OPPENHEIMER MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
485APOS, 2000-11-28
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                                                      Registration No. 2-57116
                                                               File No. 811-2668

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                                    FORM N-1A

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933                    /X/

     PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. ___                                     /   /


     POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 44                                       /X/


                        and/or

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


     AMENDMENT NO. 32                                                      /X/



                         OPPENHEIMER MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

               6803 South Tuscn Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112
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                   (Address of Principal Executive Offices)

                                 (212) 323-0200
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         (Registrant's Telephone Number)

                           ANDREW J. DONOHUE, ESQ.
                            OppenheimerFunds, Inc.
            Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048-0203
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

It is proposed that this filing will become effective:


    / / immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) / / on ______________,
    pursuant to  paragraph  (b) / / 60 days after  filing  pursuant to paragraph
    (a)(1)  /X/ on January 8, 2001,  pursuant  to  paragraph  (a)(1) / / 75 days
    after  filing  pursuant  to  paragraph  (a)(2) / / on  _______,  pursuant to
    paragraph (a)(2) of Rule (485)


If appropriate, check the following box:

    /   / This  post-effective  amendment  designates a new effective date for a
        previously filed post-amendment.


310N1A_Jan01a

Oppenheimer
Municipal Bond Fund





Prospectus dated January 8, 2001



                                          Oppenheimer  Municipal  Bond Fund is a
                                          mutual fund. It seeks  current  income
                                          exempt from  federal  income  taxes by
                                          investing  in  municipal   securities,
                                          while attempting to preserve capital.
                                               This     Prospectus      contains
                                          important information about the Fund's
                                          objective,  its  investment  policies,
                                          strategies and risks. It also contains
                                          important information about how to buy
                                          and sell  shares of the Fund and other
                                          account features.
As with all  mutual  funds,  the  Please  read this  Prospectus  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  carefully  before you invest and keep has not  approved or
disapproved the it for future reference about your Fund's  securities nor has it
account. determined that this Prospectus is accurate or complete.
It is a criminal offense to
represent otherwise.






                                                       1234





<PAGE>


CONTENTS




                    ABOUT THE FUND

                    The Fund's Investment Objective and Strategies
                    Main Risks of Investing in the Fund
                    The Fund's Performance
                    Fees and Expenses of the Fund
                    About the Fund's Investments
                    How the Fund is Managed


                    ABOUT YOUR ACCOUNT

                    How to Buy Shares
                    Class A Shares
                    Class B Shares
                    Class C Shares
                    Class N Shares

                    Special Investor Services
                    AccountLink
                    PhoneLink
                       OppenheimerFunds Internet Web Site

                    How to Sell Shares
                    By Mail
                    By Telephone
                    By Checkwriting

                    How to Exchange Shares
                     Shareholder Account Rules and Policies
                    Dividends and Taxes
                    Financial Highlights






<PAGE>


ABOUT THE FUND

The Fund's Investment Objective and Strategies
WHAT IS THE  FUND'S  INVESTMENT  OBJECTIVE?  The  Fund  seeks as high a level of
current  interest  income exempt from federal  income taxes as is available from
investing in municipal securities, while attempting to preserve capital.

WHAT DOES THE FUND  MAINLY  INVEST  IN?  The Fund  invests  mainly in  municipal
securities  that pay interest exempt from federal  individual  income tax. These
primarily include municipal bonds (which are long term  obligations),  municipal
notes (short term  obligations),  interests in municipal leases,  and tax-exempt
commercial  paper.  Most of the  securities  the Fund buys  must be  "investment
grade" (the four highest rating categories of national rating organizations such
as Moody's).

     The Fund does not limit  its  investments  to  securities  of a  particular
maturity range, but currently focuses on longer-term  securities with maturities
between 5 and 30 years when issued.  These  investments are more fully explained
in "About the Fund's Investments," below.

HOW DO THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER DECIDE WHAT SECURITIES TO BUY OR SELL? In selecting
securities  for the Fund, the portfolio  manager looks  nationwide for municipal
securities using a variety of factors which may change over time and may vary in
particular cases. The portfolio manager currently looks for:
  o Securities that provide high current income, o A wide range of securities to
  diversify the portfolio, o Securities having favorable credit characteristics,
  and o Special situations that provide opportunities for value.

