FAN ENERGY INC
SB-2/A, 1998-04-28
CRUDE PETROLEUM & NATURAL GAS
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      As Filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 27, 1998
                                                  Registration No. 333-47699
    
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                            -------------------------
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 1
                                    FORM SB-2
                        REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE
                             SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                            -------------------------
    

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                  --------------------------------------------
                 (Name of small business issuer in its charter)


       Nevada                          1311                      77-0140428
 ---------------------       -------------------------      -------------------
(State or jurisdiction         (Primary Standard              (I.R.S. Employer
  of incorporation           Industrial Classification      Identification No.)
  or organization)                Code Number)

                                                  George H. Fancher Jr.
 1801 Broadway, Suite 720                        1801 Broadway, Suite 720
  Denver, Colorado 80202                          Denver, Colorado 80202
     (303) 296-6600                                  (303) 296-6600
 ----------------------------                    ---------------------------
(Address and telephone number                   (Name, address and telephone
 of principal executive offices                  number of agent for service)
 and address of principal place
 of business)

                                 With Copies to:

                               Alan W. Peryam, LLC
                         1120 Lincoln Street, Suite 1000
                             Denver, Colorado 80203
                                 (303) 866-0900

     Approximate  date of proposed  sale to the public:  As soon as  practicable
following the date on which the Registration Statement becomes effective.

     If this Form is filed to  register  additional  securities  for an offering
pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box
and list  the  Securities  Act  registration  statement  number  of the  earlier
effective registration statement for the same offering. [ ]

     If this Form is a  post-effective  amendment  filed pursuant to Rule 462(c)
under the  Securities  Act,  check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration  statement number of the earlier effective  registration  statement
for the same offering. [ ]

     If delivery of the  Prospectus  is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434
under the Securities Act, please check the following box. [ ]
   
     If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on
a delayed or continuous  basis  pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933, other than securities offered only in connection with dividend or interest
reinvestment plans, check the following box.  [X]

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE

                                                                     Proposed             Proposed
                                                                      Maximum              Maximum           Amount of
Title of Each Class of                        Amount to be        Offering Price          Aggregate        Registration
Securities To Be Registered(1)                 Registered            Per Share         Offering Price           Fee
- ------------------------------                ------------          -----------       ----------------     ------------
<S>                                        <C>                         <C>               <C>                  <C>
Common Stock, $0.001 par value...........  3,000,000 shares(1)         $1.00             $ 3,000,000        $  885.00

Common Stock, $0.001 par value...........  2,700,000 shares(2)         $1.00             $ 2,700,000        $  796.50
                                           ---------                    ----              ----------         --------

         Total                             5,700,000                    XXX              $ 5,700,000        $1,681.50
- ----------------------------
</TABLE>

(1)  To be offered by the Registrant.

(2)  To be offered  by Selling  Securityholders.  Includes  1,800,000  shares of
     Common Stock purchased in a private  placement and 900,000 shares of Common
     Stock issuable upon exercise of outstanding  warrants acquired in a private
     placement.

(3)  The Registration Fee was paid previously.
    
     THE REGISTRANT  HEREBY AMENDS THIS  REGISTRATION  STATEMENT ON SUCH DATE OR
DATES AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO DELAY ITS EFFECTIVE DATE UNTIL THE REGISTRANT SHALL
FILE A FURTHER  AMENDMENT  WHICH  SPECIFICALLY  STATES  THAT  THIS  REGISTRATION
STATEMENT SHALL  THEREAFTER  BECOME EFFECTIVE IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 8(a) OF
THE  SECURITIES  ACT OF 1933 OR UNTIL THE  REGISTRATION  STATEMENT  SHALL BECOME
EFFECTIVE  ON SUCH  DATE  AS THE  SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION,  ACTING
PURSUANT TO SAID SECTION 8(a), MAY DETERMINE.


                                      (ii)

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                 Fan Energy Inc.
                              Cross Reference Sheet


                                     PART I
                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN THE PROSPECTUS

Item
Number        Form SB-2 Item Number                             Caption or Location in Prospectus
- ------        ---------------------                             ---------------------------------
<S>           <C>                                               <C>
1.            Front of Registration Statement and Outside       Front of Registration Statement and Outside
               Front Cover of Prospectus                         Front Cover Page of Prospectus
2.            Inside Front and Outside Back Cover Pages         Inside Front and Outside Back Cover Pages of
               of Prospectus                                     Prospectus
3.            Summary Information and Risk Factors              Prospectus Summary and Risk Factors
4.            Use of Proceeds                                   Use of Proceeds
5.            Determination of Offering Price                   Risk Factors
6.            Dilution                                          Comparative Data
7.            Selling Security Holders                          Principal and Selling Securityholders
8.            Plan of Distribution                              Plan of Distribution
9.            Legal Proceedings                                 Not Applicable
10.           Directors, Executive Officers, Promoters and      Management
               Control Persons
11.           Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial          Principal Stockholders
               Owners and Management
12.           Description of Securities                         Description of Securities
13.           Interests of Named Experts and Counsel            Experts, Legal Matters
14.           Disclosure of Commission Position on              Plan of Distribution
               Indemnification for Securities Act Liabilities
15.           Organization Within Last Five Years               Not Applicable
16.           Description of Business                           Business
17.           Management's Discussion and Analysis or           Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan
               Plan of Operation                                 of Operations
18.           Description of Property                           Business
19.           Certain Relationships and Related                 Certain Transactions
               Transactions
20.           Market for Common Equity and Related              Dividend Policy and Related Stockholder
               Stockholder Matters                               Matters
21.           Executive Compensation                            Management
22.           Financial Statements                              Financial Statements
23.           Changes In and Disagreements With                 Experts
               Accountants on Accounting and Financial
               Disclosure
</TABLE>

                                      (iii)
<PAGE>

                 [RED HERRING LANGUAGE ON PROSPECTUS COVER PAGE]
   
          INFORMATION  CONTAINED  HEREIN IS SUBJECT TO COMPLETION
          OR  AMENDMENT.  A  REGISTRATION  STATEMENT  RELATING TO
          THESE SECURITIES HAS BEEN FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND
          EXCHANGE  COMMISSION.  THESE SECURITIES MAY NOT BE SOLD
          NOR MAY OFFERS TO BUY BE ACCEPTED PRIOR TO THE TIME THE
          REGISTRATION   STATEMENT   BECOMES   EFFECTIVE.    THIS
          PROSPECTUS SHALL NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR THE
          SOLICITATION  OF AN OFFER TO BUY NOR SHALL THERE BE ANY
          SALE OF THESE  SECURITIES  IN ANY  STATE IN WHICH  SUCH
          OFFER,  SOLICITATION OR SALE WOULD BE UNLAWFUL PRIOR TO
          REGISTRATION OR QUALIFICATION UNDER THE SECURITIES LAWS
          OF ANY SUCH STATE.

<PAGE>

                                      SUBJECT TO COMPLETION DATED APRIL 27, 1998
    
PROSPECTUS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                3,000,000 Shares

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                                  Common Stock
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
     Fan Energy  Inc.,  a Nevada  corporation  (the  "Company"),  is  offering a
minimum of 300,000 shares ("Minimum  Offering") of the Common Stock,  $0.001 par
value (the "Common Stock") and up to 3,000,000  shares of Common Stock ("Maximum
Offering"), by this Prospectus (the "Offering").  The Prospectus also relates to
the  resale  of  up  to  2,700,000   shares  of  Common  Stock  by  the  Selling
Securityholders   identified   under  the   caption   "Principal   and   Selling
Securityholders."
    
     Prior to this  Offering,  there has been no public  market  for the  Common
Stock of the  Company,  and  there is no  assurance  that any such  market  will
develop.  See "Risk  Factors--Offering  Price Determination" for a discussion of
the factors considered in determining the initial public offering price.
   
     The Common Stock will not be listed in the NASDAQ stock market. The Company
will seek to have the Common Stock included in the OTC Bulletin Board maintained
by the National  Association  of Securities  Dealers,  Inc.  ("NASD")  following
completion of the Offering.
    
     SEE "RISK  FACTORS" ON PAGES 7 TO 13 FOR A DISCUSSION  OF MATERIAL  FACTORS
THAT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED IN CONNECTION WITH AN INVESTMENT IN THE COMMON STOCK.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES
     AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE
      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION
          PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY
              REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Underwriting
                                Price to       Discounts and       Proceeds to
                                 Public        Commissions(1)     Company(2)(3)
                                --------       -------------      ------------
Per Share .................  $      1.00        $    0.10         $      0.90
Total Minimum .............  $   300,000        $  30,000         $   270,000
Total Maximum..............  $ 3,000,000        $ 300,000         $ 2,700,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
(1)            The shares of Common Stock are being  offered by the Company on a
               direct  participation  basis by the officers and directors of the
               Company who will offer and sell the  securities for no commission
               or other  compensation.  The Company also may engage the services
               of  brokers  and  dealers  which  are  members  of  the  National
               Association of Securities  Dealers,  Inc.  ("NASD") and which are
               registered as such with the United States Securities and Exchange
               Commission to act as nonexclusive  agents to sell the securities.
               Any  such  participating  brokers  and  dealers  may  be  paid  a
               commission  of 10% of the purchase  price of  securities  sold by
               them.  To  the  extent  the   securities  are  not  sold  through
               participating  brokers and  dealers,  the proceeds to the Company
               would be higher.  No  broker-dealers  have been engaged as of the
               date of this  Prospectus.  Persons who sell the securities may be
               deemed  to be  underwriters  as the  term is  defined  under  the
               Securities Act of 1933.
(2)            The first  300,000  shares are being  offered by the Company on a
               "best-efforts,  all or  none"  basis  ("Minimum  Offering").  All
               proceeds from subscriptions to purchase the shares offered by the
               Company will be  transmitted  to an escrow account at The Bank of
               Denver,  Denver,  Colorado  ("Escrow Agent") by noon of the first
               business  day  following  receipt.   If  at  least  $300,000  for
               subscriptions  for the Minimum Offering is not deposited with the
               Escrow  Agent  within  120 days from the date of this  Prospectus
               (which  period may be extended for an  additional 60 days without
               notice by the  Company),  all monies  received  will be  refunded
               promptly to  subscribers,  without  deduction for  commissions or
               expenses and without interest thereon.  The minimum investment in
               the Offering is $20,000.  Subscribers  have no right to return of
               subscriptions  during the term of the escrow. After proceeds from
               the Minimum  Offering have been  deposited with the Escrow Agent,
               the  Offering may be continued  on a  "best-efforts"  basis,  but
               without any refund  provisions,  until all shares  offered by the
               Company are sold or until the Company determines to terminate the
               Offering, whichever first occurs. See "Plan of Distribution."
(3)            The proceeds to the Company are before  deduction of the expenses
               of  this  Offering,  which  are  estimated  to  be  approximately
               $40,000.  Proceeds to the Company assume  commissions are paid on
               all proceeds received. See "Use of Proceeds."



                                  May __, 1998
<PAGE>

                               INSIDE FRONT COVER

     The  Registration  Statement  of  which  this  Prospectus  is  a  part  has
registered  for resale up to  2,700,000  shares of Common  Stock of the  Company
which may be offered  from time to time by nine  persons  who are the holders of
such securities.  See "Principal and Selling Securityholders." One million eight
hundred  thousand of such shares are issued and  outstanding  and the balance of
such  securities  are  issuable  upon  exercise of  outstanding  stock  purchase
warrants.  See "Description of Securities." Shares of Common Stock could be sold
by the  holders  directly,  through  agents,  dealers  or  underwriters,  in the
over-the-counter   market,   or  otherwise,   including   privately   negotiated
transactions by the holders,  on terms and conditions  determined at the time of
any such sale by the  selling  holder.  No  broker,  dealer or other  person has
undertaken  to  purchase  or sell any of the  securities  to be  offered  by the
holders. Expenses of any such sales of Common Stock will be borne by the parties
as they may agree. See "Plan of Distribution."

     CERTAIN  PERSONS  PARTICIPATING  IN THE OFFERING MAY ENGAGE IN TRANSACTIONS
THAT  STABILIZE,  MAINTAIN,  OR OTHERWISE  AFFECT THE PRICE OF THE COMMON STOCK.
SPECIFICALLY,  PERSONS ACTING AS UNDERWRITERS MAY BID FOR, AND PURCHASE,  SHARES
OF COMMON STOCK IN THE OPEN MARKET,  SHOULD A MARKET DEVELOP.  FOR A DESCRIPTION
OF THESE ACTIVITIES, SEE "PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION."

     Prior to the date of this Prospectus,  the Company has not been a reporting
company  under the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as amended.  The Company
intends to furnish its  stockholders  with  annual  reports  containing  audited
financial statements.

    



                                        2

<PAGE>

                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
   
     This  Prospectus  and documents  incorporated  herein by reference  contain
certain  "forward-looking   statements"  which  involve  substantial  risks  and
uncertainties.  When used in this Prospectus the forward-looking  statements are
often  identified  by the  use of  such  terms  and  phrases  as  "anticipates,"
"believes,"  "intends,"  "estimates,"  "plans," "expects," "seeks," "scheduled,"
"foreseeable  future" and similar  expressions  as they relate to the Company or
its  business  or  the  management  of  the  Company.   The  "safe  harbor"  for
forward-looking  statements  provided by the Litigation  Reform Act specifically
does not apply to statements made in connection with an initial public offering.
Although the Company  believes the  understandings  and assumptions on which the
forward-looking  statements in this  Prospectus  are based are  reasonable,  the
Company's actual results,  performances and achievements could differ materially
from the results in, or implied by, these  forward-looking  statements.  Factors
that could cause or contribute to such  differences  include those  discussed in
"Risk Factors."
    
     The  following  summary is qualified  in its entirety by the more  detailed
information and financial  statements and related notes  appearing  elsewhere in
this  Prospectus.  Unless otherwise  indicated,  information in this Summary and
elsewhere in this Prospectus reflects the 10-into-1 reverse stock split effected
by the Company in March 1997, and assumes that outstanding  exercisable warrants
or  options  have not been  exercised.  Certain  terms  relating  to the oil and
natural gas industry are defined in "Glossary of Oil and Natural Gas Terms."

                                   The Company

     Fan Energy Inc. (the "Company") is an independent energy company engaged in
the  exploration  and  acquisition  of  crude  oil  and  natural  gas  reserves.
Originally  formed as an Idaho  corporation  in the early 1900s,  the  Company's
predecessor was not successful in the exploration of mining properties.  In 1988
the  predecessor  was merged into a newly-formed  Nevada  corporation as Eastern
Star Mining, Inc. and it was inactive thereafter,  with no assets or liabilities
through the end of 1996. In early 1997 the corporation was reactivated  when the
holder of a majority of the outstanding Common Stock transferred  control of the
inactive  corporation.  The  transferee  elected new  directors and officers and
caused the Company to effect a 10-into-1  reverse stock split.  Thereafter,  the
Company  raised  capital  through  the sale of its  securities  and  acquired an
interest in its oil and gas  properties  for cash and Common Stock.  The name of
the corporation was changed to Fan Energy Inc. in December 1997.

     The Company  holds an  undivided  25% working  interest in two  exploratory
prospects  located  in Yolo and Solano  Counties  in the  Sacramento  Basin near
Sacramento,  California.  The prospects total  approximately  30,000 acres.  The
operator of the prospects, a nonaffiliated  independent oil and gas company, has
completed  most  aspects  of a  three  dimensional  seismic  data  survey  ("3-D
Seismic") and has identified  several potential drilling sites where natural gas
presence is  anticipated.  The initial  exploratory  well on the  prospects  was
plugged and abandoned as a dry hole in January 1998. See "Business--Properties."
   
     The Company anticipates that as many as 40 natural gas wells may be drilled
to depths  from  2,000 to 8,000 feet on the two  prospects  over the next one to
three years,  depending upon whether initial drilling is successful and confirms
the  Company's  3-D Seismic  data  interpretations,  future  natural gas prices,
availability  of capital  and other  factors.  Until and  unless  such wells are
drilled and completed as successful natural gas producers (of which there can be
no  assurance)  or the Company  acquires  or  develops  other oil or natural gas
production or reserves,  the Company will have no production,  no cash flow, and
no oil or natural gas reserves.
    
     The Company  intends to acquire  interests in producing  oil or natural gas
properties  and  exploratory  prospects from others in the oil and gas business,
including persons or entities with whom members of management of the Company may
have an affiliation or other relationship.


                                        3

<PAGE>

                                Business Strategy

     The Company's intended strategy, which includes the following key elements,
is to develop and increase oil and natural gas reserves,  production and revenue
for the Company.
   
     o    Utilize  State-of-the-Art  Technologies.   Certain  of  the  Company's
          officers,  directors and consultants  have experience in utilizing 3-D
          Seismic data and related "state-of-the-art "technologies for analyzing
          oil and  natural  gas  drilling  and  development  opportunities.  The
          Company  intends to continue to analyze and review oil and natural gas
          prospects  in  which  it holds or may  acquire  an  interest  based on
          acquisition and analysis of 3-D Seismic data and related technologies,
          including "amplitude versus offset" or "AVO" analysis, in an effort to
          improve  drilling  success rates and accelerate the development of oil
          and natural gas reserves.
    
     o    Develop  Drillsite  Inventory.  The Company's initial interests in the
          Bali and Fiji prospects include an inventory of up to approximately 40
          potential  exploratory and development  natural gas wells, based on an
          initial  review  of the 3-D  Seismic  which  has been  completed.  The
          Company  believes that the present cash resources,  proceeds from this
          Offering and  anticipated  proceeds  from the exercise of  outstanding
          warrants  will  enable  the  Company to pay its  anticipated  share of
          drilling and completion costs for at least 12 exploratory wells on the
          these  prospects.  The Company intends to continue to seek and acquire
          interests in other prospects in the United States and Canada.

     o    Acquire Interests in Oil and Natural Gas Properties.  The Company will
          continue to evaluate  potential  acquisitions  of interests in oil and
          natural  gas  properties  in the United  States  and Canada  which may
          become   available  on  terms  which  the  Company  believes  will  be
          attractive  and  which  have  the  potential  to add to the  Company's
          reserves  and  production   through  the  application  of  lower  risk
          exploitation and exploration techniques. The Company will evaluate and
          may acquire  interests  in  producing  oil and natural gas  properties
          which may become  available on terms  acceptable to the Company.  Such
          acquisitions  will be subject to the availability of properties deemed
          suitable  by  the  Board  of  Directors,   availability  of  financial
          resources, location and other factors.
       

     The Company's  executive  offices are located at 1801 Broadway,  Suite 720,
Denver,  Colorado 80202, where it shares offices with George H. Fancher Jr., the
Company's  Chairman.  The telephone  number is (303) 296-6600.  The Company also
shares an office at 14555 North Scottsdale Road, Suite 200, Scottsdale,  Arizona
85254 with Arizona  Corporate  Management,  Inc., a business owned by William E.
Grafham, President. The phone number is (602) 483-8848.


                                        4

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                  The Offering

<S>                                                       <C>              
Common Stock Offered:

         By the Company.................................. 3,000,000 shares.
   
         By the Selling Securityholders.................. Up  to  2,700,000  shares,  including  up  to   900,000
                                                          shares  issuable upon exercise of outstanding  warrants
                                                          held by 21 persons. See "Plan of Distribution."
    
Shares outstanding prior to Offering..................... 7,771,704 shares of Common Stock.

         After Minimum Offering.......................... 8,071,704   shares  of  Common   Stock   (assuming   no
                                                          outstanding warrants are exercised).

         After Maximum Offering ......................... 10,771,704   shares  of  Common   Stock   (assuming  no
                                                          outstanding warrants are exercised).
   
Use of proceeds.......................................... The  Company  would  receive  net  proceeds of approxi-
                                                          mately  $230,000 if only the Minimum  Offering is sold,
                                                          or  $2,660,000 if the Maximum  Offering is sold,  which
                                                          would be  utilized  to fund the  Company's  anticipated
                                                          drilling obligations and acquisition and exploration of
                                                          additional oil and natural gas properties. Officers and
                                                          directors  of the  Company  do not  presently  plan  to
                                                          purchase shares in the offering;  however, such persons
                                                          or  associates  of such  persons  may  purchase up to a
                                                          total of 100,000 of shares to help the Company complete
                                                          the sale of the Minimum  Offering.  See "Risk  Factors"
                                                          and  "Plan  of  Distribution."  The  Company  will  not
                                                          receive any proceeds  from the sale of shares of Common
                                                          Stock   by   the   Selling   Securityholders.   If  all
                                                          outstanding  warrants are all exercised by holders, the
                                                          Company would receive $1,190,000.

Risk factors............................................. The  audit  reports  of  the  independent   accountants
                                                          contain a "going concern" qualification.  An investment
                                                          in  the  shares  of  Common   Stock   offered  by  this
                                                          Prospectus involves a high degree of risk and should be
                                                          considered  only by persons  who can afford the loss of
                                                          their entire investment.  Prospective  investors should
                                                          review  carefully  the  entire  Prospectus  and  should
                                                          consider,  among other things, the matters described in
                                                          "Risk Factors."

Trading................................................   The Company  will  request  one or more  broker-dealers
                                                          which  are  members  of the  NASD to  apply to have the
                                                          Common Stock of the Company  listed on the OTC Bulletin
                                                          Board Market  maintained by the NASD at the  conclusion
                                                          of the Company's Offering. No present arrangements have
                                                          been made for the  Company's  Common Stock to be listed
                                                          on the OTC Bulletin Board.
    
</TABLE>


                                        5

<PAGE>

                          Summary Financial Information
                  (Dollars in thousands, except per share data)

     The following  summary  financial data for the periods set forth below have
been derived from the Company's financial  statements included elsewhere in this
Prospectus.  The  summary  financial  data  should be read in  conjunction  with
Management's  Plan of Operations  and the Financial  Statements  and the related
Notes thereto included elsewhere in this Prospectus.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         Fiscal Year Ended
                                                                                            December 31,
                                                                                   ----------------------------
                                                                                   1996                    1997
                                                                                   ----                    ----
<S>                                                                            <C>                   <C> 
Statement of Operations Data:
Revenue......................................................................  $  - 0 -              $    - 0 -
Costs and expenses...........................................................     - 0 -                  199,232
Net(loss)....................................................................     - 0 -                 (199,232)
Net loss per share...........................................................     - 0 -                    (0.03)
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities..........................     - 0 -                  (51,468)

<CAPTION>
                                                                                            December 31,    
                                                                                   ----------------------------
                                                                                   1996                    1997  
                                                                                   ----                    ----   
<S>                                                                            <C>                   <C>       
Balance Sheet Data:
Working capital .............................................................  $  - 0 -              $   419,402 
Total assets.................................................................     - 0 -                1,710,591 
Total liabilities............................................................     - 0 -                    5,315 
Shareholders' equity.........................................................     - 0 -                1,705,276 

</TABLE>
       



                                        6

<PAGE>

                                  RISK FACTORS
   
     An investment in the shares of Common Stock offered hereby  involves a high
degree of risk.  Prospective  investors should carefully  consider the following
risks, in addition to the other  information  contained in this  Prospectus,  in
connection with an investment in the shares of Common Stock offered hereby.

     New Business.  Although the Company has existed since 1988, the Company was
substantially  reorganized  and entered a new line of business in 1997.  Through
December 31, 1997 the only  business  conducted by the Company was to acquire an
undivided minority interest in two natural gas exploratory prospects,  on one of
which one unsuccessful  exploratory well was drilled and abandoned as a dry hole
in January 1998.  The Company  plans  initially to conduct  limited  operations,
primarily by continuing to participate as a minority owner in the exploration of
the two  natural gas  prospects.  The Company  also  intends to acquire  similar
interests  in other oil or  natural  gas  exploratory  prospects  in the  United
States. The Company's business  operations are subject to all the risks inherent
in the establishment of a new business  enterprise,  including the absence of an
operating history, shortage of cash, lack of cash flow,  undercapitalization and
similar  problems.  The  Company  does  not  anticipate  that  it  will  receive
substantial cash flow from its initial  exploratory  activities until and unless
at least several  successful  wells have been  drilled,  completed and placed on
production.  The Company  presently  anticipates that its available cash will be
devoted  toward  acquisition  of interests in other oil and gas  properties  and
participating  in  drilling   activities.   See  "Business."  Various  problems,
expenses,  complications  and delays may be encountered  in connection  with the
development  of the  intended  business.  The  Company  also  faces  substantial
competitive  and  regulatory  obstacles  and  other  risks,  some of  which  are
described below.

     Qualified Audit Report; Operating Losses and Need for Additional Financing.
For the year ended December 31, 1997, the Company  incurred  operating losses of
approximately  $199,000  and at such  date  had  available  working  capital  of
approximately  $419,000.  The  auditors'  reports for  the  Company's  financial
statements for the periods ending,  and at, December 31, 1996 and 1997 both were
qualified as to whether the Company has sufficient  operating  capital to enable
the  Company to  continue as a going  concern.  The  Company  intends to use its
available cash resources and proceeds of this Offering and the proceeds, if any,
from the  exercise  of  outstanding  stock  purchase  warrants  to  continue  to
participate  in  the  exploratory  drilling  of its  two  existing  natural  gas
prospects  and to  acquire  similar  interests  in  other  oil and  natural  gas
properties.  No other  properties  have been  identified  as of the date of this
Prospectus.  The Company  initially intends to participate in the drilling of at
least 10 additional wells on its existing  natural gas prospects.  The Company's
anticipated  share in the  expenses  of  drilling  10 wells and  completing  any
successful  wells  exceeds the  Company's  present cash  resources and therefore
there can be no assurance the Company will have  sufficient  funds  available to
complete its intended exploration drilling. If the Company completes the sale of
the Minimum  Offering,  and if outstanding  stock purchase warrants which expire
during 1998 are  exercised  (see  "Description  of  Securities--Warrants"),  the
Company would have sufficient funds available to complete the initial portion of
its  exploratory  drilling plan and  participate  in drilling  approximately  12
wells.  There can be no assurance  that required  additional  financing  will be
obtained or that any other  financing  would be  available  to the Company  from
other sources. See "Management's Discussion and Analysis and Plan of Operation."

     Direct  Offering  by  Officers  and  Directors.  The  Company is making the
Offering on a direct participation basis by its directors and officers.  None of
such persons has recent  experience  in the sale of securities in an Offering of
the type  described  in this  Prospectus.  While  there are escrow  arrangements
pursuant to which  proceeds from sales of shares will be held until at least the
Minimum  Offering has been sold and to return the purchase price to investors if
at least the Minimum  Offering  has not been sold within 120 days (or within 180
days,  should the  Offering be  extended),  there can be no  assurance  that the
Offering will be  successfully  completed and it may be unlikely that all shares
offered  are  sold.  In  addition,  the lack of a named  underwriter  or  direct
participation in the Offering by named broker-dealers may make it more difficult
to complete  the  Offering  and to  establish  a liquid  public  trading  market
following  the  Offering.  The  directors and officers do not expect to purchase
shares in the Offering; however, such persons or associates of such persons may,
but are not  obligated  to,  purchase  up to 100,000  shares to help the Company
complete the Minimum Offering. See "Plan of Distribution."

                                        7

<PAGE>


     Potential Sales by Selling Securityholders. The Company has also registered
1,800,000  outstanding shares of Common Stock and 900,000 shares of Common Stock
underlying  exercisable stock purchase  warrants for resale by the holders.  The
nine persons who hold these securities have each agreed not to sell or otherwise
transfer  (i.e.,  to "lockup")  their Company  securities  for at least 120 days
following  the date of this  Prospectus  or until the Company has  completed its
Offering,  whichever  is later.  However,  the  "overhang"  of these  shares may
adversely  affect  the  willingness  of  brokers  or dealers to seek to have the
Company's stock listed in the OTC Bulletin Board Market for public trading or to
make a market in the Company's  Common Stock  following the Offering.  Also, the
availability  of such shares for sale may  adversely  affect any public  trading
market which may develop following the market.
    
     Early Stages of  Development  Activities.  The Company's  initial  strategy
includes (i) the use of 3-D Seismic and other  state-of-the-art  technologies to
maximize the potential of its properties, (ii) the drilling of exploratory wells
in the Sacramento  Basin,  and (iii) subject to the evaluation of the results of
seismic data and drilling,  drilling of additional  exploratory  and development
wells in the area.  The success of the project will be  materially  dependent on
whether the Company's initial few exploratory wells are commercially  productive
wells and whether the Company can successfully  acquire  interests in additional
exploratory   prospects.    Although   the   Company   believes   the   geologic
characteristics  and results of its 3-D data survey of its two present prospects
reduce the risk of drilling  nonproductive wells, there can be no assurance that
the Company will drill enough productive wells to establish natural gas reserves
and  positive  cash  flow.  If  the  Company  drills  a  significant  number  of
nonproductive wells, the Company's business,  financial condition and results of
operations would be materially adversely affected. Accordingly, due to the early
stage of  development,  the Company is unable to predict whether its exploration
activities in the Sacramento Basin will meet its expectations.  In the event the
Company's  exploration  activities  do not  effectively  establish  reserves and
production, the Company's business, financial condition and results of operation
will be materially adversely affected.
   
     Limited Management Participation.  The Company's officers and directors are
presently  compensated  primarily  with Common  Stock of the Company and are not
employed on a full time basis by the Company.  Each of such persons are expected
to devote  only a portion  of their  time to the  business  and  affairs  of the
Company and all of the  Company's  officers and directors  presently  have other
business  affairs to which they each devote  most of their time.  The success of
the Company in developing reserves of oil and natural gas and cash flow from the
production  therefrom is dependent  primarily upon the active  participation  of
George H. Fancher  Jr.,  the  Company's  Chairman  and William E.  Grafham,  the
President of the Company.  Both of Messrs.  Fancher and Grafham have substantial
experience  in the oil and gas  business  but both  also  have  significant  and
demanding  outside personal business  interests,  the effect of which will be to
minimize the amount of time that either has to devote to the business or affairs
of the Company. Mr. Fancher, the Chairman and Chief Operating Officer,  plans to
devote  10% to 20% of his  available  business  time to  Company  business.  Mr.
Grafham,  the President,  does not expect to devote more than 10% of his time to
Company  business.  This limited time  availability  of management may adversely
affect the Company's  ability to identify and acquire interests in other oil and
gas  properties or to  efficiently  oversee the  day-to-day  development  of the
existing   exploratory   endeavors.    See   "Conflicts   of   Interest"   below
and"Management."  The Company does not have key may life  insurance on the lives
of, nor any employment agreement with, any of its officers or directors.
    
     Conflicts  of  Interests.  The  directors  and  officers of the Company are
involved  in other  businesses,  and  have  other  interests  in the oil and gas
business which may present  conflicts of interest with respect to the activities
of the Company.  Chairman George H. Fancher Jr. is involved on a full time basis
for his own account as an  independent  oil and gas producer.  Mr. Fancher often
permits others to participate (i.e.,  acquire a working interest) in his oil and
gas projects. Mr. Fancher has represented to the Company that oil or natural gas
prospects  which he offers to third  parties  for  participation,  and which Mr.
Fancher,  in his sole  discretion,  believes to be appropriate  for the Company,
will be offered to the Company on terms no less  favorable  to the Company  than
are  available to any third  party.  Also,  oil and gas  business  opportunities
generated  by others and made  available to Mr.  Fancher for his  participation,
which Mr. Fancher,  in his sole  discretion,  believes to be appropriate for the


                                       8
<PAGE>


Company,  will be made available to the Company on the same terms as are offered
to Mr. Fancher.  Mr. Fancher may or may not participate in such ventures for his
own account. The Company will participate in an oil or natural gas prospect made
available by Mr.  Fancher only if a majority of the Company's  directors,  other
than Mr.  Fancher,  approve  the  investment.  Each of the other  directors  has
existing  personal  interests in various aspects of the oil and gas business and
each intends to continue such activities on his own behalf. However, each of the
directors has  represented  that any business  opportunity in the oil or natural
gas business involving property located within 50 miles of any existing property
in which the  Company  holds an  interest  will be first  offered to the Company
before the director pursues the opportunity for his own benefit.
   
     Limited Operating History. The Company has a limited operating history upon
which  investors  may base their  evaluation of the  Company's  prospects.  As a
result of its  brief  history  and  recently  commenced  drilling  program,  the
financial  results from the Company's  historical  periods are not indicative of
future  results.  There can be no  assurance  that the Company  will  experience
growth of revenue, oil and natural gas reserves or production. Any future growth
of the Company's oil and natural gas reserves,  production and operations  would
place  significant   demands  on  the  Company's   financial,   operational  and
administrative  resources. See "Management's Discussion and Analysis and Plan of
Operation."
    
     Volatility  of Oil and Natural Gas Prices.  The Company's  future  revenue,
operating  results,  profitability  and growth and the carrying value of any oil
and natural gas properties it acquires or develops are  substantially  dependent
upon the prices available for oil and natural gas. Historically, the markets for
oil and natural gas have been volatile and such volatility may continue or recur
in the future.  Various  factors  beyond the control of the Company  will affect
prices of oil and natural gas,  including the worldwide and domestic supplies of
oil and natural gas, the ability of the members of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries to agree to and maintain oil price and production  controls,
political instability or armed conflict in oil or natural gas producing regions,
the price and level of foreign imports, the level of consumer demand, the price,
availability  and acceptance of alternative  fuels, the availability of pipeline
capacity, weather conditions,  domestic and foreign governmental regulations and
taxes and the overall economic environment.

     Any significant  decline in the price of oil or natural gas would adversely
affect the Company and could require an impairment in the carrying  value of any
reserves which the Company develops. See "Business and  Properties--Competition"
and "Business and Properties--Regulation."

     Lack of Control Over Oil and Gas Operations. The Company does not initially
expect to be the Operator of any of its oil or natural gas interests. All of the
Company's oil and natural gas properties presently consist of minority undivided
interests in properties  operated by an unaffiliated  entity. For the most part,
the  Company  will  not have  the  right  to  determine  the  means,  timing  or
expenditures  made  in  connection  with  operations,   although  the  Company's
agreement  with the  Operator  entitles  the  Company,  or any other owner of an
undivided interest, to propose certain exploration  activities and to become the
Operator for that activity if the Operator  declines to act.  Thus,  the Company
will be unable to control material aspects of commercialization of its principal
assets and will be dependent upon the expertise,  experience, ability, diligence
and  financial  condition  of those  who  operate  the  various  properties.  An
independent  operator's  failure to properly  perform could adversely affect the
Company.
   
     Substantial Capital  Requirements.  The Company's current exploration plans
in the Sacramento Basin will require it to make substantial capital expenditures
in connection with the exploration and exploitation of those oil and natural gas
properties.  The  Company  anticipates  that the net  proceeds  from the Minimum
Offering and present  working  capital will be  sufficient to meet its estimated
capital  expenditure  requirements  for  approximately  12 months  following the
Offering.  Exercise of outstanding  warrants which expire in 1998 would generate
up to  $1,190,000  of  additional  capital.  The Company  believes  that it will
require a combination of additional  financing and cash flow from  operations to

                                       9
<PAGE>

continue to implement its future plans. The Company  currently does not have any
other  arrangements  with respect to, or sources of, additional  financing,  and
there can be no assurance that any additional financing will be available to the
Company on acceptable terms or at all. Future cash flows and the availability of
financing  will be  subject  to a  number  of  variables,  such as the  level of
production  from any  existing  wells,  prices  of oil and  natural  gas and the
Company's  success in locating and producing  new  reserves.  To the extent that
future  financing  requirements  are  satisfied  through the  issuance of equity
securities,  the Company's  existing  stockholders may experience  dilution that
could be  substantial.  The  incurrence  of debt  financing  could  result  in a
substantial  portion of the Company's operating cash flow being dedicated to the
payment of principal and interest on such indebtedness, could render the Company
more vulnerable to competitive pressures and economic downturns and could impose
restrictions on the Company's operations. If revenue, once established,  were to
decrease as a result of lower oil or natural gas prices, decreased production or
otherwise,  and the Company has no other capital sources available,  the Company
could have a reduced  ability to execute its  exploration or development  plans,
replace reserves,  if any, or to maintain production levels,  which could result
in decreased production and revenue over time. See "Management's  Discussion and
Analysis and Plan of Operation."
    
     Drilling and Operating Risks.  Oil and natural gas drilling  activities are
subject  to many  risks,  including  the risk  that no  commercially  productive
reservoirs will be encountered.  There can be no assurance that wells drilled by
the Company or in which the Company  participates will be productive or that the
Company will recover all or any portion of its drilling costs.  Drilling for oil
and natural gas may involve  unprofitable  efforts, not only from dry wells, but
from wells that are  productive  but do not produce  sufficient  net revenues to
return a profit after drilling, operating and other costs. The cost of drilling,
completing  and  operating  wells is often  uncertain.  The  Company's  drilling
operations  may be  curtailed,  delayed  or  canceled  as a result  of  numerous
factors,  many of which are beyond the  Company's  control,  including  economic
conditions, title problems, water shortages, weather conditions, compliance with
governmental and tribal  requirements and shortages or delays in the delivery of
equipment and services.  The Company's  future  drilling  activities  may not be
successful and, if unsuccessful, such failure may have a material adverse effect
on the Company's future results of operations and financial conditions.

     The  Company's  operations  are  subject to hazards  and risk  inherent  in
drilling for and producing and  transporting oil and natural gas, such as fires,
natural disasters, explosions,  encountering formations with abnormal pressures,
blowouts,  cratering,  pipeline ruptures and spills,  any of which can result in
the loss of hydrocarbons,  environmental  pollution,  personal injury claims and
other damage to  properties  of the Company and others.  As  protection  against
operating  hazards,  the Company intends to maintain  insurance coverage against
some,  but not all,  potential  losses.  The Company may elect to self-insure in
circumstances in which management believes that the cost of insurance,  although
available,  is excessive  relative to the risks presented.  The occurrence of an
event that is not covered,  or not fully covered, by third party insurance could
have a material adverse effect on the Company's  business,  financial  condition
and results of operations.

     Compliance With  Governmental  Regulations.  Oil and natural gas operations
are subject to extensive federal,  state and local laws and regulations relating
to the exploration for, and the development,  production and  transportation of,
oil and natural gas, as well as safety  matters,  which may be changed from time
to time in  response to economic or  political  conditions.  Matters  subject to
regulation by federal,  state and local authorities include permits for drilling
operations,  road and pipeline construction,  reports concerning operations, the
spacing  of  wells,   unitization  and  pooling  of  properties,   taxation  and
environmental  protection.  There can be no  assurance  that  delays will not be
encountered  in the  preparation  or approval of such  assessments,  or that the
results  of  such  regulations  will  not  require  the  Company  to  alter  its
development plans. Any delays in obtaining approvals or material alternations to
the  Company's  development  plans could have a material  adverse  effect on the
Company's operations.  From time to time, regulatory agencies have imposed price
controls and  limitations on production by  restricting  the rate of flow of oil
and  natural  gas wells below  actual  production  capacity in order to conserve
supplies of oil and natural gas. Although the Company believes it is in and will
continue  to  be  in  substantial   compliance  with  all  applicable  laws  and
regulations,   the  requirements  imposed  by  such  laws  and  regulations  are
frequently changed and subject to  interpretation,  and the Company is unable to
predict the ultimate cost of compliance with these  requirements or their effect
on its  operations.  Significant  expenditures  may be  required  to comply with
governmental  and tribal laws and  regulations  and may have a material  adverse
effect on the  Company's  financial  condition  and results of  operations.  See
"Business and Properties--Regulation."

                                       10

<PAGE>


     Compliance  With  Environmental  Regulations.  Operation of exploratory and
other  wells  are  subject  to  complex  and  changing  environmental  laws  and
regulations adopted by federal,  state and local governmental  authorities.  The
implementation  of new, or the  modification  of existing,  laws or  regulations
could have a material adverse effect on properties in which the company may have
an interest. The discharge of oil, natural gas or other pollutants into the air,
soil or  water  may  give  rise to  significant  liabilities  on the part of the
Company to the government and third parties and may require the Company to incur
substantial costs of remediation.  Moreover,  the Company may agree to indemnify
sellers of properties  purchased by the Company against certain  liabilities for
environmental claims associated with such properties.  No assurance can be given
that existing  environmental  laws or regulations,  as currently  interpreted or
reinterpreted  in the future,  or future laws or regulations will not materially
adversely affect the Company's results of operations and financial  condition or
that material  indemnity  claims will not arise against the Company with respect
to    properties    acquired    by    the    Company.    See    "Business    and
Properties--Regulation."

     Reserve  Replacement  Risk. The Company's  future success  depends upon its
ability to find,  develop or  acquire  oil and  natural  gas  reserves  that are
economically recoverable. Once established, proved reserves of the Company would
decline as reserves  are depleted by  production,  except to the extent that the
Company conducts successful exploration or development activities,  enhanced oil
recovery activities or acquires properties  containing proved reserves. In order
to establish reserves and production,  the Company must continue its exploration
drilling  program or  undertake  other  acquisition  activities.  The  Company's
strategic  plan  includes   increasing  its  reserve  base  through  exploratory
drilling,  development and  exploitation of its existing  property and acquiring
other  producing  properties.  There  can be no  assurance,  however,  that  the
Company's  planned   development  and  exploitation   projects  will  result  in
significant  additional  reserves or that the Company will have success drilling
productive wells at anticipated finding and development costs.
   
     Control by Existing Stockholders.  Upon completion of the Minimum Offering,
directors and executive  officers will own approximately  47.9% of the Company's
outstanding  Common  Stock  (approximately  37.2%  if the  Maximum  Offering  is
completed). Accordingly, these stockholders, as a group, will be able to control
the outcome of stockholder  votes,  including  votes  concerning the election of
directors,  the adoption or amendment of provisions in the company's Certificate
of  Incorporation  or Bylaws and the  approval of mergers and other  significant
corporate  transactions.  These  factors may also have the effect of delaying or
preventing  a  change  in the  management  or  voting  control  of the  Company,
including  transactions  that otherwise  could involve payment of a premium over
prevailing   market   prices  to  holders  of  Common  Stock.   See   "Principal
Stockholders" and "Certain Anti-Takeover Provisions" below.
    
     Competition.  The Company operates in the highly  competitive  areas of oil
and  natural  gas  exploration,  exploitation  and  acquisition  with many other
companies,   most  of  which  have  substantially  larger  financial  resources,
operations,  staffs and facilities.  In seeking to acquire  desirable  producing
properties  or new leases for future  exploration  and in marketing  its oil and
natural gas production,  the Company faces intense  competition  from both major
and independent oil and natural gas companies.  Many of these  competitors  have
financial and other resources  substantially in excess of those available to the
Company.  The  effects  of this  highly  competitive  environment  could  have a
material    adverse    effect    on   the    Company.    See    "Business    and
Properties--Competition."

     Acquisition  Risks.  The  Company  expects  that it may  from  time to time
evaluate and acquire  interests in properties in areas where various  members of
management  have  experience or knowledge  which provide  attractive  investment
opportunities  for the  addition  of  production  and  reserves  and  that  meet
selection criteria  established at the time.  Successfully  acquiring  producing
properties or  undeveloped  acreage  would require an assessment of  recoverable
reserves,  future  oil  and  natural  gas  prices,  operating  costs,  potential
environmental  and other  liabilities  and other  factors  beyond the  Company's
control.  Such  an  assessment  is  necessarily  inexact  and  its  accuracy  is
inherently  uncertain.  In connection with such an assessment,  the Company will
perform a review of the subject properties in a manner which management believes
to be generally  consistent with industry practices.  Such review,  however, may

                                       11

<PAGE>

not reveal all  existing or potential  problems,  nor would it permit a buyer to
become  sufficiently   familiar  with  the  properties  to  assess  fully  their
deficiencies and  capabilities.  Inspections may not be performed on every well,
and structural and environmental problems are not necessary observable even when
an  inspection  is  undertaken.  The Company  generally  would  expect to assume
preclosing  liabilities,   including  environmental  liabilities  and  generally
acquire  interests in the  properties  on an "as is" basis.  With respect to its
only  acquisition to date, the Company has no material  commitments  for capital
expenditures to comply with existing environmental requirements. There can be no
assurance that any acquisitions will be successful. Any unsuccessful acquisition
could have a material adverse effect on the Company.
   
     Certain   Anti-Takeover   Provisions.    The   Company's   Certificate   of
Incorporation  authorizes the Board of Directors to issue up to 5,000,000 shares
of  preferred  stock  without  stockholder  approval  and  to  set  the  rights,
preferences and other designations,  including voting rights, of those shares as
the Board of  Directors  may  determine.  These  provisions,  together  with the
matters  described  in "Risk  Factors--Control  by Existing  Stockholders,"  may
discourage  transactions involving actual or potential changes of control of the
Company,  including  transactions  that  otherwise  could  involve  payment of a
premium over  prevailing  market prices to holders of Common Stock.  The Company
has no plans, arrangements,  commitments or understandings relating to potential
issuance of preferred  stock.  The Company also is subject to  provisions of the
Nevada General  Corporation  Law that may make some business  combinations  more
difficult.  See  "Description  of  Capital  Stock--Certain   Provisions  of  the
Company's Charter and Bylaws," and "--Nevada Law Provisions."
    
     Absence of Dividends  on Common  Stock.  The Company has never  declared or
paid cash dividends on its Common Stock and anticipates that future earnings, if
any, will be retained for development of its business. See "Dividend Policy."
   
     Shares Eligible for Future Sale;  Registration  Rights.  Upon completion of
the  Minimum  Offering,  the  Company  will  have a total  of  8,071,704  shares
outstanding  (10,771,704 shares if the Maximum Offering is completed).  Of these
shares,  the shares offered hereby and 2,623,533  presently  outstanding  shares
will  be  freely  tradeable  without   restriction  or  registration  under  the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), by persons other than
"affiliates" of the Company,  as defined under the Securities Act. The remaining
5,148,171 outstanding shares of Common Stock will be "restricted  securities" as
that term is defined by Rule 144 as  promulgated  under the  Securities  Act, of
which 1,800,000  "restricted"  outstanding  shares, and up to 900,000 additional
restricted  shares  of  Common  Stock  issuable  upon  exercise  of  outstanding
warrants,   will  be  registered   for  resale.   See   "Principal  and  Selling
Securityholders." Upon completion of the Minimum Offering, the Company will also
have options  outstanding  to purchase an aggregate of 910,000  shares of Common
Stock. See "Executive  Compensation and Other Information," "Shares Eligible for
Future Sale" and "Description of Securities."
    
     Prior to the Offering, there has been no public market for the Common Stock
and no  predictions  can be  made  of the  effect,  if  any,  that  the  sale or
availability  for sale of shares of  additional  Common  Stock  will have on the
market price of the Common Stock in any market which may develop.  Nevertheless,
sales of  substantial  amounts  of such  shares  in any  public  market,  or the
perception that such sales could occur,  could  materially and adversely  affect
the market  price of the Common  Stock and could  impair  the  Company's  future
ability to raise capital through an offering of its equity securities.
   
     Immediate  and  Substantial  Dilution.  Purchasers  of Common  Stock in the
Offering will experience an immediate and  substantial  dilution in net tangible
book value per share of  approximately  $0.76 (76%) if only the Minimum Offering
is completed,  or $0.59 (59%) if all shares offered by the Company are sold. See
"Comparative Data."
    
                                       12

<PAGE>


     Offering Price Determination.  The offering price of the Common Stock being
offered was  established  by the Company  based on such factors as the Company's
capital requirements, financial condition and prospects, percentage ownership to
be held  by  investors  following  this  Offering,  management  and the  general
condition of securities markets at the time of the Offering.  The offering price
does not necessarily bear any relationship to the Company's assets,  book value,
earnings  history or other  established  criteria of value.  The public offering
price of the Common Stock should not be  considered  an indication of the actual
value of the Company's securities.
   
     No Prior  Public  Market;  Possible  Stock  Price  Volatility.  Before  the
Offering,  there has been no public  market for the Common  Stock.  The  initial
public  offering  price has been  determined  by the  Company,  based on several
factors that may not be  indicative  of future  market  prices.  There can be no
assurance that the Common Stock will be traded or listed on any public market or
that,  if trading does develop,  it will be  sustained.  The market price of the
Common  Stock and the  price at which the  Company  may sell  securities  in the
future  could be subject  to large  fluctuations  in  response  to  changes  and
variation  in  the  Company's  operating  results,  litigation,  general  market
conditions,  the prices of oil and natural gas, the liquidity of the Company and
the Company's ability to raise additional funds, the number of market makers for
the Company's  Common Stock and other  factors.  In the event that the Company's
operating  results are below the  expectations  of public  market  analysts  and
investors  in one or more  future  periods,  it is likely  that the price of the
Common Stock will be  materially  adversely  affected.  In  addition,  the stock
market  has  experienced  significant  price and volume  fluctuations  that have
particularly  affected  the market  prices of equity  securities  of many energy
companies,  particularly  emerging  and new  companies  and that often have been
unrelated  to the  operating  performance  of  such  companies.  General  market
fluctuations may also adversely affect the market price of the Common Stock.
    
     The  Securities  Enforcement  and Penny Stock  Reform Act of 1990  requires
additional disclosure in connection with trades in any stock defined as a "penny
stock." The  Commission's  regulations  generally  define a penny stock to be an
equity  security  that has a price of less than  $5.00  per  share,  subject  to
certain  exceptions (such exceptions include an equity security listed on NASDAQ
or issued by an issuer that has (1) net tangible  assets of at least $2 million,
if such  issuer  has been in  continuous  operation  for  three  years,  (2) net
tangible  assets of at least $5 million,  if such issuer has been in  continuous
operation for less than three years,  or (3) average annual revenues of at least
$6 million, if such issuer has been in continuous  operation for less than three
years).  None of such  exceptions  are  applicable  to the  Company.  Unless  an
exception is  available,  the  regulations  require the  delivery,  prior to any
transaction  involving a penny stock,  of a disclosure  schedule  explaining the
penny stock market and the risks associated therewith.

