN-FACT




                                    Exhibit P


                                POWER OF ATTORNEY


      KNOW  ALL MEN BY THESE  PRESENTS,  that the  undersigned  constitutes  and
appoints  Barbara M.  Japha,  Sander M.  Bieber,  Jack W.  Murphy,  and Peter V.
Bonanno,  and each of them, his true and lawful  attorney-in-fact and agent with
full power of substitution and  resubstitution  for him in his name,  place, and
stead,  to sign any and all  registration  statements  applicable to The Marsico
Investment Fund and any amendments or supplements thereto, and to file the same,
with all exhibits thereto and other documents in connection therewith,  with the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  granting unto said  attorney-in-fact  and
agent full power and  authority  to do and perform  each and every act and thing
requisite  and  necessary to be done, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in  person,  hereby  ratifying  and  confirming  all that said
attorney-in-fact  and  agent,  or his  or her  substitute  or  substitutes,  may
lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

July 7, 1999                                    / s/  FEDERICO PENA
                                          -------------------------
                                                     Federico Pena






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