WHO IS THE FUND DESIGNED FOR? The Fund is designed for individual  investors who
are seeking  income  exempt from federal  income  taxes.  The Fund does not seek
capital gains or growth. Because it invests in tax-exempt  securities,  the Fund
is not  appropriate  for  retirement  plan accounts or for investors who want to
pursue capital growth. The Fund is not a complete investment program.

Main Risks of Investing in the Fund
All investments have risks to some degree. The Fund's investments are subject to
changes in their value from a number of factors,  described below. There is also
the  risk  that  poor  security  selection  by the  Fund's  investment  Manager,
OppenheimerFunds, Inc., will cause the Fund to underperform other funds having a
similar  objective.  There  is no  assurance  that  the Fund  will  achieve  its
objective.

CREDIT RISK. Municipal securities are debt securities that are subject to credit
risk. Credit risk is the risk that the issuer of a municipal  security might not
make interest and principal  payments on the security as they become due. If the
issuer fails to pay  interest,  the Fund's  income might be reduced,  and if the
issuer fails to repay  principal,  the value of that  security and of the Fund's
shares may be reduced.  Because the Fund can invest as much as 25% of its assets
in municipal securities below investment grade to seek higher income, the Fund's
credit  risks are  greater  than those of funds  that buy only  investment-grade
bonds.  A downgrade in an issuer's  credit rating or other adverse news about an
issuer can reduce the value of that issuer's security.

INTEREST RATE RISKS.  Municipal  securities are subject to changes in value when
prevailing  interest  rates  change.  When  interest  rates fall,  the values of
already-issued  municipal  securities  generally rise. When interest rates rise,
the values of already-issued  municipal  securities generally fall and the bonds
may sell at a discount  from their face  amount.  The  magnitude  of these price
changes  is  generally  greater  for  bonds  with  longer  maturities.  The Fund
currently  focuses on longer term  securities to seek higher income.  Therefore,
its share prices may fluctuate more when interest rates change.

HOW RISKY IS THE FUND OVERALL?  The risks described above  collectively form the
overall  risk  profile  of the Fund,  and can  affect  the  value of the  Fund's
investments,  its  investment  performance,  and the prices of its shares.  This
means that you can lose money by  investing  in the Fund.  When you redeem  your
shares,  they may be worth more or less than what you paid for them. There is no
assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.  The value of the
Fund's investments in municipal securities will change over time due to a number
of factors. They include changes in general bond market movements, the change in
value of particular  bonds because of an event affecting the issuer,  or changes
in interest rates that can affect bond prices overall.  These changes can affect
the  value  of  the  Fund's  investments  and  its  prices  per  share.  In  the
OppenheimerFunds  spectrum,  the Fund is more  conservative  than some  types of
taxable bond funds,  such as high yield bond funds,  but has greater  risks than
money market funds.

An  investment  in the Fund is not a deposit of any bank,  and is not insured or
guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation or any other government
agency.



The Fund's Performance

The bar chart and table below show one measure of the risks of  investing in the
Fund, by showing changes in the Fund's performance (for its Class A shares) from
year to year for the past ten  calendar  years and by  showing  how the  average
annual  total  returns of the Fund's  shares  compare to those of a  broad-based
market index.  The Fund's past  investment  performance  is not  necessarily  an
indication of how the Fund will perform in the future.

                                 (BAR CHART)
                       [see appendix to the prospectus]

For  the  period  from  1/1/00  through  9/30/00,  the  cumulative  return  (not
annualized) for Class A shares was 5.18%.  Sales charges are not included in the
calculations  of return in this bar chart,  and if those charges were  included,
the returns would be less than those shown.  During the 10-year  period shown in
the bar chart,  the highest return (not  annualized) for a calendar  quarter was
8.58% (1Q'95) and the lowest return (not  annualized) for a calendar quarter was
-6.51% (1Q'94).