     In addition,  unless and until the securities of the Company are listed for
trading on NASDAQ or the Company has $2 million in net tangible assets,  trading
in the Company's securities will be subject to Rule 15c2-6 promulgated under the
Securities   Exchange  Act  of  1934  for  non-NASDAQ  and  nonexchange   listed
securities.  Under this rule,  broker-dealers  who recommend such  securities to
persons other than  established  customers and accredited  investors must make a
special  written  suitability  determination  for the  purchaser and receive the
purchaser's  written  agreement  to a  transaction  prior  to the  sale  of such
securities.  Securities would be exempt from this rule if the market price is at
least $5.00 per share.
   
     Because the Common Stock would be  characterized as penny stock, the market
liquidity for the Company's  securities could be adversely affected.  In such an
event, the regulations on penny stocks could limit the ability of broker-dealers
to sell the Company's  securities and the ability of purchasers in this Offering
or other stockholders to sell their securities in the secondary market.
    
     Limitations  on Director  Liability.  The  Company's  Restated  Articles of
Incorporation  ("Restated  Articles of Incorporation")  provide, as permitted by
Nevada law, that a director of the Company shall not be personally liable to the
Company or its stockholders for monetary damages for breach of fiduciary duty as
a  director,   with  certain   exceptions.   These   provisions  may  discourage
stockholders  from bringing suit against a director for breach of fiduciary duty
and may reduce the likelihood of derivative  litigation  brought by stockholders
on behalf of the Company against directors.  In addition, the Company's Restated
Articles of Incorporation  and bylaws provide for mandatory  indemnification  of
directors and officers to the fullest extent permitted by Nevada law.

                                       13

<PAGE>

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS
   
     The  estimated  net  proceeds  to the  Company  from this  Offering,  after
deduction of assumed 10% selling  commissions and the estimated expenses of this
Offering,  will be  approximately  $2,660,000 if all shares offered are sold and
$230,000 if only the Minimum Offering is completed. The Company anticipates that
the proceeds of this  Offering  will be applied and  allocated  over the next 12
months following this offering in approximately the amounts set forth below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       Minimum          Maximum
                                                                                     Shares Sold      Shares Sold
                                                                                     -----------      -----------
<S>                                                                                    <C>             <C>      
General and Administrative Expenses
  (Officer and employee compensation and benefits, facilities, furniture
      and equipment, and professional expenses) ................................  $    - 0 -        $   200,000
 Oil and natural gas drilling and other exploration or acquisition
      expenses(1) ..............................................................      230,000         2,460,000
                                                                                    ---------        ----------
         Total .................................................................  $   230,000       $ 2,660,000
                                                                                    =========        ==========
- ------------------
</TABLE>

(1)      The Company plans to  participate  in the drilling of at least four and
         perhaps as many as 10 wells on its two natural gas prospects in 1998 at
         expected  drilling  costs to the Company of  approximately  $60,000 per
         well.  The first  $240,000 of net proceeds  from the  Offering  will be
         utilized for these drilling expenses.  If at least $1.0 million or more
         is raised in the  Offering,  the  Company  may utilize a portion of the
         proceeds  for  acquisition  of other  oil or  natural  gas  properties,
         including producing properties. The Company does not currently have any
         commitments,   agreements,   or  understandings  with  respect  to  any
         acquisition of any property.

         Pending  their use for the foregoing  purposes,  the Company may invest
the  proceeds  in whole or in part in short  term  government  or  higher  rated
investment grade securities.

         The foregoing  represents the Company's best estimate of its use of the
net proceeds of this Offering based on present planning and business conditions.
The  Company  may  change its use of the  proceeds  as  unanticipated  events or
occurrences,  such as  increased  expenses,  successful  or  unsuccessful  drill
targets or  acquisition  opportunities,  may cause the Company to  redirect  its
priorities and reallocate the use of proceeds.

         Any funds received by the Company upon exercise of outstanding warrants
will be added to working capital.
    
                                       14

<PAGE>

                                COMPARATIVE DATA

     All of the  Company's  presently  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock were
issued at prices  substantially lower than the price of the shares being offered
hereby.
   
     As of December  31, 1997,  the net  tangible  book value of the Company was
approximately  $1,694,893  or $0.22 per  share.  If all  shares  offered  by the
Company are sold,  after deducting  underwriting  commissions and other offering
expenses,  the pro  forma  net  tangible  book  value  of the  Company  would be
approximately  $4,365,276  or $0.41 per share,  which  represents  an  immediate
increase  of  approximately  $0.19  per  share to  present  stockholders  and an
immediate  dilution  of  approximately  $0.59 per  share  (59%) per share to the
investors  in this  Offering.  If only  the  Minimum  Offering  is  sold,  after
deducting  commissions and other Offering  expenses,  the pro forma net tangible
book value of the  Company  as of  December  31,  1997,  would be  approximately
$1,935,276  or $0.24 per  share,  which  represents  an  immediate  increase  of
approximately $0.02 per share to present  stockholders and an immediate dilution
of approximately $0.76 per share (76%) to the persons purchasing shares pursuant
to the Offering being made hereby.
    
     The  following  data  illustrates  the per share  dilution to the investors
purchasing the shares being offered hereby:

                                                    Minimum        Maximum
                                                    Offering Sold  Offering Sold
                                                    -------------  -------------
Offering price .....................................    $ 1.00      $ 1.00
 Net tangible book value:
    Before offering ................................      0.22        0.22
    After offering .................................      0.24        0.41
  Increase attributable to payment by investors.....      0.02        0.19
Dilution to investors(1)............................      0.76        0.59
- -----------------

(1)  Dilution is determined by subtracting pro forma net tangible book value per
     share after the  Offering  from the amount paid per share by  investors  in
     this  Offering.  Dilution  will be increased by the amount of the Company's
     operating  losses for the period from December 31, 1997, to the  completion
     of the Offering.
   
     The  following  tables  compare  the  respective   investments  of  current
stockholders and of investors in this Offering  assuming the maximum and minimum
shares offered are sold:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              Percent of
                                                                 Total
                                                              Outstanding         Average Price
                                          Number of            Shares of           Per Share of             Cash
Minimum Offering                            Shares           Common Stock          Common Stock        Consideration
- ----------------                         ----------          ------------          ------------        -------------
<S>                                        <C>                      <C>              <C>             <C>  
New investors........................      300,000                  3.9%             $ 1.00          $    300,000
Existing stockholders................    7,771,704                 96.3%               0.23             1,800,000(1)
                                         ---------               ------                                ----------
                                         8,071,704               100.0%                              $  2,100,000
                                         =========               ======                                 =========
<CAPTION>
                                                              Percent of
                                                                 Total
                                                              Outstanding         Average Price
                                          Number of            Shares of           Per Share of             Cash
Maximum Offering                            Shares           Common Stock          Common Stock        Consideration
- ----------------                          ---------          ------------          ------------        -------------
<S>                                       <C>                      <C>               <C>             <C>  
New investors........................     3,000,000                27.9%             $ 1.00          $  3,000,000
Existing stockholders................     7,771,704                72.1%               0.23             1,800,000(1)
                                          ---------              ------                                ----------
                                         10,771,704               100.0%                             $  4,800,000
                                         ==========               ======                                =========
</TABLE>
- --------------------
(1)  Includes $300,000,  the net cost incurred by Mr. Fancher in connection with
     acquisition  and  exploration of the Company's  properties in excess of the
     cash  payment  from the  Company to Mr.  Fancher  for his  interest  in the
     properties.  See  "Certain  Transactions."  Does not  include  the value of
     services  for which  250,000  shares  were issued in 1997.  Also,  does not
     include  consideration paid to the Company prior to 1996 for 135,004 shares
     now held by approximately 500 stockholders.
    
                                       15

<PAGE>


     The dilution  figures and other  comparative  data contained  herein do not
take into account the possible exercise of outstanding warrants or options.

                 DIVIDEND POLICY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

   
     The Company's Common Stock is not presently traded on any public market. It
is  anticipated  that the Common  Stock may be listed on the NASD's OTC Bulletin
Board Market following the completion of the Offering.
    
     Dividend Policy. The Company has neither declared nor paid any dividends on
its Common Stock, nor does the Company anticipate that dividends will be paid on
its Common Stock in the  foreseeable  future.  The Company's  board of directors
presently intends to cause the Company to follow a policy of retaining earnings,
if any,  to expand  the  Company's  oil and  natural  gas  business.  Any future
determination  to pay dividends on the Common Stock will depend on the Company's
results  of  operations,   financial  condition  and  capital  requirements.  No
assurance  can be given  that any  holder of  Common  Stock  will  ever  receive
dividends in respect of the holder's shares of Common Stock.

     Stockholders.  As of the date hereof, the Company had 522 holders of record
of the Company's Common Stock.

           MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS AND PLAN OF OPERATION

     The  following  discussion  is  intended  to  provide  an  analysis  of the
Company's  financial  condition  and Plan of  Operation  and  should  be read in
conjunction  with the  Company's  financial  statements  and the  notes  thereto
contained  elsewhere in this Prospectus.  The matters  discussed in this section
that  are  not   historical  or  current  facts  deal  with   potential   future
circumstances and developments. Such forward-looking statements include, but are
not limited to, the drilling plans for natural gas, trends in the results of the
Company's  operations,  anticipated  rates of  production,  natural  gas prices,
operating  expenses  and the  Company's  anticipated  capital  requirements  and
capital resources. The Company's actual results could differ materially from the
results discussed in the forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause or
contribute to such  differences  include those  discussed below as well as those
discussed under the caption "Risk Factors."

Plan of Operation

     The Company has not generated revenues in any of the last two fiscal years.
The Company  plans to generate  future  revenue  through  its  participation  in
drilling with others in the Sacramento basin of cenral California.

     The Company plans to identify drilling  locations for natural gas that bear
consistent  analytical  data using 3-D Seismic and AVO  technologies.  Once such
drilling targets are identified,  the Company  anticipates  participating with a
25% working interest. The cost to the Company to drill a dry hole is expected to
be   approximately   $65,000.   The  estimated   annual  cost  for  general  and
administrative  expenses  of the  Company  is  anticipated  to be  approximately
$135,000 and other capital costs  associated  with the existing  properties  may
approximate  $200,000.  At December  31,  1997,  the  Company had  approximately
$419,000 in cash.

     Based upon the  available  working  capital at the  beginning of 1998,  the
Company could cover its anticipated  general and administrative  costs,  capital
lease  costs and  participate  in  drilling a maximum of two  exploratory  wells
before  additional  funds would be required.  If a drilled  well is  successful,
after payment of the Company's share of completion  expenses,  the Company would
expect to be able to drill a second well using the proceeds  from  production of
the  successful  well in  approximately  six  months  after it began  producing,
assuming anticipated rates of production and current natural gas prices.


                                       16

<PAGE>


     The  Company's  anticipated  share of the  additional  costs to  complete a
successful  natural  gas well in the  Sacramento  Basin  would be  approximately
$40,000.  From a successful well the Company  anticipates net monthly revenue of
approximately  $13,000, based upon expected average monthly gross gas production
of  45,000  mcf at a price of $1.80  per mcf.  Direct  costs  for  drilling  and
completing a successful well may be recovered in approximately eight months. The
expected  producing  life of wells in the area is anticipated to be three to ten
years.

     The  Company  expects  at least a portion  of  outstanding  warrants  to be
exercised by warrant holders if drilling results in one or more successful wells
producing at anticipated rates. If all outstanding warrants were exercised,  the
Company  would  receive  $500,000 by June 2,1998 and an  additional  $690,000 by
October 31, 1998, the dates of expiration.

Results of Operations

     For Year Ended December 31, 1997 Compared to Prior Fiscal Years

     During  1996 the  Company  had no  revenue  or  expenses  and  limited  its
activities to seeking a management team that would add value to the Company. The
Company was successful in  identifying an investor  during 1996 that purchased a
controlling interest in the Company during 1997.

     During  1997,  the  Company  became  active as the result of a  significant
change in ownership  and newly  appointed  officers and  directors.  It incurred
$17,856 in legal fees,  consulting fees of $50,400 and travel and  entertainment
expenses of $14,632.  Accounting  costs of $25,205 were  incurred to prepare the
Company's  records  for an audit  of the  fiscal  year of 1997 and for  internal
management use.
   
     The Company  was  dormant  and had no  activity  during the two years ended
December 31, 1996.  Through  December 31, 1996, the Company  incurred  $6,367 of
liability to a former officer who paid Company expenses  incurred in maintaining
the Company's status. The Company issued 636,700 shares to the former officer in
December  1996 in  satisfaction  of the  obligation.

     The Company utilizes no internal  computer  software or computer  operating
systems which it believes will be impacted, in any material manner, by Year 2000
issues. Due to the nature of the Company's business,  no material adverse impact
on the Company is  anticipated  due to Year 2000 issues on  operators of oil and
natural  gas  properties  in which  the  Company  owns an  interest,  co-owners,
suppliers, future customers or others.
    
Liquidity and Capital Resources

     At December 31, 1997,  the Company's  current  assets of $424,717  exceeded
current liabilities of $5,315, resulting in working capital of $419,402. The net
proceeds  from  private  placements  received  by the  Company  during  1997 was
$1,451,676  for  4,500,000  shares of Common  Stock and  warrants to purchase an
additional 3,680,000 shares. The Company would receive $1,190,000 during 1998 if
all outstanding warrants are exercised.

     On November 11, 1997 the Company  completed  purchase of its 25%  undivided
working  interest in two natural gas  exploration  prospects in California.  The
Company disbursed  $907,951 in cash and issued 2,250,000 common shares valued at
$300,000 to acquire the  prospects.  In  December  1997 the Company  prepaid the
Operator  of the  properties  a  nonrefundable  deposit  of $60,625 to cover the
Company's  anticipated  drilling costs to drill a targeted exploratory gas well,
drilled in January 1998.

     The Company  believes  that the net  proceeds  from the  Minimum  Offering,
together  with  existing  cash and  proceeds  from the  exercise of  outstanding
warrants will be sufficient to meet its anticipated  cash needs for at least the
next 12 months.  Thereafter,  if cash generated from anticipated producing wells
is insufficient to satisfy the Company's capital needs, the Company expects that

                                       17

<PAGE>

it will require additional capital in the future for funding working capital and
drilling  additional equity or debt securities or complete other financing.  The
Company has no commit ments in place to provide additional capital. In the event
financing  is needed in the future,  there can be no  assurance  that it will be
available  to the Company in an amount and on terms  acceptable  to the Company.
See "Risk Factors--Operating Losses and Need for Additional Financing."

                             BUSINESS AND PROPERTIES

General
   
     The Company is an independent  energy company  engaged in the  exploration,
development  and  acquisition  of crude  oil and  natural  gas  reserves.  Since
reestablishing  its  business  in 1997 the  Company  has  acquired a 25% working
interest in two  exploration  prospects,  totaling  approximately  30,000 acres,
helped to review 3-D  Seismic on most of the  acreage  and  participated  in one
exploratory  well. The Company intends to seek to develop  properties in regions
with known producing  horizons,  significant  available  undeveloped acreage and
considerable  opportunities  to  increase  reserves,   production  and  ultimate
recoveries  through  exploratory  and  development  drilling and  acquisition of
producing  properties.  The  Company's  present  activities  are  focused in the
Sacramento Basin in central  California where its two exploration  prospects are
located.  The  Company  anticipates  participating  in the  drilling  of 6 to 12
exploratory or development wells on these properties in 1998 and, depending upon
the  success  of  the  initial  drilling,   the  market  for  natural  gas,  the
availability  of  capital  and  other  factors,  that as many as 40 wells may be
drilled to fully test and exploit these two  prospects.  The Company  intends to
use its present cash assets, the proceeds of this Offering,  and the anticipated
proceeds from the exercise of outstanding  stock  purchase  warrants to meet the
capital  requirements  for  exploration  and  development  of  its  two  current
properties  and to acquire  similar  types of interests in other oil and natural
gas  properties  in the United States and Canada.  The initial well,  drilled to
test for the presence of hydrocarbons at approximately  7,400 feet on one of the
prospects,  was a dry hole. It is intended that the next well will be drilled in
the second quarter of 1998.

     The Company  presently has no reserves of oil or natural gas, no production
and no cash flow and it is not  anticipated  that any will  develop  unless  and
until the present  exploratory  drilling program is successful,  and the Company
participates  in the  development of reserves and production from this property.
The Company  does not serve as the  Operator in its two  present  prospects.  As
described below, a nonaffiliated  independent oil and gas producer serves as the
Operator  pursuant to an  operating  agreement  standard in the  industry.  As a
result, the Company is not generally in a position to make  determinations  with
respect to where and when exploratory or other wells will be drilled, the timing
of the drilling,  the conduct of day-to-day activities and related management of
the exploitation of the properties.  However, the Company, or any other owner of
an undivided  working  interest,  is authorized to propose  certain  exploration
activities and to become the operator for that activity if the Operator declines
to act.
    
     The Company does not  presently  intend to operate oil and gas  properties,
but instead will focus upon acquiring and holding properties which management of
the Company believes have a good potential to develop significant oil or natural
gas  production  and reserves  utilizing 3-D Seismic and other  state-of-the-art
technologies.  The Company  presently has not identified any such properties for
acquisition  and it is not likely that  additional  properties  will be acquired
until the  Company  has  attained  additional  capitalization,  either  with the
proceeds of this Offering,  the exercise of  outstanding  warrants or from other
sources.

Business Strategy

     The Company's intended strategy, which includes the following key elements,
is to develop and increase oil and natural gas reserves,  production and revenue
for the Company.
   
     o    Utilize  State-of-the-Art  Technologies.   Certain  of  the  Company's
          officers,  directors and consultants  have experience in utilizing 3-D
          Seismic data and related  "state-of-the-art"technologies for analyzing
          oil and  natural  gas  drilling  and  development  opportunities.  The
          Company  intends to continue to analyze and review oil and natural gas
          prospects  in  which  it holds  or may  acquire  an interest  based on
          acquisition and analysis of 3-D Seismic data and related technologies,
          including "amplitude versus offset" or "AVO" analysis, in an effort to
          improve  drilling  success rates and accelerate the development of oil
          and natural gas reserves.
    

                                       18

<PAGE>


     o    Develop  Drillsite  Inventory.  The Company's initial interests in the
          Bali and Fiji prospects include an inventory of up to approximately 40
          potential  exploratory and development  natural gas wells, based on an
          initial  review  of the 3-D  Seismic  which  has been  completed.  The
          Company  believes that the present cash resources,  proceeds from this
          Offering and  anticipated  proceeds  from the exercise of  outstanding
          warrants  will  enable  the  Company to pay its  anticipated  share of
          drilling and completion costs for at least 12 exploratory wells on the
          these  prospects.  The Company intends to continue to seek and acquire
          interests in other prospects in the United States and Canada.

     o    Acquire Interests in Oil and Natural Gas Properties.  The Company will
          continue to evaluate  potential  acquisitions  of interests in oil and
          natural  gas  properties  in the United  States  and Canada  which may
          become   available  on  terms  which  the  Company  believes  will  be
          attractive  and  which  have  the  potential  to add to the  Company's
          reserves  and  production   through  the  application  of  lower  risk
          exploitation and exploration techniques. The Company will evaluate and
          may acquire  interests  in  producing  oil and natural gas  properties
          which may become  available on terms  acceptable to the Company.  Such
          acquisitions  will be subject to the availability of properties deemed
          suitable  by  the  Board  of  Directors,   availability  of  financial
          resources, location and other factors.
       

Principal Properties
   
     Sacramento  Basin. The Sacramento  Basin is an asymmetrical  trough roughly
160 miles long, 50 miles wide and up to 30,000 feet deep. Sacramento, California
is located in the southern portion of the basin. The majority of the reserves in
the  basin  are  natural  gas  which  occurs  in  sandstone  reservoirs  of Late
Cretaceous,  Paleocene and Eocene  geologic ages. The productive  sands are very
porous and  permeable,  ranging in depth from 2000 to 8000 feet. It is generally
assumed that the gas was generated from deeply buried  Cretaceous  shales during
the early to mid Tertiary  period when such shales  reached depths of 12,000' or
greater.  Over time the gas migrated  upward along geologic  structures  through
faults and  continuous  sands  where  porosity  and  permeability  allowed  such
migration.  Most  reservoirs  appear  to be  water  driven  and are  capable  of
producing at relatively high rates until the water production becomes excessive,
resulting in termination of production of natural gas. The primary formations of
interest  in the Fiji and Bali  Prospects  are, in the order of  importance,  as
follows:

               The Winters  formation is the deepest and least explored due
          to the inadequacy of 2-D seismic in defining prospective drilling
          locations.  This formation produces natural gas within and on all
          sides of each of the Company's two  prospects.  Average  reserves
          for wells producing from this formation in the area are 2,500,000
          mcf per well ranging in depth between 6,000 to 8,000 feet.

               The Starkey formation is immediately above the Winters.  The
          average  reserves for wells  producing  from this  formation  are
          1,800,000 mcf per well at 4,000 to 6,000 feet.

               The Mokelumme formation is at a depth of approximately 3,000
          to 4,000 feet and the average  reserves for wells  producing from
          this zone are 500,000 mcf per well.
    
               The   Domengine   formation   is   located   at  a  dept  of
          approximately 2,000 to 3,000 feet, and the average reserves for a
          producing well in this formation are 400,000 mcf per well.


                                       19

<PAGE>

   
     In August  1997,  the  Company  entered  into an  agreement  with George H.
Fancher  Jr.  pursuant  to which the  Company  agreed to acquire  Mr.  Fancher's
undivided  25%  working  interest  in  two  exploratory  gas  prospects  in  the
Sacramento Basin of central  California.  The Company completed this transaction
in early  November  1997 at which time Mr.  Fancher  assigned to the Company his
interest in two Participation  Agreements with Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.
(the "Operator"), an unaffiliated independent oil and gas producing company. See
"Certain  Transactions."  Mr. Fancher  reserved a 0.625% net overriding  royalty
interest in the  properties  conveyed to the  Company.  The Operator has a 11.5%
working  interest in both  prospects  and also holds a 3.5%  overriding  royalty
interest  in any  properties  acquired  in the AMI (as  described  below).  Four
nonaffiliated  independent  oil and  natural  gas  producing  entities  hold the
balance of the working interest in the two prospects.

     Under the  Participation  Agreements,  the Company is entitled to receive a
25% net working interest  (approximately  a 18.75% net revenue  interest) in oil
and natural gas leases and other property  interests obtained by the Operator in
two prospects,  designated the "Fiji" prospect and the "Bali" prospect, included
in an area of mutual interest defined in each  Participation  Agreement ("AMI").
The two AMIs total  approximately  70 square miles and the Operator has obtained
oil and gas leases or lease options totaling  approximately  30,000 net acres on
the two prospects. The Operator may continue to acquire additional lease acreage
in the AMI.  The Company is  obligated  to pay 33.75% of  leasehold  acquisition
costs, oil and gas lease rentals and renewals,  and costs incurred in connection
with  acquisition of 3-D Seismic data within the two AMI's  surrounding  the two
prospects, for the Company's 25% working interest in the prospects.  Each of the
other four working interest owners (other than the Operator) also is required to
pay a portion of expenses larger than its working interest. Through December 31,
1997 the Operator had incurred  approximately  $3.6 million for land acquisition
and 3-D Seismic data expenses, of which the Company and its predecessor had paid
approximately $1.2 million.

     The Operator holds title to all leasehold agreements, including oil and gas
leases, farmin agreements or other leasehold acquisitions,  beneficially for the
Company and other participants in the prospects until such time as production is
established.  Therefore the Company does not anticipate that it will be a record
holder  of most of the  acreage  in  which  it  holds  an  undivided  beneficial
interest. The Operator is also entitled to an additional fee from the Company of
$2,500 per well commenced in either  prospect.  The Company is entitled,  at its
sole election,  to decline to participate in any particular  well proposed to be
drilled by the Operator.  If the Company  should elect not to  participate  in a
proposed  well,  it shall  forfeit all of its interest in the  leasehold and any
agreements  relating  to the lands  within in the revenue  sharing  unit for the
proposed  well.  Once  the  land  acquisition  and 3-D  Seismic  acquisition  is
completed,   the  Operator  will  operate  the   exploration,   development  and
exploitation  activities under the terms of a standard Operating Agreement.  The
Company  will  generally  be  obligated  to pay its portion of the  expenditures
incurred by the Operator in operating  activities,  including  drilling expenses
and similar  expenditures and will be entitled to receive  approximately  18.75%
(the net revenue  interest) of any  production  which might be obtained from the
prospects (after provisions for land owner and overriding royalties).

     The Company has a working  interest  relating to 16,182 gross acres (14,551
net  acres)  and  15,476  gross  acres  (14,551  net acres) in the Fiji and Bali
Prospects, respectively. A 3-D Seismic exploration program has been conducted by
the  Operator  on each  prospect  and the  data  has  been  processed  and  most
evaluation has been completed.  Drilling was  discontinued in January 1998 after
the first well was  drilled  due to wet field  conditions  brought  about by the
winter's el Nino storms in central  California.  It is anticipated that drilling
activity  will resume  late in the second  quarter of 1998 after the drill sites
have dried.


                                       20

<PAGE>


Acreage

     The following  table sets forth, as of December 31, 1997, the gross and net
acres of undeveloped  oil and natural gas leases which the Company  beneficially
holds or has the right to acquire.  The Company has no interest in any developed
oil or natural gas leases.
    
Prospect Area                        Developed            Undeveloped
- -------------                   -----------------      -----------------
                                Gross         Net      Gross         Net
                                -----         ---      -----         ---
Sacramento Basin:
  Bali Prospect .............   - 0 -        - 0 -     15,476      3,638
  Fiji Prospect .............   - 0 -        - 0 -     16,182      3,638
                                ------       ------    ------      -----
        Total ...............     --           --      31,658      7,276

Exploration and Development Activities

     In January  1998,  the Company  participated  in the  drilling of its first
exploratory  well which resulted in a dry hole.  The Company paid  approximately
$61,000 as its 25% portion of drilling and exploratory well expenses.

     No reserves or oil or natural gas have been established attributable to the
Company's interests in the above acreage.

Acquisitions

     The  Company  expects  that it may  evaluate  and pursue  from time to time
acquisitions  of interests in producing,  exploratory or development oil and gas
properties that provide attractive investment  opportunities for the addition of
production  and reserves and that meet the  Company's  selection  criteria.  The
successful  acquisition of such  properties  requires an assessment of potential
reserves of oil or natural  gas,  future oil and  natural gas prices,  operating
costs,  potential  environmental  and other liabilities and other factors beyond
the  Company's  control.  Such an  assessment  is  necessarily  inexact  and its
accuracy would be inherently  uncertain.  The Company intends that upon any such
acquisition,  management  will  perform  a  review  of  the  subject  properties
generally consistent with industry practices.  Such a review,  however, will not
reveal all existing or potential problems,  nor will it permit a buyer to become
sufficiently  familiar with the properties to assess fully their deficiencies or
potential value. Inspections of the properties may not be performed and problems
with  existing  properties  may not be  observable  even in those cases where an
inspection is undertaken. The Company may assume existing liabilities, including
environmental  liabilities,  upon any such  acquisition and would likely acquire
interests in such properties on an "as is" basis.

     The  Company's  Chairman,  George  H.  Fancher  Jr.,  who  has  substantial
experience  as an  operator  of  exploration  and  development  of oil  and  gas
properties,  may become the operator of properties in which the Company acquires
an interest.  In such event,  charges to the Company for such  services will not
exceed usual and customary charges to unaffiliated persons and will be at a rate
no  higher  than  operating  charges  made to any other  participant  in a given
project.

Marketing of Production

     The  price  to be  received  by the  Company  for any oil and  natural  gas
production  which may be  established  on Company  properties  will  depend upon
numerous  factors  beyond the  Company's  control,  including  seasonality,  the

                                       21

<PAGE>


condition of the national  and  international  economies,  the  availability  of
foreign  imports,  political  conditions  in other oil and natural gas producing
countries,   domestic  governmental   regulations,   legislation  and  policies,
decreases  in the prices of oil or natural  gas could have an adverse  affect on
the value of any reserves established by the Company and the Company's cash flow
from any production which may be established.  For March 1998, the price paid by
natural  gas  purchasers  in the  Sacramento  Basin of  central  California  was
approximately  $2.00 per mcf.  Such prices  could be higher or lower at the time
that any production from the Company's  exploratory  activities is available for
sale, depending upon the above factors and other unforseen circumstances.

Competition

     The Company operates in the highly competitive areas of oil and natural gas
exploration, exploitation, acquisition and production with other companies, many
of which have substantially larger financial resources,  operations,  staffs and
facilities.  In seeking to acquire desirable producing properties or production,
the Company faces intense  competition  from both major and  independent oil and
natural  gas  companies.  The company  expects  that the  inventory  of unproved
drilling  locations  in the two  prospects  in which the Company has an interest
will be the primary source of new reserves,  production and cash flow during the
next  year.  There  can be no  assurance  that  the  two  prospects  will  yield
substantial economic returns.  Failure of the two prospects to yield significant
quantities  of  economically  attractive  reserves  in  production  could have a
material adverse impact on the Company's  future  financial  condition and could
result in a writeoff of a significant  portion of its  investment in the oil and
gas properties.  In addition,  recent drilling activity by a number of operators
in the Sacramento  Basin may reduce or limit the  availability  of equipment and
supplies or reduce  demand for the Company's  production,  either of which would
impact the  Company  more  adversely  than if the  Company  were  geographically
diversified.

     The  Company's  competitors  include major  integrated  oil and natural gas
companies and numerous  independent  oil and natural gas companies,  individuals
and  drilling  and income  programs.  Many of its  competitors  are large,  well
established  companies with  substantially  larger  operating staffs and greater
capital  resources than the Company's and which,  in many  instances,  have been
engaged in the energy  business  for a much longer time than the  Company.  Such
companies may be able to pay more for  productive oil and natural gas properties
and  exploratory  prospects  and to  define,  evaluate,  bid for and  purchase a
greater number of properties and prospects than the Company's financial or human
resources permit. The Company's ability to acquire additional  properties and to
discover  reserves in the future will be dependent  upon its ability to evaluate
and  select  suitable  properties  and to  consummate  transactions  in a highly
competitive environment.

Regulation

     Regulation of Oil and Natural Gas Production. The Company's oil and natural
gas  exploration,  production  and related  operations  are subject to extensive
rules and regulations  promulgated by federal,  state and local  authorities and
agencies.  Failure  to comply  with such  rules and  regulations  can  result in
substantial penalties. The regulatory burden on the oil and natural gas industry
increases the Company's  cost of doing  business and affects its  profitability.
Although  the  Company  believes  it  is  in  substantial  compliance  with  all
applicable  laws  and  regulations,  because  such  rules  and  regulations  are
frequently  amended or  reinterpreted,  the Company unable to predict the future
cost or impact of complying with such laws.

     The state of California and many other states require  permits for drilling
operations,  drilling bonds and reports  concerning  operations and impose other
requirements  relating to the exploration and production of oil and natural gas.
Such states also have statues or regulations  addressing  conservation  matters,
including  provisions  for the  unitization  or pooling of oil and  natural  gas
properties, the establishment of maximum rates of production from wells, and the
regulation of spacing, plugging and abandonment of such wells.

                                       22

<PAGE>


     Federal Regulation of Natural Gas. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
("FERC")  regulates  interstate  natural  gas  transportation  rates and service
conditions,  which affect the  marketing of natural gas produced by the Company,
as well as the  revenues  received by the Company for sales of such  production.
Since the mid-1980's, FERC has issued a series of orders that have significantly
altered the marketing and  transportation of natural gas. These orders mandate a
fundamental  restructuring  of  interstate  pipeline  sales  and  transportation
service,   including  the  unbundling  by  interstate  pipelines  of  the  sale,
transportation,  storage and other  components of the city-gate  sales  services
such  pipelines  previously  performed.  One of FERC's  purposes  in issuing the
orders  was to  increase  competition  within  all  phases  of the  natural  gas
industry. Certain aspects of these orders may be modified as a result of various
appeals and related  proceedings  and it is  difficult  to predict the  ultimate
impact of the orders on the Company and others.  Generally, the orders eliminate
or  substantially   reduce  the  interstate   pipelines'   traditional  role  as
wholesalers of natural gas in favor of providing only storage and transportation
service, and has substantially  increased  competition and volatility in natural
gas markets.

     The price which the Company may receive for the sale of oil and natural gas
liquids would be affected by the cost of transporting  products to markets. FERC
has implemented  regulations  establishing an indexing system for transportation
rates for oil pipelines,  which, generally, would index such rates to inflation,
subject  to  certain  conditions  and  limitations.  The  Company is not able to
predict with  certainty the effect,  if any, of these  regulations on any future
operations. However, the regulations may increase transportation costs or reduce
well head prices for oil and natural gas liquids.

     Environmental  Matters.  The Company's  operations and  properties  will be
subject to extensive and changing federal,  state and local laws and regulations
relating  to  environmental  protection,   including  the  generation,  storage,
handling,   emission,   transportation  and  discharge  of  materials  into  the
environment,   and   relating  to  safety  and  health.   The  recent  trend  in
environmental legislation and regulation generally is toward stricter standards,
and this trend will likely continue.  These laws and regulations  may(i) require
the  acquisition  of a permit  or other  authorization  before  construction  or
drilling  commences  and for certain  other  activities;  (ii)limit  or prohibit
construction,  drilling  and other  activities  on certain  lands  lying  within
wilderness and other protected areas; and (iii) impose  substantial  liabilities
for pollution resulting from the Company's operations.  The permits required for
various of the Company's operations are subject to revocation,  modification and
renewal  by  issuing  authorities.  Governmental  authorities  have the power to
enforce their  regulations,  and violations are subject to fines or injunctions,
or both. In the opinion of management,  the Company is in substantial compliance
with current applicable environmental laws and regulations,  and the Company has
no  material  commitments  for  capital  expenditures  to comply  with  existing
environmental requirements. Nevertheless, changes in existing environmental laws
and regulations or in interpretations thereof could have a significant impact on
the Company, as well as the oil and natural gas industry in general.

     The Comprehensive Environmental,  Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
("CERCLA")  and compar  able state  statutes  impose  strict,  joint and several
liability  on owners and  operators  of sites and on persons who  disposed of or
arranged for the disposal of "hazardous  substances"  found at such sites. It is
not uncommon  for the  neighboring  land owners and other third  parties to file
claims for personal injury and property damage allegedly caused by the hazardous
substances released into the environment.  The Federal resource Conservation and
Recovery Act  ("RCRA")  and  comparable  state  statutes  govern the disposal of
"solid waste" and "hazardous  waste" and authorize the imposition of substantial
fines and  penalties  for  noncompliance.  Although  CERCLA  currently  excludes
petroleum from its definition of "hazardous substance," state laws affecting the
Company's  operations  impose  clean-up  liability  relating  to  petroleum  and
petroleum related products.  In addition,  although RCRA classifies  certain oil
field wastes as "non-hazardous," such exploration and production wastes could be
reclassified  as hazardous  wastes  thereby  making such wastes  subject to more
stringent handling and disposal requirements.

     The Company has acquired  leasehold  interests in numerous  properties that
for many years have produced oil and natural gas.  Although the previous  owners
of these  interests  may have used  operating and disposal  practices  that were
standard in the industry at the time, hydrocarbons or other wastes may have been
disposed of or released on or under the  properties.  In  addition,  some of the

                                       23

<PAGE>


Company's  properties  may be operated in the future by third  parties over whom
the Company has no control.  Notwithstanding  the Company's lack of control over
properties  operated  by others,  the  failure of the  operator  to comply  with
applicable  environmental  regulations may, in certain circumstances,  adversely
impact the Company.

     NEPA. The National  Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA") is applicable to many
of the Company's planned  activities and operations.  NEPA is a broad procedural
statute  intended to ensure that federal  agencies  consider  the  environmental
impact of their  actions by  requiring  such  agencies to prepare  environmental
impact  statements  ("EIS")  in  connection  with all  federal  activities  that
significantly affect the environment. Although NEPA is a procedural statute only
applicable to the federal  government,  a  significant  portion of the Company's
Sacramento  Basin acreage is located  either on federal land. The Bureau of Land
Management's  issuance of drilling  permits and the Secretary of the  Interior's
approval of plans of  operation  and lease  agreements  all  constitute  federal
action within the scope of NEPA.  Consequently,  unless the  responsible  agency
determines that the Company's drilling activities will not materially impact the
environment,  the  responsible  agency  will be  required  to  prepare an EIS in
conjunction with the issuance of any permit or approval.

     ESA. The Endangered  Species Act ("ESA") seeks to ensure that activities do
not jeopardize  endangered or threatened  animal,  fish and plant  species,  nor
destroy or modify the critical habitat of such species.  Under ESA,  exploration
and  production  operations,  as well as actions by  federal  agencies,  may not
significantly  impair or jeopardize the species or its habitat.  ESA provide for
criminal  penalties  for willful  violations  of the Act.  Other  statutes  that
provide  protection  to  animal  and  plant  species  and that may  apply to the
Company's  operations include,  but are not necessarily limited to, the Fish and
Wildlife  Coordination  Act, the Fishery  Conservation  and Management  Act, the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the National  Historic  Preservation Act. Although
the Company believes that its operations are in substantial compliance with such
statutes,  any change in these statutes or any  reclassification of a species as
endangered  could  subject  the  Company  to  significant  expense to modify its
operations  or  could  force  the  Company  to  discontinue  certain  operations
altogether.

Title to Properties

     The Company has the right to acquire from the Operator  satisfactory  title
to all interest in the two  prospects  where it holds an interest in  accordance
with  standards  generally  accepted in the oil and natural  gas  industry.  The
Company's  properties  will be subject to  customary  royalty  interests,  liens
incident to  operating  agreements,  liens for current  taxes and other  burdens
which the Company believes do not materially interfere with the use of or affect
the value of such properties. The remaining acreage is held by lease rentals and
similar  provisions  and  requires  production  in  paying  quantities  prior to
expiration of various time periods to avoid lease termination.

Office Facilities
   
     The Company currently uses approximately 750 square feet of office space in
Scottsdale  Arizona which it shares with Arizona Corporate  Management,  Inc., a
company  owned by William E.  Grafham,  President,  and shares  offices with its
Chairman, George H. Fancher Jr. in Denver, Colorado. The Company pays $2,000 per
month, on a month-to-month basis, for each office for rent and related services.
See "Certain Transactions."

Employees

     As of the  date of this  Prospectus,  the  Company  had no  employees.  The
Company's five directors and four part time consultants  provide  management and
other services.

                                       24

<PAGE>

                                   MANAGEMENT

     The following table sets forth the names and ages of the current  directors
and executive officers of the Company,  the principal offices and positions with
the Company  held by each  person and the date such person  became a director or
executive officer of the Company. Each director has served since 1997 except Mr.
Cloudy,  who became a director April 9, 1998.  Each serves until the next annual
meeting of stockholders.

Names of Executive
Officers and Directors      Age  Position
- ----------------------      ---  --------
George H. Fancher Jr. .....  58  Chairman of the Board, Chief Operating
                                 Officer and Director
William E. Grafham.........  60  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
Jeffrey J. Scott...........  35  Vice President and Director
Rex L. Utsler .............  52  Vice President and Director
George A. Cloudy ..........  64  Director
Albert A. Golusin..........  43  Secretary and Treasurer
    
     George H. Fancher Jr. Mr. Fancher has been a self employed  independent oil
producer,  operator and consultant in the Rocky Mountain Area since 1969,  doing
business  as Fancher Oil Company  since  1980.  He was  employed by Chevron as a
Petroleum Engineer,  in Casper,  Wyoming,  and Denver,  Colorado from 1962 until
1966.  In 1966,  he  joined  Ball  Brothers  Research  Corporation  in  Boulder,
Colorado,  followed by two years with an independent  oil company before forming
Smith-Fancher,  independent  producers in the Rocky  Mountain and  Mid-Continent
regions.  In 1980,  he formed  Fancher Oil  Company  and has  operated as a sole
proprietor since that time.

     George Fancher has been a director of the Independent Petroleum Association
of America  (IPAA),  the  Independent  Petroleum  Association of Mountain States
(IPAMS)  and  the  Rocky  Mountain  Oil  and Gas  Association  (RMOGA).  He is a
registered  Petroleum  Engineer  and  a  member  of  the  Society  of  Petroleum
Engineers.  He also  serves on the  Crude Oil  Policy  Committee,  Improved  Oil
Recovery  Task Force  Committee,  and Public Lands  Committee of the IPAA. He is
also a member of the Liaison  Committee of Cooperating Oil and Gas Associations,
and currently is Chairman of the Rocky Mountain  Producers Advisory Group and on
the Board of Directors of the Petroleum Technology Transfer Council (PTTC).

     William E. Grafham. Mr. Grafham has an investment banking background having
worked for two major national Canadian Brokerage houses from 1963 until 1977. In
1977 he established  operating  companies  representing West German partnerships
investing in natural resources. Offices were set up in Calgary, Alberta; Denver,
Colorado; and Vancouver,  BC. The Calgary and Vancouver operating companies were
eventually  merged  into  larger  entities;  while the main assets of the Denver
operation were sold in 1988.

     Since  1988 Mr.  Grafham,  a  private  investor,  has  participated  in the
formation  of a number  of  businesses  investing  in  technology,  oil and gas,
precious  metals and mining,  and real estate.  Most of these  investments  have
resulted  in the  companies  going  public,  with  involvements  in a number  of
countries. Mr. Grafham has been active as a director in various companies during
the last five years.  He is  currently  a director  or officer of the  following
publicly-traded Canadian companies:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     Company                               Public Exchange                    Type of Business

<S>                                        <C>                                <C>
     Viceroy Research Corporation          Toronto Stock Exchange             Gold mining
     Jerez Energy International, Inc.      Alberta Stock Exchange             Oil and gas
     Jettstar Resource Services Inc.       Alberta Stock Exchange             Service rigs-oil
     Walking Bear Resources Inc.           Alberta Stock Exchange             Technology
     Tellis Gold Mining Company Inc.       Vancouver Stock Exchange           Mining
</TABLE>
                                       25

<PAGE>

   
     Jeffrey J. Scott.  Mr. Scott is  currently  President  and Chief  Operating
Officer of  Calgary-based  Jerez Energy  International  Inc. Jerez is a Canadian
international  oil and gas exploration  and development  company focused in West
Africa.  He has held  this  position  since  May  1995.  Mr.  Scott is also Vice
President of  Operations of Postell  Energy Co. Ltd., a privately  held Canadian
oil and gas  company.  He has held this  position  since  1986.  Mr.  Scott is a
graduate  of the  University  of Calgary  and has been active in the oil and gas
industry since 1979 and has  experience in the areas of  production,  operations
and management.

     Rex L. Utsler.  Mr.  Utsler has over twenty  years of executive  management
experience in the energy and retail services industries.  From 1971 to 1980, Mr.
Utsler was  employed by Western  Crude Oil Inc., a large  independent  crude oil
transportation  and marketing company in various senior management and executive
positions. In 1980, he founded Bountiful Corporation, a company that specialized
in the  purchasing,  transportation  and  marketing  of crude oil and  served as
president and chief  executive  officer from 1980 to 1988. From 1991 to 1997 Mr.
Utsler  was  president  and chief  executive  officer of Grease  Monkey  Holding
Corporation, a public company, specializing in automotive services.

     George A.  Cloudy.  Mr.  Cloudy  has been  engaged  in the oil  exploration
business  since 1956.  After  graduating  from  Montana  School of Mines with an
engineering  geology degree,  petroleum option, he worked for G.S.I., a division
of Texas Instruments as a geophysicist from 1956 until 1965.

     In 1965 he was a co-founder of Digicon Inc.,  now Veritas DGC. From 1965 to
1984 he served in various capacities as Vice President, North and South America;
Executive Vice President,  Europe, Africa and the Far East;  President,  Digicon
Geophysical  Corp.,  and Vice  President  of  Research.  He was a director  from
1965-1991.  He served as chief  geophysicist and exploration  coordinator of Oil
Quest Inc. from 1995 to 1997. He is now an individual investor.

     Mr.  Cloudy is a member of the  Society  of  Exploration  Geophysicists,  a
registered geologist  (California) and a registered  professional  geophysicist,
Alberta, Canada (APEGGA).
    
     Albert A. Golusin. Mr. Golusin has been a Certified Public Accountant since
1981.  From 1985 to 1992,  Mr.  Golusin was the  Controller of a public  company
called  N-W  Group,  Inc.  which  later  became  Glenayre  Electronics.  He  was
responsible for assisting in the public reporting to regulatory  agencies in the
United States and Canada for the company.  From 1993 to the present, Mr. Golusin
has consulted to companies in the process of becoming publicly traded. He shares
an office with Arizona Corporate Management, Inc. in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Consultant

     Adrian  H.  Goodisman.  Mr.  Goodisman  has 12  years  of  exploration  and
production  experience  primarily  in the U.S.  and Western  Canada,  as well as
international  experience  in  the  UK,  Egypt,  Australia  and  Japan.  He is a
petroleum  engineer and has gained technical  excellence in field  exploitation,
acquisition/divestment's,  reserve  determinations and economic evaluations.  He
has a Bachelor of Science  (honors) degree in mathematics from the University of
Salford,  UK and a Master of Science  degree in petroleum  engineering  from the
University of Texas at Austin.  Mr. Goodisman is also actively involved with the
Society  of  Petroleum  Engineers  (SPE) and is  presently  on the SPE  National
Membership  Committee,  and a director of the Gulf Coast (Houston) Section.  For
the 1995/96  year,  he served as Chairman of the Board of Directors  for the SPE
Canadian Section.

                                       26

<PAGE>

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
   
     The  following  table  sets  forth  certain   information   concerning  the
compensation  paid by the Company for services rendered in all capacities to the
Company for the fiscal year ended  December 31, 1997 (there was no  compensation
in prior  years) of the chief  executive  officer at  December  31, 1997 and all
officers and directors, as a group.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                           Summary Compensation Table
                                                                             Long Term
                                                Annual Compensation        Compensation
                                          -------------------------------  ------------
                                                                            Securities
Name and Principal                                           Other Annual   Underlying   All Other
Positions at 12/31/97                     Salary     Bonus   Compensation     Options  Compensation
- ---------------------                     ------     -----   ------------   ---------- ------------
<S>                                      <C>         <C>       <C>          <C>         <C>
William E. Grafham ...................    - 0 -      - 0 -        - 0 -       200,000      None
President

All officers and directors,
as a group (five persons) ...........   $10,027(1)   - 0 -     $30,000(2)     800,000      - 0 -
- ---------------------
</TABLE>
    
(1)  Paid to Albert A. Golusin, Secretary, for services as a consultant.
(2)  Includes 150,000 shares of Common Stock, valued at $30,000, issued to three
     persons for  services as officers,  directors  and  representatives  of the
     Company.

     The Company has an agreement to pay Albert A. Golusin a monthly retainer of
$2,500,  as a  consultant,  for part time  accounting  and  financial  reporting
services. In addition, Mr. Golusin will receive 15,000 shares of Common Stock on
July 1, 1998 for services he provides to the Company through June 30, 1998.

Value of Options at December 31, 1997
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                          Aggregate Fiscal Year End Option Values
                                -------------------------------------------------------------
                                    Number of Securities             Value of Unexercised
                                  Underlying Unexercised             In-the-Money Options
                                Options at Fiscal Year End            at Fiscal Year End
                                  Exercisable/Unexercisable       Exercisable/Unexercisable(1)
                                ---------------------------       ----------------------------
<S>                                    <C>                             <C>     
William E. Grafham............         150,000/50,000                  $104,000/$39,000
All officers and directors
 as a group...................         735,000/65,000                  $435,500/$50,700
- ----------------------
</TABLE>

(1)  Because there is no trading  market,  the  estimated  value is based on the
     offering  price of $1.00 of the  Company's  Common  Stock less the exercise
     price of the options.

Option Grants in the Last Fiscal Year

         The Company granted  options during 1997 to the following  officers and
directors:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                         Percent of Total
                                   Number of Shares      Options Granted        Exercise Price         Expiration
Name                              Underlying Options       During Year              ($/sh)                Date
- ----                              ------------------     ----------------       --------------         ----------
<S>                                   <C>                     <C>                   <C>                 <C>
William E. Grafham..............      100,000(1)              12.3%                 $0.22               07/02/02
President                             100,000(2)              12.3%                 $0.35               10/30/07
George H. Fancher Jr. ..........      250,000(2)              30.1%                 $0.35               10/30/07
Rex L. Utsler ..................      100,000                 12.3%                 $0.35               10/30/07
Jeffrey J. Scott ...............      150,000                 18.5%                 $0.35               10/30/07
Albert A. Golusin ..............       30,000(1)               3.7%                 $0.20               07/02/07
                                       70,000                  8.6%                 $0.35               10/30/07
- ----------------------
</TABLE>

                                       27

<PAGE>


(1)  These options  become  exercisable  as to one-half of the shares six months
     from the date of grant  (July 1,  1997) and as to the  balance,  on July 1,
     1998. All other options are presently exercisable.

(2)  The options are nonstatutory  ("nonqualified")  options.  All other options
     are  intended to be  incentive  stock  options  under  Section  422A of the
     Internal Revenue Code of 1986.

Stock Option Plan
   
     The  Company has adopted its 1997  Statutory  and  Non-Statutory  Incentive
Stock Option Plan ("Plan") which authorizes the Company to grant incentive stock
options within the meaning of Section 422A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, and to grant nonstatutory stock options. The Plan relates to a total
of 1,000,000  shares of Common Stock.  Options  relating to 910,000  shares have
been issued and  outstanding.  The options for 230,000  shares vest in two equal
installments  at six months from the date of grant and at the first  anniversary
of the grant. Other outstanding  options became vested at December 31, 1997. The
options are  exercisable at $0.20 per share for 30,000  shares,  $0.22 per share
for 100,000  shares,  $0.35 per share for 680,000 shares and $0.50 per share for
options to purchase  100,000 shares granted to George A. Cloudy in April 1998 at
the time he joined  the Board of  Directors.  The  outstanding  options  must be
exercised  within 10 years from the date of grant and no later than three months
after  termination  of  employment  or service as a  director,  except  that any
optionee  who is unable to continue  employment  or service as a director due to
total and  permanent  disability  may exercise  such options  within one year of
termination  and the options of an optionee  who is employed or disabled and who
dies must be exercised within one year after the date of death.
    