                                                  Past 5 Years  Past 10 years
---------------------------------                 (or life of    (or life of
Average Annual Total Returns       Past 1 Year       class,         class,
For the periods ended December                      if less)       if less)
31, 1999
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares (inception             -9.59%         5.46%          5.74%
10/27/76)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond        -2.06%         6.91%          6.89%
Index (1)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Shares (inception            -10.31%         5.35%          3.88%
3/16/93)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares (inception             -6.64%         4.01%           N/A
8/29/95)
----------------------------------

(1) From 12/31/89

The Fund's average annual total returns include the applicable sales charge: for
Class A, the current  maximum  initial  sales charge of 4.75%;  for Class B, the
applicable  contingent  deferred  sales  charges of 5% (1-year) and 2% (5-years)
(because Class B shares convert to Class A shares 72 months after purchase,  the
`life-of-class"  return for Class B uses  Class A  performance  for this  period
after conversion);  for Class C, the 1% contingent deferred sales charge for the
1-year period. The returns measure the performance of a hypothetical account and
assume that all dividends and capital gains  distributions  have been reinvested
in additional  shares.  The performance of the Fund's Class A shares is compared
to the Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index, an unmanaged index of a broad range
of investment grade municipal bonds. The index performance  reflects  investment
of income but does not consider  transaction  costs. The Fund's  investments may
vary from the securities in the index.


Fees and Expenses of the Fund


The Fund pays a variety of  expenses  directly  for  management  of its  assets,
administration,  distribution of its shares and other  services.  Those expenses
are  subtracted  from the Fund's assets to calculate the Fund's net asset values
per  share.   All   shareholders   therefore  pay  those  expenses   indirectly.
Shareholders  pay other  expenses  directly,  such as sales  charges and account
transaction  charges.  The following tables are meant to help you understand the
fees  and  expenses  you may pay if you buy and hold  shares  of the  Fund.  The
numbers below are based on the Fund's expenses during its fiscal year ended July
31,  2000,  except that the numbers for Class N shares,  which is a new class of
shares, are based on the Fund's  anticipated  expenses for Class N shares during
the upcoming year.



Shareholder Fees (charges paid directly from your investment):

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

                                  Class A   Class B    Class C Shares   Class N
                                  Shares                                 Shares

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

Maximum Sales Charge (Load) on        4.75%          None      None        None
Purchases (as a % of offering
price)

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

Maximum Deferred Sales Charge
(Load)                                None1           5%2      1%3          1%4
(as % of the lower of the
original offering
price or redemption proceeds)

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

1. A 1% contingent deferred sales charge may apply to redemptions of
investments of $1 million or more of Class A shares. See "How to Buy Shares"
for details.
2. Applies to redemptions in first year after purchase.  The contingent deferred
sales charge declines to 1% in the sixth year and is eliminated after that.

3. Applies to shares redeemed within 12 months of purchase.
4. Applies to shares redeemed within 18 months of retirement plan's
first purchase.

Annual Fund Operating Expenses (deducted from Fund assets):
(% of average daily net assets)
-----------------------------------
                                      Class A    Class B Shares    Class C
                                      Shares                       Shares
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management Fees                        0.53%         0.53%          0.53%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distribution and/or Service            0.23%         1.00%          1.00%
(12b-1) Fees
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Expenses                         0.14%         0.14%          0.14%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Annual Operating Expenses        0.90%         1.67%          1.67%
-----------------------------------

Expenses may vary in future years. "Other Expenses" include transfer agent fees,
custodial fees, and accounting and legal expenses the Fund pays.

EXAMPLES.  The  following  examples are intended to help you compare the cost of
investing  in the Fund with the cost of investing  in other  mutual  funds.  The
examples assume that you invest $10,000 in a class of shares of the Fund for the
time periods indicated, and reinvest your dividends and distributions.

     The first example  assumes that you redeem all of your shares at the end of
those  periods.  The second  example  assumes  that you keep your  shares.  Both
examples also assume that your investment has a 5% return each year and that the
class's  operating  expenses remain the same. Your actual costs may be higher or
lower because  expenses  will vary over time.  Based on these  assumptions  your
expenses would be as follows:

--------------------------------
If shares are redeemed:           1 year      3 years    5 years    10 years1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares                     $562        $748          $        $1530
                                                        950
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Shares                     $670        $826       $1107       $1583
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares                     $270        $526          $        $1976
                                                        907
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Class N Shares

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

--------------------------------
If shares are not redeemed:       1 year      3 years    5 years    10 years1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares                     $562        $748        $950       $1530
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Shares                     $170        $526        $907       $1583
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares                     $170        $526        $907       $1976
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Class N Shares

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


In the first example,  expenses include the initial sales charge for Class A and
the applicable Class B, Class C or Class N contingent deferred sales charges. In
the second example,  the Class A expenses include the sales charge, but Class B,
Class C and Class N expenses do not include contingent deferred sales charges.

1. Class B expense for years 7 through 10 are based on Class A  expenses,  since
Class B shares automatically convert to Class A after 6 years.


About the Fund's Investments
THE FUND'S PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT POLICIES. The allocation of the Fund's portfolio
among  different  types of  investments  will  vary  over  time  based  upon the
Manager's  evaluation  of  economic  and  market  trends.  Under  normal  market
conditions,  the  Fund  attempts  to  invest  100% of its  assets  in  municipal
securities. As a fundamental policy, the Fund invests at least 80% of its assets
in municipal securities.  The Statement of Additional  Information contains more
detailed information about the Fund's investment policies and risks.

     The  Manager  tries to reduce  risks by  carefully  researching  securities
before they are  purchased.  The Fund  attempts to reduce its exposure to market
risks by  diversifying  its  investments,  that is, by not holding a substantial
amount  of  securities  of any  one  issuer  and by not  investing  too  great a
percentage of the Fund's assets in any one issuer.

     However,  changes in the overall market prices of municipal  securities and
the income they pay can occur at any time. The yield and share price of the Fund
will change daily based on changes in interest rates and market conditions,  and
in response to other economic events.

MUNICIPAL  SECURITIES.  The Fund  buys  municipal  bonds and  notes,  tax-exempt
commercial paper,  certificates of participation in municipal leases,  and other
debt  obligations.  These debt obligations are issued by state  governments,  as
well as their political  subdivisions (such as cities, towns and counties),  and
their agencies and authorities.  The Fund can also buy securities  issued by the
District of Columbia,  any  commonwealths,  territories  or  possessions  of the
United States, or their respective  agencies,  instrumentalities or authorities,
if the interest paid on the security is not subject to federal individual income
tax (in the  opinion of bond  counsel to the issuer at the time the  security is
issued).

     Municipal  securities  are issued to raise money for a variety of public or
private  purposes,  including  financing state or local  governments,  financing
specific  projects or public  facilities.  The Fund can buy both  long-term  and
short-term  municipal  securities.  Long-term securities have a maturity of more
than one  year.  The Fund  currently  focuses  on  longer-term  securities  with
maturities between 5 and 30 years when issued, to seek higher income.

     The Fund can buy  municipal  securities  that  are  "general  obligations,"
secured by the  issuer's  pledge of its full faith,  credit and taxing power for
the  payment  of  principal  and  interest.  The  Fund  can  also  buy  "revenue
obligations,"  payable only from the revenues derived from a particular facility
or class of facilities,  or a specific excise tax or other revenue source.  Some
of these revenue  obligations are private  activity bonds that pay interest that
may be a tax preference for investors subject to alternative minimum tax.

o    Municipal  Lease  Obligations.  Municipal  leases  are used by state  and
     local  governments  to  obtain  funds  to  acquire  land,   equipment  or
     facilities.  The Fund can invest in  certificates of  participation  that
     represent  a  proportionate  interest in  payments  made under  municipal
     lease  obligations.  Most municipal  leases,  while secured by the leased
     property,  are not general obligations of the issuing municipality.  They
     often  contain  "non-appropriation"  clauses  under  which the  municipal
     government  has no  obligation to make lease or  installment  payments in
     future years  unless  money is  appropriated  on a yearly  basis.  If the
     government stops making payments or transfers its payment  obligations to
     a private entity, the obligation could lose value or become taxable.