     The Plan  requires that the exercise  prices of options  granted must be at
least equal to the fair market  value of a share of Common  Stock on the date of
grant,  provided that for incentive options if an employee owns more than 10% of
the Company's  outstanding  Common Stock then the exercise price of an incentive
option  must be at  least  110%  of the  fair  market  value  of a share  of the
Company's Common Stock on the date of grant, and the maximum term of such option
may be no longer  than five years.  The  aggregate  fair market  value of Common
Stock,  determined at the time the option is granted,  for which incentive stock
options become exercisable by an employee during any calendar year is limited to
$100,000.

     The Plan is to be  administered  by the  Company's  Board of Directors or a
committee  thereof which determines the terms of options granted,  including the
exercise price, the number of shares of Common Stock subject to the option,  and
the terms and  conditions  of  exercise.  No  option  granted  under the Plan is
transferrable  by the  optionee  other than by will or the laws of  descent  and
distribution, and each option is exercisable during the lifetime of the optionee
only by such optionee.

Compensation of Directors
   
     The  Company  does  not pay cash  compensation  to  directors.  Four of the
directors of the Company will be issued 50,000 shares of restricted Common Stock
of the Company on July 1, 1998 as  compensation  for  services  furnished to the
Company as an officer or director  through June 30,  1998.  The right to receive
such shares will be  forfeited  if a director is unable or  unwilling to perform
the  services.  The Company has granted  each of the four  directors  options to
purchase shares of Common Stock at $0.35 per share, as shown in the table above.
The options  were granted  under the Plan and must be exercised  within 10 years
from the date of grant.  George A.  Cloudy  received an option to purchase up to
100,000 shares at $0.50 per share in April 1998. The option becomes  exercisable
as to half of the  shares  six  months  after  the date of  grant  and as to the
balance one year from the date of grant.

                                       28

<PAGE>

                      PRINCIPAL AND SELLING SECURITYHOLDERS

     The following  table sets forth,  as of April 30, 1998,  and as adjusted to
reflect the sale of the shares of Common Stock  offered by the Company  pursuant
to this Prospectus, certain information with respect to the beneficial ownership
of the  Company's  Common Stock by (i) each director and officer of the Company,
(ii) each person known to the Company to be the  beneficial  owner of 5% or more
of the outstanding  shares of Common Stock,  with such person's  address,  (iii)
each person whose  shares have been  registered  for resale in the  Registration
Statement of which this  Prospectus is a part (the  "Selling  Securityholders"),
and  (iv)  all of the  directors  and  executive  officers  as a  group.  Unless
otherwise indicated,  the person or entity listed in the table is the beneficial
owner of the shares and has sole voting and investment power with respect to the
shares indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               Shares beneficially
                                                                                              owned after offering
                                                                                            ---------------------------
                                                                                                           Percent
                                                       Shares Beneficially                            -----------------
                                                    owned prior to offering(1)   Shares                Minimum  Maximum
Name of Beneficial Owner                            ------------------------- being offered           Offering Offering
or Name of Officer or Director                         Number      Percent      for sale    Number      Sold     Sold
- --------------------------------------------           ------      -------    ------------- ------    -------- --------
<S>                                                   <C>           <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>     <C> 
William E. Grafham, Director ....................   843,568(2)      10.5%           --     843,568     10.1%      7.7%
Grandview Condominiums #412
Seven Mile Beach
Grand Cayman, BWI

George H. Fancher Jr., Director .................   3,000,000(3)    35.2%           --   3,000,000     34%       26%
1801 Broadway, Suite 720
Denver, Colorado 80202

Rex L. Utsler, Director .........................   350,000(4)       4.4%           --     350,000      4.2%      3.2%

Jeffrey J. Scott, Director ......................   200,000(5)       2.5%           --     200,000      2.5%      1.8%

George A. Cloudy, Director ......................       --           --             --        --         --        --

Albert A. Golusin, Secretary and Treasurer......... 185,000(6)       2.4%           --     185,000      2.3%      1.7%

David Grafham ...................................   650,000(7)       8.0%           --     650,000      7.7%      5.9%
1307 West 8th Avenue
Vancouver, B.C.
Canada V5H 3W4

Roger Duffield ..................................   625,000((9)      7.8%           --     625,000      7.4%      5.7%
c/o  Euro Bank Corporation
5th Floor, Anderson Square
Grand Cayman, BWI(8)

Euro Securities Ltd. ............................   650,000(7)       8.0%           --     650,000      7.7%      5.9%
c/o  Euro Bank Corporation
5th Floor, Anderson Square
Grand Cayman, BWI(8)

Linda Kemble ....................................   650,000(7)       8.0%           --     650,000      7.7%      5.9%
#59 Temple Hill Dr. N.E ................
Calgary, Alberta
Canada T1Y 404

Don Stewart .....................................   738,000(10)      9.0%           --     738,000      8.7%      6.6%
P. O. Box 245
Grand Cayman, BWI(8)

                                       29

<PAGE>

<CAPTION>
                                                                                               Shares beneficially
                                                                                              owned after offering
                                                                                            ---------------------------
                                                                                                           Percent
                                                       Shares Beneficially                            -----------------
                                                    owned prior to offering(1)   Shares                Minimum  Maximum
Name of Beneficial Owner                            ------------------------- being offered           Offering Offering
or Name of Officer or Director                         Number      Percent      for sale    Number      Sold     Sold
- --------------------------------------------           ------      -------    ------------- ------    -------- --------
<S>                                                   <C>           <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>     <C> 
Susan Scott .....................................   415,000(12)      5.2%     300,000(15)  115,000      1.4%      1.1%
#2 2109 4th Avenue, N.W.
Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 0N6

Alex Whiteside ..................................   405,000(11)      5.1%     405,000(14)   - 0 -        --       --
1530--1001 13 Avenue, S.W.
Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2R 0L5

Aldridge Holdings, Ltd. .........................   300,000(11)      3.7%     300,000(11)   - 0 -        --       --

Bank Lips, Ltd. .................................   372,000(14)      4.7%     372,000(12)   72,000       .9%       .7%

Colony Investments Limited ......................   320,000(15)      4.1%     300,000(13)   20,000       .2%       .2%

EMB Management Consultants ......................   300,000(13)      3.8%     300,000(11)   - 0 -        --       --

Hartford Securities .............................   300,000(13)      3.8%     300,000(11)   - 0 -        --       --

Charles Maddin ..................................   300,000(13)      3.8%     300,000(11)   - 0 -        --       --

Wadeco, Inc. ....................................   345,000(16)      4.4%     195,000(17)  150,000      1.8%      1.4%


All officers and directors as a
group (6 persons) ............................... 4,578,568(17)     49.5%     950,000    4,578,568     47.9%     37.2%
</TABLE>
    
(1)  All securities are owned directly and beneficially  unless otherwise noted.
     Beneficial  ownership is  determined  in  accordance  with the rules of the
     Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  and  generally  includes  voting  or
     investment power with respect to securities. Shares of Common Stock subject
     to options and warrants currently exercisable or exercisable within 60 days
     of March 1, 1998 are deemed outstanding for computing the percentage of the
     person  or entity  holding  such  securities  but are not  outstanding  for
     computing the percentage of any other person or entity.
(2)  Includes  250,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     options and warrants.
(3)  Includes 750,000 shares  underlying  presently  exercisable  stock purchase
     warrants  and options.  In addition,  the Company will be required to issue
     and deliver to Mr. Fancher an additional  500,000 shares of Common Stock if
     the Company  receives  gross revenue from its interest in the Bali and Fiji
     prospects  at least equal to all direct  costs  incurred in  acquiring  the
     prospects,  and  drilling  the wells,  including  cash  amounts paid to Mr.
     Fancher at the time of acquisition. See "Certain Transactions."
(4)  Includes  200,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants
(5)  Includes presently exercisable options to purchase up to 150,000 shares.
(6)  Includes  135,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     options and stock purchase warrants.
(7)  Includes  325,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(8)  Euro  Securities  Ltd. is  controlled  by Euro Bank, a bank in  Georgetown,
     Grand  Cayman  Island,  British  West  Indies,  of which Don  Stewart  is a
     director. Mr. Stewart has no other relationship with, or control over, Euro
     Securities Ltd.
(9)  Includes  225,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.

                                       29

<PAGE>

   
(10) Includes  413,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(11) Includes  135,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(12) Includes  215,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(13) Includes  100,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(14) Includes  172,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(15) Includes  120,000 shares of Common Stock underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(16) Includes  65,000 shares of Common Stock  underlying  presently  exercisable
     stock purchase warrants.
(17) Includes 750,000 shares  underlying  presently  exercisable  stock purchase
     warrants  and  735,000   shares  of  Common  Stock   underlying   presently
     exercisable options


                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     On October 31, 1997 the Company sold  2,000,000  shares for  $1,000,000 and
paid finder's fees and related  offering costs of $47,894 and issued warrants to
purchase an additional  1,180,000  shares for $690,000 on or before  October 31,
1997 to 11  non-United  States  persons or  entities  pursuant to  Regulation  S
adopted under the Securities Act. William E. Grafham, the Company's President, a
citizen of Canada and a resident of Grand Cayman,  BWI, purchased 200,000 shares
and 100,000  warrants for  $100,000.  The shares are  restricted  from  transfer
except in accordance with applicable United States' laws and the purchasers each
agreed to resell the  securities to a "U.S.  Person" as defined in Regulation S,
only in accordance with applicable  laws. All of the Common Stock and the shares
underlying the warrants, other than the shares and warrants held by Mr. Grafham,
have been registered for resale by the holders.

     On November 11, 1997 the Company completed the acquisition of a 25% working
interest in the Fiji and Bali natural gas exploration and development  prospects
in  California  from George H.  Fancher Jr.,  subject to a net .625%  overriding
royalty  interest  retained by Mr.  Fancher.  The prospects  together total over
30,000 acres and are located in the southern part of the Sacramento  Basin.  See
"Business--Principal  Properties."  The Company paid $907,951 in cash and issued
2,250,000  shares at a deemed value of $300,000 for the  property.  Mr.  Fancher
acquired  the   interests  in  the   properties   early  in  1997  and  incurred
approximately  $1,208,000 for  acquisition of his interest in the properties and
payment of his portion of exploration  and leasehold  costs and expenses  before
transfer  to  the  Company.   The  Company  also  paid  $6,247  to  Mr.  Fancher
representing  interest on a portion of Mr.  Fancher's cost between the time that
the agreement to acquire the  properties  was made and the date of completion of
the transaction As additional consideration, the Company agreed to issue 500,000
additional restricted shares to Mr. Fancher if the gross revenue received by the
Company from the  prospects is at least equal to all direct costs of the Company
associated  with  acquiring  the  interest  in the  prospects  and  exploration,
drilling and other  related  expenses by December 31, 1999. At December 31, 1997
the Company had incurred direct costs of approximately $1,275,491, including the
cash  payment  to  Mr.  Fancher.  Prior  to the  acquisition,  Mr.  Grafham  and
consultants  retained by the Company reviewed the available geologic data on the
properties and negotiated the purchase price based on the perceived value of the
properties  as  assembled  by the  Operator,  the  acquisition  and  exploration
expenditures on the properties and the lack of a public market for the Company's
shares.  Mr.  Fancher  agreed  to become a  director  of the  Company  following
completion of the transaction.
    
     In 1997 the Company paid $18,000 to Arizona Corporation Management, Inc., a
corporation owned by William E. Grafham, as reimbursement for office and related
expenses and for rent. The Company has a month-to-month  agreement to pay $2,000
per month to the corporation for office space,  use of certain office  equipment
and for limited  administrative  services.  The Company also has an  arrangement
with George H.  Fancher  Jr.,  pursuant to which Mr.  Fancher was paid $2,000 in
1997 and will be paid  $2,000  per month in 1998 for office  facilities,  use of
certain office equipment and limited administrative and technical support.

                                       30

<PAGE>
   
     On June 2, 1997 the Company sold 2,500,000  shares and warrants to purchase
an  additional  2,500,000  shares  at $0.20  per  share  for  $500,000  to eight
purchasers in private transactions with non-United States residents.
    
     On  December  1, 1996 Jean  Boyd,  then a  director  and an  officer of the
Company,  was issued  636,700 shares of Common Stock at a deemed value of $0.001
per share in  satisfaction  of an  obligation  of $6,367 owed to her for Company
expenses advanced by her in previous years.

                              PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

Shares of Common Stock Offered by the Company
   
     The offering of shares of Common Stock by the Company is being conducted by
the Company on a 300,000 share minimum (the "Minimum Offering"), 3,000,000 share
maximum (the "Maximum Offering") direct participation basis at an offering price
of $1.00 per share. The six persons who are the Company's officers and directors
will offer the shares of Common  Stock on behalf of the  Company.  Such  persons
will  not  be   compensated,   directly  or  indirectly,   in  connection   with
participation in the sale of the shares. In addition, the Company may engage one
or more  brokers or dealers  which are members of the  National  Association  of
Securities  Dealers,  Inc.  ("NASD') and which are  registered  as such with the
United States Securities and Exchange  Commission to act as nonexclusive  agents
(the  "Selected  Dealers") on behalf of the Company to offer and sell the shares
of Common Stock.  Any such Selected  Dealer would be paid a commission of 10% of
the  purchase  price of Common  Stock sold by them.  No  broker-dealer  or other
person has made any  commitment  to purchase or sell any or all of the shares of
Common Stock  offered by the Company.  It is not  anticipated  that any Selected
Dealer  would  sell more than 10% of the shares of Common  stock  offered by the
Company. The officers and directors of the Company and any Selected Dealers will
use their best efforts to identify purchasers for the shares during the offering
period. The Company will agree to indemnify each Selected Dealer against certain
liabilities, including certain liabilities or claims under the Securities Act or
to contribute to payments the Selected Dealer may be required to make in respect
thereof.

     All  proceeds  from  subscriptions  with  respect to shares of Common Stock
offered and sold by the Company or a Selected Dealer will be deposited  promptly
with The Bank of Denver,  Denver,  Colorado,  as Escrow  Agent,  pursuant  to an
Escrow Agreement  between the Company and the Escrow Agent.  Funds received from
subscriptions  will be transmitted to the Escrow Agent no later than noon of the
business day following receipt by the Company and any Selected  Dealers.  Unless
the Company  has  completed  at least the Minimum  Offering  and  deposited  the
proceeds with the Escrow Agent within 120 days from the date of this  Prospectus
(which date may be extended for up to an  additional  60 days without  notice by
the Company),  subscriptions  will be refunded  promptly to  subscribers in full
without  deduction  therefrom or interest  thereon.  During the 120-day offering
period and any  extension,  no  subscriber  will be  entitled to a refund of any
subscription.

     The Company may sell shares of Common Stock to  interested  subscribers  if
they  reside in a state in which the shares may be sold and in which the Company
or a  Selected  Dealer is  permitted  to sell the  shares.  The  Company  is not
obligated to sell any shares to any person.  Additionally,  officers,  directors
and present  stockholders  of the Company and  affiliates or persons  associated
with such  persons may purchase up to 100,000 of the shares  offered,  including
making  purchases of amounts  necessary to complete the Minimum  Offering within
the offering period. Such persons would purchase the shares on the same terms as
purchases by the public provided that shares  purchased by officers or directors
or their affiliates would be taken for investment and would not be resold except
in compliance with applicable  securities  laws. The proceeds from this Offering
will not be  utilized,  directly  or  indirectly,  to enable  anyone to purchase
shares of Common  Stock  offered by the  Company.  To the extent that  officers,
directors,  current  stockholders  and their  affiliates or associates  purchase
shares  offered  by the  Company  in the  Offering,  the number of shares in the
Minimum Offering  required to be purchased by the general public will be reduced
by a like amount and under such  circumstances the control of the Company by the
present  stockholders  would be  increased.  The officers  and  directors of the
Company and any Selected Dealers may be deemed to be "underwriters" as such term
is defined under the Securities Act.

                                       31

<PAGE>

         Selected  Dealers or others may engage in transactions  that stabilize,
maintain or  otherwise  affect the price of the Common Stock in any market which
may develop following the Offering,  including bidding for, or purchasing shares
of Common Stock in the open market, in stabilization  transactions or otherwise.
Any of these activities,  if undertaken,  could stabilize or maintain the market
price  of the  Common  Stock  above  independent  market  levels  and  could  be
discontinued at any time.
    
     Certain provisions  included in the Company's Articles of Incorporation and
Bylaws  require  the Company to  indemnify  officers  or  directors  for certain
liabilities  incurred  while  serving as an officer or director of the  Company.
Insofar as indemnification  for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may
be  permitted to  directors,  officers  and  controlling  persons of the Company
pursuant to the provisions,  or otherwise, the Company has been advised that, in
the opinion of the Securities and Exchange  Commission,  such indemnification is
against public policy as expressed in the  Securities Act and would,  therefore,
be unenforceable.

Sale of Shares by Selling Securityholders
   
     The Selling  Securityholders  described  in the table above hold a total of
1,800,000  shares of  outstanding  Common Stock and warrants  entitling  them to
purchase up to 900,000 additional shares of Common Stock. The outstanding shares
and the  shares  to be issued  upon  exercise  of the  warrants  are  restricted
securities as defined in Rule 144 adopted under the Securities Act while held by
the Selling Securities.

     Each of the  Selling  Securityholders  has agreed not to sell or  otherwise
transfer  his or her  shares  for at  least  120  days  from  the  date  of this
Prospectus  and until the  Company  has  concluded  its  Offering  (the  "Lockup
Period").  Thereafter,  the Selling Securityholders (or their pledgees,  donees,
transferees,  or other successors in interest) from time to time may sell all or
a portion of the Shares "at the market" to or through a market  maker or into an
existing trading market,  if a market then exists,  in private sales,  including
direct  sales to  purchasers,  or otherwise at  prevailing  market  prices or at
negotiated  or fixed  prices.  The  Selling  Securityholders  may offer and sell
shares following the Lockup Period  regardless of the outcome of the Offering by
the Company. By way of example, and not by way of limitation,  the Shares may be
sold by one or more of the  following  methods:  (a) a block  trade  in  which a
broker or dealer so  engaged  will  attempt  to sell the Shares as agent but may
purchase  and  resell a portion  of the block as  principal  to  facilitate  the
transaction; (b) purchases by a broker or dealer as principal and resale by such
broker or dealer for its account  pursuant to this  Prospectus;  (c) an exchange
distribution  in accordance  with the rules of such  exchange;  and (d) ordinary
brokerage transactions and transactions in which the broker solicits purchasers.
In  effecting  sales,  brokers or dealers  engaged by the seller may arrange for
other  brokers or  dealers to  participate.  Brokers  or  dealers  will  receive
commissions  or discounts  from the seller in amounts to be negotiated  with the
Selling Securityholder immediately prior to the sale. It is anticipated that the
per share  selling price for the Shares sold when a public market exists will be
at or between the "bid" and "asked"  prices of the Company's  Common  Stock,  if
any, as quoted in the  over-the-counter  market immediately  preceding the sale.
Such  brokers or dealers and any other  participating  brokers or dealers may be
deemed to be  "underwriters"  within  the  meaning  of the  Securities  Act,  in
connection  with such sales. A copy of this  Prospectus will be delivered by the
Selling Securityholder to each purchaser or as otherwise required at the time of
sale. Expenses of any such sale will be borne by the parties as they may agree.
    
     In addition,  any securities  covered by the  Prospectus  which qualify for
sale  pursuant to Rule 144 under the  Securities  Act may be sold under Rule 144
rather than pursuant to the Prospectus.

     The Selling  Securityholders  may agree to indemnify  any agent,  dealer or
broker-dealer  that  participates in transactions  involving sales of the Shares
against certain liabilities,  including liabilities arising under the Securities
Act. Any  commissions  paid or any discounts or concessions  allowed to any such
broker-dealer which purchases Shares as principal or any profits received on the
resale of such Shares may be deemed to be underwriting discounts and commissions
under the Securities Act.
                                       32

<PAGE>

   
     In order to comply with certain state securities  laws, if applicable,  the
Shares may be sold in only  states  where the  Shares  have been  registered  or
qualified  for  sale or an  exemption  from  registration  or  qualification  is
available and is complied with.
    
     The Shares offered hereby will be sold by the Selling  Securityholders  (or
their pledgees,  donees,  transferees or other successors in interest) acting as
principals for their own account.  The Company will receive none of the proceeds
from such sales.

     No  underwriting  arrangements  exist as of the date of this Prospectus for
any  Selling  Securityholders  to sell its  shares.  Upon  being  advised of any
underwriting  arrangements that may be entered into by a Selling  Securityholder
after the date of this Prospectus, the Company will prepare a supplement to this
Prospectus to disclose such arrange ments.

Certain Provisions of the Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws and Nevada Law

     The Company's ability to issue shares of new classes of preferred stock and
to determine the rights, preferences,  privileges,  designations and limitations
of such stock, including the dividend rights,  dividend rate, conversion rights,
voting rights,  terms of redemption and other terms of conditions of such stock,
could make it more  difficult  for a person to engage in, or discourage a person
from engaging in, a change in control  transaction  without the  cooperation  of
management.
   
     The Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  contain a provision,  authorized
under  Nevada law,  which  limits the  liability of directors or officers of the
Company  for  monetary  damages  for breach of  fiduciary  duty as an officer or
director other than for intentional misconduct,  fraud or a knowing violation of
law or for payment of a dividend in  violation  of Nevada  law.  Such  provision
limits  recourse  for money  damages  which might  otherwise be available to the
Company or stockholders  for negligence by individuals  while acting as officers
or directors  of the Company.  The  Restated  Articles of  Incorporation  do not
provide for the  elimination of or any  limitation on the personal  liability of
directors for (i) any breach of the director's duty of loyalty to the Company or
its  stockholders,  (ii) acts or  omissions  not in good faith or which  involve
intentional  misconduct or a knowing violation of law, (iii) unlawful  corporate
distributions,  or (iv) any  transaction  from  which such  director  derives an
improper personal benefit. Although this provision would not prohibit injunctive
or similar actions against  directors or officers,  the practical effect of such
relief would be limited.
    
     The Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws also contain provisions  requiring
the Company to indemnify  officers,  directors and certain employees for certain
liabilities  incurred in connection with actions taken on behalf of the Company,
including  expenses incurred in defending  against such liabilities.  Insofar as
indemnification  for  liabilities  arising  under  the  Securities  Act  may  be
permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the Company pursuant
to the foregoing provisions,  or otherwise, the Company has been advised that in
the opinion of the Securities and Exchange  Commission such  indemnification  is
against  public  policy as expressed in the  Securities  Act and is,  therefore,
unenforceable.

Anti-Takeover Statutes

     The Nevada General  Corporation Law ("Nevada GCL") contains two provisions,
described  below as  "Combination  Provisions" and the "Control Share Act," that
may make more difficult the  accomplishment  of unsolicited or hostile  takeover
transactions.

     Restrictions on Certain Combinations  Between Nevada Resident  Corporations
and Interested  Stockholders.  The Nevada GCL includes  certain  provisions (the
"Combination  Provisions") prohibiting certain "combinations" (generally defined
to  include  certain  mergers,  disposition  of assets  transactions,  and share
issuance or transfer  transactions)  between a resident domestic corporation and
an "interested stockholder" (generally defined to be the beneficial owner of 10%
or more of the  voting  power of the  outstanding  shares  of the  corporation),

                                       34

<PAGE>


except those which are approved by the board of directors  before the interested
stockholder first obtained a 10% interest in the corporation's  stock. There are
additional  exceptions to the  prohibition,  which apply to combinations if they
occur more than five years after the interested  stockholder's date of acquiring
shares.  The Combination  Provisions apply unless the corporation elects against
their  application  in its original  articles of  incorporation  or an amendment
thereto, or in its bylaws. The Company's Articles of incorporation and Bylaws do
not  currently  contain  a  provision   rendering  the  Combination   Provisions
inapplicable.

     Nevada  Control  Share Act.  Nevada's  Control share  Acquisition  Act (the
"Control  Share  Act")  imposes  procedural  hurdles on and  curtails  greenmail
practices   of   corporate   raiders.   The   Control   Share  Act   temporarily
disenfranchises  the  voting  power of  "control  shares"  of a person  or group
("Acquiring  Person")  purchasing  a  "controlling   interest"  in  an  "issuing
corporation"  (as defined in the Nevada GCL) not opting out of the Control Share
Act.  In  this  regard,  the  Control  Share  Act  will  apply  to  an  "issuing
corporation"   unless,   before  an   acquisition   is  made,  the  articles  of
incorporation or bylaws in effect to the 10th day following the acquisition of a
controlling interest provide that it is inapplicable.  The Company's Articles of
Incorporation  and Bylaws do not  currently  contain a provision  rendering  the
Control Share Act inapplicable.
   
     Under the  Control  Share Act, an "issuing  corporation"  is a  corporation
organized in Nevada which has 200 or more stockholders, at least 100 of whom are
stockholders  of  record  (which  for  this  purpose  includes   registered  and
beneficial  owners) and  residents of Nevada,  and which does business in Nevada
directly  or through an  affiliated  company.  The status of the Company and its
stockholders  at the time of the  occurrence  of a  transaction  governed by the
Control Share Act  (assuming  that the Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  or
Bylaws have not theretofore been amended to include opting out provisions) would
determine whether the Control Share Act is applicable.
    
     The  Control  Share  Act  requires  an  Acquiring  Person  to take  certain
procedural steps before he or it can obtain the full voting power of the control
shares. "Control shares" are the shares of a corporation (1) acquired or offered
to be acquired  which will  enable the  Acquiring  Person to own a  "controlling
Interest,  " and (2) acquired within 90 days immediately  preceding that date. A
"Controlling  interest" is defined as the ownership of shares which would enable
the Acquiring Person to exercise certain graduated amounts  (beginning with 1/5)
of all voting power of the  corporation.  The Acquiring  Person may not vote any
control  shares  without  first  obtaining  approval from the  stockholders  not
characterized as "interested stockholders" (as defined in the act).

     The Company Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws do not include  provisions
which preclude effectiveness of the Control Share Act.

     The Control share Act permits a corporation to redeem the control shares in
the following two instances,  if so provided in the articles of incorporation or
bylaws of the corporation in effect on the 10th day following the acquisition of
a  controlling  interest:  (1) if the  Acquiring  Person  fails to  deliver  the
Offeror's  Statement  to the  corporation  within 10 days  after  the  Acquiring
Person's  acquisition of the control  shares;  or (2) an Offeror's  Statement is
delivered,  but the control  shares are not accorded  full voting  rights by the
stockholders.  The Company's Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws do not address
this matter.

Shares Available for Future Sale

     Upon completion of this Offering, the Company will have 8,071,704 shares of
Common Stock  outstanding  if the Minimum  Offering is completed and  10,771,704
outstanding  if the Maximum  Offering is  completed  assuming no exercise of (1)
outstanding  warrants  for  the  purchase  of  up to  3,680,000  shares  or  (2)
outstanding stock options for the purchase of 810,000 shares. All shares sold in
this Offering will be freely  transferable by persons other than "affiliates" of
the  Company  (as that  term is  defined  under  the  Securities  Act),  without
restriction or further registration under the Securities Act.

                                       35

<PAGE>

   
         The remaining  outstanding  shares of Common Stock will be  "restricted
securities"  within the meaning of Rule 144 under the Securities Act and may not
be sold in the  absence  of  registration  under the  Securities  Act  unless an
exception from registration is available,  including the exemption  contained in
Rule 144.

     In  general,  under Rule 144,  as  currently  in  effect,  a person who has
beneficially  owned shares for at least one year,  including an  "affiliate"  as
that term is  defined in Rule 144,  is  entitled  to sell into a public  market,
within any three-month  period,  a number of  "restricted"  shares that does not
exceed the greater of 1% of their then outstanding shares of Common Stock or the
average  weekly  trading  volume during the four calendar  weeks  preceding such
sale.  Sales  under  Rule  144  are  also  subject  to  certain  manner  of sale
limitations,   notice  requirements  and  the  availability  of  current  public
information  about the Company.  Rule 144(k)  provides  that a person who is not
deemed an  "affiliate"  and who has  beneficially  owned shares for at least two
years is entitled to sell such shares at any time under Rule 144 without  regard
to the limitations described above.
    
                            DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES

Authorized Stock

     The authorized  capital stock of the Company consists of 95,000,000  shares
of Common Stock,  $0.001 par value per share,  and 5,000,000 shares of preferred
stock,  $0.001 par value per share.  All of the issued and  outstanding  capital
stock of the  Company is fully paid and  nonassessable.  The  following  summary
descriptions of the Company's  preferred stock and Common Stock are qualified in
their entirety by reference to the Company's Restated Articles of Incorporation,
which  were  filed as  exhibits  to the  Registration  Statement  of which  this
Prospectus is a part and which are available from the Company upon request.  See
"Additional Information."

Common Stock
   
     As of the date of this  Prospectus,  there were 7,771,704  shares of Common
Stock  outstanding,  held of record by 522  stockholders.  The holders of Common
Stock are  entitled  to receive  ratable  dividends  when and as declared by the
Board of Directors  from funds  legally  available  therefor and to one vote for
each share held of record on each matter submitted to a vote of stockholders. In
the event of a liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Company, holders of
Common  Stock are  entitled  to share  ratably  in all  assets  remaining  after
payments to  creditors  and other  payments  required by law.  Holders of Common
Stock have no preemptive rights and no rights to convert their Common Stock into
any other securities.  The outstanding shares of Common Stock are fully paid and
nonassessable.
    
Preferred Stock

     There are no shares of preferred stock  outstanding.  The Company may issue
from  time to time in one or more  series  with such  distinctive  designations,
rights,  preferences and limitations as the Board of Directors shall  determine.
The Board of Directors  has the  authority  to  determine  the rate of dividend,
redemption features, amounts payable upon liquidation,  sinking fund provisions,
conversion features and voting powers.

Warrants

     General. The following is a brief summary of the material provisions of the
outstanding stock purchase warrants.

     As of December 31, 1997,  the Company had  outstanding  3,680,000  warrants
held by 21 persons.  Each warrant entitles the holder thereof to purchase at any
time in whole or in part over a one year  period  from the date the  warrant was
issued,  one share of Common  Stock at a specified  exercise  price,  subject to
adjustment  referred to below.  The exercise prices and expiration  dates of the
outstanding  warrants are: (1) $0.20 per share for 2,500,000  warrants  expiring

                                       36

<PAGE>


June 2, 1998, (2) $0.50 per share for 180,000 warrants expiring October 31, 1998
and (3) $0.60 per share for 1,000,000  warrants also expiring  October 31, 1998.
The  exercise  price and number of shares of Common Stock  purchasable  upon the
exercise  of the  warrants  are subject to  adjustment  upon the  occurrence  of
certain  events,  including  stock  dividends,  stock splits,  combinations  and
reclassification  of the Common  Stock,  or sale by the Company of shares of its
Common stock or other securities  convertible into Common Stock at a price below
the then applicable exercise price of the warrants.  The holder of a warrant may
exercise such warrant by surrendering  the certificate  representing the warrant
to the Company at its offices in Scottsdale, Arizona and accompanied by payment.
Warrants are issuable in minimum  increments  of 1,000 shares and no  fractional
shares will be issued upon exercise of the warrants.

     The Warrants  are,  and shares of Common  Stock of the Company  issued upon
exercise of the warrants  shall be,  nontransferable  without the prior  written
consent  of the  Company  and may be  transferred  only in  accordance  with the
Securities  Act. The shares of Common Stock which would be issued upon  exercise
of the outstanding  warrants have been registered for resale by the holders. See
"Principal and Selling Securityholders."

Transfer Agent and Warrant Agent

     Atlas Stock Transfer Corp., Salt Lake City, Utah, is the transfer agent for
the Common Stock.

                                  LEGAL MATTERS

     The validity of the  issuance of the shares of Common  Stock being  offered
hereby by the Company and by the Selling  Securityholders  have been passed upon
for the Company by Alan W. Peryam, LLC, Denver,  Colorado.  Alan W. Peryam was a
director of the Company between March 17, 1997 and May 15, 1997.

                                     EXPERTS
   
     The balance sheet of the Company as of December 31, 1997 and the statements
of  operations,  stockholders'  equity and cash flows for the fiscal  year ended
December  31, 1997 and  cumulative  amounts from January 1, 1997 to December 31,
1997 have been included  herein in reliance  upon the report of Wheeler  Wasoff,
P.C., Denver, Colorado, independent certified public accountants, and statements
of  operations,  stockholders'  equity and cash flows for the fiscal  year ended
December  31, 1996 are  included  herein in reliance  upon the report of Darrell
Schvaneveldt, CPA, Salt Lake City, Utah, given upon the authority of those firms
as experts in  accounting  and  auditing.  The Board of Directors of the Company
replaced the  Company's  auditor in December  1997 due to the  relocation of the
Company's executive offices to Denver, Colorado. The report of Mr. Schvaneveldt,
the prior auditor for the  Company's  financial  statements  for each of the two
fiscal years ending December 31, 1996, was qualified as to the Company's ability
to continue as a going  concern.  There have been no  disagreements  between the
Company and the former accountant.
    
                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

     The Company has filed with the SEC a  Registration  Statement  on Form SB-2
("Registration  Statement")  under  the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended
("Securities  Act")  with  respect  to  the  Securities  offered  hereby.   This
Prospectus, which is part of the Registration Statement, does not contain all of
the  information  set forth in the  Registration  Statement and the exhibits and
schedules  thereto,  certain items of which are omitted in  accordance  with the
rules and  regulations of the SEC. For further  information  with respect to the
Company  and the  securities  offered  hereby,  reference  is hereby made to the
Registration  Statement and such exhibits and  schedules  thereto,  which may be
examined at the SEC's offices without charge, or copies of which may be obtained
from  the SEC upon  payment  of the  prescribed  fees.  Statements  made in this
Prospectus  as to the  contents of any  contract,  agreement or document are not
necessarily complete, and in each instance reference is made to the copy of such
contract,  agreement or other document  filed as an exhibit to the  Registration
Statement,  and  each  such  statement  is  qualified  in its  entirety  by such
reference.  The Company is a reporting  company  registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended ("1934 Act") and in accordance  therewith files
reports  and  other  information  with the SEC.  All of such  reports  and other

                                       37

<PAGE>


information  may be  inspected  and  copied at the public  reference  facilities
maintained by the SEC at 450 Fifth Street, N.W.,  Washington,  D.C. 20549 and at
regional  offices of the SEC  located at 500 West  Madison  Street,  Suite 1400,
Chicago, Illinois 60661 and 7 World Trade Center, Suite 1300, New York, New York
10048.  The  Commission  maintains a web site that contains  reports,  proxy and
information  statements  and  other  information  regarding  issuers  that  file
electronically   with   the   Commission.   The   address   of   such   site  is
http:\\www.sec.gov.
       
                      GLOSSARY OF OIL AND NATURAL GAS TERMS

     The following are  abbreviations  and definitions of terms commonly used in
the oil and natural gas industry and this Prospectus. Unless otherwise indicated
in this Prospectus, natural gas volumes are stated at the legal pressure base of
the  state  or  area  in  which  the  reserves  are  located  and at 60  degrees
Fahrenheit.

     Amplitude  Versus  Offset  ("AVO").  A seismic  technology  which  utilizes
measurement of the variation of seismic reflection amplitude with offset between
source and receiver.  The variation in the strength of the recorded  reflections
as the  horizontal  distance  between  the source and  receiver  is changed is a
comparison of "amplitude" with the distance (or "offset").

     Bbl. One stock tank barrel,  or 42 U.S. gallons liquid volume,  used herein
in reference to oil or other liquid hydrocarbons.

     BOE.  Barrels of oil equivalent,  determined  using the ratio of six Mcf of
natural gas to one Bbl of oil, condensate or natural gas liquids.

     Completion.  The installation of permanent  equipment for the production of
oil or natural gas.

     Developed acreage. The number of acres which are allocated or assignable to
producing wells or wells capable of production.

     Development  well.  A well  drilled  within  the  proved  area of an oil or
natural  gas  reservoir  to the  depth of a  stratigraphic  horizon  known to be
productive.

     Dry hole. A well found to be  incapable of producing  either oil or natural
gas in  sufficient  quantities  to justify  completion  of an oil or natural gas
well.

     Exploratory  well. A well drilled to find and produce oil or natural gas in
an unproved  area,  to find a new  reservoir in a field  previously  found to be
productive  of oil or  natural  gas in another  reservoir,  or to extend a known
reservoir.

     Gross acres or gross wells.  The total acres or wells,  as the case may be,
in which the Company has a working interest.

     LOE. Lease operating expenses.

     Mcf. One thousand cubic feet of natural gas.

     Net acres or net wells.  Gross acres or wells multiplied,  in each case, by
the percentage working interest owned by the Company.

                                       38

<PAGE>


     Net production.  Production that is owned by the Company less royalties and
production due others.
   
     Net  revenue  interest.  The  portion  of total  production  from an oil or
natural gas well  attributable  to an interest owner in the well after allowance
for  landowner  royalties,  overriding  royalties  and  other  interests  in the
production from the well held by others.
    
     Oil. Crude oil or condensate.

     Operator.  The  individual  or  company  responsible  for the  exploration,
development, and production of an oil or natural gas well or lease.

     Proved  reserves.  The estimated  quantities of crude oil,  natural gas and
natural gas liquids which  geological  and  engineering  data  demonstrate  with
reasonable  certainty to be  recoverable  in future years from known  reservoirs
under existing economic and operating  conditions,  i.e., prices and costs as of
the date the  estimate  is made.  Prices  include  consideration  of  changes in
existing  prices  provided  only  by  contractual   arrangements,   but  not  on
escalations based upon future conditions.

          (i)  Reservoirs  are considered  proved if economic  producibility  is
     supported by either actual  production or conclusive  formation  test.  The
     area of a reservoir  considered proved includes (A) that portion delineated
     by drilling and defined by natural gas-oil and/or  oil-water  contacts,  if
     any; and (B) the immediately  adjoining portions not yet drilled, but which
     can be  reasonably  judged  as  economically  productive  on the  basis  of
     available geological and engineering data. In the absence of information on
     fluid  contacts,  the lowest known  structural  occurrence of  hydrocarbons
     controls the lower proved limit of the reservoir.

          (ii) Reserves which can be produced  economically  through application
     of improved  recovery  techniques (such as fluid injection) are included in
     the "proved"  classification when successful testing by a pilot project, or
     the operation of an installed  program in the reservoir,  provides  support
     for the engineering analysis on which the project or program was based.

          (iii) Estimates of proved  reserves do not include the following:  (A)
     oil that may become  available  from  known  reservoirs  but is  classified
     separately as "indicated additional  reserves";  (B) crude oil, natural gas
     and natural gas  liquids,  the  recovery of which is subject to  reasonable
     doubt because of uncertainty as to geology, reservoir  characteristics,  or
     economic  factors;  (C) crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids that
     may occur in  undrilled  prospects;  and (D)  crude  oil,  natural  gas and
     natural gas liquids that may be recovered from oil shales,  coal, gilsonite
     and other such sources.

     Receiver. A sensitive device used to record reflections of acoustic (sound)
waves  reflected  from  rock  layers  within  the earth to the  receiver  at the
surface.

     Recompletion.  The  completion  for  production of an existing well bore in
another formation from that in which the well has been previously completed.

     Reserves. Proved reserves.

     Royalty.  An  interest in an oil and natural gas lease that gives the owner
of the interest the right to receive a portion of the production from the leased
acreage (or of the proceeds of the sale thereof), but generally does not require
the owner to pay any portion of the costs of drilling or operating  the wells on
the leased acreage.  Royalties may be either  landowner's  royalties,  which are
reserved by  the  owner of the  leased acreage at the time the lease is granted,

                                       39

<PAGE>


or overriding royalties, which are usually reserved by an owner of the leasehold
in connection with a transfer to a subsequent owner.

     Seismic.  Technology which measures amplitude of sound waves reflected from
subsurface geological structures.  The seismic data is acquired in the field and
processed to yield information about the anticipated subsurface stratigraphy.

     2-D seismic.  When both sources and receivers are confined to a line,  such
as a road or trail,  the resulting image is a cross-section  of  two-dimensional
representation  of the earth with the  horizontal  dimension  being the distance
along the line and the  vertical  dimension  being the time it takes the  source
energy to be reflected and returned to the receivers.

     3-D seismic.  When the sources and receivers are not confined to a line but
occupy an area, such as a section or township,  they produce a three-dimensional
representation  of the earth with the two horizontal  dimensions being north and
south and the vertical dimension being time.

     Source.  The energy  used to produce  the  acoustic  waves  recorded at the
receivers.  In the  Sacramental  Basin the source is a small  charge of dynamite
detonated in a shallow drilled drill hole.

     Undeveloped  acreage.  Lease acres on which wells have not been  drilled or
completed to a point that would permit the  production of commercial  quantities
of oil and natural gas regardless of whether or not such acreage contains proved
reserves.  Included  within  undeveloped  acreage are those lease  acres(held by
production  under the terms of a lease)  that are not  within the  spacing  unit
containing, or acreage assigned to, the productive well holding such lease.

     Working  interest.  An  interest in an oil and natural gas lease that gives
the owner of the interest the right to drill for and produce oil and natural gas
on the  leased  acreage  and  requires  the owner to pay a share of the costs of
drilling and production  operations.  The share of production to which a working
interest  owner is entitled  will always be smaller than the share of costs that
the  working  interest  owner is  required  to bear,  with  the  balance  of the
production accruing to the owners of royalties. For example, the owner of a 100%
working  interest in a lease  burdened  only by a  landowner's  royalty of 12.5%
would be  required  to pay 100% of the costs of a well but would be  entitled to
retain 87.5% of the production.

     Workover. Operations on a producing well to restore or increase production.

                                       40

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                  <C>

No  person  has  been   authorized   to  give  any
information  or  to  make  any  representation  in
connection with the offering being made hereby not
contained  in this  Prospectus,  and,  if given or
made, such information or representation  must not
be relied  upon as having  been  authorized.  This
Prospectus does not constitute an offer to sell or
solicitation  of  an  offer  to  buy  any  of  the
securities  offered hereby in any  jurisdiction in
which  it  is  unlawful  to  make  such  offer  or
solicitation  in such  jurisdiction.  Neither  the
delivery  of this  Prospectus  nor any  sale  made
hereunder shall under any circumstances  create an
implication that  information  contained herein is
correct  as of any  time  subsequent  to the  date
hereof.


                                                                                             FAN ENERGY INC.
             -------------------------


                                                     Page No.
                                                     -------
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY.......................................3
RISK FACTORS.............................................7                                      3,000,000
USE OF PROCEEDS.........................................14                                Shares of Common Stock
COMPARATIVE DATA........................................15
DIVIDEND POLICY AND RELATED
    STOCKHOLDER MATTERS.................................16
MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND
    ANALYSIS AND PLAN OF OPERATION......................16                                    -------------
BUSINESS AND PROPERTIES.................................18
MANAGEMENT..............................................25                                     PROSPECTUS
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION..................................27                                    -------------
PRINCIPAL AND SELLING SECURITYHOLDERS...................29
CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS....................................31
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION....................................32
DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES...............................36
LEGAL MATTERS...........................................37
EXPERTS.................................................37
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION..................................37
GLOSSARY OF OIL AND NATURAL GAS TERMS...................38
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ................................. F-1

   
                                                                                                    May _, 1998

Until ______________________, 1998 (90 days from the
date  of  this  Prospectus)  all  dealers  effecting
transactions in the registered  securities,  whether
or not  participating in this  distribution,  may be
required  to  deliver  a  prospectus.   This  is  in
addition to the  obligation  of dealers to deliver a
prospectus  when  acting  as  underwriters  and with
respect to their unsold allotments or subscriptions.

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

</TABLE>

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)


                          INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


                                                                        PAGE
                                                                        ----

Independent Auditor's Report                                          F-2 - F-3

Balance Sheet
         December 31, 1997                                                  F-4

Statements of Operations
         Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997                             F-5

Statement of Stockholders' Equity
         Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997                             F-6

Statements of Cash Flows
         Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997                       F-7 - F-8

Notes To Financial Statements                                         F-9 - F-17




                                      F - 1

<PAGE>




                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT


To The Board of Directors and Stockholders FAN ENERGY INC.
   
We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Fan Energy Inc. (a development
stage company) as of December 31, 1997 and the related statements of operations,
stockholders'  equity  and cash  flows  for the year then  ended and  cumulative
amounts from January 1, 1997 to December 31, 1997.  These  financial  statements
are the  responsibility of the Company's  management.  Our  responsibility is to
express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit.
    
We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards  require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance   about  whether  the  financial   statements  are  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
   
In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects,  the financial position of Fan Energy Inc. as of December
31, 1997 and the results of its  operations and its cash flows for the year then
ended and  cumulative  amounts  from  January 1, 1997 to  December  31,  1997 in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
    
The  accompanying  financial  statements  have been  prepared  assuming that the
Company  will  continue  as a  going  concern.  As  discussed  in  Note 2 to the
financial  statements,   the  Company  has  incurred  losses  from  its  initial
operations and has not commenced  principal  operations  that raise  substantial
doubt about its ability to continue as a going  concern.  Management's  plans in
regard to these matters are also  described in Note 2. The financial  statements
do not  include  any  adjustments  that might  result  from the  outcome of this
uncertainty.


                                            /s/ Wheeler Wasoff, P.C.
                                            WHEELER WASOFF, P.C.


Denver, Colorado
January 30, 1998


                                      F - 2

<PAGE>
    


                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT



Board of Directors
Eastern Star Mining, Inc.

I have audited the accompanying  statements of operations,  stockholders  equity
and cash flows of Eastern Star  Mining,  Inc.,  for the year ended  December 31,
1996.  These  financial  statements  are  the  responsibility  of the  Company's
management.  My  responsibility  is to express  on  opinion  on these  financial
statements based on my audit.

I conducted my audit in accordance with generally  accepted auditing  standards.
Those standards  require that I plan and perform the audit to obtain  reasonable
assurance   about  whether  the  financial   statements  are  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the accounting  principles used and the significant  estimates made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
I believe that my audit provides a reasonable basis for my opinion.
   
In my opinion,  the aforementioned  financial  statements present fairly, in all
material  respects,  the results of  operations  and cash flows of Eastern  Star
Mining,  Inc. for the year ended December 31, 1996, in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles.

The accompanying  financial  statements have been prepared  assuming the company
will continue as a going  concern.  The Company has an  accumulated  deficit and
negative cash flows.  These factors raise  substantial doubt about the Company's
ability to  continue  as a going  concern.  Management  plans in regard to these
matters are also  discussed in Note #2. The financial  statements do not include
any adjustment that might result from the outcome of the uncertainty.
    

                                            /s/ Schvaneveldt and Company
                                            SCHVANEVELDT AND COMPANY


February 15, 1997
Salt Lake City, Utah

                                      F - 3

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                                  BALANCE SHEET
                                December 31, 1997


                                     ASSETS


<S>                                                                           <C>
CURRENT ASSET
  Cash ....................................................................   $   424,717
                                                                              -----------

    Total Current Asset ...................................................       424,717

UNDEVELOPED OIL AND GAS PROPERTIES ........................................     1,275,491

DEFERRED OFFERING COSTS ...................................................        10,383
                                                                              -----------
                                                                              $ 1,710,591
                                                                              ===========

                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

CURRENT LIABILITIES
  Accounts payable ........................................................   $     5,315
                                                                              -----------

    Total Current Liabilities .............................................         5,315
                                                                              -----------
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (Notes 3 and 6)

STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (Note 4)
  Preferred stock, $.01 par value
        Authorized - 5,000,000 shares
        Issued - none .....................................................          --
  Common stock, $.001 par value
        Authorized - 95,000,000 shares
        Issued and outstanding - 7,771,704 shares .........................         7,772
  Additional paid-in capital ..............................................     1,796,236
  Deficit accumulated during the development stage ........................      (199,232)
  Additional paid-in capital stock options ................................       100,500
                                                                              -----------
                                                                                1,705,276
                                                                              -----------
                                                                              $ 1,710,591
                                                                              ===========
</TABLE>

    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                      F - 4

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                     Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997

                                                                                Cumulative
                                                                               Amounts from
                                                                             Jan. 1, 1997 to
                                                     1996           1997      Dec. 31, 1997
                                                     ----           ----     ----------------

<S>                                           <C>              <C>            <C>
REVENUES ..................................   $         --     $      --      $      --
                                              --------------   -----------    -----------


OPERATING EXPENSES
  General and administrative ..............             --         192,985        192,985
  Interest (Note 3) .......................             --           6,247          6,247
                                              --------------   -----------    -----------

                                                        --         199,232        199,232
                                              --------------   -----------    -----------


NET (LOSS) ................................   $         --     $  (199,232)   $  (199,232)
                                              ==============   ===========    ===========

NET (LOSS) PER COMMON SHARE ...............   $         --     $      (.03)   $      (.03)
                                              ==============   ===========    ===========

WEIGHTED AVERAGE NUMBER OF COMMON
   SHARES OUTSTANDING .....................          189,077     7,771,704      7,771,704
                                              ==============   ===========    ===========
</TABLE>



    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                      F - 5

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                       STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                     Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997

                                                                                                             Deficit     Additional
                                                                                                           Accumulated    Paid-In
                                                                   Common Stock            Additional       During the    Capital
                                                               --------------------          Paid-In       Development     Stock
                                                               Shares        Amount          Capital          Stage       Options
                                                               ------        ------        ----------      -----------   ----------

<S>                                                            <C>        <C>            <C>             <C>             <C>
Balance, January 1, 1996 ..............................        135,004    $       135    $   498,146     $  (504,648)    $      --

Issuance of common stock as satisfaction of
    accounts payable - related ........................        636,700            637          5,730            --              --
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------     -----------     -----------
Balance, December 31, 1996 ............................        771,704            772        503,876        (504,648)           --

Reclassification of deficit pursuant to quasi
    reorganization ....................................           --             --         (504,648)        504,648            --
Sale of common stock and warrants pursuant to
    private placement, at $.20 per unit ...............      2,500,000          2,500        497,500            --              --
Cost of private placement offering ....................           --             --             (430)           --              --
Issuance of common stock for services, valued at
    $.20 per share ....................................        250,000            250         49,750            --              --
Sale of common stock and warrants pursuant to
    private placement, at $.50 per unit ...............      2,000,000          2,000        998,000            --              --
Costs of private placement offering ...................           --             --          (52,439)           --              --
Issuance of common stock for property, valued at
    $.133 per share ...................................      2,250,000          2,250        297,750            --              --
Issuance of common stock warrants for offering
    costs .............................................           --             --            4,545            --              --
Issuance of stock options .............................           --             --            2,332            --           100,500
Net (loss) ............................................           --             --             --          (199,232)           --
                                                           -----------    -----------    -----------     -----------     -----------
Balance, December 31, 1997 ............................      7,771,704    $     7,772    $ 1,796,236     $  (199,232)    $   100,500
                                                           ===========    ===========    ===========     ===========     ===========
</TABLE>


    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                      F - 6

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                     Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997

                                                                                                                        Cumulative
                                                                                                                       Amounts from
                                                                                                                         Jan. 1 to
                                                                                  1996                1997             Dec. 31, 1997
                                                                                  ----                ----             -------------
<S>                                                                          <C>                  <C>                   <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
  Net (loss) ......................................................          $      --            $  (199,232)          $  (199,232)
  Adjustments to reconcile net (loss) to net
      cash provided by operating activities .......................                 --                   --                    --
    Stock options .................................................              102,832              102,832
    Stock for services ............................................                 --                 50,000                50,000
    Changes in assets and liabilities
      Increase in accounts payable ................................                 --                  5,315                 5,315
      Other .......................................................                 --                (10,383)              (10,383)
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
  Net cash (used) by operating activities .........................                 --                (51,468)              (51,468)
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Cash paid for unproved oil and gas properties ...................                 --               (975,491)             (975,491)
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
  Net cash (used) in investing activities .........................                 --               (975,491)             (975,491)
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Proceeds from sale of common stock ..............................                 --              1,500,000             1,500,000
  Cash paid for offering costs ....................................                 --                (48,324)              (48,324)
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
  Net cash provided by financing activities .......................                 --              1,451,676             1,451,676
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
NET INCREASE IN CASH ..............................................                 --                424,717               424,717

CASH, BEGINNING OF PERIODS ........................................                 --                   --                    --
                                                                             -----------          -----------           -----------
CASH, END OF PERIODS ..............................................          $      --            $   424,717           $   424,717
                                                                             ===========          ===========           ===========
</TABLE>



    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                      F - 7

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                      STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (CONTINUED)
                     Years ended December 31, 1996 and 1997


SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION

During the year ended  December  31, 1997 the Company  paid cash for interest of
$6,247.

SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF NON-CASH INVESTING AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES

During the year ended  December 31, 1996 the Company  issued  636,700  shares of
common stock valued at $6,367 ($.01 per share) in full  satisfaction  of amounts
due a former officer/director of the Company.

During the year ended December 31, 1997 the Company:

o    issued  2,250,000  shares of common  stock,  valued at $300,000  ($.133 per
     share), as partial consideration for unproved oil and gas properties.

o    issued 680,000 options to purchase common stock to officers,  directors and
     consultants, valued at $102,832.

o    issued 250,000 shares of common stock for services, valued at $50,000 ($.20
     per share).

o    issued  180,000  warrants  to  purchase  shares of common  stock as partial
     consideration  for finders fees in conjunction  with the private  placement
     sale of common stock, valued at $4,545.





    The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

                                      F - 8

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 1 - ORGANIZATION

        Fan Energy Inc. (the "Company") is an independent energy company engaged
        in the  exploration  and  acquisition  of  crude  oil  and  natural  gas
        reserves.  Originally formed as an Idaho corporation in the early 1900s,
        the  Company's  predecessor  was not  successful in the  exploration  of
        mining   properties.   In  1988  the   predecessor  was  merged  into  a
        newly-formed  Nevada corporation as Eastern Star Mining, Inc. and it was
        inactive  thereafter,  with no assets or liabilities  through the end of
        1996. In early 1997 the corporation was reactivated when the holder of a
        majority of the  outstanding  common  stock  transferred  control of the
        inactive corporation.  The transferee elected new directors and officers
        and caused the Company to effect a 10-into-1  reverse  stock split.  The
        name of the corporation was changed to Fan Energy Inc. in December 1997.

        Effective  with the  change in control  and  reactivation,  the  Company
        undertook  development  stage  activities  as  defined by  Statement  of
        Financial  Accounting  Standards  (SFAS)  No.  7  and  is  considered  a
        development  stage  company  effective  January 1, 1997.  Its  principal
        activities  have been raising capital through the sale of its securities
        and acquiring an undivided  minority interest in two oil and natural gas
        exploratory prospects in California for cash and common stock.


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

         OIL AND GAS PROPERTIES

         The Company follows the full cost method to account for its oil and gas
         exploration and development activities. Under the full cost method, all
         costs  incurred which are directly  related to oil and gas  exploration
         and  development  are  capitalized  and subjected to  depreciation  and
         depletion.   Depletable   costs  also   include   estimates  of  future
         development costs of proved reserves.  Costs related to undeveloped oil
         and gas  properties  may be excluded from  depletable  costs until such
         properties  are  evaluated  as  either  proved  or  unproved.  The  net
         capitalized costs are subject to a ceiling limitation.  Gains or losses
         upon  disposition  of oil and gas properties are treated as adjustments
         to capitalized costs,  unless the disposition  represents a significant
         portion of the  Company's  proved  reserves.  A separate cost center is
         maintained  for  expenditures  applicable  to each country in which the
         Company conducts exploration and/or production activities.
   
         Undeveloped  oil and gas  properties  consist  of  leases  and  acreage
         acquired by the Company for its exploration and development activities.
         As of December  31,  1997,  no  exploration  had been  commenced on the
         properties.  The cost of these  nonproducing  leases is recorded at the
         lower  of  cost  or  fair  market  value.   As  of  December  31,  1997
         substantially  all costs related to undeveloped  oil and gas properties
         consists  of  costs   incurred  in   conjunction   with  the  Company's
         acquisition of the properties.
    
         In  January  1998 an  unsuccessful  exploratory  well was  drilled  and
         abandoned as a dry hole on one of the Company's prospects.

                                      F - 9

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

         The Company has adopted SFAS No. 121  "Accounting for the Impairment of
         Long-Lived  Assets and for  Long-Lived  Assets to Be Disposed of" which
         requires  that  long-lived  assets to be held and used be reviewed  for
         impairment  whenever events or changes in  circumstances  indicate that
         the carrying amount of an asset may not be recoverable. The adoption of
         SFAS 121 has not had an impact on the Company's  financial  statements,
         as the Company has determined  that no impairment loss for 1997 need to
         be recognized for applicable assets of continuing operations.

         DEFERRED OFFERING COSTS

         Deferred  offering costs consist of costs incurred in connection with a
         proposed public offering of the Company's common stock. If the offering
         is successful,  costs incurred will be charged  against the proceeds of
         the offering. If the offering is not successful, costs incurred will be
         charged to operations.

         INCOME TAXES

         The Company has adopted the provisions of SFAS No. 109, "Accounting for
         Income   Taxes".   SFAS  109  requires   recognition  of  deferred  tax
         liabilities  and assets for the  expected  future tax  consequences  of
         events  that have been  included  in the  financial  statements  or tax
         returns.  Under this method,  deferred tax  liabilities  and assets are
         determined based on the difference between the financial  statement and
         tax basis of assets and  liabilities  using enacted tax rates in effect
         for the year in which the differences are expected to reverse.

         At December 31, 1997, the Company had a net operating loss carryforward
         of  approximately  $95,000 that may be offset  against  future  taxable
         income through 2012.

         The  Company has fully  reserved  the tax  benefits of these  operating
         losses because the likelihood of realization of the tax benefits cannot
         be determined.

         The $21,900 tax benefit of the loss  carryforward  has been offset by a
         valuation  allowance  of the same  amount.  The  total tax  benefit  is
         attributable to 1997.

         Temporary  differences  between the time of reporting certain items for
         financial and tax reporting  purposes consist primarily of compensation
         expense related to the issuance of stock options.

         USE OF ESTIMATES

         The  preparation of financial  statements in conformity  with generally
         accepted  accounting  principles  requires management to make estimates
         and assumptions that affect the reported

                                     F - 10

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

         amounts of assets and liabilities  and disclosure of contingent  assets
         and  liabilities  at the date of the financial  statements and reported
         amounts of revenues and expenses  during the reporting  period.  Actual
         results could differ from those estimates.

         (LOSS) PER COMMON SHARE

         (Loss) per  common  share is  computed  based on the  weighted  average
         number of common shares outstanding  during each period.  Common shares
         issued from reactivation as a development  stage company,  and prior to
         completion of the Company's  proposed initial public offering (Note 7),
         are  considered   outstanding  for  1997.  Common  stock   equivalents,
         consisting  of  warrants  and  options,   are  not  considered  in  the
         calculation  of  net  loss  per  share  as  their  inclusion  would  be
         antidilutive.

         In  February  1997  SFAS No.  128,  "Earnings  Per  Share"  was  issued
         effective  for  periods  ending after  December  15, 1997.  There is no
         impact on  the Company's financial statements from adoption of SFAS No.
         128.

         SHARED BASED COMPENSATION

         In October 1995 SFAS No. 123" Accounting for Stock-Based  Compensation"
         was  issued.  This  standard  defines  a fair  value  based  method  of
         accounting for an employee  stock option or similar equity  instrument.
         This  statement   gives  entities  a  choice  of  recognizing   related
         compensation  expense  by  adopting  the new fair  value  method  or to
         continue to measure  compensation  using the intrinsic  value  approach
         under Accounting Principles Board (APB) Opinion No. 25. The Company has
         elected to utilize APB No. 25 for  measurement;  and will,  pursuant to
         SFAS No.  123,  disclose  supplementally  the pro forma  effects on net
         income and  earnings per share of using the new  measurement  criteria.
         During the year ended December 31, 1997,  the Company  issued  warrants
         and options to purchase shares of its common stock (Note 4).

         CASH EQUIVALENTS

         For purposes of  reporting  cash flows,  the Company  considers as cash
         equivalents  all highly  liquid  investments  with a maturity  of three
         months or less at the time of purchase.  On  occasion,  the Company has
         cash in banks in excess of federally insured amounts.

         CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK

         Financial   instruments  which  potentially   subject  the  Company  to
         concentrations  of credit risk consist of cash.  The Company  maintains
         cash accounts at one financial  institution.  At December 31, 1997 cash
         on deposit at this financial  institution  exceeded  federally  insured


                                     F - 11

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

         amounts by approximately  $325,000.  The Company periodically evaluates
         the credit  worthiness of financial  institutions,  and maintains  cash
         accounts  only in large high quality  financial  institutions,  thereby
         minimizing  exposure  for  deposits  in  excess  of  federally  insured
         amounts.

         BASIS OF ACCOUNTING

         The accompanying  financial  statements have been prepared on the basis
         of  accounting  principles   applicable  to  a  going  concern,   which
         contemplates   the   realization  of  assets  and   extinguishment   of
         liabilities in the normal course of business.

         As previously  discussed,  the Company is in the development  stage and
         has not realized  revenues from its planned  operations.  As such,  the
         Company,  as of December  31, 1997 has incurred  net  operating  losses
         since  reactivation as a development stage company of $199,232 and does
         not have  sufficient  working  capital to fund its  planned  operations
         during the next twelve months.  Although sufficient funds are available
         to  meet  general  and   administrative   expenses  and  capital  costs
         associated  with existing oil and gas properties  for 1998,  additional
         funding will be required to complete  the  Company's  planned  drilling
         program and put successful wells into production.  These  circumstances
         raise  substantial  doubt about the Company's  ability to continue as a
         going  concern.  In order to meet the  Company's  continuing  financing
         needs,  management  of the  Company  intends to raise  working  capital
         through the sale of common stock or other securities,  or through other
         financings.

         The  Company's  financial  statements  do not include  any  adjustments
         related  to the  realization  of the  carrying  value of  assets or the
         amounts  and  classification  of  liabilities  that might be  necessary
         should the Company be unable to continue in existence.

         The ability of the Company to continue operations as a going concern is
         dependent upon its success in obtaining  capital through sale of common
         stock  or  other   securities  and  ultimately   achieving   profitable
         operations.

         NEW TECHNICAL PRONOUNCEMENTS

         In February 1997 SFAS No. 129, "Disclosure of Information about Capital
         Structure"  was issued  effective for periods ending after December 15,
         1997. The Company has adopted the disclosure provisions of SFAS No. 129
         effective with the fiscal year ended December 31, 1997.

         In June 1997 SFAS No. 130, "Reporting  Comprehensive Income" was issued
         effective  for fiscal years  beginning  after  December 31, 1997,  with


                                      F - 12

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

         earlier  application  permitted.  The Company has elected to adopt SFAS
         No.  130  effective  with the  fiscal  year ended  December  31,  1998.
         Adoption of SFAS No. 130 is not  expected to have a material  impact on
         the Company's financial statements.

         In June 1997 SFAS No. 131,  "Disclosure about Segments of an Enterprise
         and  Related   Information"  was  issued  effective  for  fiscal  years
         beginning after December 31, 1997, with earlier application  permitted.
         The Company has elected to adopt SFAS No. 131 effective with the fiscal
         year ended December 31, 1998.  Adoption of SFAS No. 131 is not expected
         to have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.


NOTE 3 - OIL AND GAS PROPERTIES

         In 1997 the Company  acquired a 25% undivided  working  interest in two
         natural  gas  exploration  and  development  prospects  located  in the
         southern part of the Sacramento  Basin in California.  The Company paid
         $907,951 in cash and issued 2,250,000 shares of common stock, valued at
         $300,000 ($.133 per share), for the properties. The total value of cash
         paid and stock issued approximates the transferor's historical basis in
         the property of $1,207,951.  As additional  consideration,  the Company
         agreed to issue 500,000 additional  restricted shares to the transferor
         if the gross  revenue  received by the Company from the prospects is at
         least  equal  to all  direct  costs  of  the  Company  associated  with
         acquiring  the interest in the prospects and drilling and other related
         expenses by December  31,  1999.  The  Company  paid to the  transferor
         interest  in the amount of $6,247 (8% per annum) for funds  advanced by
         the  transferor  on the  property  from  the  date  of the  acquisition
         agreement  (August 27, 1997) to the closing of the agreement  (November
         11,  1997).  Concurrently  with the closing,  the  transferor  became a
         director and officer of the Company.

         The Company may be subject to various possible  contingencies which are
         primarily   from   interpretations   of  federal  and  state  laws  and
         regulations  affecting  the oil and gas industry.  Although  management
         believes it has  complied  with the various laws and  regulations,  new
         rulings   and   interpretations   may   require  the  Company  to  make
         adjustments.



                                      F - 13

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 4 - STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

         COMMON STOCK

         In 1996 the Company issued  636,700  shares of common stock,  valued at
         $6,367 ($.01 per share), to a former officer/director of the Company in
         satisfaction  of an  obligation  owed for Company  expenses  previously
         advanced.

         In 1997,  the Company  completed  the sale of common stock and warrants
         pursuant to a private placements as follows:

         o    2,500,000  units,  at a price  of $.20  per  unit,  consisting  of
              2,500,000   shares  of  common  stock  and  warrants  to  purchase
              2,500,000  shares of common stock at an exercise price of $.20 per
              share before June 2, 1998.  Proceeds to the Company were $500,000,
              before costs of the offering of $430.

         o    2,000,000  units,  at a price  of $.50  per  unit,  consisting  of
              2,000,000   shares  of  common  stock  and  warrants  to  purchase
              1,000,000  shares of common stock at an exercise price of $.60 per
              share  before  October 31,  1998.  Proceeds  to the  Company  were
              $1,000,000 before costs of the offering of $52,439.

         In 1997  the  Company  issued  shares  of  common  stock  for  non-cash
consideration, as follows:

         o    250,000  shares  for  services,  of which  150,000  shares  are to
              officers and directors, valued at $50,000 ($.20 per share).

         o    2,250,000 shares to an  officer/director  as partial  compensation
              for the  acquisition of oil and gas prospects,  valued at $300,000
              ($.133 per share).
   
         QUASI REORGANIZATION

         Effective  January 1, 1997, the  stockholders of the Company approved a
         plan of  informal  quasi  reorganization.  Pursuant  to the  plan,  the
         Company's   accumulated   deficit  of   $504,648  as  of  the  date  of
         reorganization   was  eliminated  and  charged  to  additional  paid-in
         capital.
    

                                      F - 14

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 4 - STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)

         WARRANTS

         In 1997 the  Company  issued  warrants to  purchase  180,000  shares of
         common stock at an exercise price of $.50 per share through October 31,
         1998 as partial consideration for a finders fee in conjunction with the
         private  placement sale of $.50 units described above. The warrants are
         valued at $4,545, using the Black-Scholes option pricing model.

         At December 31, 1997 the status of outstanding warrants is as follows:

     Issue             Shares          Exercise         Expiration
     Date            Exercisable         Price             Date

June 3, 1997          2,500,000          $.20        June 2, 1998

October 31, 1997      1,000,000          $.60        October 31, 1998

October 31, 1997        180,000          $.50        October 31, 1998

         The per share  weighted-average  grant  date  fair  value and per share
         weighted  average  exercise  price of warrants  granted during 1997 are
         $.01 and $.32, respectively.

         STOCK OPTION PLAN

         In July 1997 the Company  adopted its 1997  Statutory and  Nonstatutory
         Incentive  Stock  Option Plan (the Plan)  allowing  for the issuance of
         incentive stock options and  nonstatutory  stock options to purchase an
         aggregate  1,000,000  shares of common  stock to  directors,  officers,
         employees and  consultants of the Company.  The Plan is administered by
         the Board of Directors.

         The Plan  provides  that  incentive  stock  options  be  granted  at an
         exercise  price equal to the fair market value of the common  shares of
         the  Company on the date of the grant and must be at least 110% of fair
         market value when granted to a 10% or more shareholder. The term of all
         stock options  granted under the Plan may not exceed ten years,  and no
         later than three months after  termination  of  employment,  except the
         term of incentive  stock options  granted to a 10% or more  shareholder
         which may not exceed five years.



                                      F - 15

<PAGE>

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 4 - STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)

         At December 31, 1997 the status of outstanding options granted pursuant
         to the Plan was as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       Unvested
                                   Grant             Options         Options            Options           Exercise
                                   Date              Granted         Vested          Outstanding            Price


<S>                            <C>                   <C>             <C>               <C>               <C>
Officer/Director               Jul. 2, 1997          130,000            -              130,000           $.20-.22

Officers/Directors             Oct. 30, 1997         670,000         670,000              -                 .35

Other                          Oct. 30, 1997          10,000          10,000              -                 .35
                                                     -------         -------             ---
                                                     810,000         680,000           130,000
                                                     =======         =======           =======
</TABLE>

         The  weighted  average  contractual  life  of  options  outstanding  at
         December 31, 1997 was 9.4 years.

         The Company has adopted the disclosure-only provisions of SFAS No. 123.
         Had  compensation  cost  for  the  Company's  stock  option  plan  been
         determined  based on the fair value at the grant date  consistent  with
         the  provisions  of SFAS No. 123, the  Company's  net loss and loss per
         share for 1997  would  have  been  increased  to the pro forma  amounts
         indicated below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

         <S>                                                                   <C>
         Net (loss) applicable to common stockholders - as reported            $(199,232)
                                                                                ========
         Net (loss) applicable to common stockholders - pro forma               (254,950)
                                                                                ========
         (Loss) per share - as reported                                             (.03)
                                                                                ========
         (Loss) per share - pro forma                                               (.03)
                                                                                ========
         Weighted average fair value of options granted in 1997                      .20
                                                                                ========
</TABLE>

         The fair value of each option  grant is  estimated on the date of grant
         using  the  Black-Scholes   option-pricing  model  with  the  following
         weighted-average  assumptions  used for grants:  dividend  yield of 0%;
         expected  volatility of 0%; discount rate of 5.50%;  and expected lives
         of 5 years.

         At December 31, 1997 the number of options  exercisable was 680,000 and
         the weighted average exercise price of these options was $.35.

         The Company has recognized as compensation expense $100,500 for 670,000
         options issued October 30, 1997 to Officers/Directors,  pursuant to APB
         No. 25, and $2,332 for 10,000 options issued to non-employees, pursuant
         to SFAS No. 123. Those options were issued at an exercise price of $.15
         per share less than the then private placement cost of common stock.

                                      F - 16

<PAGE>
                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
                          (A Development Stage Company)
                          Notes to Financial Statements
                                December 31, 1997


NOTE 4 - STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (CONTINUED)

         STOCK SPLIT

         Effective  January 1, 1997 the  Company  effected a  10-into-1  reverse
         stock split. The Company did not change the authorized number of common
         shares or par value of the common stock. All information in these notes
         and the accompanying  financial  statements gives retroactive effect to
         the 10-into-1 reverse stock split.


NOTE 5 - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

         In 1997 the Company paid an aggregate $10,000 to entities controlled by
         Officers/Directors  of the Company for office space and  administrative
         services in Scottsdale, Arizona ($8,000) and Denver, Colorado ($2,000),
         at the rate of $2,000 per month.

         In November 1997 the Company entered into a one year agreement with its
         Secretary/Treasurer  to provide  financial  and other  services  to the
         Company  for  $2,500  per  month.  During  1997  the  Company  paid the
         Secretary/Treasurer  $10,027 for services  provided  and issued  50,000
         shares of common stock, valued at $10,000 ($.20 per share).


NOTE 6 - COMMITMENTS

         In  November  1997 the  Company's  Board  of  Director's  approved  the
         issuance of an aggregate 215,000 shares of common stock to officers and
         directors of the Company for services to be performed  through June 30,
         1998, at a deemed value of $.50 per share.


NOTE 7 - PROPOSED STOCK OFFERING

         In November 1997, the Company's Board of Directors  approved the filing
         of a  Registration  Statement  on Form  SB-2  with the  Securities  and
         Exchange Commission relating to an initial public offering of a minimum
         300,000 shares and a maximum  3,000,000  shares of the Company's common
         stock at a price of $1.00 per share,  on a "best  efforts" basis by the
         officers and directors of the Company.



                                      F - 17

<PAGE>

                                     PART II

                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

Item 24.  Indemnification of Directors and Officers.

     Article  ELEVENTH of the  Registrant's  Restated  Articles of Incorporation
provides  that no  director  or officer of the  Registrant  shall be  personally
liable to the  Registrant or any of its  stockholders  for damages for breach of
fiduciary  duty as a director or officer,  except that such  provision  will not
eliminate  or limit  the  liability  of a  director  or  officer  for any act or
omission which involves intentional misconduct,  fraud or a knowing violation of
law or for the payment of any  dividend in  violation  of Section  78.300 of the
Nevada Revised Statutes.

     Section  78.751 of the Nevada  Revised  Statutes  permits the Registrant to
indemnify its directors,  officers, employees and agents if such person acted in
good faith and in a manner which he reasonably  believed to be in or not opposed
to the best  interests  of the  corporation,  and,  with respect to any criminal
action or  proceeding,  has no  reasonable  cause to  believe  his  conduct  was
unlawful.

     To the extent that a director,  officer, employee or agent of a corporation
has been  successful  on the merits or otherwise  in defense of any action,  the
corporation must provide indemnification against expenses,  including attorneys'
fees, actually and reasonably incurred by him in connection with the defense.

     Article  TWELFTH of the  Registrant's  Restated  Articles of  Incorporation
provides as follows:

          TWELFTH: The corporation shall, to the fullest extent permitted
     by Nevada law as in effect from time to time,  indemnify  any person
     against  all  liability  and  expense  (including  attorneys'  fees)
     incurred  by  reason  of the fact  that he is or was a  director  or
     officer of the  corporation  or,  while  serving  as a  director  or
     officer of the  corporation,  he is or was serving at the request of
     the corporation as a director, officer, partner or trustee of, or in
     any similar  managerial or fiduciary  position of, or as an employee
     or agent of, another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust,
     association,  or other entity.  Expenses (including attorneys' fees)
     incurred in defending an action,  suit or proceeding  may be paid by
     the corporation in advance of the final  disposition of such action,
     suit or proceeding to the fullest extent and under the circumstances
     permitted by Nevada law. The  corporation  may purchase and maintain
     insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a director, officer,
     employee,   fiduciary  or  agent  of  the  corporation  against  any
     liability  asserted  against and incurred by such person in any such
     capacity or arising out of such person;'s  position,  whether or not
     the  corporation  would  have the power to  indemnify  against  such
     liability  under  the  provisions  of  this  Section  TWELFTH.   The
     indemnification provided by this Section TWELFTH shall not be deemed
     exclusive  of any other  rights to which  those  indemnified  may be
     entitled   under  these  Articles  of   Incorporation,   any  bylaw,
     agreement,  vote of  stockholders  or  disinterested  directors,  or
     otherwise,  and shall inure to the benefit of their heirs, executors
     and administrators. The provisions of this Section TWELFTH shall not
     be  deemed to  preclude  the  corporation  from  indemnifying  other
     persons from similar or other expenses and  liabilities as the Board
     of  Directors  or  the  stockholders  may  determine  in a  specific
     instance or by resolution of general application.

     Article  VI,  Section  1 of  the  Registrant's  Bylaws  provides  that  the
Registrant shall provide indemnification to Registrant's officers, directors and
employees to the fullest extent  permitted under the Nevada General  Corporation
Law.

Item 25.  Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.
   
         Expenses  (none  of which  will be paid or  reimbursed  by the  Selling
Stockholders  to the  Registrant)  payable in  connection  with the issuance and
distribution of the securities being registered hereby are as follows:


                                      II-1
    

<PAGE>


Securities and Exchange Commission Registration Fee............      $ 2,561*
Accounting Fees and Expenses...................................       10,000*
Legal Fees and Expenses........................................       20,000*
Printing, Freight and Engraving................................        2,500*
Escrow Fees ...................................................        2,000
Miscellaneous..................................................        2,939*
                                                                      ------
       Total...................................................      $40,000*
- ----------------------
    
         *Estimated.

Item 26.  Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities.

     The following is information  with respect to all  unregistered  securities
sold by the Registrant within the past three years:

     (a) On December 15, 1996 the  Registrant  issued  636,700  shares of Common
Stock,  valued  at  $6,367 to an  officer  and  director  of the  Registrant  in
satisfaction of an obligation owed by the Registrant to the officer for expenses
of $6,367  advanced on behalf of the Registrant by such person.  The issuance of
the shares was exempt from  registration  under  Section 4(2) of the  Securities
Act, as the person to whom the shares were issued,  the President and a director
of the  Registrant,  had full  knowledge  of the  business  and  affairs  of the
Registrant,  certificates representing the shares were marked with a restrictive
legend and the shares were taken for investment.

     (b) On June 2, 1997 the Registrant  issued  2,500,000  shares of its Common
Stock and  2,500,000  stock  purchase  warrants to eight  non-U.S.  citizens for
$500,000 in a private  transaction.  Each of the warrants entitles the holder to
purchase one  additional  share of Common Stock of the Registrant at an exercise
price of $0.20 per share on or before June 2, 1998. No underwriter  was involved
in the transaction and there were no underwriting discounts or commissions.  The
issuance of the securities was exempt from  registration  under Rule 504 adopted
under Regulation D of the Securities Act. Form D was filed by the Registrant.

     (c) On August 29, 1997 the Registrant issued 2,250,000 shares of its Common
Stock to George  H.  Fancher  Jr.  in  connection  with the  acquisition  by the
Registrant of oil and gas properties.  Upon issuance of the shares, certificates
representing the shares were delivered to an escrow agent pending  completion of
the acquisition  trans action.  The acquisition  transaction was completed on or
about November 11, 1997 at which time the shares were delivered to Mr.  Fancher.
In the  transaction,  the  Registrant  received an assignment  of Mr.  Fancher's
undivided  interest in two natural gas  exploration  and  development  prospects
located  in the  southern  part  of the  Sacramento  Basin  in  California.  The
Registrant  paid  $907,951  in cash and  issued the  2,250,000  shares of Common
Stock,  valued at $300,000,  for the  properties.  The total of the cash and the
stock is intended to be equal to Mr.  Fancher's cost in acquiring and developing
the property prior to transfer to the Registrant. No underwriter was involved in
the transaction.  The issuance of the securities to Mr. Fancher was exempt under
Section 4(2) of the  Securities  Act. Mr.  Fancher  acquired the  securities for
investment,   certificates  representing  the  securities  were  marked  with  a
restrictive  legend  and  stop  transfer   instructions  were  placed  with  the
Registrant's stock transfer agent.
   
         (d) On September 15, 1997 the  Registrant  issued 250,000 shares of its
Common Stock to six  sophisticated  persons for services valued at $50,000.  The
were services  provided by two persons who are directors of the Registrant,  one
person who is an  officer,  one person who  provided  office and  administrative
services and two persons who are consultants. No underwriter was involved in the
transactions.  The  issuance  of the  securities  was exempt  from  registration
pursuant to Section 4(2) of the Securities  Act. Each of the persons to whom the
shares  were issued had full  knowledge  about the  business  and affairs of the
Registrant,  each signed a written  investment  letter  which  acknowledged  the
receipt of  information  concerning the Registrant and agreed to hold the shares
issued for investment  purposes,  the  certificates  representing the securities
each bear a restrictive legend and stop transfer  instructions were entered with
the Registrant's stock transfer agent.
    

                                      II-2

<PAGE>

     (e) On October  31,  1997 the  Registrant  issued  2,000,000  shares of its
Common  Stock and  warrants to purchase  1,000,000  shares of Common Stock to 10
non-U.S.  citizens for $1,000,000.  Each of the warrants  entitles the holder to
purchase one additional  share of Common Stock at an exercise price of $0.60 per
share on or before October 31, 1998.  The  Registrant  issued cash finder's fees
totaling  $45,000 and issued  warrants  entitling  the holders to purchase up to
180,000  shares  of  Common  Stock at $0.50  per  share to three  nonaffiliated,
non-U.S.  citizen finders in connection with the  transaction.  The Registrant's
President,  William  E.  Grafham,  participated  in the  private  placement  and
purchased 200,000 shares and 100,000 warrants for $100,000.  The issuance of the
securities was exempt from  registration  pursuant to Regulation S adopted under
the  Securities  Act. Each of the  purchasers  agreed that no sale of any of the
securities would be made to any U.S. Person,  as defined in Regulation S, except
in compliance with the Securities Act.

Item 27.  Exhibits.

     The following is a list of all exhibits filed as part of this  Registration
Statement.

Exhibit No.       Description and Method of Filing
- ----------        --------------------------------
   
     (1)       Form of Selected Dealer Agreement.
    
     (3.1)     Restated Articles of Incorporation of Eastern Star Mining,  Inc.,
               as filed with the Nevada Secretary of State February 7, 1997.

     (3.2)     Certificate of Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation of Eastern
               Star Mining,  Inc., as  filed with the Nevada  Secretary of State
               May 19, 1997.

     (3.3)     Certificate of Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation of Eastern
               Star Mining,  Inc., as  filed with the Nevada  Secretary of State
               May 28, 1997.

     (3.4)     Certificate of Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation of Eastern
               Star Holdings, Inc.,  as filed with the Nevada Secretary of State
               December 10, 1997.

     (3.5)     Bylaws of Registrant adopted December 31, 1997.

   
     (4.1)     Form of Fund Escrow Agreement.

     (4.2)     Form of Subscription Agreement

     (5.1)     Opinion  dated April 27, 1998, of Alan W. Peryam,  LLC  regarding
               legality of the securities being registered.
    
     (10.1)    Letter  Agreement  dated August 27, 1997 between  Registrant  and
               George H. Fancher Jr. d/b/a Fancher Oil Company.
   
     (10.2)    Agreement With Arizona Corporate Management,  Inc. dated November
               1, 1998.

     (10.3)    1997 Incentive and Nonstatutory Stock Option Plan.

     (10.4)    Letter  regarding  conflicts  of   interest  dated  March 6, 1998
               between Registrant and George H. Fancher Jr.

     (10.5)    Form of Investment Letter for certain officers and consultants.

     (10.6)    Agreement with Albert Golusin.
                                      II-3

<PAGE>



     (10.7)    Form of Lockup Agreement for Selling Securityholders.

     (16)      Letter  of Darrell Schvanveldt, Certified Public Accountant.
    
     (23.1)    Consent of Wheeler Wasoff,  P.C.,  Independent  Certified  Public
               Accountants.

     (23.2)    Consent of Darrell Schvanveldt, Certified Public Accountant.
   
     (23.3)    Consent dated April 27, 1998 of Alan W. Peryam, LLC

     (24)      Power of Attorney.*
    
- ------------------

         *Previously filed.

Item 28.  Undertakings

     The undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes that it will:

     (1) File,  during  any  period in which it  offers or sells  securities,  a
post-effective amendment to this Registration Statement to:

          (i)  Include  any  prospectus  required  by  Section  10(a)(3)  of the
               Securities Act;

          (ii) Reflect in the prospectus any facts or events which, individually
               or together, represent a fundamental change in the information in
               the registration statement; and

          (iii)Include any  additional or changed  material  information  on the
               plan of distribution.

     (2)  For  determining  liability  under  the  Securities  Act,  treat  each
post-effective  amendment  as a new  registration  statement  of the  securities
offered,  and the offering of the securities at that time to be the initial bona
fide offering.

     (3) File a post-effective  amendment to remove from registration any of the
securities that remain unsold at the end of the offering.

     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
may  be  permitted  to  directors,  officers  and  controlling  persons  of  the
Registrant pursuant to the foregoing  provisions,  or otherwise,  the Registrant
has been advised that, in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission,
such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act
and is, therefore, 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 a
director,  officer or  controlling  person of the  Registrant in the  successful
defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer
or controlling  person in connection with the securities being  registered,  the
Registrant will,  unless in the opinion of its legal 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 Securities  Act and will be governed by the final  adjudication
of such issue.

                                      II-4

<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES
   
     In accordance  with the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of 1933, the
Registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all
of the  requirements  of filing on Form SB-2 and  authorized  this  Registration
Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,  in the City and County
of Denver, State of Colorado on April 27, 1998.
    
                              FAN ENERGY INC.


                              By /s/ William E. Grafham
                                 -----------------------------------------------
                                 William E. Grafham, Chief Executive Officer

   
                              By /s/ Rex L. Utsler
                                 -----------------------------------------------
                                 Rex L. Utsler, Director, 
                                 Principal Financial Officer
    

                              By /s/ Albert A. Golusinh
                                 -----------------------------------------------
                                 Albert A. Golusin, Principal Accounting Officer

     In accordance  with the  requirements  of the Securities Act of 1933,  this
Registration Statement was signed by the following persons in the capacities and
on the dates stated:

   
Signature                                      Title          Date
- ---------                                      -----          ----


/s/ Willaim E. Grafham                         Director       April 27, 1998
- ----------------------------------------
William E. Grafham


/s/ George H. Fancher Jr.                      Director       April 27, 1998
- ----------------------------------------
George H. Fancher Jr.


Jeffrey J. Scott*                              Director       April 27, 1998
- ----------------------------------------
Jeffrey J. Scott

/s/ Rex L. Utsler                              Director       April 27, 1998
- ---------------------------------------
Rex L. Utsler, Director

/s/ George A. Cloudy                           Director       April 27, 1998
- ---------------------------------------
George A. Cloudy, Director


*By /s/ George H. Fancher Jr.                                 April 27, 1998
    ------------------------------------
    George H. Fancher Jr.
    Attorney-in-Fact
    
                                      II-5


<PAGE>
                                  EXHIBIT INDEX

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

   Exhibit     Description                                                              Page No.
   ------      -----------                                                              -------
   <S>        <C>                                                                      <C>
   
     (1)       Form of Selected Dealer Agreement.
    
     (3.1)     Restated Articles of Incorporation of Eastern Star Mining,  Inc.,
               as filed with the Nevada Secretary of State February 7, 1997.

     (3.2)     Certificate of Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation of Eastern
               Star Mining,  Inc., as  filed with the Nevada  Secretary of State
               May 19, 1997.

     (3.3)     Certificate of Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation of Eastern
               Star Mining,  Inc., as  filed with the Nevada  Secretary of State
               May 28, 1997.

     (3.4)     Certificate of Amendment of Articles of  Incorporation of Eastern
               Star Holdings, Inc.,  as filed with the Nevada Secretary of State
               December 10, 1997.

     (3.5)     Bylaws of Registrant adopted December 31, 1997.
   
     (4.1)     Form of Fund Escrow Agreement.

     (4.2)     Form of Subscription Agreement

     (5.1)     Opinion  dated April 27, 1998, of Alan W. Peryam,  LLC  regarding
               legality of the securities being registered.
    
     (10.1)    Letter  Agreement  dated August 27, 1997 between  Registrant  and
               George H. Fancher Jr. d/b/a Fancher Oil Company.
   
     (10.2)    Agreement With Arizona Corporate Management,  Inc. dated November
               1, 1998.

     (10.3)    1997 Incentive and Nonstatutory Stock Option Plan.

     (10.4)    Letter  regarding  conflicts  of   interest  dated  March 6, 1998
               between Registrant and George H. Fancher Jr.

     (10.5)    Form of Investment Letter for certain officers and consultants.

     (10.6)    Agreement with Albert Golusin.

     (10.7)    Form of Lockup Agreement for Selling Securityholders.

     (16)      Letter  of Darrell Schvanveldt, Certified Public Accountant.
    

     (23.1)    Consent of Wheeler Wasoff,  P.C.,  Independent  Certified  Public
               Accountants.

     (23.2)    Consent of Darrell Schvanveldt, Certified Public Accountant.
   
     (23.3)    Consent dated April 27, 1998 of Alan W. Peryam, LLC

     (24)      Power of Attorney.*                                                       N/A
    
</TABLE>

     *Previously filed


                            SELECTED DEALER AGREEMENT

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.
               Public Offering of 3,000,000 Shares of Common Stock
                                       at
                                 $1.00 Per Share

                         Dated as of ____________, 1998

Gentlemen:

     The  undersigned,  Fan Energy Inc., a Nevada  corporation  (the "Company"),
hereby confirms its agreement with you as follows:

     1. General. This Selected Dealer Agreement (the "Agreement") sets forth the
terms and conditions  between the Company and you (a "Selected Dealer") whereby,
subject to the terms of this  Agreement,  you as a Selected  Dealer  will,  as a
nonexclusive agent of the Company,  offer to sell on behalf of the Company,  and
the Company will sell,  pursuant to subscriptions  obtained by you, other agents
acting  on behalf of the  Company  and the  Company's  officers,  directors  and
employees in a registered public offering,  up to 3,000,000 shares of $0.001 par
value common stock (the "Shares") as described in the  Prospectus  dated May __,
1998 (the "Prospectus").

     In the Offering, the Company is offering a minimum of 300,000 and a maximum
of  3,000,000  Shares  at a  purchase  price  of  $1.00  per  Share  aggregating
respectively $300,000 and $3,000,000 (the "Offering"). An investor must purchase
a minimum of 20,000 Shares (i.e.  $20,000) although the Company reserves to sell
a lesser number of Shares in its sole discretion. All Shares are offered subject
to the right of the Company to reject any subscription for Shares in whole or in
part and subject to certain other conditions. The terms of the Offering are more
particularly described in the Prospectus. In connection with the Offering by the
Company, the Company may retain certain Selected Dealers,  including you, all of
which shall be members of the National  Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc.
(the "Selected Dealers").

     2.  Appointment  as  Selected  Dealer.  You are hereby  invited to become a
Selected  Dealer and by your  confirmation  indicated by signing this Agreement,
you  agree  to act in  such  capacity  and to use  your  best  efforts  to  find
purchasers for up to a maximum of $300,000 of the Shares in the Offering (10% of
the total amount  offered) in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth
in this Agreement, provided that you shall have no obligation to sell any of the
Shares.



<PAGE>


     3. Prospectus.  The Company shall provide you with such number of copies of
the Prospectus and such number copies of any amendments and supplements  thereto
as you may reasonably request.

     4.  Solicitation  of  Subscriptions.  You  hereby  agree to  solicit,  as a
nonexclusive agent of the Company,  investors to purchase Shares in the Offering
in accordance with the terms as set forth in the Prospectus.

          (a) Acceptance Standards. No Subscription Agreement shall be effective
     unless and until accepted by the Company and the Company reserves the right
     to reject any such  subscription  and to accept or reject  subscriptions in
     the order of their  receipt by the Escrow Agent or  otherwise.  The Company
     will  not  consider  any  proposed   subscription  until  the  Subscription
     Agreement has been completed in full and signed by the investor.

          (b) Solicitation  Procedures.  Each person desiring to purchase Shares
     will be  required  to sign and  complete  a  Subscription  Agreement.  Each
     investor  will make his or her check  payable  to the order of "The Bank of
     Denver,  Fan Energy  Inc.,  Escrow  Account" in the amount of the  purchase
     price of the Share. You agree to promptly deliver the original Subscription
     Agreement  as  signed  by  the  investors,  together  with  the  investor's
     subscription  funds  directly to the Escrow  Agent on or before noon of the
     first business day following the date of receipt of the  investor's  funds.
     You are not  permitted to sign a  Subscription  Agreement for any investor.
     The Bank of Denver, Denver, Colorado is the Escrow Agent in connection with
     the Offering in accordance with the terms of the Fund Escrow Agreement. You
     agree to sign and become a party to the Fund Escrow Agreement and to sign a
     counterpart  of the agreement at or before the time when you first transmit
     investor funds to the Escrow Agent.

          Upon  receipt of the  investor's  funds from the Company or a Selected
     Dealer,  the Escrow  Agent will  deposit  the funds in the Escrow  Account.
     Until such time as at least  $300,000 in investor funds have been deposited
     with the  Escrow  Agent by the  Selected  Dealer(s)  and the  Company,  the
     Company  will have no right to obtain any funds held in the Escrow  Account
     by the Escrow Agent and no subscriber shall have any right to return of his
     funds,  except as described in the Fund Escrow Agreement.  The right of the
     Company or you to receive  funds from the Escrow  Account is subject to the
     terms of the Fund Escrow Agreement.

          You  agree to offer the  Shares  only in  jurisdictions  which you are
     properly  qualified or registered,  as required by applicable law, to offer
     or sell securities,  and which  jurisdictions  are identified to you by the
     Company as a  jurisdiction  where the offering may be lawfully  made. At or
     prior to the  delivery  of funds by the  Escrow  Agent to the  Company,  as
     described  in the  Fund  Escrow  Agreement,  you  agree to  deliver  to the
     Company,  if so  requested by the Company,  a  certificate  stating (i) the
     identification of each subscriber whose funds you transmitted to the Escrow
     Agent,  together  with the  number of Shares  purchased,  and the number of


                                        2

<PAGE>

     purchasers in each state and (ii) that your  representations and warranties
     contained  in Section 8 hereof are true and correct with the same effect as
     though  expressly  then made and that you have  complied with the covenants
     contained in Section 9 hereof.

     5. Due Diligence.  You agree to conduct your own investigation to determine
that all  materials  facts upon which each person who purchases the Shares might
rely  in  making  his  or her  investment  decision  have  been  accurately  and
adequately  disclosed in the  Prospectus to the extent you deem  necessary.  The
Company  agrees to furnish to you any and all  information  which you reasonably
request or deem necessary to review in connection with any  investigation  which
you choose to make.

     6. Compensation.  Subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein, and
in consideration of your services to the Company,  the Company shall pay to you,
at such time as  offering  proceeds  are  delivered  by the Escrow  Agent to the
Company,  a selling  commission equal to 10% of the gross offering  proceeds for
the Shares sold through you. All compensation  under this Agreement will be paid
on a per Share basis on the date that funds are delivered by the Escrow Agent to
the Company in accordance with the Fund Escrow  Agreement or within two business
days  thereafter.  Payment of this  compensation  is  subject  to the  following
conditions:

               (i) No  compensation  will be paid  until  the  minimum  offering
          amount  (300,000 Shares for proceeds of $300,000) has been reached and
          such amounts have been  delivered to the Escrow Agent and the proceeds
          of all checks have cleared the collection process;

               (ii) No compensation  will be paid with respect to a subscription
          for Shares  which are  rejected  for any reason by the Company or with
          respect  to any  Shares  for  which  good  funds  are  not  ultimately
          collected by the Escrow Agent; or

               (iii)  No   compensation   will  be  payable   with   respect  to
          transactions in  jurisdictions  where such payments may not legally be
          made.

     7.  Representations,  Warranties and Agreements of the Company. The Company
represents and warrants to, and agrees with you as follows:

          (a) The Company is a corporation duly organized,  validly existing and
     in good  standing  under  the  laws of the  state of  Nevada  with the full
     corporate  power and  authority to conduct its business as described in the
     Prospectus. The Company is duly licensed or qualified to do business and in
     good standing as a foreign  corporation in all  jurisdictions  in which the
     nature of the  activities  conducted  by it or the  character of the assets
     owned or leased by it makes such license or qualification necessary.

          (b) The Company has an authorized  capitalization  as set forth in the
     Prospectus and all of the then  outstanding  shares of capital stock of the
     Company will have been,  and the Shares to be sold in the Offering will be,
     duly  authorized  and  all  shall  be  validly   issued,   fully  paid  and
     nonassessable.


                                        3

<PAGE>


          (c) The Company does not have outstanding any options to purchase,  or
     any rights or warrants to subscribe  for, or any  securities or obligations
     convertible  into, or any contracts or  commitments  to issue to sell,  any
     equity  securities  or  any  such  warrants,   convertible   securities  or
     obligations, other than as disclosed in the Prospectus.

          (d) Except as disclosed in the Prospectus, there are no actions, suits
     or  proceedings  pending or threatened  against the Company,  or against or
     affecting  any of its  directors or  officers,  before or by any federal or
     state court,  commission,  regulatory body,  administrative agency or other
     governmental  body,  domestic or foreign,  wherein an unfavorable ruling or
     decision or finding would  materially  and adversely  affect the Company or
     its business.  The Company has, and at all times during the offering period
     will have, complied in all material respects with all laws, regulations and
     orders applicable to it or its business,  the violation of which would have
     a material  adverse  effect upon its business.  The Company has, and at all
     times  during the  offering  period  will have,  in all  material  respects
     performed all its  obligations  required to be performed by it, and is not,
     and at all times during the Offering Period,  will not be, in default under
     any material contract or other instrument to which it is a party.

          (e) The Company is not in violation  of its Articles of  Incorporation
     or Bylaws.

          (f) The  Shares  have  been  duly  authorized  and,  when  issued  and
     delivered to the purchasers  thereof against  payments  therefor and in the
     manner described in the Prospectus,  will be validly issued, fully paid and
     nonassessable.  The  description  of  the  common  stock  contained  in the
     Prospectus is complete and accurate in all material respects.

          (g) This Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and delivered by
     the Company and  constitutes a valid and binding  agreement of the Company,
     except  as  may  be  limited  by  bankruptcy,  insolvency,  reorganization,
     moratorium or other similar laws relating to or affecting creditors' rights
     generally  or by general  equitable  principles.  The  performance  of this
     Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby will
     not result in a breach or violation of any of the terms or  provisions  of,
     or constitute a default under, any indenture, mortgage, instrument to which
     the Company is a party or by which the Company or any of its  properties is
     bound,  or under any statute or under any order,  rule or regulation of any
     court or other regulatory agency applicable to the Company or its business.
     No consent,  approval,  authorization  or order of any court or  regulatory
     agency or body is  required  for the  consummation  by the  Company  of the
     transactions on its part contemplated in this Agreement, except as such may
     be required under federal and state securities laws.

          (h) Except as reflected in or contemplated  by the  Prospectus,  since
     the respective  dates as of which  information is given in the  Prospectus,
     there has not been, and on the termination  date of the Offering there will
     not have been, any material adverse change in the condition of the Company,
     financial or otherwise.

          (i) At each  time  that  proceeds  from  the  sale of the  Shares  are
     delivered by the Escrow Agent in accordance with the Fund Escrow Agreement,
     the  Company  shall cause the Escrow  Agent to pay to you the  compensation
     described  in Section 6 above.  Also,  at such time or within two  business
     days thereafter, the Company shall cause its transfer agent to issue and to
     deliver to purchasers of the Shares  certificates  representing  the Shares
     purchased in the offering with the proceeds delivered by the Escrow Agent.

                                        4

<PAGE>




     8.  Representations  and  Warranties  of the  Selected  Dealer.  You hereby
represent, warrant and agree with the Company and us that:

          (a) Power and Authority.  You have been duly incorporated or organized
     and are validly  existing in good  standing  under the laws of the state of
     your  organization,  with all requisite power and authority to conduct your
     business and to perform the obligations contemplated herein.

          (b) Due Authorization and Enforceability. This Agreement has been duly
     and validly authorized, executed and delivered by you or on your behalf and
     constitutes your valid,  binding and enforceable  agreement,  except to the
     extent  that (i) the  enforceability  of this  Agreement  by be  limited by
     bankruptcy,   insolvency,   reorganization,   moratorium  or  similar  laws
     affecting  the rights of creditors  generally or by general  principles  of
     equity   (regardless  of  whether  such  enforcement  is  considered  in  a
     proceeding in equity or at law), and (ii) the indemnification provisions of
     this Agreement by be held to violate public policy (under either federal or
     state law) in the context of the offer or sale of securities.

          (c) Absence of Legal or  Contractual  Conflicts.  Your  execution  and
     delivery  of this  Agreement,  and  the  performance  of  your  obligations
     hereunder, will not result in a breach or violation of any of the terms and
     provisions   of,  or   constitute  a  default   under,   your  articles  of
     incorporation  or bylaws,  any  agreement or  instrument to which you are a
     party or by which you are bound, or any judgment, decree, order or, to your
     knowledge, any statute, rule or regulation applicable to you.

          (d)  Adequacy  of  Prospectus.   The  information   contained  in  the
     Prospectus  relating to you or the plan of distribution  of the Shares,  if
     any, is complete and correct and does not contain any untrue statement of a
     material  fact or omit to  state a  material  fact  necessary  to make  the
     statements therein not misleading.