Ratings of Municipal  Securities the Fund Buys. Most of the municipal securities
     the Fund buys are "investment grade" at the time of purchase. The Fund does
     not invest more than 25% of its total assets in municipal  securities  that
     at the time of  purchase  are not  "investment-grade."  "Investment  grade"
     securities  are those rated within the four highest  rating  categories  of
     Moody's, Standard & Poor's or Fitch or another nationally recognized rating
     organization, or (if unrated) are judged by the Manager to be comparable to
     rated investment grade  securities.  Rating categories are described in the
     Statement  of  Additional  Information.  A  reduction  in the  rating  of a
     security after the Fund buys it will not automatically  require the Fund to
     dispose  of  that  security.  However,  the  Manager  will  evaluate  those
     securities to determine whether to keep them in the Fund's portfolio.

     The  Manager  may rely to some  extent  on  credit  ratings  by  nationally
     recognized  rating  agencies in  evaluating  the credit risk of  securities
     selected  for the Fund's  portfolio.  It may also use its own  research and
     analysis.  Many factors affect an issuer's ability to make timely payments,
     and the credit risks of a particular security may change over time.

o    Special Credit Risks of Lower-Grade  Securities.  Municipal securities that
     are below investment grade (these are sometimes called  "junkbonds") may be
     subject  to  greater  price  fluctuations  and risks of loss of income  and
     principal than investment-grade  municipal securities.  Securities that are
     (or that have fallen) below  investment  grade have a greater risk that the
     issuers might not meet their debt obligations.


CAN THE FUND'S  INVESTMENT  OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES  CHANGE?  The Fund's Board of
Trustee  can  change  non-fundamental  policies  without  shareholder  approval,
although significant changes will be described in amendments to this Prospectus.
Fundamental policies cannot be changed without the approval of a majority of the
Fund's  outstanding  voting  shares.  The  Fund's  investment   objective  is  a
fundamental  policy. An investment policy or technique is not fundamental unless
this Prospectus or the Statement of Additional Information says that it is.

OTHER INVESTMENT  STRATEGIES.  To seek its objective,  the Fund can also use the
investment  techniques and strategies described below. The Fund might not always
use all of them.  These  techniques  involve risks although some are designed to
help reduce overall investment risks.

Floating Rate/Variable Rate Obligations. Some municipal securities have variable
     or  floating  interest  rates.  Variable  rates  are  adjustable  at stated
     periodic intervals.  Floating rates are automatically adjusted according to
     a specified market rate for such investments, such as the percentage of the
     prime rate of a bank, or the 91-day U.S. Treasury Bill rate.

     Variable rate bonds known as "inverse  floaters" pay interest at rates that
     move in the opposite direction of yields on short-term bonds in response to
     market  changes.  As interest  rates rise,  inverse  floaters  produce less
     current  income,  and their  market  value  can  become  volatile.  Inverse
     floaters are a type of "derivative security." Some have a "cap," so that if
     interest rates rise above the "cap," the security pays additional  interest
     income.  If rates do not rise  above the  "cap," the Fund will have paid an
     additional amount for a feature that proves worthless.
OtherDerivatives.  The  Fund  can  invest  in  derivative  securities  that  pay
     interest  that  depends  on the  change  in value of an  underlying  asset,
     interest  rate or index.  Options  and futures  (discussed  below) are also
     examples of  derivatives.  The Fund may use  derivatives  to seek increased
     returns or to try to hedge investment  risks.  Examples of external pricing
     mechanisms are interest rate swaps, municipal bond indices or swap indices.
  o  There  Are  Special  Risks  in  Using  Derivatives.  If the  issuer  of the
     derivative  investment does not pay the amount due, the Fund can lose money
     on its investment. Also, the underlying security or investment on which the
     derivative is based, and the derivative itself, may not perform the way the
     Manager  expected it to perform.  If that  happens,  the Fund will get less
     income than expected or its share price could  decline.  To try to preserve
     capital,  the  Fund  has  limits  on the  amount  of  particular  types  of
     derivatives  it can hold.  For example,  the Fund will not invest more than
     20% of its total assets in inverse floaters.
Puts and Stand-By  Commitments.  The Fund can acquire "stand-by  commitments" or
     "puts" with respect to municipal securities.  The Fund obtains the right to
     sell  specified  securities  at a  set  price  on  demand  to  the  issuing
     broker-dealer or bank. However, this feature may result in a lower interest
     rate on the security. The Fund acquires stand-by commitments or puts solely
     to enhance portfolio liquidity.
Illiquid  Securities.  Investments  may be illiquid  because they do not have an
     active trading market, making it difficult to value them or dispose of them
     promptly at an acceptable  price. The Fund will not invest more than 15% of
     its net assets in illiquid  securities.  The Manager  monitors  holdings of
     illiquid  securities on an ongoing  basis to determine  whether to sell any
     holdings to  maintain  adequate  liquidity.  The Fund cannot buy a security
     that has a restriction on its resale.
Hedging. The Fund can buy and sell futures contracts,  put and call options,  or
     enter into  interest  rate swap  agreements.  These are all  referred to as
     "hedging  instruments."  The Fund  does  not use  hedging  instruments  for
     speculative purposes,  and has limits on the use of them. The Fund does not
     use hedging  instruments to a substantial degree and is not required to use
     them in seeking its goal.  Hedging  involves  risks.  If the Manager uses a
     hedging   instrument  at  the  wrong  time  or  judges  market   conditions
     incorrectly, the strategy could reduce the Fund's returns.
Temporary  Defensive  Investments.  The Fund can  invest up to 100% of its total
     assets in temporary defensive  investments during periods of unusual market
     conditions.  Generally  they would be short-term  municipal  securities but
     could  be  U.S.  government  securities  or  highly-rated   corporate  debt
     securities. The income from some temporary defensive investments may not be
     tax-exempt,  and therefore when making those investments the Fund might not
     achieve  its  objective.  The Fund may also hold cash and cash  equivalents
     pending  the  investment  of  proceeds  from  the  sale of Fund  shares  or
     portfolio securities, or to meet anticipated redemptions of Fund shares.