          (e)  Broker-Dealer  Qualifications.  You are (i) a broker-dealer  duly
     registered  pursuant to the  provisions of the  Securities  Exchange Act of
     1934, as amended (the  "Exchange  Act"),  (ii) a member in good standing of
     the  National  Association  of  Securities  Dealers,  Inc.  and (iii)  duly
     registered as a broker-dealer under the applicable statutes and regulations
     of each  state in which you will  offer and sell the  Shares,  except  such
     states in which you are exempt from  registration  or such  registration is
     not  otherwise  required.  You  will  maintain  your  registration  in good
     standing, or your exemption from such registration, through the term of the
     offering  and you will  comply  with all  statutes  and other  requirements
     applicable to you with respect to your  brokerage  activities  within those
     jurisdictions.


                                        5

<PAGE>


          (f) No  Disqualifications.  Neither  you or  any  of  your  directors,
     officers, predecessors or agents nor any beneficial owner of 10% or more of
     any class of your equity securities, nor any of their respective affiliates
     (nor  any  other  person  serving  in a  similar  capacity):

               (i) has been  convicted  within 10 years prior to the date hereof
          of any  crime  or  offense  involving  the  purchase  or  sale  of any
          security,   involving  the  making  of  a  false  statement  with  the
          Securities  and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC"),  or arising out of such
          person's  conduct  as  an  underwriter,   broker,  dealer,   municipal
          securities dealer or investment advisor;

               (ii) is subject to any order,  judgment or decree of any court of
          competent  jurisdiction  temporarily  or  preliminarily  enjoining  or
          restraining,  or is subject to any order,  judgment,  or decree of any
          court of competent  jurisdiction,  entered  within five years prior to
          the date hereof, permanently enjoining or restraining such person from
          engaging in or continuing  any conduct or practice in connection  with
          the purchase or sale of any security,  involving the making of a false
          filing with the SEC or arising  out of the conduct of the  business of
          an  underwriter,   broker,  dealer,  municipal  securities  dealer  or
          investment advisor;

               (iii)  is  subject  to an order of the SEC  entered  pursuant  to
          Section 15(b), 15B(a), or 15B(c) of the Exchange Act, or is subject to
          an order of the SEC entered  pursuant to Section  203(e) or (f) of the
          Investment Advisors Act of 1940;

               (iv) is suspended or expelled from membership in, or suspended or
          barred from association with a member of, an exchange  registered as a
          national  securities  exchange  pursuant to Section 6 of the  Exchange
          Act, an association  registered as a national  securities  association
          under  Section  15A of the  Exchange  Act,  or a  Canadian  securities
          exchange or association for any act or omission  constituting  conduct
          inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade;

               (v)  is  subject  to  a  United  States   Postal   Service  false
          representation  order  entered  within  five  years  prior to the date
          hereof; or is subject to a restraining order or preliminary injunction
          entered  under  Section 3007 of Title 39,  United  States  Code,  with
          respect to any conduct alleged to constitute postal fraud;

               (vi)  has  been  or  has  been  named  as an  underwriter  of any
          securities covered by any registration  statement which is the subject
          of any  pending  proceeding  or  examination  under  Section  8 of the
          Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act"), or is the subject
          of any  refusal  order or stop order  entered  thereunder  within five
          years prior to the date hereof;


                                        6

<PAGE>


               (vii) has taken or failed to take any other act or are subject to
          any other  order or  proceedings,  that  would  make  unavailable  any
          limited   offering   exemption  from   registration  or  qualification
          requirements of federal or state securities laws;

               (viii) has filed a registration  statement that is the subject of
          a  currently  effective  stop order  entered  pursuant  to any state's
          securities law within five years prior to the date hereof;

               (ix) has  been  convicted  within  five  years  prior to the date
          hereof of any  felony or  misdemeanor  in  connection  with the offer,
          purchase  or sale of any  security  or any felony  involving  fraud or
          deceit, including but not limited to forgery, embezzlement,  obtaining
          money under false pretenses, larceny or conspiracy to defraud;

               (x) is currently subject to any state administrative  enforcement
          order or judgment  entered by that  state's  securities  administrator
          within  five  years  prior to the date  hereof  or is  subject  to any
          state's administrative enforcement order or judgment in which fraud or
          deceit,  including  but not  limited to making  untrue  statements  of
          material facts and omitting to state material facts, was found and the
          order or  judgment  was  entered  within  five years prior to the date
          hereof;

               (xi) is subject to any state's  administrative  enforcement order
          or judgment that prohibits, denies or revokes the use of any exemption
          from  registration in connection  with the offer,  purchase or sale of
          securities; or

               (xii) is  currently  subject to any order,  judgment or decree of
          any  court of  competent  jurisdiction  temporarily  or  preliminarily
          restraining  or  enjoining,  or is subject to any order,  judgement or
          degree of any court of competent jurisdiction  permanently restraining
          or enjoining, such party from engaging in or continuing any conduct or
          practice in  connection  with the  purchase or sale of any security or
          involving the making of any false filing with the state entered within
          five years prior to the date hereof.

     9. Covenants of Selected  Dealer.  You hereby covenant with the Company and
us as follows:

          (a)  Delivery  of  Prospectus.  You or a person  acting on your behalf
     shall  furnish to each offeree,  concurrently  with making an offer to such
     offeree,  a copy  of  the  Prospectus,  as it  may  have  been  amended  or
     supplemented by the Company,  and shall maintain  adequate  records of each
     person to whom a Prospectus has been delivered. Neither you nor any of your
     agents will give any information or make any representation with respect to
     the  Company or its  business  or affairs  other  than the  information  or
     representations contained in the Prospectus.

                                        7

<PAGE>


          (b)  Conduct of  Solicitation.  You or a person  acting on your behalf
     will cause  each  person  interest  in  acquiring  Shares to  complete  and
     executive a  Subscription  Agreement  (a copy of which is an exhibit to the
     Fund Escrow Agreement) in accordance with Section 4(b) hereof. You will not
     execute any  Subscription  Agreement  for any person and will not invest in
     the Shares through any person's  discretionary  trading account without the
     written  approval of such  person.  You will abide by, and take  reasonable
     precautions to ensure  compliance  with,  all  provisions  contained in the
     Prospectus and this Agreement regulating the terms and manner of conducting
     the offering.

          (c) Compliance With Federal  Securities Laws. You will comply with all
     applicable  requirements  of the 1933  Act and the  rules  and  regulations
     promulgated thereunder.  You any person acting on your behalf will exercise
     reasonable care to ensure that a purchaser is not an underwriter within the
     meaning of Section 2(11) of the 1933 Act.

          (d) Compliance With Blue Sky Laws. You will comply with all applicable
     requirements  of  any  state  securities  or  "blue  sky"  law or  rule  or
     regulation  promulgated  thereunder.  You will not offer or sell any of the
     Shares in any  jurisdiction  (i) prior to receiving  instructions  (oral or
     written) from the Company that offers may be made in such  jurisdiction and
     (ii) except in  compliance  with all  applicable  securities  or "blue sky"
     laws. With respect to any state which limits the number of offers and sales
     which  may be made,  you shall  offer for sale no more than such  number of
     Shares as the Company may advise you may be offered and/or sold.

          (e)  Maintenance of Records.  You will retain in your records and make
     available to the Company, for a period of at least five years,  information
     concerning each person who purchased the Shares.

     10. Indemnification.

          (a) The Company will  indemnify and hold harmless the Selected  Dealer
     and its officers and directors from and against all losses, claims, damages
     or liabilities,  joint and several,  to which any of the aforesaid  parties
     may  become  subject,  under  the 1933 Act or  otherwise,  insofar  as such
     losses,  claims,  damages or  liabilities  (or actions in respect  thereof)
     arise out of or are based upon (i) any untrue  statement of a material fact
     contained in the Prospectus, any amendment or supplement thereto, or in any
     "blue  sky"  filing or other  document  executed  by the  Company or on its
     behalf  specifically for the purpose of qualifying any or all of the Shares
     for sale  under  the  securities  laws of any  jurisdiction  or based  upon
     written  information  furnished under the securities laws thereof (any such
     filing,  document or information being  hereinafter  referred to as a "Blue
     Sky  Application")  or (ii) the  omission to state in the  Prospectus,  any
     amendment or supplement thereto,  any registration  statement,  or any Blue
     Sky  Application a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary
     to make  the statements therein, in  light of the circumstances under which

                                        8

<PAGE>


     they were made, not misleading;  and will reimburse the Selected Dealer and
     its  officers  and  directors  for any legal or other  expenses  reasonably
     incurred  by  the  Selected  Dealer  and  its  officers  and  directors  in
     connection  with  investigating  or defending such loss,  claim,  damage or
     liability  arises out of, or is based upon any untrue statement or omission
     concerning  the Selected  Dealer or otherwise  made in reliance upon and in
     conformity with instructions or information furnished to the Company by the
     Selected Dealer or by any of its officers, directors, employees or agents.

          (b) The Selected  Dealer will indemnify and hold harmless the Company,
     its  officers  and  directors  and each  person,  if any,  who controls the
     Company  within the  meaning of  Section  15 of the 1933 Act,  against  all
     losses,  claims,  damages  or  liabilities  to which  any of the  aforesaid
     parties may become  subject,  under the 1933 Act or  otherwise,  insofar as
     such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or actions in respect thereof)
     arise out of or are based upon: (i) any untrue statement of a material fact
     contained in the Prospectus,  any amendment or supplement  thereto,  or any
     Blue Sky Application,  in each case to the extent,  but only to the extent,
     the such untrue  statement  concerns the Selected  Dealer or otherwise  was
     made in reliance upon and in conformity  with  instructions  or information
     furnished to the Company by the Selected  Dealer or by any of its officers,
     directors,  employees  or  agents;  (ii)  the  omission  to  state  in  the
     Prospectus,  any  amendment  or  supplement  thereto,  or in any  Blue  Sky
     Application a material  fact required to be stated  therein or necessary to
     make the statement therein,  in light of the circumstances under which they
     were made,  not  misleading,  in each case to the  extent,  but only to the
     extent,  the such untrue statement or omission concerns the Selected Dealer
     or otherwise was made in reliance upon and in conformity with  instructions
     or information furnished to the Company by the Selected Dealer or by any of
     its officers, directors, employees or agents; (iii) any unauthorized use of
     sales materials or use of representatives; or (iv) any misrepresentation by
     the  Selected  Dealer in this  Agreement  or any breach of  warranty by the
     Selected  Dealer with respect to this  Agreement.  The Selected Dealer will
     also reimburse the Company, its officers and directors, or such controlling
     person in  connection  with  investigating  or defending  any loss,  claim,
     damage, liability or action referred to above.

          (c) Promptly  after receipt by an indemnified  party under  subsection
     (a) or  (b)  above  of  notice  of the  commencement  of any  action,  such
     indemnified  party  shall,  if a claim  in  respect  thereof  is to be made
     against  the  indemnifying   party  under  such   subsection,   notify  the
     indemnifying party in writing of the commencement thereof. In case any such
     action shall be brought against any indemnified  person and it shall notify
     the indemnifying party of the commencement  thereof, the indemnifying party
     shall be entitled to  participate  therein  and, to the extent the it shall
     desire,  jointly with any other indemnifying party similarly  notified,  to
     assume the defense thereof with counsel  satisfactory  to such  indemnified
     party.


                                        9

<PAGE>


     11. Survival Clause.  The respective  indemnities,  agreements  (including,
without   limitation,   the   agreements   set  forth  in  Section  10  hereof),
representations, warranties and other statements of the Company and the Selected
Dealer,  as set forth in this Agreement,  shall remain in full force and effect,
regardless of any  investigation  (or any  statement as to the results  thereof)
made by or on behalf of the Selected  Dealer or the Company,  and shall  survive
any closing and termination of this Agreement and the receipt of any payment for
the Shares.

     12. Commencement Date, Term and Termination of this Agreement.

          (a) This Agreement  shall become  effective as of the date first above
     written.

          (b) The Company  shall have the right to terminate  this  Agreement at
     any time during the Offering period if any representations or warranties of
     the  Selected  Dealer  hereunder  shall be found to have been  incorrect or
     misleading  or the  Selected  Dealer  shall  fail,  refuse  or be unable to
     perform any of its agreements or obligations hereunder.

          (c) The Agreement shall terminate at the conclusion of the offering as
     described in the Fund Escrow Agreement.

Notwithstanding  termination  of the Agreement,  the  obligations of the parties
under Sections 6, 7, 9(e) and 10 shall survive.

     13. Notices.  All communications  hereunder shall be in writing and if sent
to the Selected Dealer shall be mailed,  delivered or telecopied to the Selected
Dealer at the  address  set forth  above:  and if sent to the  Company  shall be
mailed,  delivered or telecopied to Rex Utsler, Vice President, Fan Energy Inc.,
1801 Broadway,  Suite 720,  Denver,  Colorado 80202, and to such other addresses
and persons as may reasonably be furnished in writing by the parties hereto.

     14.  Governing Law. This Agreement and all matters  related hereto shall be
governed by and construed in  accordance  with the internal laws of the state of
Colorado  applicable to agreements made and to be performed entirely within such
state. Any legal action,  suit or proceeding with respect to any matter relating
to or arising out of or in connection  with the offering or this Agreement shall
be brought in the federal and state courts  located in Denver,  Colorado and, by
execution and delivery of this  Agreement,  each of the Company and the Selected
Dealer hereby further irrevocably agrees, accepts and submits to, for itself and
in  respect  of  any  of  its  property,  generally  and  unconditionally,   the
jurisdiction of the aforesaid courts.  The provisions of this Agreement shall be
construed as of this Agreement had been drafted by both parties.

     15. Entire Agreement.  This Agreement contains the entire understanding and
agreement  between the parties  hereto with respect to the subject matter hereof
and supersedes all prior agreements, written or oral, with respect thereto.

     16. Waivers and  Preservation  of Remedies.  No delay on the part of either
party in exercising any right,  power or privilege  hereunder shall operate as a
waiver  thereof,  nor shall any  waiver on the part of either  party of any such
right, power or privilege, nor any single or partial exercise of any such right,
power or privilege, preclude any further exercise thereof or the exercise of any
other such right, power or privilege.


                                       10

<PAGE>


     17.  Counterparts.  This  Agreement  may be  executed by one or more of the
parties hereto in any number of  counterparts,  each of which shall be deemed to
be an original,  but all such  counterparts  shall together continue one and the
same instrument.

     18. Parties and Successors.  This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure
solely to the  benefit of the  Company,  the  Selected  Dealer and to the extent
provided in Section 10 hereof,  to each person  indemnified  therein,  and their
respective  heirs,  executors,  administrators,  successors and assigns,  and no
other  person  shall  acquire  or have  any  right  under or by  virtue  of this
Agreement.  This Agreement may not be assigned by either party without the prior
written consent of the other party. No purchaser of any Shares shall be deemed a
successor or assign by reason of such purchase.

     19.  Severability.  If any provision of this Agreement  shall be held to be
invalid,  illegal or  unenforceable,  or is  challenged  by any state or federal
regulatory  agency in the  administration  of any  statute  or  regulation,  the
validity,  legality and enforceability of the remaining  provisions hereof shall
in no way be affected or impaired thereby.

     IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the parties  hereto have caused this  Agreement to be
duly executed as of the date and year first above written.

                                          FAN ENERGY INC.



                                          By 
                                             ---------------------------------
                                             George H. Fancher, Jr., Chairman

AGREED AND ACCEPTED:

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



By 
  ----------------------------------

Name 
     -------------------------------
Title 
     -------------------------------

                                       11


                       RESTATED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
                                       OF
                            EASTERN STAR MINING, INC.


     The  undersigned,  who are the  President  and  Secretary  of Eastern  Star
Mining,  Inc., a Nevada  corporation,  in compliance with NRS 78.404,  and being
authorized and directed by the Board of Directors of Eastern Star Mining,  Inc.,
hereby certify that:


     1.  Pursuant to the Articles  and  Agreement of Merger dated June 23, 1989,
and filed with the  Secretary of State of Nevada  August 24, 1989,  Eastern Star
Mining,  Inc.,  an Idaho  corporation,  was merged  with and into  Eastern  Star
Mining, Inc., a Nevada corporation.  Immediately prior to the time of the merger
there were  1,349,819  common  shares of Eastern  Star  Mining,  Inc.,  an Idaho
corporation,  and one share of Eastern Star Mining,  Inc., a Nevada  corporation
outstanding, notwithstanding that the Articles of Agreement of Merger mistakenly
recited that 1,349,819  common shares of the Nevada  corporation were issued and
outstanding prior to the merger.


     As a result,  the number of shares of  outstanding  common stock of Eastern
Star Mining,  Inc.,  the surviving  corporation in the merger,  was  incorrectly
stated in the  Articles  and  Agreement  of  Merger.  At and  subsequent  to the
effective  date of the  merger  between  Eastern  Star  Mining,  Inc.  (an Idaho
corporation) and Eastern Star Mining, Inc. (a Nevada corporation), which was the
surviving  corporation  following  the merger,  there were  1,349,819  shares of
common  stock,  par  value  $0.001  of  the  surviving  corporation  issued  and
outstanding.


     2. Effective November 5, 1996 resolutions were adopted by unanimous written
consent of the Board of Directors declaring the advisability and desirability of
amending and  restating  the Articles of  Incorporation  of Eastern Star Mining,
Inc., and calling a special meeting of the  shareholders  for the  consideration
thereof to-wit:


          RESOLVED,  that,  subject to the ratification and approval of the
     shareholders   of  Eastern   Star  Mining,   Inc.,   the  Articles  of
     Incorporation  shall be  amended  and  restated  as  permitted  by NRS
     78.385.1(e)  and 78.403 to read,  as so amended and  restated,  as set
     forth below.


     3.  Pursuant  to NRS  78.320.1,  a formal  meeting of the  shareholders  of
Eastern Star  Mining,  Inc.  was not called or noticed,  but written  consent of
shareholders  holding at least a majority of the voting power of the corporation
was secured to take effect as of November 11, 1996,  approving,  by  resolution,
the action of the Board of Directors in amending and  restating  the Articles of
Incorporation to read as so amended and restated as follows:

     FIRST; The name of the corporation is Eastern Star Mining, Inc.

     SECOND:  The registered  agent for the  corporation and the location of the
principal  office of this  corporation  within the state of Nevada is Marilyn K.
Radloff, 115 Taurus Circle, Reno, Nevada, 89511.



<PAGE>



     THIRD:  The  corporation  shall have unlimited power to engage in and to do
any lawful act  concerning any or all lawful  businesses for which  corporations
may be organized under the General Corporation Law of Nevada.

     FOURTH:  The aggregate  number of shares which the  corporation  shall have
authority to issue is 100,000,000,  of which  95,000,000  shares shall be common
stock, $0.001 par value ("Common Stock") and 5,000,000 shares shall be preferred
stock,  $0.01 par  value  ("Preferred  Stock").  the  designations,  preference,
limitations and relative rights of shares of each class of stock are as follows:

     1. Common Stock. The rights of holders of Common Stock to receive dividends
or to  share  in the  distribution  of  assets  in  the  event  of  liquidation,
dissolution or winding up of the affairs of the corporation  shall be subject to
the  preferences,  limitations  and relative  rights of the holders of Preferred
Stock.  The  holders of the Common  Stock shall be entitled to one vote for each
share of Common  Stock  held by them of record at the time for  determining  the
holders thereof entitled to vote.

     2. Preferred Stock. The corporation may issue the Preferred Stock from time
to  time in one or more  series  with  such  distinctive  designations,  rights,
preferences and limitations as the Board of Directors shall determine. The Board
of Directors  hereby is expressly vested with the authority to fix and determine
the relative  rights and  preferences of each such series of Preferred  Stock to
the full extent  permitted by these  Articles of  Incorporation  and the General
Corporation Law of Nevada in respect to the following:

          (a) The rate of dividend,  if any,  the time of payment of  dividends,
when the dividends are  cumulative,  and the date from which any dividends shall
accrue;

          (b) Whether shares may be redeemed and if so, the redemption price and
the terms and conditions of redemption;

          (c) The amount  payable  upon shares in event of either  voluntary  or
involuntary liquidation;

          (d) Sinking fund or other  provisions,  if any, for the  redemption or
purchase of shares;

          (e) The terms and conditions on which shares may be converted,  if the
shares of any series are issued with the privilege of conversion; and

          (f) Voting powers, if any.

Notwithstanding  the fixing of the number of shares  constituting the particular
series  upon  the  issuance  thereof,  the  Board of  Directors  may at any time
thereafter authorize the issuance of additional shares of the same series or may
reduce the number of shares constituting such series.


                                      - 2 -

<PAGE>



     The Board of  Directors  expressly  is  authorized  to vary the  provisions
relating to the foregoing matters between the various series of Preferred Stock,
but in all other  respects the shares of each series shall be of equal rank with
each other, regardless of series. All Preferred Stock in any one series shall be
identical in all respects.

     FIFTH: The members of the governing board shall be styled  "directors." The
names and addresses of the persons who serve as directors until their successors
are duly elected and shall qualify are:

Name                                                Address
- ----                                                -------

Jean P. Boyd.....................................   265 Kern Avenue
                                                    Morro Bay, California 93442

Cindy Mendez.....................................   4526 North Laureen
                                                    Fresno, California 93726

Dan Reddell......................................   2541 Nutmeg Avenue
                                                    Morro Bay, California 93441

The number of  directors  servicing  on the Board of  Directors  at any one time
shall be not less than three nor more than nine,  the exact  number to be set by
the Bylaws.

     SIXTH:  The  capital  stock of this  corporation  shall not be  subject  to
assessment to pay the debts of the corporation,  and, in this particular,  these
Articles of Incorporation shall not be subject to amendment;  provided, however,
that nothing contained in this Article SIXTH shall prohibit the subscription for
shares of the Company's capital stock from being paid in full at such time or in
such installments as determined by the Board of Directors of the corporation.

     SEVENTH: The corporation shall have perpetual existence.

     EIGHTH:  No holder  of  shares  of stock of any  class of the  corporation,
whether  now or  hereafter  authorized,  shall  have  the  preemptive  right  to
purchase, receive or subscribe for any of the unissued stock of the corporation,
or for any stock of the corporation  hereafter  authorized to be issued,  or for
bonds,  debentures,  or other securities  convertible into stock of any class of
the corporation,  or for stock held in the treasury of the corporation;  and all
such  unissued  and  additional  shares of stock,  bonds,  debentures,  or other
securities  convertible  into stock of any class of the  corporation  as well as
stock  held  in the  treasury  of the  corporation,  however,  the  same  may be
acquired, may be issued and disposed of by the Board of Directors to such person
or  persons  and on such  terms  and for  such  consideration  (so far as may be
permitted  by law) as the Board of Directors in their  absolute  discretion  may
deem advisable.

     NINTH:  Cumulative voting in the election of directors is not permitted.  A
majority  of  the  outstanding  shares  of the  corporation  entitled  to  vote,
represented  in person or by proxy,  shall  constitute  a quorum at a meeting of
stockholders.


                                      - 3 -

<PAGE>



     ELEVENTH:  No director or officer of the  corporation  shall be  personally
liable to the corporation or any of its  stockholders  for damages for breach of
fiduciary  duty as a director o officer,  except that such  provisions  will not
eliminate  or limit  the  liability  of a  director  or  officer  for any act or
omission which involves intentional misconduct, fraud, or a knowing violation of
law or for the payment of any  dividend in  violation  of Section  78.300 of the
Nevada Revised Statutes.

     TWELFTH:  The corporation  shall, to the fullest extent permitted by Nevada
law as in effect from time to time,  indemnify any person  against all liability
and expense  (including  attorneys' fees) incurred by reason of the fact that he
is or was a director  or  officer  of the  corporation  or,  while  serving as a
director or officer of the  corporation,  he is or was serving at the request of
the corporation as a director, officer, partner or trustee of, or in any similar
managerial  or  fiduciary  position  of, or as an employee or agent of,  another
corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust, association,  or other entity.
Expenses  (including  attorneys' fees) incurred in defending an action,  suit or
proceeding may be paid by the corporation in advance of the final disposition of
such  action,   suit  or  proceeding  to  the  fullest   extent  and  under  the
circumstances permitted by Nevada law. The corporation may purchase and maintain
insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a director,  officer,  employee,
fiduciary or agent of the corporation against any liability asserted against and
incurred  by such person in any such  capacity or arising out of such  person;'s
position,  whether  or not the  corporation  would  have the power to  indemnify
against  such  liability  under the  provisions  of this  Section  TWELFTH.  The
indemnification  provided by this Section TWELFTH shall not be deemed  exclusive
of any other  rights to which  those  indemnified  may be  entitled  under these
Articles  of  Incorporation,  any  bylaw,  agreement,  vote of  stockholders  or
disinterested  directors, or otherwise,  and shall inure to the benefit of their
heirs,  executors and  administrators.  The  provisions of this Section  TWELFTH
shall not be deemed to preclude the corporation from indemnifying  other persons
from similar or other expenses and  liabilities as the Board of Directors or the
stockholders  may  determine in a specific  instance or by resolution of general
application.

     THIRTEENTH:  The  directors  of this  corporation  shall be  subject to the
doctrine  of  corporate  opportunities  only  insofar as it applies to  business
opportunities  which this  corporation  has  expressed an interest as determined
from  time to time by the  corporation's  Board of  Directors  as  evidenced  by
resolutions appearing in the corporation's  minutes. When such areas of interest
are delineated,  all such business  opportunities  within such areas of interest
which  come to the  attention  of the  directors  of this  corporation  shall be
disclosed  promptly to this  corporation  and made available to it. The Board of
Directors  may reject any  business  opportunity  presented  to it for any valid
business  reasons  and  thereafter  any officer or  director  may avail  himself
(herself) of such opportunity. Until such time as this corporation shall be free


                                      - 4 -

<PAGE>


to engage in such areas of  interest  on their own and this  doctrine  shall not
limit the rights of any  director  of this  corporation  to  continue a business
existing  prior to the time that such area of  interest  is  designated  by this
corporation.  This  provision  shall not be construed to release any employee of
the  corporation  from  any  duties  which  he may  have as an  employee  to the
corporation.

     FOURTEENTH:  No contract or other  transaction  between the corporation and
one or more of its  directors or officers,  or between the  corporation  and any
corporation,  firm or  association  in  which  one or more of its  directors  or
officers  are  directors  or officers or are  financially  interested,  shall be
either void or voidable solely due to such financial  interest or association or
solely  because  any such  director  or officer is present at the meeting of the
Board of  Directors  or a committee  thereof  which  authorizes  or approves the
contract or  transaction,  or because the vote or votes of common or  interested
directors  are counted for such  purpose,  so long as either (i) the fact of the
common  directorship  or  financial  interest  is  disclosed  or  known  to  the
corporation's  Board of Directors or committee  and noted in the Minutes and the
Board or committee authorizes, approves, or ratifies the contract or transaction
in good faith by a vote sufficient for the purpose without  counting the vote or
votes of such director or directors; (ii) the fact of the common directorship or
financial  interest is disclosed or known to the stockholders,  and they approve
or ratify the  contract  or  transaction  in good  faith by a  majority  vote or
written consent of the stockholders holding a majority of the shares entitled to
vote and the votes of the common or  interested  directors or officers  shall be
counted  in any  such  vote  of the  stockholders;  or  (iii)  the  contract  or
transaction  is fair as to the  corporation  at the  time  it is  authorized  or
approved.  The common or interested  directors  maybe counted in determining the
presence  of a quorum at a  meeting  of the Board of  Directors  or a  committee
thereof which authorizes,  approves, or ratifies a contract or transaction,  and
if the vote of the common or interest  directors is not counted at such meeting,
then a majority of the disinterested directors may authorize,  approve or ratify
a contract or transaction.

     FIFTEENTH:  Nothing  contained  in these  Articles of  Incorporation  shall
prohibit the corporation  from declaring and paying dividends on its outstanding
common or preferred stock in assets other than cash, including the corporation's
common or preferred  stock, so long as such dividends are paid out of the excess
of its assets over liabilities,  including capital,  or if no excess, out of its
net profits for the fiscal year then current and the  preceding  fiscal year, or
out of its net profits for the  preceding  fiscal year,  but not  otherwise,  in
accordance with the provisions of the General Corporation Law of Nevada.

     SIXTEENTH:  The  directors of this  corporation  are  authorized  to adopt,
confirm, ratify, alter, amend, rescind, and repeal Bylaws or any portion thereof
from time to time.

     4.  The   foregoing   resolutions   adopting  the   Restated   Articles  of
Incorporation  are true,  correct,  and exact copies of the resolutions  adopted
effective November 5, 1996 and November 11, 1996; and they are currently in full
force and effect and have not been altered,  amended,  modified,  rescinded,  or
revoked.


                                      - 5 -

<PAGE>



     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned President and Secretary of Eastern Star
Mining,  Inc. have executed this Restated Articles of Incorporation this 6th day
of January, 1997.


                                       EASTERN STAR MINING, INC.




                                       By  /s/ Jean P. Boyd
                                          --------------------------------------
                                          Jean P. Boyd, President




                                       By /s/ Dan Reddell
                                         ---------------------------------------
                                         Dan Reddell, Secretary


STATE OF CALIFORNIA                 )
                                    ) ss.
COUNTY OF SAN LUIS OBISPO           )


     On 1/6/97, before me, Cheryl Snyder-Horne, personally appeared Jean P. Boyd
and Dan Reddell,  personally  known to me to be the person(s)  whose name(s) are
subscribed to the within  instrument and  acknowledged  to me that they executed
the same in their authorized  capacity(ies),  and that by their  signature(s) on
the  instrument  the  person(s) or the entity upon behalf of which the person(s)
acted, executed the instrument.

         WITNESS my hand and official seal.


(S E A L)                                    /s/ Cheryl Snyder-Horne
                                             -----------------------------------
                                             Notary Public--California
                                             San Luis Obispo County
                                             My commission expires July 21, 1998



                                      - 6 -


              CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
                            EASTERN STAR MINING, INC.

     We, the  undersigned,  Alan W.  Peryam,  President  and James H.  Petersen,
Secretary of Eastern Star Mining, Inc., do hereby certify:

          That the Board of  Directors  of said  corporation  at a meeting  duly
     convened and held pursuant  unanimous written consent as of the 21st day of
     March, 1997, adopted a resolution to amend the Articles of Incorporation as
     follows:

          Article FOURTH is hereby amended to read as follows;

          FOURTH:  Effective  upon filing of this  Certificate  of  Amendment of
     Articles of Incorporation  with the Secretary of State of Nevada, a reverse
     stock  split of  outstanding  stock of the  Company is adopted  pursuant to
     which each share of common stock  outstanding  prior to the effective  date
     shall  thereafter  equal  one-tenth  of one  share of  common  stock,  thus
     effecting a  ten-into-one  reverse  stock split.  Any  fractional  share of
     common  stock  which  would be held by a  stockholder  as a  result  of the
     reverse stock split shall be rounded up to the next largest whole number of
     shares of common stock as of the effective date of the reverse stock split.
     The reverse  stock split shall reduce the number of  outstanding  shares of
     common  stock from  7,717,019  shares  outstanding  immediately  before the
     reverse stock split to 771,702  shares  outstanding  immediately  after the
     reverse  stock split.  Certificates  representing  shares of the  Company's
     Common Stock outstanding immediately prior to the reverse stock split shall
     thereafter  represent one-tenth the number of shares reflected on the share
     certificate.

          All other  terms and  provisions  set forth in  Article  FOURTH of the
     Articles of Incorporation as heretofore restated shall remain in full force
     and effect.

          All other  terms and  provisions  set forth in  Article  FOURTH of the
     Article of the  Articles of  Incorporation  as  heretofore  restated  shall
     remain in full force and effect.

     The number of shares of the Corporation outstanding and entitled to vote on
the  Amendment to the Articles of  Incorporation  is 7,717,019  shares of common
stock and that the said  Amendment  to the Articles of  Incorporation  have been
consented  to and  approved by a majority  vote of the  stockholders  holding at
least a majority of each class of stock of Corporation  outstanding and entitled
to vote thereon.

                                           /s/ Alan W. Peryam
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Alan W. Peryam, President


                                           /s/ James H. Petersen
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           James H. Petersen, Secretary
STATE OF COLORADO )
CITY AND          )   ss.
COUNTY OF DENVER  )

     On March 31, 1997,  personally appeared before me, a Notary Public, Alan W.
Peryam and James H.  Petersen,  who  acknowledged  that they  executed the above
instrument  on behalf of Eastern  Star Mining,  Inc.,  and that the facts stated
therein are true.

     My commission expires: 2/27/00

                                           /s/ Bobbie L. Knight
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Notary Public

                           CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT OF
                            ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

                            EASTERN STAR MINING, INC.

     We the  undersigned,  Alan W.  Peryam,  President,  and James H.  Petersen,
Secretary, of Eastern Star Mining, Inc., do hereby certify:

     That the Board of Directors of said  corporation at a meeting duly convened
and held by written  consent  effective on the 9th day of May,  1997,  adopted a
resolution  to amend  the  Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation  as  heretofore
amended, to change the name of the corporation, as follows:

          Article FIRST is hereby amended to read in its entirety as follows:

          FIRST: The name of the corporation is Eastern Star Holdings, Inc.

     The number of shares of the corporation outstanding and entitled to vote on
the Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation is 771,702;  that the said change
in  the  name  of  the   corporation  and  the  Amendment  to  the  Articles  of
Incorporation  have been  consented  to and  approved by the  unanimous  written
consent of  stockholders  holding at least a majority  of each class of stock of
the corporation outstanding and entitled to vote thereof.


                                         /s/   Alan W. Peryam
                                         --------------------------------------
                                         Alan W. Peryam



                                         /s/ James H. Petersen
                                         --------------------------------------
                                         James H. Petersen

STATE OF COLORADO )
    CITY AND      )   ss.
COUNTY OF DENVER  )

     On May 22, 1997,  personally  appeared before me, a notary public,  Alan W.
Peryam and James H.  Petersen,  who  acknowledged  that they  executed the above
Certificate  of Amendment to the  Articles of  Incorporation  and that the facts
stated therein are true.

         My commission expires:  2/27/00

                                         /s/ Bobbie L. Knight
                                         --------------------------------------
                                         Notary Public


                           CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT OF
                            ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

                           EASTERN STAR HOLDINGS, INC.

     We the  undersigned,  William E.  Grahfam,  President  and Albert  Golusin,
Secretary, of Eastern Star Holdings, Inc., do hereby certify:

     That the Board of Directors of said  corporation at a meeting duly convened
and held by  unanimous  written  consent  effective  on the  November  21, 1997,
adopted  a  resolution  to amend  the  Restated  Articles  of  Incorporation  as
heretofore amended, to change the name of the corporation, as follows:

          Article FIRST is hereby amended to read in its entirety as follows:

          FIRST: The name of the corporation is Fan Energy Inc.

     The number of shares of the corporation outstanding and entitled to vote on
the  Amendment  to the Articles of  Incorporation  is  7,771,704;  that the said
change in the name of the  corporation  and the  Amendment  to the  Articles  of
Incorporation  have been  consented  to and  approved by the written  consent of
stockholders  holding  at  least  a  majority  of each  class  of  stock  of the
corporation outstanding and entitled to vote thereon.


                                         /s/ William E. Grafham
                                         ---------------------------------------
                                         William E. Grafham


                                         /s/ Albert Golusin
                                         ---------------------------------------
                                         Albert Golusin

STATE OF ARIZONA    )
                    )   ss.
COUNTY OF MARICOPA  )

     On November  30,  1997,  personally  appeared  before me, a notary  public,
William E. Grafham and Albert Golusin,  who acknowledged  that they executed the
above  Certificate  of Amendment to the Articles of  Incorporation  and that the
facts stated therein are true.

     My commission expires: 6/13/2001

                                         /s/ Susan D. Bower
                                         ---------------------------------------
                                         Notary Public-State of Arizona
                                         Maricopa County

                                     BYLAWS
                                       OF
                                 FAN ENERGY INC.

                                    ARTICLE I

                                     Offices

     Section 1. Principal Office. The principal office of the corporation in the
state of Nevada  shall be located at Reno,  Nevada or at such other  location as
shall be designated  by the Board of Directors  from time to time in the future.
The corporation may have such other offices,  either within or without the state
of Nevada,  as the Board of  Directors  may  designate or as the business of the
corporation may require from time to time.

     Section 2. Registered  Office. The registered office of the corporation may
be, but need not be, identical with the principal office, and the address of the
registered office may be changed from time to time by the board of directors.

     Section 3. Other  Offices.  The  corporation  may have such other  offices,
either within or outside  Nevada,  as the board of directors may designate or as
the business of the corporation may require from time to time.

                                   ARTICLE II

                                  Stockholders

     Section 1. Annual  Meetings.  Unless  otherwise  directed  and fixed by the
Board of Directors,  the annual meeting of the stockholders shall be held during
the second  fiscal  quarter of each year at such time and place as the Chairman,
Chief Executive Officer, President, Vice President or Secretary shall designate,
for the  purpose of electing  directors  and for the  transaction  of such other
business as may come before the meeting.

     Section 2. Special Meetings. Special meetings of the stockholders,  for any
purpose or purposes,  unless otherwise  prescribed by statute,  may be called by
the Chairman,  Chief Executive Officer,  President or by the Board of Directors,
and shall be called by the  President  at the request of the holders of not less
than one-third of all of the outstanding  shares of the corporation  entitled to
vote at the meeting.

     Section 3. Place of  Meeting.  The Board of  Directors  may  designate  any
place, either within or without the state of Nevada, as the place of meeting for
any annual meeting or for any special  meeting called by the Board of Directors.
A waiver of notice signed by all stockholders  entitled to vote at a meeting may
designate any place,  either within or without the state of Nevada, as the place

                                        1

<PAGE>


for the holding of such  meeting.  If no  designation  is made,  or if a special
meeting be otherwise called, the place of meeting shall be the registered office
of the corporation in the state of Nevada.

     Section  4.  Notice of  Meeting.  Whenever  stockholders  are  required  or
permitted to take any action at a meeting,  written  notice of the meeting shall
be given  stating the place,  day and hour of the meeting  and, in the case of a
special  meeting,  the purpose or purposes for which the meeting is called.  The
notice shall be delivered not less than ten days nor more than sixty days before
the date of the meeting, either personally or by mail, by or at the direction of
the  Chairman,  Chief  Executive  Officer,  President,  Vice  President  or  the
Secretary to each  stockholder  of record  entitled to vote at such meeting.  If
mailed,  such notice shall be deemed given as to any stockholder of record, when
deposited in the United States mail, addressed to the stockholder at his address
as it appears  on the stock  transfer  books of the  corporation,  with  postage
thereon prepaid.

     When a meeting  is  adjourned  to  another  time or place,  it shall not be
necessary to give any notice of the  adjourned  meeting if the time and place to
which the  meeting  is  adjourned  are  announced  at the  meeting  at which the
adjournment  is taken  except as  provided  by the  General  Corporation  Law of
Nevada,  and at the adjourned  meeting any business may be transacted that might
have been transacted on the original date of the meeting.

     If  the  adjournment  is  for  more  than  thirty  days,  or if  after  the
adjournment  a new record date is fixed for the adjourned  meeting,  a notice of
the adjourned  meeting shall be given to each  stockholder of record entitled to
vote at the meeting.

     Section 5. Fixing Date for  Determination  of  Stockholders  of Record.  In
order to  determine  the  stockholders  entitled  to notice of or to vote at any
meeting of  stockholders or any  adjournment  thereof,  or to express consent to
corporate action in writing without a meeting, or entitled to receive payment of
any dividend or other  distribution  or allotment of any rights,  or entitled to
exercise any rights in respect of any change, conversion or exchange of stock or
for the purpose of any other lawful  action,  the Board of Directors may fix, in
advance a record date, which shall not be more than sixty nor less than ten days
before  the date of such  meeting,  nor more than  sixty days prior to any other
action.  If no record date is fixed by the Board of  Directors,  the record date
shall be determined in accordance with the provision of the General  Corporation
Law of Nevada.

     Section 6. List of  Stockholders.  The  officer who has charge of the stock
ledger of the corporation  shall prepare and make, at least 10 days before every
meeting of the  stockholders,  a complete list of the  stockholders  entitled to
vote at the meeting,  arranged in alphabetical order, and showing the address of
each  stockholder  and the  number  of  shares  registered  in the  name of each
stockholder.  Such list shall be open to the examination of any stockholder, for
any purpose germane to the meeting, during ordinary business hours, for a period
of at least ten days  prior to the  meeting,  either at a place  within the city
where the meeting is to be held (which place shall be specified in the notice of


                                        2

<PAGE>


the meeting) or, if not so  specified,  at the place where said meeting is to be
held,  and the list  shall  be  produced  and kept at the time and  place of the
meeting during the whole time thereof,  and may be inspected by any  stockholder
who may be present.  Upon the  willful  neglect or refusal of the  directors  to
produce such a list at any meeting for the election of directors,  they shall be
ineligible for election to any office at such meeting.

     Section 7.  Stockholder's  Right of  Inspection.  Any person who has been a
stockholder  of record of the  corporation  for at least six months  immediately
preceding his demand, or any person holding,  thereunto authorized in writing by
the holders of, at least five  percent of all its  outstanding  shares,  upon at
least five days' written  demand,  or any judgment  creditor of the  corporation
without prior  demand,  shall have the right to inspect in person or by agent or
attorney,  during usual  business  hours,  the stock  ledger or duplicate  stock
ledger, whether kept in the principal office of the corporation in this state or
elsewhere, and to make extracts therefrom. A proper purpose shall mean a purpose
reasonably related to such person's interest as a stockholder. In every instance
where an  attorney  or other  agent  shall be the  person who seeks the right of
inspection, the demand under oath shall be accompanied by a power of attorney or
such other  writing  which  authorizes  the  attorney  or the agent to so act on
behalf of the  stockholder.  The  demand  under oath  shall be  directed  to the
corporation at its registered  office in this state or at its principal place of
business.

     Section 8. Quorum. A majority of the outstanding  shares of the corporation
entitled to vote,  represented in person or by proxy,  shall constitute a quorum
at a meeting of  stockholders.  If a quorum is present,  the affirmative vote of
the  majority of the shares  represented  at the meeting and entitled to vote on
the subject matter (including,  but not limited to, the adoption of an incentive
stock  option plan) shall be the act of the  stockholders,  unless the vote of a
greater  proportion  or number of voting by classes is  required  by the General
Corporation  Law of  Nevada or the  Articles  of  Incorporation.  If less than a
majority of the outstanding  shares are represented at a meeting,  a majority of
the shares so  represented  may adjourn the  meeting  from time to time  without
further notice.  At such adjourned meeting at which a quorum shall be present or
represented,  any business may be transacted which might have been transacted at
the meeting as originally notified. The stockholders present at a duly organized
meeting may continue to transact business until adjournment, notwithstanding the
withdrawal of enough stockholders to leave less than a quorum.

     Section 9. Method of Voting.  The vote upon any question before the meeting
need not be by ballot. When a quorum is present at any meeting,  the vote of the
holders of a majority  of the stock  having  voting  power  present in person or
represented  by proxy shall decide any  question  brought  before such  meeting,
unless the question is one upon which by express provision of the statutes or of
the Articles of  Incorporation  a different  vote is required in which case such
express provision shall govern and control the decision of such question.

     Section 10. Voting Rights of Stockholders and Proxies.  Each stockholder of
record entitled to vote in accordance with the laws of the state of Nevada,  the
Articles  of  Incorporation  or these  Bylaws,  shall at  every  meeting  of the


                                        3

<PAGE>


stockholders  be entitled  to one vote in person or by proxy for each share,  or
fraction thereof, of stock entitled to vote standing in his name on the books of
the corporation,  but no proxy shall be voted on after six months from its date,
unless the proxy provides for a longer period.

     At all meetings of stockholders, a stockholder may vote by proxy by signing
an  appointment  form or  similar  writing,  either  personally  or by his  duly
authorized  attorney-in-fact.   A  stockholder  may  also  appoint  a  proxy  by
transmitting or authorizing the transmission of a telegram,  teletype,  or other
electronic  transmission providing a written statement of the appointment to the
proxy, a proxy solicitor,  proxy support service  organization,  or other person
duly authorized by the proxy to receive  appointments as agent for the proxy, or
to  the  corporation.   The  transmitted  appointment  shall  set  forth  or  be
transmitted  with  written  evidence  from which it can be  determined  that the
stockholder  transmitted or authorized the transmission of the appointment.  The
proxy  appointment  form or similar writing shall be filed with the secretary of
the corporation before or at the time of the meeting. The appointment of a proxy
is effective  when  received by the  corporation  and is valid for eleven months
unless a  different  period is  expressly  provided in the  appointment  form or
similar writing.

     Any complete copy, including an electronically transmitted facsimile, of an
appointment  of a proxy may be  substituted  for or used in lieu of the original
appointment for any purpose for which the original appointment could be used.

     Revocation  of a proxy  does not  affect  the right of the  corporation  to
accept the  proxy's  authority  unless (i) the  corporation  had notice that the
appointment  was  coupled  with an  interest  and notice  that such  interest is
extinguished  is received by the secretary or other officer or agent  authorized
to  tabulate  votes  before  the  proxy   exercises  his  authority   under  the
appointment,  or (ii)  other  notice of the  revocation  of the  appointment  is
received by the secretary or other officer or agent authorized to tabulate votes
before the proxy exercises his authority under the appointment.  Other notice of
revocation may, in the discretion of the  corporation,  be deemed to include the
appearance at a  stockholders'  meeting of the stockholder who granted the proxy
and his voting in person on any matter subject to a vote at such meeting.

     The death or  incapacity  of the  stockholder  appointing  a proxy does not
affect the right of the  corporation  to accept  the  proxy's  authority  unless
notice of the death or  incapacity is received by the secretary or other officer
or agent  authorized to tabulate votes before the proxy  exercises his authority
under the appointment.

     The  corporation  shall not be required to  recognize an  appointment  made
irrevocable if it has received a writing revoking the appointment  signed by the
stockholder  (including a stockholder  who is a successor to the stockholder who
granted the proxy) either personally or by his attorney-in-fact, notwithstanding
that the  revocation  may be a breach of an  obligation  of the  stockholder  to
another person not to revoke the appointment.


                                        4

<PAGE>


     Subject to Section 16 and any express  limitation on the proxy's  authority
appearing on the  appointment  form,  the  corporation is entitled to accept the
proxy's vote or other action as that of the stockholder making the appointment.

     Section 11.  Recognition  Procedure  for  Beneficial  Owners.  The board of
directors  may adopt by  resolution  a procedure  whereby a  stockholder  of the
corporation may certify in writing to the  corporation  that all or a portion of
the shares  registered in the name of such  stockholder are held for the account
of a specified person or persons.  The resolution may set forth (i) the types of
nominees to which it applies, (ii) the rights or privileges that the corporation
will  recognize in a beneficial  owner,  which may include rights and privileges
other than voting,  (iii) the form of  certification  and the  information to be
contained  therein,  (iv) if the certification is with respect to a record date,
the time within which the certification must be received by the corporation, (v)
the period for which the nominee's  use of the procedure is effective,  and (vi)
such other provisions with respect to the procedure as the board deems necessary
or desirable.  Upon receipt by the  corporation of a certificate  complying with
the procedure  established by the board of directors,  the persons  specified in
the certification  shall be deemed, for the purpose or purposes set forth in the
certification, to be the registered holders of the number of shares specified in
place of the stockholder making the certification.

     Section 12.  Ownership of its Own Stock.  Shares of its own stock belonging
to the  corporation  or to  another  corporation,  if a  majority  of the shares
entitled to vote in the election of directors of such other corporation is held,
directly or indirectly,  by the  corporation,  shall neither be entitled to vote
nor counted for quorum  purposes.  Nothing in this section shall be construed as
limiting the right of the  corporation to vote any shares of stock held by it in
a fiduciary capacity.

     Section 13. Voting by Fiduciaries and Pledgors.  Persons holding stock in a
fiduciary  capacity  shall be entitled  to vote the shares so held,  and persons
whose stock is pledged shall be entitled to vote,  unless in the transfer by the
pledgor on the books of the  corporation he has expressly  empowered the pledgee
to vote  thereon,  in which case only the pledgee,  or his proxy,  may represent
said stock and vote thereon.

     Section 14. No Cumulative  Voting.  There shall be no cumulative  voting of
shares.

     Section 15. Informal Action by Stockholders  and  Ratification.  Any action
required to be taken at a meeting of the stockholders, or any other action which
may be taken at a meeting of the stockholders, may be taken without a meeting if
a consent in  writing,  setting  forth the  action so taken,  shall be signed by
stockholders  in the manner  provided for under the General  Corporation  Law of
Nevada.  If any meeting is irregular due to a lack of notice or written consent,
the  proceedings  of the meeting may be ratified and approved and rendered valid
and such  irregularity or defect waived by a writing signed by all  stockholders
having the right to vote at such meeting.



                                        5

<PAGE>


     Section  16.  Corporation's  Acceptance  of Votes.  If the name signed on a
vote,  consent,  waiver,  proxy  appointment,  or proxy  appointment  revocation
corresponds to the name of a  stockholder,  the  corporation,  if acting in good
faith, is entitled to accept the vote,  consent,  waiver,  proxy  appointment or
proxy  appointment  revocation and give it effect as the act of the stockholder.
If the name  signed  on a vote,  consent,  waiver,  proxy  appointment  or proxy
appointment  revocation  does not correspond to the name of a  stockholder,  the
corporation,  if acting in good faith,  is  nevertheless  entitled to accept the
vote, consent,  waiver, proxy appointment or proxy appointment revocation and to
give it effect as the act of the stockholder if:

          (i) the  stockholder  is an entity and the name signed  purports to be
     that of an officer or agent of the entity;

          (ii)  the  name  signed  purports  to be  that  of  an  administrator,
     executor,  guardian or conservator representing the stockholder and, if the
     corporation  requests,  evidence  of  fiduciary  status  acceptable  to the
     corporation has been presented with respect to the vote,  consent,  waiver,
     proxy appointment or proxy appointment revocation;

          (iii) the name signed  purports to be that of a receiver or trustee in
     bankruptcy of the stockholder and, if the corporation requests, evidence of
     this status  acceptable to the  corporation has been presented with respect
     to the vote,  consent,  waiver,  proxy  appoint  ment or proxy  appointment
     revocation;

          (iv) the name  signed  purports  to be that of a  pledgee,  beneficial
     owner  or  attorney-in-fact  of the  stockholder  and,  if the  corporation
     requests,  evidence  acceptable  to  the  corporation  of  the  signatory's
     authority to sign for the  stockholder  has been  presented with respect to
     the  vote,  consent,   waiver,   proxy  appointment  or  proxy  appointment
     revocation;

          (v)  two  or  more  persons  are  the  stockholder  as  co-tenants  or
     fiduciaries  and the name signed purports to be the name of at least one of
     the co-tenants or fiduciaries,  and the person signing appears to be acting
     on behalf of all the co-tenants or fiduciaries; or

          (vi) the acceptance of the vote, consent, waiver, proxy appointment or
     proxy appointment revocation is otherwise proper under rules established by
     the corporation that are not inconsistent with this Section 16.