How the Fund is Managed
THE  MANAGER.  The  Manager  chooses  the Fund's  investments  and  handles  its
day-to-day business. The Manager carries out its duties, subject to the policies
established  by the  Fund's  Board of  Trustees,  under an  investment  advisory
agreement  which states the Manager's  responsibilities.  The agreement sets the
fees the Fund pays to the Manager and  describes  the expenses  that the Fund is
responsible to pay to conduct its business.
     The  Manager  has  been an  investment  advisor  since  1960.  The  Manager
(including  subsidiaries) managed more than $125 billion in assets as of October
31,  2000,   including  other  Oppenheimer  funds,  with  more  than  5  million
shareholder  accounts.  The Manager is located at Two World Trade  Center,  34th
Floor, New York, New York 10048-0203.

     Portfolio Manager. The portfolio manager of the Fund is Jerry Webman.
     Mr. Webman is Senior Vice President and Director of the Fixed Income
     Department of the Manager.  Prior to joining the Manager in February
     1996, Mr. Webman was a Vice President at Prudential Investment
     Corporation from November, 1990.

Advisory  Fees.  Under  the  investment  advisory  agreement,  the Fund pays the
     Manager an  advisory  fee at an annual  rate which  declines  as the Fund's
     assets grow:  0.60% of the first $200 million of average annual net assets,
     0.55% of the next $100 million,  0.50% of the next $200  million,  0.45% of
     the next $250 million, 0.40% of the next $250 million, and 0.35% of average
     annual net assets over $1 billion.  The Fund's  management fee for its last
     fiscal year ended July 31, 2000, was 0.53% of average annual net assets for
     each class of shares.