     The  corporation  is  entitled  to reject a vote,  consent,  waiver,  proxy
appointment or proxy appointment revocation if the secretary or other officer or
agent  authorized to tabulate votes,  acting in good faith, has reasonable basis
for doubt about the  validity of the  signature  on it or about the  signatory's
authority to sign for the stockholder.



                                        6

<PAGE>


     Neither  the  corporation  nor its  officers  nor any agent who  accepts or
rejects  a  vote,  consent,  waiver,  proxy  appointment  or  proxy  appointment
revocation in good faith and in accordance with the standards of this Section is
liable in damages for the consequences of the acceptance or rejection.

     Section 17. Meetings by  Telecommunication.  Any or all of the stockholders
may participate in an annual or special stockholders' meeting by, or the meeting
may be  conducted  through the use of, any means of  communication  by which all
persons  participating in the meeting may hear each other during the meeting.  A
stockholder  participating in a meeting by this means is deemed to be present in
person at the meeting.

                                   ARTICLE III

                               Board of Directors

     Section 1. General  Powers.  The  business  and affairs of the  corporation
shall be managed by its Board of Directors,  except as otherwise may be provided
in the  Articles.  One member of the Board of Directors  may be appointed by the
directors to the  position of Chairman of the Board.  If the position is filled,
the Chairman of the Board,  when  present,  shall preside at all meetings of the
stockholders and of the Board of Directors and shall perform all duties incident
to the  office  of  Chairman  of the  Board  and  such  other  duties  as may be
prescribed by the Board of Directors  from time to time. The Board of Directors,
by  resolution  adopted  by a  majority  of the  full  Board of  Directors,  may
designate from among its members an executive committee and/or one or more other
committees,  each  of  which  shall  have  the  authority  provided  for in such
resolution  subject to the limitations on such authority provided in the General
Corporation Law of Nevada.

     Section 2. Number,  Tenure and  Qualification.  A majority of the directors
may adopt a  resolution  amending  this  Section 2 to increase  or decrease  the
number of directors  from time to time, but in no event shall there be less than
three (3) or more than nine (9) directors. Each director shall hold office until
the next  annual or  special  meeting  of  stockholders  at which a new Board of
Directors  is  elected  and until his  successor  shall  have been  elected  and
qualified.  Directors  need not be  residents of Nevada or  stockholders  of the
corporation.

     Section 3. Regular  Meetings.  A regular  meeting of the Board of Directors
shall be held without notice other than this Bylaw immediately after, and at the
same place as, the annual  meeting of  stockholders.  The Board of Directors may
provide, by resolution, the time and place, either within or without Nevada, for
the  holding of  additional  regular  meetings  without  other  notice than such
resolution.

     Section 4. Special Meetings. Special meetings of the Board of Directors may
be called by or at the request of the  Chairman of the Board,  or, if a Chairman
of the Board has not been elected,  by the  President,  or, by a majority of the
directors.  The person or persons  authorized  to call  special  meetings of the


                                        7

<PAGE>


Board of  Directors  may fix any place,  either  within or without  the state of
Nevada,  as the place for holding any special  meeting of the Board of Directors
called by them.

     Section 5. Notice.  Notice of any special  meeting  shall be given at least
two days previous  thereto by written notice  delivered  personally or mailed to
each director at his business address, by telegram,  or by electronic  facsimile
transmission.  If  mailed,  such  notice  shall be deemed to be  delivered  when
deposited in the United States Mail so addressed,  with postage thereon prepaid.
If notice be given by telegram, such notice shall be deemed to be delivered when
the  telegram is  delivered  to the  telegraph  company.  Any director may waive
notice of any meeting.  The attendance of a director at a meeting  constitutes a
waiver of notice of such meeting,  except in cases in which a director attends a
meeting for the express purposes of objecting to the transaction of any business
because the meeting is not lawfully called or convened.  Neither the business to
be trans acted at, nor the  purpose  of, any  regular or special  meeting of the
Board of  Directors  need be specified in the notice or waiver of notice of such
meeting.

     Section 6. Quorum. A majority of the number of directors fixed by Section 6
shall  constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at any meeting of the
Board of Directors,  but if less than such  majority is present at a meeting,  a
majority of the  directors  present  may  adjourn the meeting  from time to time
without further notice.

     Section  7.  Manner of Acting.  Unless a greater  number of  directors  are
required under these Bylaws or the corporation's Articles of Incorporation,  the
act of the majority of the  directors  present at a meeting at which a quorum is
present shall be the act of the Board of Directors.

     Section  8.  Vacancies  and Newly  Created  Directorships.  All  vacancies,
including those caused by an increase in the number of directors,  may be filled
by a majority of the  remaining  directors,  though less than a quorum,  or by a
sole  remaining  director,  and the  directors so chosen shall hold office until
their  successors  shall  be  elected  and  qualified,  or until  their  earlier
resignation or removal.  When one or more directors  shall give notice of his or
their resignation to the Board, effective at a future date, the Board shall have
power to fill such vacancy or vacancies to take effect when such  resignation or
resignations  shall become effective,  each director so appointed to hold office
during  the  remainder  of the  term of  office  of the  resigning  director  or
directors.

     Section 9.  Compensation.  By  resolution  of the Board of  Directors,  the
directors may be paid their  expenses,  if any, of attendance at each meeting of
the Board of Directors,  may be paid a fixed sum for  attendance at each meeting
of the Board of Directors or a stated  salary as director;  and may be paid such
other  compensation  for  serving as a  director  of the  corporation  as may be
determined  by the  Board of  Directors.  No such  payment  shall  preclude  any
director  from  serving the  corporation  in any other  capacity  and  receiving
compensation therefor.


                                        8

<PAGE>


     Section 10.  Presumption of Assent.  A director of the  corporation  who is
present at a meeting of the Board of Directors at which action on any  corporate
matter is taken shall be presumed to have  assented to the action  taken  unless
his  dissent  shall be entered in the  minutes of the meeting or unless he shall
file his written  dissent to such action with the person acting as the secretary
of the meeting before the  adjournment  thereof or shall forward such dissent by
registered  mail to the  secretary  of the  corporation  immediately  after  the
adjournment of the meeting.  Such right to dissent shall not apply to a director
who voted in favor of such action.

     Section 11. Informal  Action by Directors.  Any action required to be taken
at a meeting of the Board of  Directors,  or any other action which may be taken
at a meeting of the Board of Directors or any committees  thereof,  may be taken
without a meeting if a consent in writing, setting forth the action so taken (or
counterparts  thereof),  shall be signed by all of the directors with respect to
the subject matter thereof.

     Section 12. Committees. The Board of Directors may, by resolution passed by
a majority of the whole Board, designate one or more committees,  each committee
to consist of one or more of the  directors  of the  corporation.  The Board may
designate one or more directors as alternate  members of any committee,  who may
replace any absent or  disqualified  member at any meeting of the committee.  In
the  absence  or  disqualification  of a member of a  committee,  the  member or
members thereof present at any meeting and not disqualified from voting, whether
or not he, she or they  constitute a quorum,  may  unanimously  appoint  another
member of the Board of  Directors to act at the meeting in the place of any such
absent or disqualified member. Any such committee, to the extent provided in the
resolution of the Board of Directors, shall have and may exercise all the powers
and  authority of the Board of Directors in the  management  of the business and
affairs of the corporation to be affixed to all papers which may require it; but
no such committee shall have the power or authority in reference to amending the
Articles of  Incorporation,  adopting an agreement  of merger or  consolidation,
recommending  to  the  stockholders  the  sale,  lease  or  exchange  of  all or
substantially all of the corporation's property and assets,  recommending to the
stockholders a dissolution of the  corporation or a revocation of a dissolution,
or amending  the Bylaws of the  corporation;  and unless the  resolution  or the
Articles of Incorporation expressly so provide, no such committee shall have the
power or authority to declare a dividend or to authorize  the issuance of stock.
Such committee or committees  shall have such name or names as may be determined
from  time to  time by  resolution  adopted  by the  Board  of  Directors.  Each
committee  shall keep regular minutes of its meetings and report the same to the
Board of Directors when required.

     The  provisions of these bylaws which govern  meetings,  notice,  waiver of
notice, quorum, voting requirements and action without a meeting of the board of
directors,  shall apply to  committees  and their members  appointed  under this
Section 12.

     Neither the designation of any such committee,  the delegation of authority
to such  committee,  nor any action by such committee  pursuant to its authority
shall alone  constitute  compliance by any member of the board of directors or a
member of the  committee in question with his  responsibility  to conform to the
standard of care applicable to directors.

                                        9

<PAGE>


     Section 13.  Telephonic  Meetings.  The board of  directors  may permit any
director (or any member of a committee  designated by the board) to  participate
in a regular or special meeting of the board of directors or a committee thereof
through  the  use  of  any  means  of   communication  by  which  all  directors
participating in the meeting can hear each other during the meeting.  A director
participating  in a meeting in this  manner is deemed to be present in person at
the meeting.

     Section 14.  Standard  of Care.  A director  shall  perform his duties as a
director,  including without  limitation his duties as a member of any committee
of the board,  in good faith,  in a manner he  reasonably  believes to be in the
best  interests  of the  corporation,  and with the care an  ordinarily  prudent
person  in a like  position  would  exercise  under  similar  circumstances.  In
performing  his duties,  a director  shall be  entitled to rely on  information,
opinions,  reports  or  statements,  including  financial  statements  and other
financial  data,  in each case  prepared  or  presented  by the  persons  herein
designated. However, he shall not be considered to be acting in good faith if he
has knowledge  concerning  the matter in question that would cause such reliance
to be  unwarranted.  A director  shall not be liable to the  corporation  or its
stockholders  for any  action  he takes or omits to take as a  director  if,  in
connection  with such action or omission,  he performs his duties in  compliance
with this Section 14.

     The  designated  persons on whom a director is entitled to rely are (i) one
or more officers or employees of the  corporation  whom the director  reasonably
believes to be reliable  and  competent  in the  matters  presented,  (ii) legal
counsel,  public  accountant,  or other person as to matters  which the director
reasonably   believes  to  be  within  such  person's   professional  or  expert
competence, or (iii) a committee of the board of directors on which the director
does  not  serve  if the  director  reasonably  believes  the  committee  merits
confidence.

                                   ARTICLE IV

                               Officers and Agents

     Section 1. General. The officers of the corporation shall be a chairman (if
elected),  a president,  a secretary  and a  treasurer,  each of whom shall be a
natural  person  eighteen  years of age or older.  The board of  directors or an
officer or officers  authorized  by the board may appoint  such other  officers,
assistant officers,  committees and agents,  assistant secretaries and assistant
treasurers,  as they may  consider  necessary.  The  board of  directors  or the
officer or officers  authorized  by the board shall from time to time  determine
the  procedure  for the  appointment  of officers,  their term of office,  their
authority and duties and their  compensation.  One person may hold more than one
office. In all cases where the duties of any officer,  agent or employee are not
prescribed  by the bylaws or by the board of directors,  such officer,  agent or
employee  shall  follow the  orders and  instructions  of the  president  of the
corporation.


                                       10

<PAGE>



     Section 2. Appointment and Term of Office.  The officers of the corporation
shall be appointed by the board of directors at each annual meeting of the board
held after  each  annual  meeting of the  stockholders.  If the  appointment  of
officers  is not made at such  meeting or if an officer  or  officers  are to be
appointed by another officer or officers of the corporation,  such  appointments
shall be made as soon thereafter as conveniently may be. Each officer shall hold
office until the first of the following  occurs:  his successor  shall have been
duly appointed and qualified, his death, his resignation,  or his removal in the
manner provided in Section 3.

     Section 3.  Resignation  and Removal.  An officer may resign at any time by
giving  written notice of resignation  to the  corporation.  The  resignation is
effective  when the  notice is  received  by the  corporation  unless the notice
specifies a later effective date.

     Any  officer or agent may be  removed at any time with or without  cause by
the board of directors or an officer or officers  authorized  by the board or by
the  stockholders.  Such removal does not affect the contract rights, if any, of
the  corporation or of the person so removed.  The  appointment of an officer or
agent shall not in itself create contract rights.

     Section 4.  Vacancies.  A vacancy in any office,  however  occurring may be
filled by the board of  directors,  or by the officer or officers  authorized by
the board,  for the  unexpired  portion  of the  officer's  term.  If an officer
resigns and his  resignation  is made  effective  at a later date,  the board of
directors,  or  officer or  officers  authorized  by the  board,  may permit the
officer to remain in office  until the  effective  date and may fill the pending
vacancy  before  the  effective  date if the board of  directors  or  officer or
officers  authorized  by the board  provide  that the  successor  shall not take
office until the effective date. In the alternative,  the board of directors, or
officer or officers authorized by the board of directors, may remove the officer
at any time before the effective date and may fill the resulting vacancy.

     Section 5.  Chairman of the Board.  The Chairman of the Board of Directors,
if elected, or failing his election,  the Chief Executive Officer,  shall be the
principal  operating  officer of the  corporation  and in general  supervise and
control of the day-to-day business and affairs of the corporation,  shall report
to the Board of Directors, shall preside at all meetings of the stockholders and
the Board of Directors  and shall perform such other duties as may be prescribed
from time to time by the Board of Directors or by the Bylaws.

     Section 6. Chief  Executive  Officer.  The Chief  Executive  Officer of the
corporation,  in the absence of the  Chairman,  shall preside at all meetings of
the stockholders and the Board of Directors and shall be the principal executive
officer  of the  Corporation  and  shall  perform  such  other  duties as may be
prescribed  from time to time by the Board of  Directors  or by the Bylaws.  The
Chief  Executive  Officer shall be authorized  and empowered to act on behalf of
the corporation,  to sign  certificates,  contracts and other instruments of the
corporation  which may be authorized by the Board of Directors,  required by law
or are otherwise necessary with the same force and effect as if such instruments
were signed by the President.  If no Chief  Executive  Officer is elected by the
Board of  Directors,  the  President  shall  perform  the  duties  of the  Chief
Executive Officer.


                                       11

<PAGE>



     Section 7.  President.  The President  shall report to the Chief  Executive
Officer,  if such an officer is  elected by the Board of  Directors.  If a Chief
Executive  Officer is not elected by the Board of  Directors or in the event the
Chief Executive Officer is unable to serve as the principal executive officer of
the corporation,  then the President shall be the principal executive officer of
the Corporation.  The President shall preside at meetings of the stockholders in
the absence of the Chairman and Chief Executive officer.  The President may sign
with the Treasurer, Assistant Treasurer,  Secretary, Assistant Secretary, or any
other proper  officer of the  corporation  thereunto  authorized by the Board of
Directors,  including the Chairman or the Chief Executive Officer,  certificates
for shares of the corporation,  any deeds, mortgages,  bonds, contracts or other
instruments  which the Board of Directors has authorized to be executed,  except
in cases in which the signing and execution thereof shall be expressly delegated
by the Board of Directors  or by these bylaws to some other  officer or agent of
the corporation, or shall be required by law to be otherwise signed or executed;
and in general  shall  perform all duties as may from time to time be prescribed
by the Chairman, Chief Executive Officer or the Board of Directors.

     Section 8. Vice  Presidents.  If elected,  the vice presidents shall assist
the chairman of the board and the president and shall perform such duties as may
be assigned to them by the  chairman  of the board and the  president  or by the
board  of  directors.  In the  absence  of the  chairman  of the  board  and the
president, the vice president, if any (or, if more than one, the vice presidents
in the order designated by the board of directors, or if the board makes no such
designation,  then the vice president designated by the chairman of the board or
by the  president,  or if neither the board,  the  chairman of the board nor the
president makes any such designation, the senior vice president as determined by
first election to that office),  shall have the powers and perform the duties of
the chairman of the board and the president.

     Section 9.  Secretary.  The  secretary  shall (i) prepare  and  maintain as
permanent  records the minutes of the  proceedings of the  stockholders  and the
board of directors,  a record of all actions taken by the  stockholders or board
of directors without a meeting,  a record of all actions taken by a committee of
the  board of  directors  in place of the  board of  directors  on behalf of the
corporation,  and a record of all waivers of notice of meetings of  stockholders
and of the  board  of  directors  or any  committee  thereof,  (ii) see that all
notices are duly given in accordance  with the provisions of these bylaws and as
required by law,  (iii) serve as custodian of the  corporate  records and of the
seal of the  corporation  and affix the seal to all documents when authorized by
the board of  directors,  (iv) keep at the  corporation's  registered  office or
principal  place of business a record  containing the names and addresses of all
stockholders  in a form  that  permits  preparation  of a list  of  stockholders
arranged  by voting  group and by class or series of shares  within  each voting
group,  that is  alphabetical  within  each  class or series  and that shows the
address  of,  and the  number of shares of each  class or series  held by,  each
stockholder,  unless  such  a  record  shall  be  kept  at  the  office  of  the
corporation's  transfer  agent or registrar,  (v) maintain at the  corporation's


                                       12

<PAGE>


principal  office  the  originals  or copies of the  corporation's  articles  of
incorporation,  bylaws, minutes of all stockholders' meetings and records of all
action taken by  stockholders  without a meeting for the past three  years,  all
written communications within the past three years to stockholders as a group or
to the holders of any class or series of shares as a group,  a list of the names
and business  addresses of the current  directors  and  officers,  a copy of the
corporation's  most recent  corporate  report filed with the Secretary of State,
and financial  statements showing in reasonable detail the corporation's  assets
and  liabilities  and results of operations for the last three years,  (vi) have
general  charge of the  stock  transfer  books of the  corporation,  unless  the
corporation has a transfer agent, (vii) authenticate records of the corporation,
and (viii) in general,  perform all duties  incident to the office of  secretary
and  such  other  duties  as from  time to time  may be  assigned  to him by the
president or by the board of directors.  The directors  and/or  stockholders may
however  respectively  designate a person other than the  secretary or assistant
secretary to keep the minutes of their respective meetings.

     Any books, records, or minutes of the corporation may be in written form or
in any form  capable of being  converted  into  written form within a reasonable
time.

     Section 10.  Treasurer.  The  treasurer  shall be the  principal  financial
officer  of the  corporation,  shall  have the care and  custody  of all  funds,
securities,  evidences  of  indebtedness  and  other  personal  property  of the
corporation  and shall deposit the same in accordance  with the  instructions of
the board of directors.  He shall receive and give receipts and acquittances for
money  paid  in on  account  of  the  corporation,  and  shall  pay  out  of the
corporation's  funds on hand all  bills,  payrolls  and other  just debts of the
corporation of whatever nature upon maturity.  He shall perform all other duties
incident to the office of the treasurer  and,  upon request of the board,  shall
make such reports to it as may be required at any time. He shall, if required by
the board,  give the  corporation  a bond in such sums and with such sureties as
shall be satisfactory to the board, conditioned upon the faithful performance of
his duties and for the  restoration  to the  corporation  of all books,  papers,
vouchers,  money and other  property of whatever kind in his possession or under
his control  belonging to the  corporation.  He shall have such other powers and
perform such other duties as may from time to time be prescribed by the board of
directors or the  president.  The assistant  treasurers,  if any, shall have the
same powers and duties, subject to the supervision of the treasurer.

     The  treasurer  shall  also  be the  principal  accounting  officer  of the
corporation.  He shall  prescribe  and  maintain  the  methods  and  systems  of
accounting  to be  followed,  keep  complete  books and  records  of  account as
required by applicable laws,  prepare and file all local,  state and federal tax
returns, prescribe and maintain an adequate system of internal audit and prepare
and furnish to the  president  and the board of directors  statements of account
showing  the  financial  position  of the  corporation  and the  results  of its
operations.


                                       13

<PAGE>


     Section 11. Assistant Secretaries and Assistant  Treasurers.  The Assistant
Secretaries,  when  authorized  by the  Board of  Directors,  may sign  with the
President or a Vice President  certificates  for shares of the  corporation  the
issuance of which shall have been  authorized  by a  resolution  of the Board of
Directors. The Assistant Treasurers shall respectively, if required by the Board
of Directors, give bonds for the faithful discharge of their duties in such sums
and with such sureties as the Board of Directors shall determine.  The Assistant
Secretaries and Assistant Treasurers,  in general,  shall perform such duties as
shall be assigned to them by the Secretary or the Treasurer, respectively, or by
the President or the Board of Directors.

     Section 12. Salaries. The salaries of the officers shall be fixed from time
to time by the  Board  of  Directors  and no  officer  shall be  prevented  from
receiving  such  salary by reason of the fact that he is also a director  of the
corporation.

                                    ARTICLE V

                                      Stock

     Section 1.  Certificates.  The board of directors  shall be  authorized  to
issue any of its classes of shares with or without  certificates.  The fact that
the  shares  are not  represented  by  certificates  shall have no effect on the
rights  and  obligations  of  stockholders.  If the shares  are  represented  by
certificates,  such  shares  shall  be  represented  by  consecutively  numbered
certificates  signed,  either  manually  or by  facsimile,  in the  name  of the
corporation  by the  president  and  secretary  or by one or more other  persons
designated  by the board of  directors.  In case any  officer  who has signed or
whose  facsimile  signature  has been  placed upon such  certificate  shall have
ceased to be such officer before such  certificate is issued,  such  certificate
may nonetheless be issued by the corporation  with the same effect as if he were
such  officer at the date of its issue.  Certificates  of stock shall be in such
form  and  shall  contain  such  information  consistent  with  law as  shall be
prescribed  by the  board  of  directors.  If  shares  are  not  represented  by
certificates,  within a reasonable  time following the issue or transfer of such
shares,  the corporation shall send the stockholder a complete written statement
of all of the information  required to be provided to holders of  uncertificated
shares by applicable laws.  Notwithstanding the adoption of such a resolution by
the Board of Directors,  every holder of stock  represented by certificates  and
upon request,  every holder of uncertificated shares shall be entitled to have a
certificate signed by, or in the name of the corporation by the Chairman or Vice
Chairman of the Board of Directors,  or the  President or Vice  President and by
the  Treasurer  or an  Assistant  Treasurer,  or the  Secretary  or an Assistant
Secretary of such corporation  representing  the number of shares  registered in
certificate  form.  Any or  all  the  signatures  on  the  certificate  may be a
facsimile. All certificates surrendered to the corporation for transfer shall be
canceled and no new certificate shall be issued until the former certificate for
a like number of shares hall have been surrendered and canceled,  except that in
case of a lost,  destroyed  or  mutilated  certificate  a new one may be  issued
therefor  upon  such  terms and  indemnity  to the  corporation  as the Board of
Directors may prescribe.


                                       14

<PAGE>


     Section 2. Consideration for Shares.  Certificated or uncertificated shares
shall not be issued  until the shares  represented  thereby are fully paid.  The
board of  directors  may  authorize  the  issuance  of shares for  consideration
consisting of any tangible or intangible property or benefit to the corporation,
including cash,  promissory notes, services performed or other securities of the
corporation. Future services shall not constitute payment or partial payment for
shares of the  corporation.  The promissory note of a subscriber or an affiliate
of a subscriber  shall not constitute  payment or partial  payment for shares of
the  corporation  unless the note is  negotiable  and is secured by  collateral,
other than the shares being purchased, having a fair market value at least equal
to the principal amount of the note. For purposes of this Section 2, "promissory
note"  means a  negotiable  instrument  on which there is an  obligation  to pay
independent of collateral and does not include a non-recourse note.

     Section 3. Lost Certificates.  In case of the alleged loss,  destruction or
mutilation  of a  certificate  of stock,  the board of directors  may direct the
issuance of a new  certificate in lieu thereof upon such terms and conditions in
conformity  with law as the board may  prescribe.  The board of directors may in
its discretion  require an affidavit of lost  certificate  and/or a bond in such
form and amount and with such surety as it may  determine  before  issuing a new
certificate.

     Section 4. Transfer of Shares.  Transfer of shares of the corporation shall
be made only on the stock  transfer  books of the  corporation  by the holder of
record thereof or by his legal representative, who shall furnish proper evidence
of authority to transfer,  or by his attorney  thereunto  authorized by power of
attorney duly executed and filed with the Secretary of the  corporation,  and on
surrender for  cancellation of the  certificate  for such shares.  The person in
whose name shares stand on the books of the  corporation  shall be deemed by the
corporation  to be the owner  thereof for all  purposes.  Upon  surrender to the
corporation or to a transfer agent of the  corporation of a certificate of stock
duly endorsed or  accompanied by proper  evidence of  succession,  assignment or
authority to transfer, and receipt of such documentary stamps as may be required
by law and evidence of compliance with all applicable  securities laws and other
restrictions,  the  corporation  shall  issue a new  certificate  to the  person
entitled thereto,  and cancel the old certificate.  Every such transfer of stock
shall be entered on the stock  books of the  corporation  which shall be kept at
its principal  office or by the person and the place  designated by the board of
directors.

     Except as otherwise  expressly provided in these bylaws, and except for the
assertion of  dissenters'  rights as provided under  applicable  Nevada law, the
corporation  shall be entitled to treat the  registered  holder of any shares of
the corporation as the owner thereof for all purposes, and the corporation shall
not be bound to recognize  any equitable or other claim to, or interest in, such
shares or rights  deriving from such shares on the part of any person other than
the registered holder,  including without limitation any purchaser,  assignee or
transferee of such shares or rights deriving from such shares,  unless and until
such other person becomes the registered  holder of such shares,  whether or not
the corporation  shall have either actual or constructive  notice of the claimed
interest of such other person.


                                       15

<PAGE>



     Section 5. Transfer Agent,  Registrars and Paying Agents.  The board may at
its discretion  appoint one or more transfer  agents,  registrars and agents for
making payment upon any class of stock, bond, debenture or other security of the
corporation.  Such agents and registrars may be located either within or outside
Nevada.  They shall have such  rights and duties and shall be  entitled  to such
compensation as may be agreed.

                                   ARTICLE VI

                       Indemnification of Certain Persons

     Section 1.  Indemnification.  For purposes of Article VI, a "Proper Person"
means any  person who was or is a party or is  threatened  to be made a party to
any threatened, pending, or completed action, suit or proceeding, whether civil,
criminal,  administrative or investigative,  and whether formal or informal,  by
reason of the fact that he is or was a director, officer, employee, fiduciary or
agent of the corporation, or is or was serving at the request of the corporation
as a director,  officer, partner, trustee,  employee,  fiduciary or agent of any
foreign or domestic profit or nonprofit corporation or of any partnership, joint
venture,  trust,  profit  or  nonprofit  unincorporated   association,   limited
liability company, or other enterprise or employee benefit plan. The corporation
shall  indemnify  any  Proper  Person  against   reasonably   incurred  expenses
(including attorneys' fees), judgments,  penalties,  fines (including any excise
tax  assessed  with  respect to an employee  benefit  plan) and amounts  paid in
settlement  reasonably  incurred by him in connection with such action,  suit or
proceeding  if it is  determined  by the  groups  set forth in Section 4 of this
Article that he conducted himself in good faith and that he reasonably  believed
(i) in the case of conduct in his official  capacity with the corporation,  that
his conduct was in the corporation's best interests,  or (ii) in all other cases
(except  criminal  cases),  that his  conduct  was at least not  opposed  to the
corporation's best interests,  or (iii) in the case of any criminal  proceeding,
that he had no reasonable  cause to believe his conduct was  unlawful.  A Proper
Person will be deemed to be acting in his  official  capacity  while acting as a
director, officer, employee or agent on behalf of this corporation and not while
acting on this corporation's behalf for some other entity.

     No  indemnification  shall be made under this Article VI to a Proper Person
with respect to any claim, issue or matter in connection with a proceeding by or
in the right of a corporation in which the Proper Person was adjudged  liable to
the  corporation or in connection  with any proceeding  charging that the Proper
Person derived an improper personal benefit,  whether or not involving action in
an  official  capacity,  in which he was  adjudged  liable on the basis  that he
derived  an  improper  personal  benefit.  Further,  indemnification  under this
Section  in  connection  with a  proceeding  brought  by or in the  right of the
corporation shall be limited to reasonable expenses,  including attorneys' fees,
incurred in connection with the proceeding.

     Section 2. Right to  Indemnification.  The corporation  shall indemnify any
Proper Person who was wholly successful,  on the merits or otherwise, in defense
of  any  action,   suit,   or   proceeding  as  to  which  he  was  entitled  to
indemnification  under Section l of this Article VI against expenses  (including



                                       16
<PAGE>


attorneys'  fees)  reasonably  incurred by him in connection with the proceeding
without  the  necessity  of  any  action  by  the  corporation  other  than  the
determination in good faith that the defense has been wholly successful.

     Section 3. Effect of Termination of Action.  The termination of any action,
suit or proceeding by judgment,  order, settlement or conviction, or upon a plea
of nolo  contendere or its  equivalent  shall not of itself create a presumption
that the person  seeking  indemnification  did not meet the standards of conduct
described  in Section l of this  Article  VI.  Entry of a judgment by consent as
part of a  settlement  shall not be  deemed an  adjudication  of  liability,  as
described in Section 2 of this Article VI.

     Section 4. Groups Authorized to Make Indemnification Determination.  Except
where  there is a right to  indemnification  as set forth in  Sections 1 or 2 of
this  Article or where  indemnification  is ordered by a court in Section 5, any
indemnification  shall  be made by the  corporation  only as  authorized  in the
specific case upon a determination by a proper group that indemnification of the
Proper  Person is  permissible  under the  circumstances  because he has met the
applicable  standards  of conduct set forth in Section l of this  Article.  This
determination  shall be made by the board of  directors  by a  majority  vote of
those  present at a meeting at which a quorum is  present,  which  quorum  shall
consist of  directors  not  parties to the  proceeding  ("Quorum").  If a Quorum
cannot be  obtained,  the  determination  shall be made by a majority  vote of a
committee of the board of directors  designated  by the board,  which  committee
shall  consist of two or more  directors not parties to the  proceeding,  except
that  directors  who  are  parties  to the  proceeding  may  participate  in the
designation  of  directors  for the  committee.  If a  Quorum  of the  board  of
directors cannot be obtained and the committee cannot be established, or even if
a Quorum is  obtained  or the  committee  is  designated  and a majority  of the
directors  constituting  such Quorum or committee so directs,  the determination
shall be made by (i) independent  legal counsel  selected by a vote of the board
of directors or the committee in the manner specified in this Section 4 or, if a
Quorum of the full board of directors  cannot be obtained and a committee cannot
be established,  by independent legal counsel selected by a majority vote of the
full board (including directors who are parties to the action) or (ii) a vote of
the stockholders.

     Section 5. Court-Ordered  Indemnification.  Any Proper Person may apply for
indemnification  to the court  conducting  the proceeding or to another court of
competent  jurisdiction  for mandatory  indemnification  under Section 2 of this
Article,  including  indemnifica tion for reasonable expenses incurred to obtain
court-ordered  indemnification.  If the court determines that such Proper Person
is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnification in view of all the relevant
circumstances,  whether  or not he met the  standards  of  conduct  set forth in
Section l of this Article or was adjudged  liable in the  proceeding,  the court
may order such  indemnification  as the court  deems  proper  except that if the
Proper Person has been  adjudged  liable,  indemnifica  tion shall be limited to
reasonable  expenses  incurred in connection  with the proceeding and reasonable
expenses incurred to obtain court-ordered indemnification.


                                       17

<PAGE>


     Section 6. Advance of Expenses.  Reasonable expenses (including  attorneys'
fees)  incurred in  defending  an action,  suit or  proceeding  as  described in
Section 1 may be paid by the  corporation to any Proper Person in advance of the
final  disposition  of such  action,  suit or  proceeding  upon receipt of (i) a
written  affirmation  of such Proper  Person's good faith belief that he has met
the  standards  of conduct  prescribed  by Section l of this  Article VI, (ii) a
written  undertaking,  executed  personally or on the Proper Person's behalf, to
repay such  advances  if it is  ultimately  determined  that he did not meet the
prescribed  standards of conduct (the undertaking  shall be an unlimited general
obligation  of the Proper  Person but need not be  secured  and may be  accepted
without  reference  to  financial  ability  to  make  repayment),  and  (iii)  a
determination  is made by the proper  group (as  described  in Section 4 of this
Article  VI)  that the  facts as then  known to the  group  would  not  preclude
indemnification.  Determination  and  authorization of payments shall be made in
the same manner specified in Section 4 of this Article VI.

     Section 7. Witness  Expenses.  The sections of this Article VI do not limit
the corporation's  authority to pay or reimburse expenses incurred by a director
in connection  with an appearance as a witness in a proceeding at a time when he
has not been made a named defendant or respondent in the proceeding.

     Section 8. Report to  Stockholders.  Any  indemnification  of or advance of
expenses to a director in  accordance  with this Article VI, if arising out of a
proceeding by or on behalf of the  corporation,  shall be reported in writing to
the stockholders with or before the notice of the next stockholders' meeting. If
the next stockholder action is taken without a meeting at the instigation of the
board of directors,  such notice shall be given to the stockholders at or before
the time the first stockholder signs a writing consenting to such action.

                                   ARTICLE VII

                             Provision of Insurance

     Section 1.  Selection by  Directors.  By action of the board of  directors,
notwithstanding any interest of the directors in the action, the corporation may
purchase  and  maintain  insurance,  in such  scope and  amounts as the board of
directors deems  appropriate,  on behalf of any person who is or was a director,
officer,  employee,  fiduciary  or agent  of the  corporation,  or who,  while a
director,  officer, employee,  fiduciary or agent of the corporation,  is or was
serving at the  request of the  corporation  as a  director,  officer,  partner,
trustee,  employee,  fiduciary  or  agent  of  any  other  foreign  or  domestic
corporation or of any  partnership,  joint venture,  trust,  profit or nonprofit
unincorporated  association  limited  liability  company or other  enterprise or
employee benefit plan, against any liability  asserted against,  or incurred by,
him in that  capacity or arising  out of his status as such,  whether or not the
corporation  would have the power to indemnify him against such liability  under
the  provisions  of Article VI or  applicable  law.  Any such  insurance  may be
procured from any insurance company  designated by the board of directors of the
corporation,  including any insurance  company in which the  corporation  has an
equity interest or any other interest, through stock ownership or otherwise.


                                       18

<PAGE>


                                  ARTICLE VIII

                                  Miscellaneous

     Section 1. Seal. The corporate seal of the corporation shall be circular in
form and shall  contain the name of the  corporation  and the words,  "corporate
seal."

     Section 2.  Fiscal  Year.  The fiscal year of the  corporation  shall be as
established by the board of directors.

     Section 3.  Amendments.  These  Bylaws  and any  amendment  thereof  may be
altered,  amended or  repealed,  or new Bylaws may be  adopted,  by the Board of
Directors  at any  regular  or  special  meeting  by the  affirmative  vote of a
majority  of all the  members of the Board,  provided in the case of any special
meeting at which all the members of the Board are not  present,  that the notice
of such meeting  shall have stated the amendment of the Bylaws and any amendment
thereof, including the Bylaws adopted by the Board of Directors, may be altered,
amended or repealed and other Bylaws may be adopted by the holders of a majority
of the total outstanding stock of the corporation entitled to vote at any annual
meeting or at any special meeting, provided, in the case of any special meeting,
that  notice of such  proposed  alteration,  amendment,  repeal or  adoption  is
included in the notice of the meeting.

     Section 4. Gender. The masculine gender is used in these bylaws as a matter
of convenience  only and shall be interpreted to include the feminine and neuter
genders as the circumstances indicate.

     Section 5. Conflicts.  In the event of any irreconcilable  conflict between
these  bylaws  and  either  the  corporation's   articles  of  incorporation  or
applicable law, the latter shall control.

     Section 6. Definitions.  Except as otherwise specifically provided in these
bylaws,  all terms used in these bylaws shall have the same definition as in the
General Corporation Law of Nevada.

     Section 7. Waiver of Notice. Whenever any notice is required to be given to
any  stockholder  or director of the  corporation  under the provisions of these
Bylaws or under the  provisions  of the Articles of  Incorporation  or under the
provisions  of the  General  Corporation  Law of  Nevada,  a waiver  thereof  in
writing, signed by the person or persons entitled to such notice, whether before
or after the time stated  therein,  shall be deemed  equivalent to the giving of
such notice.


                                       19

<PAGE>


     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS,  that I, the  undersigned  Secretary of the
corporation,  do hereby  certify that the above and  foregoing  Bylaws were duly
adopted as the Bylaws of said corporation at a meeting of the directors  thereof
held by consent on December 31, 1997.


                                    /s/ Albert Golusin
- -------------------                 --------------------------------
Date                                Secretary





                                       20


                              FUND ESCROW AGREEMENT

     THIS AGREEMENT is made and entered into effective as of May __, 1998 by and
among the following:

          (a) FAN ENERGY  INC.  (the  "Company"),  a Nevada  corporation,  whose
     address is 1801 Broadway, Suite 720, Denver, Colorado 80202;

          (b) THE BANK OF DENVER, a  state-chartered  bank (the "Escrow Agent"),
     whose address is 1534 California Street, Denver, Colorado 80202; and

          (c) Each selected  broker-dealer which participates in the offering by
     the Company as an  authorized  agent of the Company and who signs a copy of
     this Agreement (a "Selected Dealer").

                                    RECITALS

     A.  Pursuant  to  a  Registration  Statement  No.  333-47699,  including  a
Prospectus dated May __, 1998 (the  "Prospectus"),  the Company intends to offer
and sell up to  3,000,000  shares of its  common  stock,  $0.001  par value (the
"Shares").  The Shares  will be offered on a 300,000  Share  minimum,  3,000,000
Share maximum "best efforts,  part or none" basis at a price of $1.00 per Share.
The minimum  purchase is $20,000;  however,  the Company  reserves  the right to
accept a lesser minimum purchase.

     B. The  Company  may enter  into  appropriate  agreements  with one or more
entities which are brokers-dealers,  registered as such and which are members of
the National  Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc. ("Selected  Dealers") and
any Selected Dealer who participates in the offering by the Company shall become
a party to this Agreement and subject to the terms and conditions hereof.

     C. Pursuant to the terms of the Prospectus, this Agreement is being made to
escrow  for  certain  periods   commencing  upon  the  date  of  the  Prospectus
("Effective Date") and for the benefit of subscribers in the offering, the gross
proceeds from the sale of the Shares; and

     D. The Company  desires to enter into this  Agreement with the Escrow Agent
for the  purpose of  fulfilling  the escrow  requirements  as  described  in the
Prospectus.

     NOW  THEREFORE,  in  consideration  of the  forgoing  recitals,  the mutual
promises   and   covenants   contained   herein  and  other  good  and  valuable
consideration,  the  receipt  and  sufficiency  of which are  acknowledged,  the
parties agree as follows:

     1. The Company and each Selected  Dealer shall deliver to the Escrow Agent,
by noon on the first business day following receipt,  all proceeds from the sale
of the Shares being offered,  together with the original,  executed Subscription
Agreement in the form attached  hereto as Exhibit A. A copy of the  Subscription
Agreement  shall be  retained  by the  Company,  or, if the deposit is made by a
Selected Dealer, the Selected Dealer shall retain a copy and promptly transmit a
copy of the Subscription Agreement to the Company.



<PAGE>


     2. All funds or remittances  delivered to the Escrow Agent pursuant  hereto
shall be  deposited  immediately  by the Escrow  Agent in a  noninterest-bearing
escrow accounted  designated  substantially as follows:  The Bank of Denver, Fan
Energy Inc., Escrow Account (the "Escrow Account").  The Escrow Account shall be
created and  maintained  subject to the customary  rules and  regulations of the
Escrow Agent pertaining to such accounts.  Funds deposited with the Escrow Agent
shall be by check or bank draft  only;  wire  transfers  shall not be  permitted
without the prior approval of the Escrow Agent.

     3. During the Escrow Period (as hereinafter  defined),  none of the amounts
deposited in the Escrow  Account shall become the property of the Company or any
other entity,  or subject to the debts of the Company or any other entity,  and,
except as expressly provided herein with respect to payments by the Escrow Agent
to  the  Company  and  others,   the  Escrow  Agent  shall  make  or  permit  no
disbursements from the Escrow Account. The Escrow Agent, in its sole discretion,
shall be entitled to place a hold on any funds deposited into the Escrow Account
for up to 10 business  days to ensure that such funds are cleared and  collected
prior to an any disbursement by the Escrow Agent.

     4. The Escrow Period shall begin on the Effective Date and,  subject to the
provisions of paragraph 6 below, shall terminate on the earlier to occur of:

          (a) The date which is 120 days after the Effective Date (provided that
     upon  the  written  notification  from  the  Company  to the  Escrow  Agent
     delivered  to the Escrow  Agent on or prior to such date,  the  Company may
     extent the offering for up to an additional sixty (60) days), provided that
     if on or prior to such date, there has been deposited with the Escrow Agent
     at least  $300,000 from  subscribers  representing  the purchase of 300,000
     shares of Company  common stock in the  offering,  then the offering may be
     extended by the Company until the earlier to occur of the time specified in
     subparagraph 4(b) or (c) below; or

          (b) The date on which  $3,000,000  has been  delivered  to the  Escrow
     Agent  representing  the purchase by  subscribers  of  3,000,000  shares of
     Company  common stock and all checks have cleared and been  collected,  but
     not longer than one hundred and eighty (180) days from the Effective  Date;
     or

          (c) The date  specified  in a written  notice  delivered to the Escrow
     Agent from the Company stating the election of the Company to terminate the
     offering.

     5. In the  event  that  proceeds  of at least  $300,000  are  received  and
collected in the Escrow Account prior to the events specified in paragraph 4(a),
(b) or (c) above, the Escrow Agent shall  immediately  provide written notice to
the Company and to any participating  Selected Dealer that cleared and collected
funds deposited in the Escrow Account total at least $300,000.  Upon the written
request from the Company and any participating  Selected Dealer delivered to the
Escrow Agent  following  sending of the notice by the Escrow  Agent,  the Escrow
Agent  shall  disburse  the  amount of  collected  funds then held in the Escrow
Account  as set  forth  below  and  the  escrow  arrangements  for  deposit  and
collection of subscriptions  from investors in the offering shall continue.  All
collected  funds  accumulated  in the Escrow Account at the time of this Closing
shall be disbursed and paid by the Escrow Agent as follows:

                                        2

<PAGE>


          (a) To any Selected  Dealer who has (i) become subject to the terms of
     this Fund Escrow Agreement by signing a counterpart hereof and (ii) who has
     transmitted  subscriber's  funds and  Subscription  Agreement to the Escrow
     Agent in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, a commission equal to
     10% of all amounts  deposited in the Escrow Account by such Selected Dealer
     and collected by the Escrow Agent.

          (b) To the Company,  the remainder of all collected  amounts deposited
     in the Escrow  Account less amounts,  if any, due and payable to the Escrow
     Agent for unpaid fees or expenses as provided for herein. The Company shall
     make  appropriate  arrangements  with  its  stock  transfer  agent  for the
     issuance  and delivery to persons who  purchased  Shares in the offering of
     certificates  representing  Shares  purchased,  at the time of  receipt  of
     proceeds  from the  Escrow  Agent or  within  two  business  days  thereof.
     However,  the Escrow Agent shall have no  obligation or  responsibility  to
     assure the issuance or delivery of the certificates.

     6. After conclusion of the first closing as described in paragraph 5 above,
the Escrow Account shall continue through one or more additional  closings until
the  occurrence of the earlier of the events  specified in paragraph 4(b) or (c)
above, provided that no more than one such closing shall be held in any week. At
each such closing, disbursements shall be made in the same manner as provided in
paragraph 5 above.

     7. In the event the Escrow Period terminates  pursuant to paragraph 4(a) or
(c) because less than $300,000 was delivered to the Escrow Agent or collected in
the Escrow Account, then the Escrow Agent, as promptly as possible,  shall remit
directly to those  persons on whose  behalf the funds were  deposited  and whose
funds were  collected  (such  persons  shall be deemed to be the  persons  whose
names,  addresses  and  subscription  amounts  are  set  forth  on  Subscription
Agreements  delivered  to the  Escrow  Agent  at the time of each  deposit  into
escrow), the amount paid by each such person (and collected by the Escrow Agent)
without  interest  and without  any  deductions  whatsoever.  The amount paid or
payable to each subscriber  pursuant to this paragraph shall be deemed to be the
property of such  subscriber free and clear of any and all claims of the Company
or any of its creditors or of any Selected Dealer, and the respective  agreement
to  purchase  the Shares made and entered  pursuant  to the  Prospectus  and the
Subscription  Agreement  thereupon  shall be deemed to be canceled,  without any
further liability of said subscriber to pay for the Shares purchased. The Escrow
Agent  shall be required to make such  payment  only to the person  named in the
Subscription  Agreement at the address specified  therein.  Any funds payable to
subscribers of Shares which the Escrow Agent cannot  disburse to said subscriber
because the address  given in the  Subscription  Agreement is defective or which
the Escrow Agent cannot disburse for any other reason to said purchaser shall be
retained  by the  Escrow  Agent and dealt  with in  accordance  with  applicable
Colorado  law. At such time as the Escrow Agent shall have made all payments and
remittances provided for in this paragraph, the Escrow Agent shall be completely
discharged and released of any and all further liabilities and  responsibilities
hereunder.

                                        3

<PAGE>


     8. The Company shall give the Escrow Agent  appropriate  written  notice of
any extension of the offering period as described in paragraph 4(a).

     9. The Escrow Agent, in its actions  pursuant to this  Agreement,  shall be
fully protected and indemnified by the Company in every  reasonable  exercise of
its  discretion  (but not for its  negligence or  misconduct)  and shall have no
obligations hereunder to the Company, or to any other party, except as expressly
set forth herein and for matters  relating to the Escrow  Agent's  negligence or
misconduct.

     10. As compensation  for services of the Escrow Agent under this Agreement,
the  Company  shall  pay the  Escrow  Agent a fee of  $2,000  at the  time  this
Agreement  is  executed,  which fee shall cover the services of the Escrow Agent
regardless of whether this Agreement  terminates pursuant to paragraph 4(a), (b)
or (c) above.  The Company shall pay an additional fee of $7.00 per check issued
by the Escrow Agent  hereunder in the event that the Escrow Agent is required to
remit amounts to subscribers in accordance with paragraph 7 above.

     11.  The  Escrow  Agent  shall  have no  obligation  to  invest  any of the
deposited funds or to pay interest thereon.

     12. The Escrow  Agent shall not issue any  certificates  of deposit,  stock
certificates,  or any other instrument or document  representing any interest in
the deposited funds, but written notice  acknowledging  receipt of the deposited
funds will be delivered by facsimile on Friday of every week by the Escrow Agent
to the  Company.  Facsimile  notice  shall  be  addressed  as set  forth  on the
signature  pages of this  Agreement.  The Escrow  Agent  shall give the  Company
prompt written notice when funds deposited in the Escrow Account total $300,000.
The Escrow Agent shall make an accounting  to the Company and any  participating
Selected  Dealer  when and if it pays  Escrow  Funds to the Company or any other
specified  recipient  pursuant to paragraphs 5, 6 or 7 hereof.  The Escrow Agent
shall not be  responsible  for fees and other costs and expenses in  conjunction
with the issuance or transfer of securities.

     13. The Company and any  participating  Selected Dealer agree to provide to
the Escrow Agent all information  necessary to facilitate the  administration of
this Agreement, and the Escrow Agent may relay upon the information so provided.
In performing any of its duties hereunder,  the Escrow Agent shall not incur any
liability to anyone for any claims, damages,  losses, costs or expenses,  except
for its willful misconduct or gross negligence,  and it shall, accordingly,  not
incur any such liability with respect to (a) any action taken or omitted to good
faith upon  written  advice of  counsel  given  with  respect  to any  questions
relating  to the duties and  responsibilities  of the  Escrow  Agent  under this
Agreement,  or (b) any action taken or omitted in reliance upon any  instrument,
including  the  written  advice  provided  for  herein,  not  only as to its due
execution and the validity and  effectiveness of its provisions,  but also as to
the truth and accuracy of any information  contained  therein,  which the Escrow
Agent  shall in good  faith  believe  to be  genuine,  to have  been  signed  or
presented by a proper person or persons,  and to conform with the  provisions of
this Agreement.

                                        4

<PAGE>


     14. The Company  hereby  agrees to indemnify  and hold  harmless the Escrow
Agent  against  any and all  losses,  claims,  damages,  liabilities,  costs and
expenses,  including  reasonable costs of investigation  and attorneys' fees and
disbursements  which may be imposed  upon the Escrow  Agent or  incurred  by the
Escrow Agent hereunder,  or the performance of its duties  hereunder,  including
any  litigation  arising from this  Agreement or  involving  the subject  matter
hereof,  except for those  incurred by the Escrow Agent as a result of its gross
negligence or willful misconduct.

     15. If at any time a dispute  shall  exist as to the  duties of the  Escrow
Agent and the terms hereof, or if funds deposited hereunder are not withdrawn on
or before thirty (30) days after the Escrow Period set forth in paragraph 4, the
Escrow  Agent may, in its  discretion,  deposit said funds with the Clerk of the
District  Court for the City and County of Denver,  State of  Colorado,  and may
interplead the parties hereto as to the rights,  if any, in such funds.  Upon so
depositing such funds and filing its complaint in interpleader, the Escrow Agent
shall be  completely  discharged  and  released  from all further  liability  or
responsibility under the terms hereof. The parties hereto, for themselves, their
successors and assigns,  do hereby consent to the jurisdiction of said Court and
do hereby  appoint  the Clerk of said  Court as their  agent for  service of all
process in connection with the proceeding mentioned in this paragraph.