ABOUT YOUR ACCOUNT

How to Buy Shares
HOW DO YOU BUY SHARES?  You can buy shares several ways, as described below.
The Fund's Distributor, OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc., may appoint
servicing agents to accept purchase (and redemption) orders. The Distributor,
in its sole discretion, may reject any purchase order for the Fund's shares.
Buying Shares Through Your Dealer.  You can buy shares through any dealer,
     broker  or  financial  institution  that  has a sales  agreement  with  the
     Distributor. Your dealer will place your order with the Distributor on your
     behalf.
Buying Shares Through the Distributor.  Complete an OppenheimerFunds New Account
     Application  and  return  it  with a  check  payable  to  "OppenheimerFunds
     Distributor, Inc." Mail it to P.O. Box 5270, Denver, Colorado 80217. If you
     don't list a dealer on the  application,  the Distributor  will act as your
     agent in buying the shares.  However,  we  recommend  that you discuss your
     investment  with a financial  advisor before you make a purchase to be sure
     that the Fund is appropriate for you.
  o  Paying by Federal Funds Wire.  Shares purchased through the Distributor may
     be paid for by Federal Funds wire. The minimum investment is $2,500. Before
     sending a wire, call the Distributor's Wire Department at 1.800.525.7048 to
     notify the Distributor of the wire and to receive further instructions.
  o  Buying Shares Through OppenheimerFunds  AccountLink.  With AccountLink, you
     pay for shares by electronic funds transfers from your bank account. Shares
     are purchased for your account on the regular  business day the Distributor
     is  instructed  by you to  initiate  the  Automated  Clearing  House  (ACH)
     transfer to buy shares. You can provide those  instructions  automatically,
     under an Asset Builder Plan, described below, or by telephone  instructions
     using  OppenheimerFunds  PhoneLink,  also described below.  Please refer to
     "AccountLink," below for more details.
  o  Buying Shares Through Asset Builder Plans.  You may purchase  shares of the
     Fund (and up to four other Oppenheimer funds) automatically each month from
     your  account  at a bank or  other  financial  institution  under  an Asset
     Builder Plan with AccountLink. Details are in the Asset Builder Application
     and the Statement of Additional Information.
HOW MUCH  MUST  YOU  INVEST?  You can buy Fund  shares  with a  minimum  initial
investment  of $1,000.  You can make  additional  purchases  at any time with as
little as $25. There are reduced minimum  investments  under special  investment
plans.
  o  With Asset Builder Plans,  Automatic  Exchange Plans and military allotment
     plans,  you can make initial and  subsequent  investments  for as little as
     $25. You can make additional purchases of at least $25 by telephone through
     AccountLink.
  o  The minimum investment  requirement does not apply to reinvesting dividends
     from the Fund or other  Oppenheimer  funds (a list of them  appears  in the
     Statement of Additional Information, or you can ask your dealer or call the
     Transfer Agent), or reinvesting  distributions  from unit investment trusts
     that have made arrangements with the Distributor.

AT WHAT PRICE ARE SHARES SOLD? Shares are sold at their offering price, which is
the net asset value per share plus any initial  sales charge that  applies.  The
offering price that applies to a purchase order is based on the next calculation
of the net asset value per share that is made after the Distributor receives the
purchase order at its offices in Colorado,  or after any agent  appointed by the
Distributor receives the order and sends it to the Distributor.
Net  Asset  Value.  The Fund  calculates  the net asset  value of each  class of
     shares  as of the  close of The New York  Stock  Exchange,  on each day the
     Exchange is open for trading  (referred to in this Prospectus as a "regular
     business day").  The Exchange  normally closes at 4:00 P.M., New York time,
     but  may  close  earlier  on  some  days.  All  references  to time in this
     Prospectus mean "New York time".
     The net asset value per share is  determined  by dividing  the value of the
     Fund's net assets  attributable  to a class by the number of shares of that
     class that are outstanding.  To determine net asset value, the Fund's Board
     of Trustees has established  procedures to value the Fund's securities,  in
     general based on market value. The Board has adopted special procedures for
     valuing illiquid  securities and obligations for which market values cannot
     be readily obtained.
The  Offering Price. To receive the offering price for a particular day, in most
     cases the  Distributor or its  designated  agent must receive your order by
     the time of day The New York Stock Exchange  closes that day. If your order
     is  received  on a day when the  Exchange is closed or after it has closed,
     the order will receive the next  offering  price that is  determined  after
     your order is received.
Buying Through a Dealer.  If you buy shares  through a dealer,  your dealer must
     receive the order by the close of The New York Stock  Exchange and transmit
     it to the Distributor so that it is received before the Distributor's close
     of business on a regular  business day (normally 5:00 P.M.) to receive that
     day's offering price.  Otherwise,  the order will receive the next offering
     price that is determined.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WHAT  CLASSES OF SHARES DOES THE FUND OFFER?  The Fund  offers  investors  three
different  classes  of  shares.   The  different  classes  of  shares  represent
investments in the same portfolio of securities,  but the classes are subject to
different  expenses and will likely have  different  share prices.  When you buy
shares,  be sure to specify  the class of shares.  If you do not choose a class,
your investment will be made in Class A shares.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ClassA Shares.  If you buy Class A shares,  you pay an initial  sales charge (on
     investments  up to $1  million).  The amount of that sales charge will vary
     depending  on the amount you invest.  The sales  charge rates are listed in
     "How Can You Buy Class A Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ClassB Shares.  If you buy Class B shares,  you pay no sales  charge at the time
     of purchase,  but you will pay an annual  asset-based  sales charge. If you
     sell your shares  within six years of buying them,  you will normally pay a
     contingent  deferred sales charge.  That  contingent  deferred sales charge
     varies depending on how long you own your shares,  as described in "How Can
     You Buy Class B Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ClassC Shares.  If you buy Class C shares,  you pay no sales  charge at the time
     of purchase,  but you will pay an annual  asset-based  sales charge. If you
     sell your shares  within 12 months of buying them,  you will normally pay a
     contingent  deferred  sales  charge of 1%, as described in "How Can You Buy
     Class C Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ClassN Shares.  Class N shares are offered  only through  retirement  plans that
     purchase  $500,000  or more of  Class N shares  of one or more  Oppenheimer
     funds or that have  assets of  $500,000  or more or 100 or more of eligible
     plan participants.  Non-retirement plan investors cannot buy Class N shares
     directly.