     16. All notices,  demands,  or requests  required or  authorized  hereunder
shall be deemed given  sufficiently  if in writing and sent by  certified  mail,
return  receipt  requested  and  postage  prepaid,  with a  copy  also  sent  by
facsimile,  to the person or his  address and facsimile  number set forth on the
signature page hereof.

     17.  The  Escrow  Agent is hereby  expressly  authorized  and  directed  to
disregard  any and all notices or warnings  given by any of the parties  hereto,
other than those notices and warnings specifically called for in this Agreement,
or by any other  person or  corporation,  excepting  only  orders or  process of
court,  and is hereby  expressly  authorized to comply with and obey any and all
orders, judgments, or decrees of any court. In the event that Escrow Agent obeys
or complies with any such order,  judgment, or decree of any court, it shall not
be  liable  to any of the  parties  hereto  or to any  other  person,  firm,  or
corporation by reason of such  compliance,  notwithstanding  that any such order
judgment or decree may be subsequently reversed, modified, annulled or set aside
or vacated, or found to have been entered without jurisdiction.

     18. The Escrow Agent shall have no duty to know or determine performance or
nonperformance  of any  provision  of any  agreement  between the other  parties
hereto,  and the original,  or a copy, of any such agreement  deposited with the
Escrow Agent shall not bind such agent in any manner.  The Escrow Agent  assumes
no  responsibility  for the validity or sufficiency of any documents or paper or
payments  deposited  or called  for  hereunder  except as may be  expressly  and
specifically set forth in this Agreement in clear and unambiguous language,  and
the  duties  and  responsibilities  of the  Escrow  Agent are  limited  to those
expressly and specially stated in this Agreement in such language.

                                        5

<PAGE>


     19. This  Agreement  shall be governed and  interpreted  by the laws of the
state of  Colorado  and  shall be  binding  upon the  parties  hereto  and their
respective   successors   and  assigns.   This  Agreement  may  be  executed  in
counterparts.

     20. This Agreement may be executed in  counterparts,  any one of which need
not contain the  signature of more than one party,  but all  counterparts  taken
together will constitute one and the same Agreement.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Company and the Escrow Agent and each participating
Selected Dealer have executed this Fund Escrow  Agreement  effective on the date
first written above.

ESCROW AGENT:                                COMPANY:

THE BANK OF DENVER                           FAN ENERGY INC.



By                                           By 
   -----------------------------------         ---------------------------------
   Howard Jacobsen, Senior Vice President       George H. Fancher Jr., Chairman
   Duly Authorized Officer                      1801 Broadway, Suite 720
   1534 California Street                       Denver, Colorado 80202
   Denver, Colorado 80202                       Facsimile: (303) 296-2433
   Facsimile: (303) 623-3395

                                             SELECTED DEALER:

                                             -----------------------------------
                                             Name


                                             -----------------------------------
                                             Signature of Authorized Officer

                                             -----------------------------------
                                             Address

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

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

                                             -----------------------------------
                                             Facsimile Number

                                        7




                                   EXHIBIT A
                                                     ---------------------------
                                                     Name of Subscriber

                             SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT

                                 FAN ENERGY INC.

                      1998 Public Offering of Common Stock
                                       at
                                 $1.00 Per Share
                         Minimum Purchase: 20,000 Shares


Fan Energy Inc.
1801 Broadway, Suite 720
Denver, Colorado 80202

Gentlemen:

     1. Subscription for Shares. The undersigned, intending to be legally bound,
hereby  irrevocably  subscribes  to  purchase  from Fan  Energy  Inc.,  a Nevada
corporation  (the "Company"),  the number of shares of common stock,  $0.001 par
value  ("Shares"),  set forth below at a purchase price of $1.00 per Share. This
subscription  is submitted  in  accordance  with,  and subject to, the terms and
conditions described herein and in the Prospectus dated May __, 1998 relating to
the public  offering and sale of the Shares,  a copy of which has been delivered
to and received by the under  signed.  The  signature of the  undersigned  below
confirms the subscription to purchase Shares in the public offering.

     2. The number of Shares  subscribed  for, the total  purchase price and the
method of payment are as follows:

           Number of Shares                 _____________________________
           Total Purchase Price (enclosed) $_____________________________
           Method of Payment                _____________________________

All checks are to be made  payable  to:  "The Bank of Denver,  Fan Energy  Inc.,
Escrow Account."

     3. Escrow of Funds.  Payments made by all subscribers shall be delivered to
The Bank of Denver,  Denver,  Colorado as Escrow  Agent in  connection  with the
offering of the Shares by the Company.  This  subscription is irrevocable by the
subscriber.  Subscriber's  funds shall be held by the Escrow Agent in accordance
with the terms of the  offering as  described  in the  Prospectus.  Certificates
representing  the  Shares  of  common  stock of the  Company  shall be issued to
subscriber and others who participate in the offering only at such time as funds
for the purchase of Shares are  delivered  the  Company,  or within two business
days  thereafter  and only in  accordance  with the  terms  of the  offering  as
described in the Prospectus.  Neither the Subscription  Agreement nor any of the
rights of the undersigned subscriber may be transferred or assigned.


<PAGE>


Dated:                  , 1998
       -----------------
                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Signature of Subscriber

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Complete Name of Subscriber

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Complete Mailing Address of Subscriber

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

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Telephone Number of Subscriber

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Tax Identification Number of Subscriber

     Certificates  representing the Shares subscribed for shall be issued in the
name of the subscriber as set forth above unless the following is completed:

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Names(s) in which the Shares are to be
                                      registered

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

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Form of joint ownership (if applicable)

     [If the  certificates  are to be  registered  in the name of a person other
than the subscriber who signs this  Subscription  Agreement,  please furnish the
tax  identification  number  for each  person in whose name the Shares are to be
registered:
           ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------]


                                        2




                               ALAN W. PERYAM, LLC
                         1120 Lincoln Street, Suite 1000
                             Denver, Colorado 80203



                                 April 27, 1998



Fan Energy Inc.
1801 Broadway, Suite 720
Denver, Colorado 80202

Gentlemen:

     We  refer  to  the  Registration  Statement  on  Form  SB-2  ("Registration
Statement") of Fan Energy Inc., a Nevada  corporation  ("Company"),  to be filed
with the United States Securities and Exchange  Commission on or about April 27,
1998,  relating  to the offer and sale of up to  3,000,000  shares of $0.001 par
value common stock (the "Common Stock") and 2,700,000 shares of Common Stock for
resale by holders of such securities as described therein.

     We have reviewed such documents and records as we have deemed  necessary to
enable us to express an informed  opinion on the matters  covered thereby and we
are of the opinion that the Common Stock described in the Registration statement
is, or will be, upon  exercise of warrants in  accordance  with their terms upon
issuance, legally issued, fully paid and nonassessable.

                                          Sincerely,

                                          ALAN W. PERYAM, LLC


                                          By   /s/ Alan W. Peryam
                                               ---------------------------------
                                               Alan W. Peryam




                           EASTERN STAR HOLDINGS INC.

George H. Fancher Jr. d/b/a
FANCHER OIL COMPANY                                              August 27, 1997
1801 Broadway
Suite 720
Denver, Colorado

Re:    Fiji Prospect - Yolo County - California ("Fiji Prospect")
       Bali Prospect - Solano County - California ("Bali Prospect")
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Agreement will constitute our understanding  regarding Eastern Star Holdings
Inc.  ("Eastern  Star") purchase of an interest in the captioned  prospects from
George H. Fancher Jr. d/b/a  Fancher Oil Company  ("Fancher").  The terms of the
Agreement are as follows:


       1.     Interest to be Acquired


              1.1.  Fancher  will sell and  Eastern  Star will  purchase  all of
                    Fancher's right, title and interest, (the "Interest") in the
                    Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.  participation  agreements
                    ("SPA") relating to the Fiji Prospect and the Bali Prospect,
                    such  agreements  being attached hereto as Schedule "A". The
                    SPA provide that Fancher has the right to acquire 25% of all
                    interest acquired by Slawson  Exploration  Company,  Inc. in
                    the Fiji Prospect and Bali Prospect.


       2.     Consideration


              2.1.  In  consideration  of  the sale of the  Interest in the SPA,
                    Eastern Star shall issue to George H. Fancher Jr. a total of
                    2,250,000 shares as follows:


                    (a)  1,500,000  shares  (the  "Acquisition  Shares")  to  be
                         issued on Escrow Closing (as defined below);


                    (b)  750,000 shares (the "Performance  Shares") to be issued
                         on Escrow  Closing  to be  released  to Fancher at such
                         time as there are a minimum of 10 wells which have been
                         drilled  with  initial  production  rates  of at  least
                         1,500,000  cubic  feet per day per  well.  The  parties
                         agree  to  execute  and  deliver  that  form of  Escrow
                         Agreement attached hereto as Schedule "B".


              2.2.  Fancher  shall not be entitled to exercise any voting rights
                    attached to  Acquisition  Shares or the  Performance  Shares
                    prior to the Final  Closing (as defined  below).  All shares
                    issued  to  Fancher  shall  be  subject  to any and all hold
                    periods required by appropriate securities legislation.



<PAGE>


                                                                     Page 2 of 5



               2.3. In  addition  to  the  Acquisition  Shares  and  Performance
                    Shares, Eastern Star shall pay to Fancher on Escrow Closing,
                    an amount equal to Fancher's  total cash  investment  in the
                    SPA less $300,000 (US). As at July 31, 1997, the amount that
                    would  have  been  payable  to  Fancher  was   approximately
                    $360,000 (US).


               2.4. Fancher  shall  retain  a 2 1/2%  gross  overriding  royalty
                    proportionately reduced leasehold interest actually acquired
                    by Eastern  Star  pursuant to the SPA (ie.  if Eastern  Star
                    acquires  a 25%  working  interest,  then the  Fancher  over
                    riding royalty interest will be 0.625%).


          3.   Bonus

               3.1. Fancher  shall be  entitled  to be issued a further  500,000
                    shares  (the "Bonus  Shares") of Eastern  Star as a bonus if
                    the Interest payout occurs on or before December 31, 1999 or
                    at such later date as the parties may mutually agree. Payout
                    shall  be  defined  as that  time at  which  gross  revenues
                    received by Eastern  Star equal all direct  costs of Eastern
                    Star  associated with acquiring the acreage and drilling the
                    prospects  including  but not limited to the cash payment to
                    Fancher   described  in  sections  2.3  and  6.2  (excluding
                    interest  paid  at  Final   Closing),   seismic,   drilling,
                    completing, LOE, production taxes, and royalties.


          4.   Representations/Warranties - Fancher

               4.1. Fancher represents and warrants as follows:

                    (a)  the  SPA  is  valid,   subsisting  and  enforceable  in
                         accordance  with its terms and Fancher is in compliance
                         with all terms, conditions,  obligations and agreements
                         as required of Fancher under the SPA;

                    (b)  Fancher  is  the  sole  and  beneficial  owner  of  the
                         Interest  and  there  are  no  other  rights,  options,
                         encumbrances or liens relating to the Interest;

                    (c)  subject to the consent of Slawson Exploration  Company,
                         Inc.,  Fancher  has the right and ability to enter into
                         this  Agreement and that this  Agreement when signed is
                         binding and enforceable in accordance with its terms;

                    (d)  there are no actual,  pending,  or threatened  actions,
                         suits,  claims or  proceedings  regarding  the Interest
                         and/or the SPA; and

                    (e)  Fancher   is  not  aware  of  any   material   fact  or
                         circumstance  which has not been disclosed which should
                         be  disclosed  in order to prevent the  representations
                         and warranties provided herein from being misleading.

<PAGE>

                                                                     Page 3 of 5
          5.   Covenants- Eastern Star


               5.1. Eastern Star covenants to use its reasonable best efforts to
                    fulfill the following conditions:

                    (a)  Eastern Star shares  being  approved for listing on the
                         NASDAQ  bulletin  board on or before  October 31, 1997;
                         and

                    (b)  Eastern  Star  closing  a  private   placement  of  its
                         securities  for minimum  gross  proceeds of  $1,000,000
                         (US) on or before  October 31,  1997 on terms  mutually
                         agreed to by the parties.

               5.2. Eastern  Star  further  covenants  that  it  shall  use  its
                    reasonable best efforts to complete the private placement as
                    described in section  5.1(b)  above on or before  October 1,
                    1997 subject only to the shares of Eastern Star being listed
                    on the NASDAQ bulletin board.

               5.3. Eastern Star  represents  and warrants to Fancher that as of
                    the date of this Agreement the capital  structure of Eastern
                    Star is as set forth in  Schedule  "C"  attached  hereto and
                    made a part hereof.

          6.   Closing of Purchase and Sale - Escrow

               6.1. The interim closing of the purchase and sale of the Interest
                    shall be completed on or before August 31, 1997 (the "Escrow
                    Closing") with the Interest and the  Acquisition  Shares and
                    Performance   Shares   being  held  in  escrow   subject  to
                    completion  of the listing and  financing  as  described  in
                    section 5.1(a) and 5.1(b) above.

               6.2. At Escrow  Closing,  Eastern  Star shall pay to Fancher  the
                    amount  as  required  by  section  2.3  herein  and at Final
                    Closing (as defined  below)_  Eastern  Star shall  reimburse
                    Fancher for any and all further funds advanced by Fancher in
                    accordance with the Interest with interest at the rate of 8%
                    per annum.

               6.3. At Escrow Closing, Fancher shall deliver into escrow any and
                    all  documentation  required to transfer  the Interest as of
                    the  date  of  Escrow  Closing  subject  only  to the  Final
                    Closing,  including  without  limitation,  evidence  of  the
                    consent of Slawson Exploration Company, Inc..

          7.   Remedy for Failure to Comply with Covenants

               7.1. In the event that Eastern  Star fails to timely  achieve all
                    of the  conditions  set forth in section  5.1(a) and 5.1(b),
                    then  the  transfer  for the SPA to  Eastern  Star  shall be
                    deemed  rescinded and  cancelled and William E. Grafham,  or
                    any  assignee of William E.  Grafham  acceptable  to Fancher
                    (herein  collectively  referred  to as  "Grafham")  shall be
                    required to purchase from Fancher a 12 1/2% working interest
                    in the SPA effective  November 1, 1997.  In such event,  the
                    following shall apply:

                    (a)  Fancher  shall  return  the   Acquisition   Shares  and
                         Performance  Shares to Eastern Star and  quitclaim  all
                         right to the Bonus Shares,  and Eastern Star shall quit
                         claim and release any and all right, title interest and
                         entitlement  to the  Interest  free  and  clear  of any
                         assignment or encumbrance  arising by, through or under
                         Eastern Star;

                    (b)  Grafham  shall  reimburse  Eastern Star for any and all
                         funds  paid to  Fancher  pursuant  to the terms of this
                         Agreement;


<PAGE>

                                                                     Page 4 of 5


                    (c)  Grafham  shall pay to Fancher an amount  which is equal
                         to the  difference  between  $900,000 (US) and the cash
                         paid to Fancher by Eastern Star to November 1, 1997;

                    (d)  Fancher shall sell,  assign and set over to Grafham,  a
                         12  1/2%  working  interest  in the  SPA  subject  to a
                         proportionately   reduced  2  1/2%  overriding  royalty
                         interest;; and

                    (e)  Grafham  shall  be  responsible  for his  proportionate
                         share of  funding  of the SPA  after  Fancher  has paid
                         $1,200,000 (US) of total project costs  associated with
                         Fancher's original 25% working interest.

              7.2.  Fancher  agrees  that  Eastern  Star's  failure  satisfy the
                    conditions  set forth in section  5.1(a)  and 5.1(b)  herein
                    shall only entitle  Fancher to those remedies in section 7.1
                    and Fancher hereby agrees to waive and release  Eastern Star
                    from any and all damages,  actions, claims,  liabilities and
                    remedies arising directly or indirectly from such failure to
                    satisfy such conditions.

          8.  Closing of Purchase and Sale - Final

              8.1.  In the event Eastern Star  satisfies  all of the  conditions
                    set forth in section  5.1(a) and  5.1(b),  then on or before
                    November  1,  1997  (the  "Final  Closing"),  Fancher  shall
                    receive the Acquisition  Shares and the payment  required by
                    section 6.2 and  Eastern  Star shall  receive all  documents
                    transferring the Interest to Eastern Star.

          9.  Management

              9.1.  On Final  Closing the  management  of Eastern  Star shall be
                    composed of the following:

                    Fancher        Director/Chairman
                    Grafham        Director/CEO/President
                    Scott          Director
                    Utsler         Director

         10.  Incorporation of Subsidiary/Name Change

              10.1. Eastern Star shall purchase the Interest through,  or at the
                    election  of Eastern  Star on or before  the Final  Closing,
                    transfer the Interest to, a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  to be
                    incorporated  under the law of Nevada  or  Colorado,  at the
                    election  of  Eastern  Star prior to the Final  Closing.  In
                    addition,  the  parties  agree to change the name of Eastern
                    Star to such other name as the parties may agree.  Corporate
                    structure will be subject to further discussions.

         11.  Stock Restrictions

              11.1. Eastern Star,  Grafham and Fancher shall  mutually  agree on
                    an acceptable  trading  restrictions on certain free trading
                    shares of  Eastern  Star to be  identified  by  Grafham  and
                    Fancher.


<PAGE>

                                                                     Page 5 of 5
         12.  SPA

              12.1. Upon the execution of this  Agreement by all the parties and
                    upon  Eastern Star  obtaining  the  Interest  hereunder,  or
                    Grafham  obtaining an interest  hereunder,  all of the terms
                    and  conditions of the SPA shall apply as if Eastern Star or
                    Grafham had been an original contracting party thereto.

If you agree with the foregoing terms and  conditions,  please sign in the space
indicated below and return one original letter to the undersigned


Yours truly,

Eastern Star Holdings Inc.                The foregoing terms and conditions are
Per:                                      hereby accepted and agreed.



Albert Golusin                            George H. Fancher Jr. d/b/a
Director                                  Fancher Oil Company
:jm



                                          William E. Grafham
<PAGE>
                                  Schedule "A"

Slawson
exploration company, inc.

Rocky Mountain Division
1625 Broadway, Suite 1450
Denver, Colorado 80202-4714
(303) 592-8880 - FAX (303) 592-8881




April 23, 1997

Fanchcr Oil Company 1801 I Broadway, Suite 720 Denver, CO 80202

Attn: Mr. George H. Fancher, Jr,

RE   RM 96-002 Fiji Prospect
     Participation Agreement
     Yolo County, California

Gentleman:

In this Participation  Agreement,  Slawson Exploration  Company,  Inc., a Kansas
Corporation d/b/a Donald C. Slawson Exploration Company, Me. within the State of
California,  shall  hereinafter  be  referred  to as  "Slawson"  and Fancher Oil
Company shall hereinafter be referred to as "Fancher".

This Agreement will constitute our understanding regarding Fancher's purchase of
an interest in Slawson's  Fiji  Prospect and the  formation of an Area of Mutual
Interest.

The terms of this agreement are as follows:

1.   Slawson is in the process of acquiring  leasehold within the Fiji Prospect,
     the general geographic area for which is set out on Exhibit " I ", attached
     hereto and made a part hereof. Further,  Slawson anticipates collecting and
     processing  approximately  25  square  miles  of  3D  seismic  within  Fiji
     Prospect.

2.   Fancher has agreed to  participate  with  Slawson for a  proportionate  25%
     share of leasehold acquisition and collection of 3D seismic data within the
     Fiji  Prospect.  Maximum  cost for seismic  acquisition  is estimated to be
     $800,000.  Land costs are  estimated  to be within a range of  $250,000  to
     $300,000,  depending upon the amount of acreage  eventually  leased and the
     price per acre.  Fancher is responsible for spending its  proportionate 25%
     share of such amounts  under tile terms of this  agreement,  assuming  such
     costs arc incurred within 12 months from the date hereof. If either or both
     of such  amounts  are  exceeded,  Fancher  may  participate  in  additional
     expenditures  on a selected  basis,  under  tile  terms of this  agreement.
     Fancher  agrees to be bound by the terms and  provisions  of  leasehold  in
     which it  participates.  Slawson shall be responsible for the remaining 75%
     of such obligations and shall hold Fancher harmless therefrom.

3.   Fancher will reimburse  Slawson for all leasehold and geophysical  costs on
     the basis of cost plus 35%, so that  Fancher's  share.  of actual  costs is
     33.75%.  Slawson is currently in the process of acquiring  leasehold in the
     Fiji Prospect  area.  Simultaneous  with the  execution of this  agreement,
     Fancher will  reimburse  Slawson the sum of  $117,787.50  which  represents
     leasehold,  brokerage and seismic  permitting costs incurred or anticipated
     through April,  1997.  Reimbursement  for remaining  costs, or estimates of
     such costs, which may be made from time to time, will be made to Slawson by


<PAGE>

Fiji Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 2
April 23, 1997

     Fancher  within 15 days from receipt of an invoice.  Slawson  agrees to pay
     the  remaining  66.25% of costs or to find other  participants  to pay such
     costs.

4.   An Area of Mutual  Interest  ("AMI") is hereby  established  consisting  of
     lands lying  within  Township 6 North,  Ranges 3 and 4 East,  Yolo  County,
     California. The AMI will be comprised of all lands located within the final
     outline of the 3D seismic survey that is being conducted under the terms of
     this agreement. When available, an outline of the survey, and thus the AMI,
     will be attached hereto as Exhibit "2". This AMI shall remain in effect for
     the term of any oil and gas leases which become subject to this  agreement,
     whether  by  acquisition,   extension  or  renewal,  and  shall  thereafter
     terminate  unless  production is  established  on any portion of said lands
     through  this  agreement,  and  shall  then  continue  so long as  there is
     production.  Fanchcr shall be obligated to acquire its proportionate  share
     of all leasehold  acquired by Slawson  within the AMI up to a maximum gross
     (unpromoted)  expenditure of $300,000.  If this amount is exceeded,  and if
     additional expenditures are incurred for acquisition, Slawson will promptly
     notify Fancher in writing of such acquisition, describing same and the cost
     thereof.  Fancher  will have 10 days from  receipt of such  notice to elect
     whether  or  not  to  participate  for  its  proportionate  share  of  such
     acquisition,  insofar  only as same covers  lands in the subject  AMI.  The
     failure of Fancher to reply  positively  within the 10 day time period will
     be deemed an election not to participate in the acquisition.  Fancher shall
     not acquire any interest  within this AMI except  through  this  agreement,
     while in effect, without the express written consent of Slawson.

5.   Slawson shall be responsible for payment of all delay rentals,  minimum and
     shut-in  royalties,  as well as any other  payments  required  to  maintain
     leases in full force and effect. Slawson shall not be liable for failure to
     properly  make such  payments,  in the  absence of gross  negligence.  Upon
     receipt of an invoice, Fancher shall, within 20 days, reimburse Slawson for
     its proportionate share of such payments, or, at Fancher's election, notify
     Slawson  that it no longer  desires to hold an interest  in the  applicable
     lease(s),  in  which  case  Fancher's  interest  shall be  relinquished  to
     Slawson.

6.   Slawson will retain Fancher's  proportionate share of title to all acquired
     leasehold and/or farmin agreements beneficially for Fancher until such time
     as a well is drilled and  completed and a pooling  agreement,  if required,
     has been filed.  Slawson will then deliver an  assignment to Fancher of its
     proportionate  share of  leasehold  in the revenue  sharing unit or acreage
     held  by  the  well's  production,  on a  well-by-well  basis,  subject  to
     obtaining any required  consent to assign under the provisions of the lease
     and/or  farmin  agreements.  If such  consent  to assign  cannot be readily
     obtained,  Slawson  shall hold title to the  leasehold  and  agreements  on
     behalf of Fancher. If such consent is obtained,  Slawson will promptly make
     assignment under the terms of this paragraph.  The intent of this paragraph
     is for Slawson to hold title beneficially for Fancher in order to avoid the
     administrative  time and expense involved in making  assignments;  however,
     notwithstanding  the  provisions  of this  paragraph,  Fancher  may  demand
     assignment  from  Slawson of all  leasehold  to which it holds an  interest
     under the terms of this agreement.  If such a request is made, Slawson will
     make all  reasonable  efforts to provide the assignment in a timely manner,
     subject to the provisions of this agreement.  All leasehold acquired by any
     method under this agreement (whether by Slawson or Fancher) will be subject
     to a proportionately reduced 3.50% of 8/8ths overriding royalty interest in
     favor of Slawson.


<PAGE>

Fiji Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 3
April 23, 1997


7.   It is anticipated that Slawson will propose wells to be drilled within this
     AMI on an ongoing  basis.  At the time of  proposal,  Slawson  will provide
     Fancher  with  written  notice of its intended  operation,  specifying  the
     location of the well, estimated spud date, the depth and formation(s) to be
     drilled, and an Authorization For Expenditure ("AFE") setting out estimated
     dry hole and completion costs, and any other pertinent  information.  It is
     expressly understood that Slawson will make best efforts to insure that its
     AFEs  represent  actual  anticipated  costs.  Upon  receipt  of notice of a
     proposed well,  Fancher shall have 20 days within which to notify  Slawson,
     in writing,  of its election to  participate.  The failure of Fancher to so
     elect within the time specified  shall be deemed an election by Fancher not
     to  participate  in the proposed well. If Fancher elects not to participate
     in a proposed  well, or is deemed to have so elected,  it shall forfeit all
     of its interest in the leasehold, farmins, options, etc. covering the lands
     within the revenue  sharing unit for the proposed well.  Excepted from this
     forfeiture would be: a) any area then established as a revenue sharing unit
     for a producing well in which Fancher has previously participated,  or b) a
     well which is  drilling  or which has not spud,  but in which  Fancher  has
     committed to participate.

     Should  Fancher  elect to  participate  in a well,  it will be obligated to
     participate in the entire  proposed  operation to casing point. An election
     to  participate  will also  obligate  Fancher to acquire its  proportionate
     share  of all  interest  acquired  by  Slawson  in the well  through  lease
     acquisition,  farmin  acreage  and/or  non-consent  interest  (wherein  the
     non-consent  interest  is acquired  from a third  party,  unrelated  to the
     Slawson,  Fancher and the other  participants  in Fiji Prospect,  and where
     said  non-consent  interest is  required  to make up 100% of the  drillsite
     working interest available for Slawson,  Fancher and the other participants
     in Fiji Prospect). In order to be entitled to the benefits of this numbered
     paragraph,  Slawson  shall,  within 90 days from  expiration of the initial
     notice  period,  spud the proposed  well. The parties agree to make any and
     all assignments,  necessary to accomplish the above  provisions.  Except in
     the case of an expiring lease, farmout agreement,  farmout option agreement
     or similar  circumstance,  only one well proposal may be made every 20 days
     under the terms of this numbered  paragraph.  In all instances  within this
     numbered  paragraph,  the names Slawson and Fancher may be  interchanged so
     that  either  party may  propose  wells.  It is  recognized  that there are
     additional  working  interest owners in this project area that have ongoing
     working  interest  capabilities  in  each  proposed  well.  Further,  it is
     recognized  that said  additional  working  interest owners in this project
     area have the ability to propose wells as set forth herein.

8.   Fancher  shall pay a $2,500 spud fee to Slawson for each well drilled under
     the terms of this agreement, in which it participates.

9.   An Operating  Agreement in the form attached  hereto as Exhibit "3" will be
     executed  for each well  drilled  under the  terms of this  agreement.  The
     Contract  Area  for  each  Operating  Agreement  will be  comprised  of the
     designated  revenue  sharing unit for the well.  In the event of a conflict
     between the terms of this agreement and any such Operating  Agreement,  the
     terms of this agreement shall prevail.

10.  It is  understood  that the parties  hereto may be  required  to  negotiate
     operating  agreements  with third parties.  The parties agree that if there
     are any conflicts between the Operating  Agreement  attached hereto and any
     third  party  operating  agreement,  the terms of the  Operating  Agreement
     attached hereto shall control the relationship between Slawson and Fancher.

<PAGE>


Fiji Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 4
April 23, 1997


11.  An Escrow  Agreement  in the form  attached  hereto as Exhibit "4" shall be
     entered  into between  Slawson and Fancher for each well drilled  under the
     terms of this agreement.  Article 1 of the Escrow Agreement provides a date
     by which the  participants  in the well will  deposit  their funds into the
     Escrow   Account.   Such  date  will  be   established  by  Slawson  to  be
     approximately  10 days  prior to spud of each  well.  If  Fancher  fails to
     deposit its share of the  applicable  costs,  including its spud fee as set
     out in paragraph 8 of this agreement, by this date, it will be assumed that
     Fancher does not wish to  participate  in the well. In this event,  Slawson
     shall give  Fancher  notice that it has not  received its funds and Fancher
     will  either  deliver  such  funds  to  Slawson  by 1:00 PM MST on the next
     business  day or be  subject  to the  provisions  of  paragraph  7 of  this
     agreement, covering non participation.  Slawson shall be obligated to place
     funds  received  from all  participants  in the  same  escrow  account,  in
     pro-rata amounts based on their share of costs.

12.  Fancher's  representatives  shall have free  access to any well  within the
     Fiji  Prospect  in which it  participates  at all times and to all  records
     pertaining thereto. In addition, all geological information obtained in the
     drilling  of any  well,  in  which  Fancher  participates,  shall  be  made
     available.  Fancher may provide a list of its  geological  requirements  to
     Slawson, which shall be provided by Slawson, as reasonable.

13.  If Slawson  terminates  its legal  existence,  transfers  its interest to a
     successor and no longer owns an interest in the Fiji  Prospect,  or becomes
     insolvent or bankrupt,  or is placed in receivership,  it shall cease to be
     Operator  without any action by Fancher or  Slawson's  other  Non-Operating
     partners, except the selection of a successor. Slawson may be removed if it
     fails or refuses to carry out its duties  hereunder or is no longer capable
     of serving as Operator  by the  affirmative  vote of Fancher and  Slawson's
     other Non-Operating  partners owning a majority interest based on ownership
     in the Fiji Prospect,  after excluding the voting interest of Slawson. Such
     resignation or removal shall not become  effective  until 7:00 o'clock A.M.
     on the first day of the calendar month  following the expiration of 60 days
     after the giving of notice of  resignation by Slawson or action by the Non-
     Operators to remove Slawson,  unless a successor Operator has been selected
     and assumes the duties of Operator at an earlier date.  Slawson,  after the
     effective  date of  resignation  or  removal,  shall be bound by the  terms
     hereof  as  Non-Operator.  A change of a  corporate  name or  structure  of
     Slawson or  transfer of  Slawson's  interest  to any single  subsidiary  or
     parent corporation shall not be the basis for removal of Slawson.

     Upon the resignation or removal of Slawson,  a successor  Operator shall be
     selected  by  the   affirmative   vote  of  Fancher  and  Slawson's   other
     Non-Operating partners owning a majority interest based on the ownership in
     the Fiji  Prospect.  The  successor  Operator  shall be  selected  from the
     parties  owning an interest in the Fiji Prospect at the time such successor
     Operator is selected.  If Slawson is removed or is deemed to have resigned,
     fails to vote or votes only to succeed itself, the successor Operator shall
     be  selected  by the  affirmative  vote  of  Fancher  and  Slawson's  other
     Non-Operating partners in the Fiji Prospect owning a majority interest, and
     after excluding the voting interest of Slawson.

     This  provision  shall  also  apply to the  resignation  or  removal of any
     successor Operator.

<PAGE>


Fiji Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 5
April 23, 1997


14.  The parties hereto agree that all disputes  between them arising out of, or
     in connection  with,  this  Agreement  shall be resolved by  arbitration as
     provided  herein.  This agreement to arbitrate shall survive the rescission
     or  termination  of this  contract.  All  arbitration  shall  be  conducted
     pursuant to the Commercial  Arbitration  Rules of the American  Arbitration
     Association.   If  available,   the  panel  used  shall  be  selected  from
     arbitrators having at least 10 years of oil and gas experience and employed
     by the American Arbitration Association and the decision of the arbitrators
     shall be  final  and  binding  on all  parties.  All  arbitration  shall be
     undertaken pursuant to the Federal  Arbitration Act, where applicable,  and
     the  decision  of the  arbitrators  shall be  enforceable  in any  court of
     competent jurisdiction.

15.  Fancher  will have  full  access to all  seismic  data and  interpretations
     thereof, for which it shares the cost of acquisition.  If such data is ever
     sold,  Fancher  will be  entitled  to 25% of tile  proceeds  of such  sale.
     Fancher  will not trade the data or allow  third  parties  to review  same,
     without Slawson's express written consent.

16.  All  notices  required  herein  shall be  considered  given when  delivered
     personally or when sent by facsimile or deposited in the U.S. Mail properly
     addressed as follows:

     Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.        Fancher Oil Company
     1612 Broadway, Suite 1450                1801 Broadway, Suite 720
     Denver, CO 80202                         Denver, CO 80202
     FAX: (303) 592-8881                      FAX: (303) 296-2433

17.  The  liabilities  of  the  parties  shall  be  several  and  not  joint  or
     collective,  and each party shall be responsible  only for its share of the
     costs and liabilities incurred as provided herein. It is not the purpose or
     intention of this agreement to create any partnership,  mining  partnership
     or association,  and neither this agreement nor the operations herein shall
     be construed or considered as creating any such legal relationship.

18.  The terms and  covenants  hereof  shall  extend to, and be binding  on, the
     parties hereto, their heirs, successors, legal representatives and assigns;
     however, Fancher will not assign its interest in this agreement without the
     express written consent of Slawson.  Such consent shall not be unreasonably
     withheld.  This  agreement  sets forth the  entire  agreement  between  the
     parties  hereto,  and there are no oral  agreements  not set out  herein in
     writing.

If the foregoing terms correctly set forth our understanding, please execute and
return one copy of this agreement.

Very Truly Yours.


/s/ Bruce Branson
Bruce Branson
District Landman

AGREED TO AND ACCEPTED THIS 29th DAY OF April, 1997


FANCHER OIL COMPANY



By /s/ George H. Fancher Jr.
- ------------------------------------------
<PAGE>


                               FANCHER OIL COMPANY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Trinty Place - Suite 720 - 1801 Broadway - Denver,  Colorado  80202-3835 - (303)
296-6600 - Fax (303) 296-2433



Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.                     April 29, 1997
1625 Broadway
Suite 1450
Denver, Colorado 80202-4714

Attention:     Bruce Branson

        RE:    Fiji Prospect
               Participation Agreement/JOA
               Yolo County, California

Gentlemen,

Enclosed  please  find  one  copy of the  referenced  agreement  which  has been
executed on behalf of George H. Fancher, Jr. dba Fancher Oil Company, subject to
the following modifications:

     1.   All  references to Fancher Oil Company in said prospect  documents and
          agreements shall be amended to read George H. Fancher, Jr. dba Fancher
          Oil Company (Fancher).

     2.   Paragraph 3, page 2. Change the 15 day reimbursement on invoices to 30
          days.

     3.   Paragraph  4,  page 2. The time  period  under the AMI to  respond  to
          acquisitions notices will be amended to 20 days.

     4.   Paragraph 5, page 2. Rental invoices will be reimbursed within 30 days
          from receipt thereof.

     5.   Paragraph  6,  page 2.  Slawson  agrees  to  provide  Lease  Exhibits,
          spreadsheets   and/or  plats   showing  all  leasehold  and  leasehold
          acquisitions to Fancher upon request.  Should Fancher elect to receive
          assignments of all acquired  leasehold, Slawson will make a good faith
          effort to provide said assignments within 30 days.

     6.   Paragraph  7, page 3.  Fancher  will have 30 days from  receipt of any
          well proposal  within the AMI in which to elect to participate for his
          working interest share. In addition to the AFE and plat Slawson agrees
          to provide a geologic prognosis and a Drilling Title Opinion and/or an
          Abstract and Attorney's opinion for Fancher's review.

     7.   Paragraph 11, page 3. Slawson  agrees to provide the Escrow  Agreement
          referred to as Exhibit "4" approximately 30 days prior to spud of each
          well.

     8.   Paragraph  15, page 4.  Fancher  will receive a license to all seismic
          data acquired  under this  Agreement in which he shares in the cost of
          said acquisition.



<PAGE>

If these modifications arc acceptable to Slawson,  please so indicate by signing
both copies of this letter and returning one fully  executed copy to this office
for inclusion in our files.  If you have any questions  please contact me at the
letterhead number or Mike Fitzgerald at 863-4483 or 290-8683. Thank you for your
time and cooperation.

Yours Very Truly,


/s/ George H. Fancher Jr.
George H. Fancher Jr., dba
Fancher Oil Company


Agreed to and Accepted this 30th day of April, 1997.


Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.


/s/   J. Bruce Branson
- ------------------------------------------
      J. Bruce Branson
Title District Landman








<PAGE>


Slawson exploration company, inc.

Rocky Mountain Division
1625 Broadway, Suite 1450
Denver, Colorado 80202-4714
(303) 592-8880 - FAX (303) 592-8881

April 23, 1997

Fancher Oil Company
1801 B roadway, Suite 720
Denver, CO 80202

Attn:     Mr. George H. Fancher, Jr.

RE:       RM 96-004 Bali Prospect
          Participation Agreement
          Solano County, California

Gentlemen:

In this Participation  Agreement,  Slawson Exploration  Company,  Inc., a Kansas
Corporation d/b/a Donald C. Slawson Exploration  Company,  Inc. within the State
of  California,  shall  hereinafter  be referred to as "Slawson" and Fancher Oil
Company shall hereinafter be referred to as Fanchcr".

This Agreement will constitute our understanding regarding Fancher's purchase of
an interest in Slawson's  Bali  Prospect and the  formation of an Area of Mutual
Interest.

The terms of this agreement are as follows:

1.   Slawson is in the process of acquiring  leasehold within the Bali Prospect,
     the general  geographic area for which is set out on Exhibit "1 ", attached
     hereto and made a part hereof. Further,  Slawson anticipates collecting and
     processing  approximately  40  square  miles  of  3D  seismic  within  Bali
     Prospect.

2.   Fancher has agreed to  participate  with  Slawson for a  proportionate  25%
     share of leasehold acquisition and collection of 3D seismic data within the
     Bali  Prospect.  Maximum  cost for seismic  acquisition  is estimated to be
     $1,280,000.  Land costs are  estimated  to be within a range of $180,000 to
     $370,000,  depending upon the amount of acreage  eventually  leased and the
     price per acre,  Fancher is responsible for spending its  proportionate 25%
     share of such  amounts  under the terms of this  agreement,  assuming  such
     costs are incurred within 12 months from the date hereof. If either or both
     of  such  amounts  an  exceeded,  Fancher  may  participate  in  additional
     expenditures  on a  selected  basis,  under  the  terms of this  agreement.
     Fancher  agrees to be bound by the terms and  provisions  of  leasehold  in
     which it  participates.  Slawson shall be responsible for the remaining 75%
     of such, obligations and shall hold Fancher harmless therefrom.

3.   Fancher will reimburse  Slawson for all leasehold and geophysical  costs on
     the basis.  of cost plus 35%, so that  Fancher's  share of actual  costs is
     33.75%.  Slawson is currently in the process of acquiring  leasehold in the
     Bali Prospect  area.  Simultaneous  with the  execution of this  agreement,
     Fancher  will  reimburse  Slawson the sum of  $38,812.50  which  represents
     leasehold and brokerage costs incurred or anticipated  through April, 1997,
     Reimbursement for remaining costs, or estimates of such costs, which may be




<PAGE>

Bali Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 2
April 25, 1997

     made from time to time,  will be made to Slawson by Fancher  within 30 days
     from receipt of an invoice.  Slawson agrees to pay the remaining  66.25% of
     costs or to find other participants to pay such costs.

4.   An Area of Mutual  Interest  ("AMI") is hereby  established  consisting  of
     lands lying within  Townships 7 and 8 North,  Range 2 East,  Solano County,
     California. The AMI will be comprised of all lands located within the final
     outline of the 3D seismic survey that is being conducted under the terms of
     this agreement. When available, an outline of the survey, and thus the AMI,
     will be attached  hereto as.  Exhibit "2".  This* AM shall remain in effect
     for  the  term  of any oil and gas  leases  which  become  subject  to this
     agreement,  whether  by  acquisition,   extension  or  renewal.  and  shall
     thereafter  terminate  unless  production is  established on any portion of
     said lands through this agreement, and shall then continue so long as there
     is  production.  Fancher  shall be obligated  to acquire its  proportionate
     share of all leasehold  acquired by Slawson  within the AMI up to a maximum
     gross (unpromoted) expenditure of $370,000. If this amount is exceeded, and
     if  additional  expenditure's  are incurred for  acquisition,  Slawson will
     promptly notify Fancher in writing of such acquisition, describing same and
     the cost thereof. Fanchcr will have 20 days from receipt of such notice to.
     elect whether or not to  participate  for its  proportionate  share of such
     acquisition,  insofar  only as same covers  lands in the subject  AMI.  The
     failure of Fancher to reply  positively  within the 20 day time period will
     be deemed an election not to participate in the acquisition.  Fancher shall
     not acquire any interest  within this AMI except  through  this  agreement,
     while in effect, without the express written consent of Slawson.

5.   Slawson shall be responsible for payment of all delay rentals,  minimum and
     shut-in  royalties,  as well as any other  payments  required  to  maintain
     leases in full force and effect. Slawson shall not be liable for failure to
     properly  make such  payments,  in the  absence of gross  negligence.  Upon
     receipt of an invoice, Fancher shall, within 30 days, reimburse Slawson for
     its proportionate share of such payments, or, at Fancher's election, notify
     Slawson  that it no longer  desires to hold an interest  in the  applicable
     lease(s),  in  which  case  Fancher's  interest  shall be  relinquished  to
     Slawson..

6.   Slawson will retain Fancher's  proportionate share of title to all acquired
     leasehold and/or farmin agreements beneficially for Fancher until such time
     as a well is drilled and  completed and a pooling  agreement,  if required,
     has been filed.  Slawson will then deliver an  assignment to Fancher of its
     proportional share of leasehold in the revenue sharing unit or acreage held
     by the well's production, on a well-by-well basis, subject to obtaining any
     required  consent to assign under the provisions of the lease and/or farmin
     agreements.  If such consent to assign cannot be readily obtained,  Slawson
     shall hold title to the leasehold and  agreements on behalf of Fancher.  If
     such consent is obtained,  Slawson will promptly make assignment  under the
     terms of this  paragraph,  The intent of this  paragraph  is for Slawson to
     hold title  beneficially  for Fancher in order to avoid the  administrative
     time and expense involved in making assignments;  however,  notwithstanding
     the  provisions  of this  paragraph,  Fancher  may demand  assignment  from
     Slawson of all  leasehold to which it holds an interest  under the terms of
     this agreement. If such a request is made, Slawson will make all reasonable
     efforts  to  provide  the  assignment  in a timely  manner,  subject to the
     provisions of this  agreement  All  leasehold  acquired by any method under
     this  agreement  (whether  by  Slawson  or  Fancher)  will be  subject to a
     proportionately  reduced  3.50% of 8/8ths  overriding  royalty  interest in
     favor of Slawson.

7.   It is anticipated that Slawson will propose wells to be drilled within this
     AMI on an ongoing  basis.  At the time of  proposal.  Slawson  will provide
     Fancher  with  written  notice of its intended  operation,  specifying  the
     location of the well, estimated spud date, the depth and formation(s) to be
     drilled, and an Authorization For Expenditure ("AFE") setting out estimated
     dry hole and completion posts, and any other pertinent  information.  It is



<PAGE>


Bali Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 3
April 23, 1997


     expressly understood that Slawson will make best efforts to insure that its
     AFEs;  present  actual  anticipated  costs,  Upon  receipt  of  notice of a
     proposed well,  Fancher shall have 30 days within which to notify  Slawson,
     in writing,  of its election to  participate.  The failure of Fancher to so
     elect within the time specified  shall be deemed an election by Fancher not
     to  participate  in the proposed well. If Fancher elects not to participate
     in a proposed  well, or is deemed to have so elected,  it shall forfeit all
     of its interest in the leasehold, farmins, options, etc. covering the lands
     within the revenue  sharing unit for the proposed well.  Excepted from this
     forfeiture.  would be: a) any area then  established  as a revenue  sharing
     unit for a producing well in which Fancher has previously participated,  or
     b) a well which is drilling or which has not spud, but in which Fancher has
     committed to participate.

     Should  Fancher  elect to  participate  in a well,  it will be obligated to
     participate in the entire proposed  operation to casing point.. An election
     to participate will also obligate Fancher to acquire its proportionate sham
     of all interest acquired by Slawson in the well. through lease acquisition,
     farmin  acreage  and/or  non-consent   interest  (wherein  the  non-consent
     interest is acquired from a third party, unrelated to the Slawson,  Fancher
     and the other  participants  in Bali Prospect,  and where said  non-consent
     interest  is  required to make up 100% of the  drillsite  working  interest
     available  for  Slawson,  Fancher  and.  the  other  participants  in  Bali
     Prospect).  In  order  to be  entitled  to the  benefits  of this  numbered
     paragraph,  Slawson  shall,  within 90 days from  expiration of the initial
     notice  period,  spud the proposed  well. The parties agree to make any and
     all assignments necessary to accomplish the above provisions. Except in the
     case of an expiring lease,  farmout  agreemen,  farmout option agreement or
     similar  circumstance,  only one well  proposal  may be made  every 20 days
     under the terms of this numbered  paragraph.  In all instances  within this
     numbered  paragraph,  the names Slawson and Fancher may be  interchanged so
     that  either  party may  propose  wells.  It is  recognized  that there are
     additional  working  interest owners in this project area that have ongoing
     working  interest  capabilities  in  each  proposed  well.  Further,  it is
     recognized  that said  additional  working  interest owners in this project
     area have the ability to propose wells as set forth herein.

8.   Fancher  shall pay a $2,500 spud fee to Slawson for each well drilled under
     the terms of this agreement, in which it participates.

9.   An Operating  Agreement in the form attached  hereto as Exhibit "3" will be
     executed  for each well  drilled  under the  terms of this  agreement.  The
     Contract  Area  for  each  Operating  Agreement  will be  comprised  of the
     designated  revenue  sharing  unit for the well.  In the event o a conflict
     between the terms of this agreement and any such Operating  Agreement,  the
     terms of this agreement shall prevail.

10.  It is  understood  that the parties  hereto may be  required  to  negociate
     operating  agreements  with third parties.  The parties agree that if there
     are any conflicts between the Operating  Agreement  attached hereto and any
     third  party  operating  agreement,  the terms of the  Operating  Agreement
     attached hereto shall control the relationship between Slawson and Fancher.

11.  An Escrow  Agreement  in the form  attached  hereto as Exhibit "4" shall be
     entered  into between  Slawson and Fancher for each well drilled  under the
     terms of this agreement.  Article 1 of the Escrow Agreement provides a date
     by which the  participants  in the well will  deposit  their funds into the
     Escrow   Account.   Such  date  will  be   established  by  Slawson  to  be
     approximately  30 days  prior to spud of each  well.  If  Fancher  fails to



<PAGE>


Bali Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 4
April 23, 1997


     deposit its share of the  applicable  costs,  including its spud fee as set
     out in paragraph 8 of this agreement, by this date, it will be assumed that
     Fancher does not wish to  participate  in the well. In this event,  Slawson
     shall give  Fancher  notice that it has not  received its funds and Fancher
     will  either  deliver  such  funds  to  Slawson  by 1:00 PM MST on the next
     business  day or be  subject  to the  provisions  of  paragraph  7 of  this
     agreement, covering non participation.  Slawson shall be obligated to place
     funds  received  from all  participants  in the  same  escrow  account,  in
     pro-rata amounts based on their share of costs.

12.  Fancher's  representatives  shall have free  access to any well  within the
     Bali  Prospect  in which it  participates  at all times and to all  records
     pertaining thereto. In addition, all geological information obtained in the
     drilling  of any  well,  in  which  Fancher  participates,  shall  be  made
     available.  Fancher may provide a list of its  geological  requirements  to
     Slawson, which shall be provided by Slawson, as reasonable.

13.  If Slawson  terminates  its legal  existence,  transfers  its interest to a
     successor and no longer owns an interest in the Bali  Prospect,  or becomes
     insolvent or bankrupt,  or is placed in receivership,  it shall cease to be
     Operator  without any action by Fancher or  Slawson's  other  Non-Operating
     partners, except the selection of a successor. Slawson may be removed if it
     fails or refuses to carry out its duties  hereunder or is no longer capable
     of serving as Operator  by the  affirmative  vote of Fancher and  Slawson's
     other Non-Operating  Partners owning a majority interest based on ownership
     in the Bali Prospect,  after excluding the voting interest of Slawson. Such
     resignation or removal shall not become  effective  until 7:00 o'clock A.M.
     on the first day of the calendar month  following the expiration of 60 days
     after  the  giving of notice of  resignation  by  Slawson  or action by the
     Non-Operators  to remove  Slawson,  unless a  successor  Operator  has been
     selected  and assumes the duties of Operator at an earlier  date.  Slawson,
     after the effective date of  resignation or removal,  shall be bound by the
     term hereof as  Non-Operator.  A change of a corporate name or structure of
     Slawson or  transfer of  Slawson's  interest  to any single  subsidiary  or
     parent corporation shall not be the basis for removal of Slawson.

     Upon the resignation or removal of Slawson,  a successor  Operator shall be
     selected by the affirmative to of Fancher and Slawson's other Non-Operating
     partners  owning a majority  interest  based on the  ownership  in the Bali
     Prospect.  The successor Operator shall be selected from the parties owning
     an interest in the Bali  Prospect  at the time such  successor  Operator is
     selected,  If Slawson is  removed or is deemed to have  resigned,  fails to
     vote or votes only to  succeed  itself,  the  successor  Operator  shall be
     selected  by  the   affirmative   vote  of  Fancher  and  Slawson's   other
     Non-Operating partners in the Bali Prospect owning a majority interest, and
     after excluding the voting interest of Slawson.

     This  provision  shall  also  apply to the  resignation  or  removal of any
     successor Operator.

14.  The parties hereto agree that all disputes  between them arising out of, or
     in connection  with,  this  Agreement  shall be resolved by  arbitration as
     provided herein. This agreement to arbitrate shall survive the recission or
     termination of this contract.  All arbitration shall be conducted  pursuant
     to  the   Commercial   Arbitration   Rules  of  the  American   Arbitration
     Association.   If  available,   the  panel  used  shall  be  selected  from
     arbitrators having at least 10 years of oil and gas experience and employed



<PAGE>


Bali Participation Agreement
Fancher Oil Company
Page 5
April 23, 1997


     by the American Arbitration Association and the decision of the arbitrators
     shall be  final  and  binding  on all  parties.  All  arbitration  shall be
     undertaken pursuant to the Federal  Arbitration Act, where applicable,  and
     the  decision  of the  arbitrators  shall be  enforceable  in any  court of
     competent jurisdiction.

15.  Fancher  will have  full  access to all  seismic  data and  interpretations
     thereof, for which it shares the cost of acquisition.  If such data is ever
     sold, Fancher will be entitled to 25% of the proceeds of such sale. Fancher
     will not trade the data or allow  third  parties  to review  same,  without
     Slawson's express written consent.

16.  All  notices  required  herein  shall be  considered  given when  delivered
     personally or when sent by facsimile or deposited in the U.S. Mail properly
     addressed as follows:

     Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.         Fancher Oil Company
     1612 Broadway, Suite 1450                 1801 Broadway, Suite 720
     Denver, CO 80202                          Denver, CO 80202
     FAX: (303) 592-8881                       FAX, (303) 296-2433

17.  The  liabilities  of  the  parties  shall  be  several  and  not  joint  or
     collective,  and each party shall be responsible  only for its share of the
     costs and liabilities incurred as provided herein. It is not the purpose or
     intention of this agreement to create any partnership,  mining  partnership
     or association,  and neither this agreement nor the operations herein shall
     be construed or considered as creating any such legal relationship.

18.  The terms and  covenants  hereof  shall  extend to, and be binding  on, the
     parties hereto, their heirs, successors, legal representatives and assigns;
     however, Fancher will not assign its interest in this agreement without the
     express written consent of Slawson.  Such consent shall not be unreasonably
     withheld.  This  agreement  sets forth the entire  agreement  between  the,
     parties  hereto,  and there are no oral  agreements  not set out  herein in
     writing.

If the foregoing terms correctly set forth our understanding, please execute and
return one copy of this agreement.

Very Truly Yours,


/s/ Bruce Branson
Bruce Branson
District Landman

AGREED TO AND ACCEPTED THIS 29TH DAY OF APRIL, 1997


FANCHER OIL COMPANY



By /s/ George H. Fancher Jr.
   ----------------------------------



<PAGE>


                               FANCHER OIL COMPANY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Trinty Place - Suite 720 - 1801 Broadway - Denver,  Colorado  80202-3835 - (303)
296-6600 - Fax (303) 296-2433


Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.                   April 29, 1997
1625 Broadway
Suite 1450
Denver, Colorado 80202-4714

Attention:     Bruce Branson

          RE:  Bali Prospect
               Participation Agreement/JOA
               Solana County, California

Gentlemen,

Enclosed  please  find  one  copy of the  referenced  agreement  which  has been
executed on behalf of George H. Fancher, Jr. dba Fancher Oil Company, subject to
the following modifications.

     1.   All  references to Fancher Oil Company in said prospect  documents and
          agreements shall be amended to read George H. Fancher, Jr. dba Fancher
          Oil Company (Fancher).

     2.   Paragraph 3, page 2. Change the 15 day reimbursement on invoices to 30
          days.

     3.   Paragraph  4,  page 2. The time  period  under the AMI to  respond  to
          acquisitions notices will be amended to 20 days.

     4.   Paragraph 5, page 2. Rental invoices will be reimbursed within 30 days
          from receipt thereof.

     5.   Paragraph  6,  page 2,  Slawson  agrees  to  provide  Lease  Exhibits,
          spreadsheets   and/or  plats   showing  all  leasehold  and  leasehold
          acquisitions to Fancher upon request.  Should Fancher elect to receive
          assignments of all acquired leasehold,  Slawson will make a good faith
          effort to provide said assignments within 30 days.

     6.   Paragraph  7, page 3.  Fancher  will have 30 days from  receipt of any
          well proposal  within the AMI in which to elect to participate for his
          working interest share. in addition to the AFE and plat Slawson agrees
          to provide a geologic  prognosis and a Drilling.  Title Opinion and/or
          an Abstract and Attorney's opinion for Fancher's review.

     7.   Paragraph 11, page 3. Slawson  agrees to provide the Escrow  Agreement
          referred to as Exhibit "4" approximately 30 days prior to spud of each
          well.

     8.   Paragraph  15, page 4.  Fancher  will receive a license to all seismic
          data acquired  under this  Agreement in which he shares in the cost of
          said acquisition.



<PAGE>



If these modifications arc acceptable to Slawson,  please so indicate by signing
both copies of this letter and returning one fully  executed copy to this office
for inclusion in our files.  If you have any questions  please contact me at the
letterhead number or Mike Fitzgerald at 863-4483 or 290-8683. Thank you for your
time and cooperation.

Yours Very Truly,


/s/ George H. Fancher Jr.
George H. Fancher Jr., dba
Fancher Oil Company


Agreed to and Accepted this 30th day of April, 1997.


Slawson Exploration Company, Inc.


/s/   J. Bruce Branson
- ------------------------------------------
      J. Bruce Branson
Title District Landman






                               AGREEMENT FOR RENT

     THIS  AGREEMENT,  is  effective  November  1, 1997 and is  between  Arizona
Corporate  Management,  Inc.  ("Landlord") and Fan Energy Inc. (formerly Eastern
Star Holdings, Inc.)("Tenant").

     1. Rent of Office Space.  Landlord agrees to rent to Tenant office space on
a shared,  nonexclusive  basis at Landlord's  premises at 14555 North Scottsdale
Road, No. 200, Scottsdale, Arizona 85254. Tenant shall be entitled to reasonable
use of Landlord's office  facilities,  including file storage,  office space and
secretarial services as required.  In addition,  Tenant shall be entitled to use
Landlord's office equipment,  including fax machine,  copy machine,  proprietary
telephone  equipment and any other office equipment which Landlord has available
in the premises.

     2.  Term.  This  Agreement  shall be on a  month-to-month  basis and may be
terminated  by Tenant  upon 30 days  prior  notice to  Landlord.  Landlord  must
furnish  Tenant with at least three months  prior notice if Landlord  intends to
terminate  this  Agreement  and Tenant  shall be entitled to continue to use the
premises following receipt of notice until termination.

     3. Obligation to Pay Rent.  Tenant shall pay to Landlord,  as rent, a total
of  $2,000  monthly,  payable  at the  beginning  of each  month.  Tenant  shall
reimburse  Landlord  for  any  long  distance  telephone  expenses,  or  similar
out-of-pocket  expenses  incurred  by  Landlord  on behalf of the  Tenant.  Such
reimbursement shall be paid monthly, as charged to Tenant by Landlord.

     4. Access to Premises. While this Agreement is in effect, Tenant shall have
reasonable  access to the premises and may make reasonable use thereof,  subject
to the right of Landlord and any other  tenant  similar to the Tenant to use the
premises.  Tenant shall be subject to reasonable rules and practices established
Landlord from time to time regarding use of the premises.

                                    LANDLORD:

                                    ARIZONA CORPORATE MANAGEMENT, INC.


                                    By /s/ William E. Grafham
                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Authorized Officer

                                    TENANT:

                                    FAN ENERGY INC.


                                    By /s/ Albert A. Golusin
                                      ------------------------------------------
                                      Authorized Officer

                           EASTERN STAR HOLDINGS, INC.
                         1997 INCENTIVE AND NONSTATUTORY
                                STOCK OPTION PLAN

     1. Purpose of Plan.  The purpose of this 1997  Incentive  and  Nonstatutory
Stock  Option Plan are to attract and retain the best  available  personnel  for
positions of substantial responsibility,  to provide additional incentive to the
Employees,  Directors  and  Consultants  of Eastern  Star  Holdings,  Inc.  (the
"Company") and to promote the success of the Company's business. Options granted
hereunder may be either  "incentive stock options," as defined in Section 422 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended,  or "nonstatutory stock options,"
at the  discretion  of the Board and as  reflected  in the terms of the  written
stock option agreement.

     2. Definitions. As used herein, the following definitions shall apply:

          (a) "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company,  or if a
     Committee is appointed, "Board" shall refer to the Committee if the context
     so requires.

          (b) "Code" shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

          (c) "Common Stock" shall mean the common stock of the Company.

          (d)  "Company"  shall  mean  Eastern  Star  Holdings,  Inc.,  a Nevada
     corporation.

          (e)  "Committee"  shall mean the  Committee  appointed by the Board of
     Directors in accordance with paragraph (a) of Section 4 of the Plan, if one
     is appointed, or the Board if no committee is appointed.

          (f)  "Consultant"  shall mean any person who is engaged by the Company
     or any Subsidiary to render consulting services and is compensated for such
     consulting services.

          (g)  "Continuous  Status as an Employee" shall mean the absence of any
     interruption or termination of service as an Employee. Continuous Status as
     an Employee shall not be considered  interrupted in the case of sick leave,
     military  leave,  or any other  leave of  absence  approved  by the  Board;
     provided  that  such  leave  is for a period  of not  more  than 90 days or
     reemployment upon the expiration of such leave is guaranteed by contract or
     statute.

          (h)  "Employee"  shall  mean  any  person,   including   officers  and
     directors,  employed  by the  Company  or any Parent or  Subsidiary  of the
     Company.

          (i) "Incentive Stock Option" shall mean an Option which is intended to
     qualify as an incentive  stock option  within the meaning of Section 422 of
     the Code and which shall be clearly identified as such in the written Stock
     Option  Agreement  provided  by the  Company  to each  Optionee  granted an
     Incentive Stock Option under the Plan.

          (j) "Non-Employee Director" shall mean a director who:

               (i) Is not  currently an officer (as defined in Section  16a-1(f)
          of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended) of the Company or
          a Parent or Subsidiary of the Company, or otherwise currently employed
          by the Company or a Parent or Subsidiary of the Company;

               (ii)  Does  not   receive   compensation,   either   directly  or
          indirectly, from the Company or a Parent or Subsidiary of the Company,
          for services rendered as a Consultant or in any capacity other than as
          a  director,  except  for an amount  that does not  exceed  the dollar
          amount for which disclosure would be required  pursuant to Item 404(a)
          of Regulation S-K adopted by the United States Securities and Exchange
          Commission; and


<PAGE>

               (iii) Does not possess an interest in any other  transaction  for
          which  disclosure  would  be  required  pursuant  to  Item  404(a)  of
          Regulation  S-K adopted by the United States  Securities  and Exchange
          Commission.

          (k)  "Nonstatutory  Stock Option"  shall mean an Option  granted under
     this Plan which does not  qualify as an  Incentive  Stock  Option and which
     shall be clearly  identified as such in the written Stock Option  Agreement
     provided  by the  Company to each  Optionee  granted a  Nonstatutory  Stock
     Option under this Plan. To the extent that the aggregate  fair market value
     of Optioned Stock to which Incentive Stock Options granted under Options to
     an Employee are  exercisable  for the first time during any  calendar  year
     (under the Plan and all plans of the  Company or any Parent or  Subsidiary)
     exceeds  $100,000,  such  Options  shall be treated as  Nonstatutory  Stock
     Options  under the Plan.  The  aggregate  fair market value of the Optioned
     Stock  shall be  determined  as of the date of grant of each Option and the
     determination  of  which  Incentive  Stock  Options  shall  be  treated  as
     qualified  incentive  stock options under Section 422 of the Code and which
     Incentive Stock Options exercisable for the first time in a particular year
     in excess of the $100,000 limitation shall be treated as Nonstatutory Stock
     Options shall be  determined  based on the order in which such Options were
     granted in accordance with Section 422(d) of the Code.

          (l) "Option"  shall mean an Incentive  Stock  Option,  a  Nonstatutory
     Stock Option or both as  identified  in a written  Stock  Option  Agreement
     representing such stock option granted pursuant to the Plan.

          (m) "Optioned Stock" shall mean the Common Stock subject to an Option.

          (n)  "Optionee"  shall mean an Employee or other person who is granted
     an Option.

          (o)  "Parent"  shall  mean  a  "parent  corporation,"  whether  now or
     hereafter existing, as defined in Section 424(e) of the Code.

          (p)  "Plan"  shall mean this 1997  Incentive  and  Nonstatutory  Stock
     Option Plan.

          (q) "Share" shall mean a share of the Common Stock of the Company,  as
     adjusted in accordance with Section 11 of the Plan.

          (r) "Stock  Option  Agreement"  shall mean the agreement to be entered
     into between the Company and each Optionee  which shall set forth the terms
     and  conditions  of each Option  granted to each  Optionee,  including  the
     number of Shares  underlying  such  Option and the  exercise  price of each
     Option granted to such Optionee under such agreement.

          (s) "Subsidiary" shall mean a "subsidiary corporation," whether now or
     hereafter existing, as defined in Section 424(f) of the Code.

     3. Stock  Subject to the Plan.  Subject to the  provisions of Section 11 of
the Plan, the maximum  aggregate number of Shares which may be optioned and sold
under  the  Plan  is  1,000,000  shares  of  Common  Stock.  The  Shares  may be
authorized, but unissued, or reacquired Common Stock. If an Option should expire
or become  unexercisable  for any reason  without having been exercised in full,
the unpurchased  Shares which were subject thereto shall,  unless the Plan shall
have been terminated, become available for future grant under the Plan.

     4. Administration of the Plan.

          (a)  Procedure.  The Plan  shall  be  administered  by the  Board or a
     Committee  appointed by the Board  consisting  of two or more  Non-Employee
     Directors to  administer  the Plan on behalf of the Board,  subject to such
     terms and conditions as the Board may prescribe. If the Company has a class
     of its equity  securities  registered under the Securities  Exchange Act of
     1934, as amended ("1934 Act"), the Board shall appoint such a Committee.


                                       2
<PAGE>

               (i) Once  appointed,  the Committee shall continue to serve until
          otherwise  directed by the Board (which for purposes of this paragraph
          (a)(i)  of this  Section  4 shall  be the  Board of  Directors  of the
          Company).  From time to time the Board  may  increase  the size of the
          Committee and appoint additional members thereof, remove members (with
          or without  cause) and appoint new members in  substitution  therefor,
          fill vacancies  however caused, or remove all members of the Committee
          and thereafter directly administer the Plan.

               (ii) Members of the Board who are granted,  or have been granted,
          Options may vote on any matters  affecting the  administration  of the
          Plan or the grant of any Options pursuant to the Plan.

          (b) Powers of the Board.  Subject to the  provisions of the Plan,  the
     Board (or the  Committee,  subject to the approval of the Board) shall have
     the authority, in its discretion:

               (i) To grant Incentive Stock Options,  in accordance with Section
          422 of the Code,  and  Nonstatutory  Stock Options or both as provided
          and  identified in a separate  written Stock Option  Agreement to each
          Optionee  granted  such  Option or  Options  under the Plan;  provided
          however,  that in no  event  shall an  Incentive  Stock  Option  and a
          Nonstatutory Stock Option granted to any Optionee under a single Stock
          Option  Agreement be subject to a "tandem"  exercise  arrangement such
          that the exercise of one such Option affects the  Optionee's  right to
          exercise the other Option granted under such Stock Option Agreement;

               (ii) To  determine,  upon review of relevant  information  and in
          accordance with Section 8(b) of the Plan, the fair market value of the
          Common Stock;

               (iii) To determine the exercise  price per Share of Options to be
          granted,  which exercise price shall be determined in accordance  with
          Section 8(a) of the Plan;

               (iv) To determine the Employees or other persons to whom, and the
          time or times at which,  Options  shall be  granted  and the number of
          Shares to be represented by each Option;

               (v) To interpret the Plan;

               (vi) To  prescribe,  amend  and  rescind  rules  and  regulations
          relating to the Plan;

               (vii) To  determine  the  terms  and  provisions  of each  Option
          granted  (which need not be  identical)  and,  with the consent of the
          holder thereof, modify or amend each Option;

               (viii) To  accelerate or defer (with the consent of the Optionee)
          the exercise  date of any Option,  consistent  with the  provisions of
          Section 7 of the Plan;

               (ix) To authorize  any person to execute on behalf of the Company
          any  instrument   required  to  effectuate  the  grant  of  an  Option
          previously granted by the Board; and

               (x)  To  make  all  other  determinations   deemed  necessary  or
          advisable for the administration of the Plan.

               (xi) To determine whether a holder of Nonstatutory  Stock Options
          granted  under  this Plan  shall  have  engaged  in  conduct  which is
          contrary to the best  interests of the Company and whose  Nonstatutory
          Stock  Option is  therefore  subject to  cancellation  as set forth in
          Section 7.

                                       3
<PAGE>


          (c) Effect of Board's  Decision.  All  decisions,  determinations  and
     interpretations  of the Board shall be final and  binding on all  Optionees
     and any other permissible holders of any Options granted under the Plan.

     5. Eligibility.

          (a) Persons Eligible. Options may be granted to any person selected by
     the Board.  Incentive  Stock Options may be granted only to  Employees.  An
     Employee,  who  is  also  a  director  of  the  Company,  its  Parent  or a
     Subsidiary, shall be treated as an Employee for purposes of this Section 5.
     An  Employee or other  person who has been  granted an Option may, if he is
     otherwise eligible, at the discretion of the Committee,  if a Committee has
     been appointed, or the Board, be granted an additional Option or Options.

          (b) No Effect on  Relationship.  The Plan  shall not  confer  upon any
     Optionee  any right with respect to  continuation  of  employment  or other
     relationship  with the Company nor shall it  interfere  in any way with his
     right  or  the  Company's  right  to  terminate  his  employment  or  other
     relationship at any time.

     6. Term of Plan.  The Plan became  effective on the date first approved and
adopted by the Board of  Directors,  as set forth on the last page of this Plan.
It shall  continue  in effect  for 10 years from the date of such  approval  and
adoption, unless sooner terminated under Section 13 of the Plan.

     7. Term of Option.  The term of each Option shall be 10 years from the date
of grant  thereof or such  shorter  term as may be provided in the Stock  Option
Agreement.  However,  in the case of an  Incentive  Stock  Option  granted to an
Optionee who, at the time the Option is granted,  owns stock  representing  more
than 10% of the  total  combined  voting  power of all  classes  of stock of the
Company or any Parent or Subsidiary,  the term of the Option shall be five years
from the date of grant  thereof or such  shorter  time as may be provided in the
Stock Option Agreement.

     The  Nonstatutory  Stock Options  granted to, and held by, any person under
this Plan, may be deemed  canceled and forfeited by the Board,  if the Board, in
its  sole  discretion,  determines  that  the  conduct  of the  holder  of  such
Nonstatutory Stock Option has been contrary to the best interests of the Company
and could reasonably be deemed by the Board to have a material adverse effect on
the Company or the business of the Company.

     8. Exercise Price and Consideration.

          (a) Exercise Price.  The per Share exercise price for the Shares to be
     issued  pursuant to  exercise  of an Option  shall be no less than the fair
     market  value  of  Shares  of  common  stock as of the date of grant of the
     option or such higher price as may be determined by the Board,  but the per
     Share  exercise  price under an Incentive  Stock Option shall be subject to
     the following:

               (i) If granted to an  Employee  who,  at the time of the grant of
          such Incentive Stock Option,  owns stock representing more than 10% of
          the voting  power of all classes of stock of the Company or any Parent
          or  Subsidiary,  the per Share  exercise  price shall not be less than
          110% of the fair market value per Share on the date of grant.

               (ii) If granted  to any other  Employee,  the per Share  exercise
          price shall not be less than 100% of the fair  market  value per Share
          on the date of grant.

          (b)  Determination  of Fair Market  Value.  The fair market  value per
     Share on the date of grant shall be determined as follows:


                                       4
<PAGE>

               (i) If the Common Stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange,
          the  American  Stock  Exchange  or  such  other  securities   exchange
          designated by the Board, or admitted to unlisted trading privileges on
          any such  exchange,  or if the  Common  Stock is quoted on a  National
          Association of Securities  Dealers,  Inc.  system that reports closing
          prices, the fair market value shall be the closing price of the Common
          Stock as  reported  by such  exchange  or  system  on the day the fair
          market value is to be determined,  or if no such price is reported for
          such day, then the  determination of such closing price shall be as of
          the last  immediately  preceding  day on which the closing price is so
          reported;

               (ii) If the Common Stock is not so listed or admitted to unlisted
          trading  privileges  or so quoted,  the fair market value shall be the
          average of the last  reported  highest bid and the lowest asked prices
          quoted  on  the  National  Association  of  Securities  Dealers,  Inc.
          Automated Quotations System or, if not so quoted, then by the National
          Quotation Bureau, Inc. on the day the fair market value is determined;
          or

               (iii)  If the  Common  Stock  is not so  listed  or  admitted  to
          unlisted trading privileges or so quoted, and bid and asked prices are
          not  reported,  the fair  market  value  shall be  determined  in such
          reasonable manner as may be prescribed by the Board.

          (c) Consideration and Method of Payment.  The consideration to be paid
     for the  Shares to be issued  upon  exercise  of an Option,  including  the
     method  of  payment,  shall be  determined  by the  Board  and may  consist
     entirely of cash, check,  other shares of Common Stock having a fair market
     value on the date of exercise equal to the aggregate  exercise price of the
     Shares as to which said Option shall be exercised,  or any  combination  of
     such methods of payment,  or such other consideration and method of payment
     for the  issuance  of  Shares to the  extent  permitted  under  the  Nevada
     Business Corporation Act.

     9. Exercise of Option.

          (a)  Procedure  for  Exercise:  Rights as a  Shareholder.  Any  Option
     granted  hereunder  shall be  exercisable  at such  times  and  under  such
     conditions as determined by the Board,  including performance criteria with
     respect to the Company  and/or the  Optionee,  and as shall be  permissible
     under the terms of the Plan.

          In the sole  discretion  of the Board,  at the time of the grant of an
     Option or  subsequent  thereto but prior to the  exercise of an Option,  an
     Optionee  may be  provided  with  the  right  to  exchange,  in a  cashless
     transaction,  all or part of the Option for Common  Stock of the Company on
     terms and conditions determined by the Board.

          An Option may not be exercised for a fraction of a Share.

          An Option shall be deemed to be exercised  when written notice of such
     exercise has been given to the Company in accordance  with the terms of the
     Option by the person  entitled to exercise  the Option and full payment for
     the Shares with respect to which the Option is exercised  has been received
     by the Company.  Full payment, as authorized by the Board, may consist of a
     consideration  and method of payment  allowable under Section 8(c) and this
     Section  9(a)  of  the  Plan.  Until  the  issuance  (as  evidenced  by the
     appropriate  entry on the books of the  Company  or of the duly  authorized
     transfer  agent of the Company) of the stock  certificate  evidencing  such
     Shares,  no right to vote or  receive  dividends  or any other  rights as a
     shareholder shall exist with respect to the Optioned Stock, notwithstanding
     the exercise of the Option.  No  adjustment  will be made for a dividend or
     other  right  for  which  the  record  date is prior to the date the  stock
     certificate is issued, except as provided in Section 11 of the Plan.


                                        5
<PAGE>

          Exercise of an Option in any manner  shall result in a decrease in the
     number of Shares which  thereafter  may be available,  both for purposes of
     the Plan and for exercise  under the Option,  by the number of Shares as to
     which the Option is exercised.

          (b) Termination of Status as an Employee.  In the case of an Incentive
     Stock Option,  if any Employee ceases to serve as an Employee,  he may, but
     only within such period of time not exceeding three months as is determined
     by the Board at the time of grant of the  Option,  after the date he ceases
     to be an Employee of the Company, exercise his Option to the extent that he
     was entitled to exercise the Option at the date of such termination. To the
     extent that he was not  entitled to exercise the Option at the date of such
     termination,  or if he does not exercise any portion of the Option which he
     was  entitled  to  exercise  at the  date of  termination  within  the time
     specified herein, the Option shall terminate.

          (c) Disability of Optionee.  In the case of an Incentive Stock Option,
     notwithstanding  the  provisions  of Section  9(b)  above,  in the event an
     Employee is unable to continue his employment  with the Company as a result
     of his total and permanent  disability  (as defined in Section  22(e)(3) of
     the Code),  he may,  but only within such period of time not  exceeding  12
     months as is  determined  by the  Board at the time of grant of the  Option
     from the date of  termination,  exercise  his  Option to the  extent he was
     entitled to exercise it at the date of such termination. To the extent that
     he was not entitled to exercise the Option at the date of  termination,  or
     if he does not  exercise any portion of the Option which he was entitled to
     exercise at the date of disability  within the time specified  herein,  the
     Option shall terminate.

          (d) Death of Optionee.  In the case of an Incentive  Stock Option,  in
     the event of the death of the Optionee:

               (i) During the term of the Option if the Optionee was at the time
          of his death an Employee the Company and had been in Continuous Status
          as an  Employee or  Consultant  since the date of grant of the Option,
          the Option may be  exercised,  at any time within 12 months  following
          the  date of  death,  by the  Optionee's  estate  or by a  person  who
          acquired the right to exercise  the Option by bequest or  inheritance,
          but only to the  extent  of the  right to  exercise  that  would  have
          accrued had the Optionee  continued  living and remained in Continuous
          Status as an Employee 12 months after the date of death; or

               (ii) Within such period of time not exceeding  three months as is
          determined  by the Board at the time of grant of the Option  after the
          termination  of  Continuous  Status as an Employee,  the Option may be
          exercised,  at any time within 12 months  following the date of death,
          by the  Optionee's  estate or by a person  who  acquired  the right to
          exercise the Option by bequest or inheritance,  but only to the extent
          of the right to exercise that had accrued at the date of termination.

     10.  Nontransferability  of  Options.  In the  case of an  Incentive  Stock
Option,  the  Option  may  not  be  sold,   pledged,   assigned,   hypothecated,
transferred,  or  disposed of in any manner (a "sale or other  transfer")  other
than by will or by the laws of descent and  distribution  and may be  exercised,
during the  lifetime of the  Optionee,  only by the  Optionee.  In the case of a
nonstatutory  stock  option,  an  Option  may not be  sold,  pledged,  assigned,
hypothecated, transferred, or disposed of in any manner during the period ending
one year from the date of grant and thereafter  only (i) after written notice to
the  Board  and (ii) in a  manner  which is in  compliance  with all  applicable
provisions of the  Securities  Act of 1933, as amended ("1933 Act") and the 1934
Act to the reasonable  satisfaction  of the Company.  Upon any permitted sale or
other transfer,  the transferee shall remain subject to all terms and conditions
of the Plan and the Stock Option Agreement.


                                       6
<PAGE>

     11.  Adjustments Upon Changes in Capitalization  or Merger.  Subject to any
required action by the shareholders of the Company, the number of Shares covered
by each outstanding  Option, and the number of Shares which have been authorized
for issuance  under the Plan but as to which no Options have yet been granted or
which have been  returned to the Plan upon  cancellation  or  expiration  of any
Option, as well as the price per Share covered by each such outstanding  Option,
shall be proportionately  adjusted for any increase or decrease in the number of
issued Shares resulting from a stock split, reverse stock split, stock dividend,
combination or  reclassification  of the Common Stock,  or any other increase or
decrease in the number of issued shares of Common Stock effected without receipt
of  consideration  by the Company;  provided,  however,  that  conversion of any
convertible securities of the Company shall not be deemed to have been "effected
without receipt of  consideration."  Such adjustment shall be made by the Board,
whose  determination  in that respect  shall be final,  binding and  conclusive.
Except as  expressly  provided  herein,  no issuance by the Company of shares of
stock of any class, or securities convertible into shares of stock of any class,
shall affect, and no adjustment by reason thereof shall be made with respect to,
the number or price of Shares subject to an Option.

     In the event of the proposed dissolution or liquidation of the Company, the
Option will terminate  immediately  prior to the  consummation  of such proposed
action,  unless otherwise  provided by the Board. The Board may, in the exercise
of its  sole  discretion  in such  instances,  declare  that  any  Option  shall
terminate  as of a date fixed by the Board and give each  Optionee  the right to
exercise  his  Option  as to all or any part of the  Optioned  Stock,  including
Shares as to which the Option would not otherwise be  exercisable.  In the event
of the proposed sale of all or  substantially  all of the assets of the Company,
or the merger of the Company with or into another  corporation  in a transaction
in which the  Company is not the  survivor,  the  Option  shall be assumed or an
equivalent option shall be substituted by such successor corporation or a parent
or subsidiary of such successor corporation, unless the Board determines, in the
exercise of its sole discretion and in lieu of such assumption or  substitution,
that the  Optionee  shall have the right to exercise the Option as to all of the
Optioned Stock,  including  Shares as to which the Option would not otherwise be
exercisable.  If the  Board  makes  an  Option  fully  exercisable  in  lieu  of
assumption or substitution in the event of such a merger or sale of assets,  the
Board shall notify the Optionee that the Option shall be fully exercisable for a
period of 30 days from the date of such  notice,  and the Option will  terminate
upon the expiration of such period.

     12. Time of Granting Options. The date of grant of an Option shall, for all
purposes,  be the date on which the Board makes the determination  granting such
Option.  Notice of the  determination  shall be given to each  Employee or other
person to whom an Option is so granted  within a reasonable  time after the date
of such  grant.  Within a  reasonable  time  after  the date of the  grant of an
Option,  the  Company  shall  enter into and  deliver to each  Employee or other
person  granted  such Option a written  Stock  Option  Agreement  as provided in
Sections  2(r) and 16 hereof,  setting  forth the terms and  conditions  of such
Option  and  separately  identifying  the  portion  of the  Option  which  is an
Incentive Stock Option and/or the portion of such Option which is a Nonstatutory
Stock Option.

     13. Amendment and Termination of the Plan.

          (a)  Amendment and  Termination.  The Board may amend or terminate the
     Plan from time to time in such  respects  as the Board may deem  advisable;
     provided that, the following revisions or amendments shall require approval
     of the shareholders of the Company in the manner described in Section 17 of
     the Plan:

               (i) An increase in the number of Shares subject to the Plan above
          1,000,000  Shares,  other than in connection with an adjustment  under
          Section 11 of the Plan;


                                       7
<PAGE>

               (ii) Any  change in the  designation  of the  class of  Employees
          eligible to be granted Incentive Stock Options; or

               (iii) Any material amendment under the Plan that would have to be
          approved by the  shareholders of the Company for the Board to continue
          to be able to grant Incentive Stock Options under the Plan.

          (b)  Effect  of  Amendment  or  Termination.  Any  such  amendment  or
     termination of the Plan shall not affect Options  already  granted and such
     Options  shall  remain in full force and effect as if the Plan had not been
     amended  or  terminated,  unless  mutually  agreed  otherwise  between  the
     Optionee and the Board,  which  agreement  must be in writing and signed by
     the Optionee and the Company.

     14. Conditions Upon Issuance of Shares. Shares shall not be issued pursuant
to the exercise of an Option unless the exercise of such Option and the issuance
and  delivery of such Shares  pursuant  thereto  shall  comply with all relevant
provisions of law, including,  without  limitation,  the 1933 Act, the 1934 Act,
the rules and regulations  promulgated  thereunder,  applicable state securities
laws, and the  requirements of any stock exchange upon which the Shares may then
be listed, and shall be further subject to the approval of legal counsel for the
Company with respect to such compliance.

     As a condition to the  existence of an Option,  the Company may require the
person  exercising  such Option to represent and warrant at the time of any such
exercise that the Shares are being purchased only for investment and without any
present   intention   to  sell  or   distribute   such  Shares  and  such  other
representations  and  warranties  which in the opinion of legal  counsel for the
Company,  are  necessary or  appropriate  to  establish  an  exemption  from the
registration  requirements  under  applicable  federal and state securities laws
with respect to the acquisition of such Shares.

     15. Reservation of Shares. The Company,  during the term of this Plan, will
at all  times  reserve  and keep  available  such  number  of Shares as shall be
sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the Plan.  Inability of the Company to
obtain authority from any regulatory body having  jurisdiction,  which authority
is deemed by the Company's legal counsel to be necessary for the lawful issuance
and sale of any Share  hereunder,  shall  relieve the  Company of any  liability
relating to the failure to issue or sell such Shares as to which such  requisite
authority shall not have been obtained.

     16. Option  Agreement.  Each Option granted to an Employee or other persons
shall be  evidenced  by a written  Stock  Option  Agreement.  The  Stock  Option
Agreement  shall be in the form and shall include the terms and  conditions  set
forth on Exhibit A attached hereto.

     17.  Shareholder  Approval.  Continuance  of the Plan  shall be  subject to
approval by the shareholders of the Company.  Such shareholder  approval and any
shareholder approval required under Section 13 of the Plan, may be obtained at a
duly held  shareholders  meeting  by the  affirmative  vote of the  holders of a
majority of the outstanding  shares of the voting stock of the Company,  who are
present or  represented  and entitled to vote thereon,  or by unanimous  written
consent of the  shareholders  in  accordance  with the  provisions of the Nevada
Business Corporation Act.

     18.  Information to Optionees.  The Company shall provide to each Optionee,
during the period for which such  Optionee has one or more Options  outstanding,
copies of all annual  reports and other  information  which are  provided to all
shareholders  of the Company.  The Company shall not be required to provide such
information  if the  issuance  of  Options  under  the  Plan is  limited  to key
employees  whose duties in  connection  with the Company  assure their access to
equivalent information.


                                       8
<PAGE>

     19.  Gender.  As used herein,  the  masculine,  feminine and neuter genders
shall be deemed to include the others in all cases where they would so apply.

     20. CHOICE OF LAW. ALL QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE CONSTRUCTION,  VALIDITY AND
INTERPRETATION  OF THIS  PLAN AND THE  INSTRUMENTS  EVIDENCING  OPTIONS  WILL BE
GOVERNED BY THE  INTERNAL  LAW,  AND NOT THE LAW OF  CONFLICTS,  OF THE STATE OF
NEVADA.

Adopted by Directors:      Effective May 9, 1997
Adopted by Shareholders:   Effective May 15, 1997

                                          EASTERN STAR HOLDINGS, INC..
                                          organized under the laws of Nevada


                                          By /s/ William E. Grafham
                                             ----------------------------------
                                             William E. Grafham, Chairman
ATTEST:

/s/ Albert Golusin
- --------------------------------------
Albert Golusin, Secretary



                               FANCHER OIL COMPANY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Trinty Place - Suite 720 - 1801 Broadway - Denver,  Colorado  80202-3835 - (303)
296-6600 - Fax (303) 296-2433


March 6, 1998


Mr. William E. Grafham, President
FAN Energy Inc.
1801 Broadway, Suite 720
Denver, Colorado 80202

                                            Re: Certain Understandings Regarding
                                                Conflicts of Interest

Dear Bill:

     This  letter is  intended to set forth the  understandings  and  agreements
which we have regarding potential conflicts of interest which may exist or which
might develop  between FAN Energy Inc.  (Company)  and George H.  Fancher,  Jr.,
(d/b/a Fancher Oil Company), a/k/a Fancher Oil LLC and Fancher Resources, LLC. I
am suggesting  that these  conflicts  and potential  conflicts be handled in the
manner  set  forth  below.  If this  suggested  resolution  of these  issues  is
acceptable  to you and to the other  directors  of the  Company,  I suggest that
these understandings be adopted as applicable to all potential conflicts.

     1.   I will  continue  to  engage  in the oil and gas  business  for my own
          account  much as I have done in the past.  I will not be  expected  to
          report to or  account  to the  Company  regarding  any of my  business
          activities.

     2.   I agree that when an oil and gas project is  developed by me or any of
          the other  entities  through  which I conduct my oil and gas business,
          and which is offered  for  participation  to  others,  I will make the
          participation  available to FAN Energy Inc., if in my discretion,  the
          project  would be  appropriate  for the Company.  This will be done by
          notifying you of the project,  including  anticipated  costs,  timing,
          etc. The terms offered to the Company will be no less favorable to the
          Company than are available to any third party participant.

     3.   Likewise, when an oil and gas project developed by others is presented
          to me for my  participation,  if  participation  by  FAN  Energy  Inc.
          appears appropriate in the project to me in my sole discretion, I will
          pass on the  opportunity  for the Company to  participate.  I may also
          participate individually. The terms of such a project to be offered to
          the  Company  will  be no  less  favorable  to the  Company  than  are
          available to me.

<PAGE>


Mr. William E. Grafham, President
FAN Energy Inc.
March 6, 1998
Page Two


     4.   The Company will not participate in any project presented by me unless
          a majority of the other  directors,  acting on behalf of the  Company,
          approve the participation.

     5.   From  time to time I or an  entity  controlled  by me may serve as the
          Operator  of an oil and gas project in which the Company is or becomes
          a  participant.  In such event,  charges made by me as Operator to the
          Company for its share of costs and  expenses  will not exceed the rate
          for such charges or expenses made to other  unaffiliated  participants
          In the project.

     Please review the above.  Assuming they are acceptable to you and the other
directors,  I suggest that a summary of the above  understandings be included in
the  registration  statement and other public  documents  which were prepared on
behalf  of the  Company.  Also,  the  understanding  set forth  above  should be
applicable to all other officers and directors.

                                         Sincerely,


                                         /s/ George H. Fancher Jr.
                                         George H. Fancher, Jr.

GHF:jh


                                               , 1997
                             -----------------

Eastern Star Holdings, Inc.
14555 North Scottsdale Road, Suite 200
Scottsdale, Arizona  85260

Gentlemen:

     This  letter is for the  purpose  of  confirming  the  representations  and
understandings  of the  undersigned  in connection  with the  acquisition by the
undersigned of ________  shares of common stock of Eastern Star  Holdings,  Inc.
("Shares").  Please issue a certificate  evidencing such Shares registered in my
name.

     In connection with the purchase of the Shares, the undersigned represent to
you as follows:

     1. The Shares are being  acquired  solely for  investment  purposes for the
account of the undersigned  and for purposes other than of distribution  and not
with the intent to divide any  interest in the Shares  with others or  otherwise
distribute the Shares.

     2. I am cognizant of the  Company's  financial  condition,  management  and
operations  and  I  have  had  the  opportunity  to  obtain  full  and  complete
information concerning the Company's affairs.

     3. I have  sufficient  knowledge  and  experience in financial and business
matters  to  make  me  capable  of  evaluating  the  merits  and  risks  of this
investment.

     4. I represent  that it is  unlikely  that it will be  necessary  for me to
dispose of any of the Shares or any portion thereof in the foreseeable future.

     5. I understand  that the Shares being  acquired  have not been  registered
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended ("Act"),  or the securities laws of
any state. Thus, the Shares are "restricted securities,  and there is no present
market for the  Shares  and it is  unlikely  that a market  will  develop in the
foreseeable future."

     6. I consent that the certificate evidencing the Shares may be stamped with
the restrictive legend as follows:

          "The  securities  represented  by  this  certificate  may  not be
          offered for sale, sold or otherwise  transferred  except pursuant
          to an effective  registration  statement under the Securities Act
          of 1933 (the "Act"),  or pursuant to an exemption  from  registra
          tion  under  the  Act,  the   availability  of  which  is  to  be
          established to the satisfaction of the Company."

     7. I understand  and agree that the Shares  being  acquired by me cannot be
resold unless the Shares are registered  under the Act and any applicable  state
securities laws or unless  exemptions from such  registration  requirements  are
available.



<PAGE>


Eastern Star Holdings, Inc.
Page 2


     8. I understand and agree that the Shares being acquired by me must be held
for an  indefinite  period of time because such Shares have not been  registered
under the Act or any state securities laws, and therefore, cannot be sold unless
they  are  subsequently  registered  under  the  Act and  any  applicable  state
securities laws or unless exemptions from such registrations are available.

     9. I understand  that the Company may make stop  transfer  notations on its
stock  records or issue stop  transfer  instructions  to its  transfer  agent in
connection  with any proposed  transfer of the Shares to insure  compliance with
the Securities Act and any applicable state securities laws.

     10. I  understand  that only the Company can  register the Shares under the
Act and  applicable  state  securities  laws  and the  Company  has not made any
representations to me that the Company will register the Shares under the Act or
any  applicable  state  securities  laws or with respect to compliance  with any
exemption therefrom.

     11. Prior to any  proposed  sale or transfer for value of all or any of the
Shares,  I shall give written notice to the Company  containing  such reasonable
information  as the  Company or counsel  may  request to enable  counsel for the
Company to determine  whether  registration  is required in connection with such
proposed  transfer.  The undersigned will not effect any such proposed  transfer
without the prior written consent of the Company.


                                 Sincerely,


                                 -----------------------------------------
                                 Signature

                                 -----------------------------------------
                                 Name Printed

                                 -----------------------------------------
                                 Address

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

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

                                 -----------------------------------------
                                 Tax I.D. Number


                           EASTERN STAR HOLDINGS, INC.

        14555 N. Scottsdale Road, Suite 200 o Scottsdale, Arizona 85254
                    Tel: (602) 483-8848 Fax: (602) 483-7338
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


November 15, 1997



Mr. Albert Golusin
8250 E. Arabian Trail #220
Scottsdale, Az. 85258

Re: Consulting Agreement with Eastern Star Holdings, Inc. ("Company")


Dear Mr. Golusin:

This letter  agreement is to supersede  the agreement  between  yourself and the
Company dated April 1, 1997. The terms of this agreement are as follows:



1.       Golusin  agrees to be the Secretary and or Treasurer of the Company and
         will  be  responsible   for  all  financial   reporting  to  regulatory
         authorities, shareholders and management.

2.       Eastern Star will pay Golusin $2,500 per month in cash.

3.       The effective  date of this  agreement  will be November 15, 1997.  The
         initial term of this  agreement will be for one (1) year with a renewal
         or cancellation provision on 90 days notice.



Agreed to by:


/s/ Albert Golusin                          /s/ William Grafham
- ---------------------------------           ---------------------------------
Albert Golusin                              William Grafham, President

                          AGREEMENT NOT TO SELL SHARES

     THIS AGREEMENT NOT TO SELL SHARES  ("Agreement"),  made effective this ____
day  of  ___________,  1998,  is by and  between  FAN  ENERGY,  INC.,  a  Nevada
corporation  (the  "Company")  and the  undersigned  owner of the Company common
stock (referred to herein as "Shareholder").

     A. Purpose. In connection with the proposed public offering by the Company,
and in order to  induce  the  Company  to  register  shares  held by,  or shares
underlying  warrants held by, the undersigned  (the "Shares"),  the undersigned,
being a shareholder  of the Company,  holding that number of Shares shown on the
signature page below, agrees as set forth below.

     B. Agreement of Shareholder. The Shareholder hereby agrees and acknowledges
that he or she will benefit greatly from the Company's  proposed public offering
of common  stock and that as further  inducement  to the Company to register the
Shares  for  resale  by  the  Shareholder,  and  for  other  good  and  valuable
consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the
Shareholder hereby agrees with the Company as follows:

          1. The Shareholder will not, directly or indirectly, without the prior
     written consent of the Company,  sell, offer to sell, assign,  hypothecate,
     grant any right to purchase any interest in, or otherwise dispose of any of
     the Shares owned directly, indirectly or beneficially by the Shareholder on
     the effective date of the  Registration  Statement filed in connection with
     the Company's  public offering for a period (the "Lockup Period") ending on
     the later of: (a) the first  business  day which is 120 days after the date
     of the definitive  Prospectus used by the Company in the public offering of
     common stock of the Company, or (b) 30 days following the completion by the
     Company of the public offering,  as evidenced by a public announcement from
     the Company that the offering has been completed.

          2. The Shareholder  also agrees no other transfer,  including gifts or
     private sales,  will be made of the Shares owned by Shareholder  during the
     Lockup  Period  unless  such  transfer  is in  compliance  with  applicable
     securities law requirements  established to the satisfaction of the Company
     and the  prospective  transferee has executed and agreed to become bound by
     the terms and conditions of this Agreement.

          3. The  Shareholder  further  consents  that the  shareholders'  stock
     certificate  or  certificates  may be marked with a legend  describing  the
     Shareholder's  agreement  and that the  Company  may  cause  the  Company's
     transfer  agent to place stop  transfer  orders  against the  Shareholder's
     stock certificate during the Lockup Period.

     C. Effective  Time.  This Agreement  shall not become  effective  until all
persons  listed on the  attached  Exhibit A each have  signed and  delivered  an
Agreement  Not  to  Sell  Shares  relating  to  all  Shares  owned  directly  or
beneficially  by such persons.  This Agreement by Shareholder may be enforced by
the  Company  and/or by any person or entity  which acts as an  underwriter  for
compensation  in the Company's  public  offering.  The Lockup Period may only be
shortened with the prior written consent of the Company and any person or entity
which acts as an underwriter for  compensation in the Company's  public offering
of common stock.


<PAGE>



     D. Completion of Offering.  If the  Registration  Statement does not become
effective,  or if the  Company  does not  sell  the  minimum  number  of  Shares
specified in the  Registration  Statement,  this Agreement shall become null and
void.

     E.  Applicable  Laws.  This Agreement  shall be governed by the laws of the
state of Colorado and shall be construed in accordance therewith.

     F.  Binding  Effect.  All the  provisions  of this  Agreement by or for the
benefit of the Company shall inure to the benefit of the Company,  any person or
entity which acts as an underwriter in the public  offering by the Company,  and
their respective  successors and assigns. This Agreement shall not be assignable
by the Shareholder.

     G. Entire  Agreement.  This writing  represents  the entire  agreement  and
understanding  of the parties  with  respect to the subject  matter  hereof.  No
amendment or modification of this Agreement shall be deemed effective unless and
until it has been executed in writing by the parties to this Agreement.  No term
or condition of this  Agreement  shall be deemed to have been waived,  nor shall
thereby any  estoppel  to enforce any  provision  of this  Agreement,  except by
written  instrument that has been executed by any party charged with such waiver
or estoppel. To the extent that this Agreement is inconsistent with the terms of
any other agreement  between the Company and the Shareholder,  the terms of this
Agreement shall govern and supersede such other agreement.

     H. Headings.  The headings in this Agreement are for convenience only; they
form no part of this Agreement and shall not affect its interpretation.

     I.  Counterparts.  This Agreement may be executed in several  counterparts,
each of which  shall be  deemed  an  original  but all of which  together  shall
constitute one and the same instrument.

     IN WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the  parties  hereto  have  executed  this  Agreement
effective the day and year first above written.


                                           FAN ENERGY, INC.
                                           a Nevada corporation
ATTEST:

                                           By 
                                              ----------------------------------
                                              William E. Grafham, President
- -------------------------------------
Albert  Golusin, Secretary
                                           SHAREHOLDER:


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

                                           NUMBER OF SHARES:

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

                                           NUMBER OF WARRANTS:

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

                                        2

<PAGE>


                                    EXHIBIT A

                                  Shareholders

     [List holders of 1,800,000  Shares and 900,000 Warrants sold by the Company
at $0.50 per unit.]

















                                        3

                            SCHVANEVELDT AND COMPANY
                           Certified Public Accountant
                         275 E. South Temple, Suite 300
                           Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
                                 (801) 521-2392


                                 April 27, 1998


United States Securities and
    Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D. C. 20549

                  Re:      Fan Energy, Inc.
                           Registration Statement No. 333-47699

Gentlemen:

     A copy of the "Experts" section of the Prospectus included in Amendment No.
1 of the above-referenced Registration Statement has been furnished to me for my
review.  Included in such section is a description  of the  circumstances  under
which this firm was  dismissed as the auditor for the Issuer and replaced with a
successor  auditor.  This letter is to confirm that we agree with the statements
made by the Issuer in this section of the Prospectus.

     This  letter  may  be  filed  as an  exhibit  to  Amendment  No.  1 to  the
Registration Statement when filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

                                        Sincerely,

                                        SCHVANEVELDT AND COMPANY



                                        By /s/ Darrell Schvaneveldt
                                           ------------------------------------
                                           Darrell Schvaneveldt





                INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT'S CONSENT


We consent to the  incorporation by reference in the  Registration  Statement of
Fan Energy Inc. on Form SB-2 of our report  dated  January 30, 1998 on our audit
of the financial statements of Fan Energy Inc. as of December 31, 1997.


/s/ Wheeler Wasoff, P.C.
WHEELER WASOFF, P.C.

Denver, Colorado
April 27, 1998





                            SCHVANEVELDT AND COMPANY
                          Certified Public Accountant
                         275 E. South Temple, Suite 300
                           Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
                                 (801) 521-2392




                         Consent of Independent Auditor

TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF EASTERN STAR MINING INC.


     I hereby consent to the use in the Registration Statement and Prospectus to
be used in connection with a public offering of securities, which you are filing
with the  Securities & Exchange  Commission  of our Opinion  dated  February 15,
1997,  relating to the Financial  Statements of Eastern Star Mining,  Inc.,  and
subsequently included in the Prospectus, constituting a part of the Registration
Statement.  We also consent to the reference to us in the  Prospectus  under the
heading "EXPERTS".


                                            /s/ Schvaneveldt and Company
                                            SCHVANEVELDT AND COMPANY


April 27, 1998
Salt Lake City, Utah





                               CONSENT OF ATTORNEY

     Reference is made to the  Registration  Statement on Form SB-2  pursuant to
which  certain  Selling  Securityholders  described  therein  propose  to sell a
maximum  of  3,000,000  shares of the  $0.001 par value  common  stock  ("Common
Stock") of the Company.  Reference  is also made to the opinion  dated April 27,
1998 included as Exhibit  (5.1) to the  Registration  Statement  relating to the
legality of the securities proposed to be issued and to be sold.

     I hereby  consent to the filing of the opinion  dated April 27, 1998, as an
exhibit to the  Company's  Registration  Statement on Form SB-2 and reference to
the undersigned in the Registration Statement under the caption "Legal Matters."



                                            /s/ Alan W. Peryam
                                            ------------------------------------
                                            Alan W. Peryam

Denver, Colorado
Dated: April 27, 1998



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