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

WHICH  CLASS OF SHARES  SHOULD YOU  CHOOSE?  Once you decide that the Fund is an
appropriate investment for you, the decision as to which class of shares is best
suited to your needs depends on a number of factors that you should discuss with
your financial advisor. Some factors to consider are how much you plan to invest
and how long you plan to hold your  investment.  If your  goals  and  objectives
change  over  time  and you  plan to  purchase  additional  shares,  you  should
re-evaluate those factors to see if you should consider another class of shares.
The Fund's operating costs that apply to a class of shares and the effect of the
different  types of sales charges on your  investment  will vary your investment
results over time.

     The  discussion  below  is  not  intended  to  be  investment  advice  or a
recommendation,  because each investor's financial considerations are different.
The discussion below assumes that you will purchase only one class of shares and
not a combination of shares of different  classes.  Of course these examples are
based on  approximations  of the effects of current  sales  charges and expenses
projected over time, and do not detail all of the  considerations in selecting a
class of shares.  You should analyze your options  carefully with your financial
advisor before making that choice.

How  Long Do You Expect to Hold Your  Investment?  While future  financial needs
     cannot be  predicted  with  certainty,  knowing how long you expect to hold
     your  investment  will assist you in  selecting  the  appropriate  class of
     shares.  Because of the effect of  class-based  expenses,  your choice will
     also depend on how much you plan to invest. For example,  the reduced sales
     charges  available  for larger  purchases of Class A shares may, over time,
     offset  the effect of paying an initial  sales  charge on your  investment,
     compared to the effect over time of higher  class-based  expenses on shares
     of Class B or Class C .
  o  Investing for the Shorter  Term.  While the Fund is meant to be a long-term
     investment,  if you have a relatively  short-term  investment horizon (that
     is, you plan to hold your shares for not more than six  years),  you should
     probably consider  purchasing Class A or Class C shares rather than Class B
     shares.  That is because of the effect of the Class B  contingent  deferred
     sales charge if you redeem  within six years,  as well as the effect of the
     Class B asset-based sales charge on the investment return for that class in
     the short-term.  Class C shares might be the appropriate choice (especially
     for investments of less than  $100,000),  because there is no initial sales
     charge on Class C shares, and the contingent deferred sales charge does not
     apply to amounts you sell after holding them one year.
     However,  if you plan to invest more than  $100,000  for the shorter  term,
     then as your investment  horizon increases toward six years, Class C shares
     might not be as advantageous as Class A shares.  That is because the annual
     asset-based  sales  charge on Class C shares will have a greater  impact on
     your account over the longer term than the reduced  front-end  sales charge
     available for larger purchases of Class A shares.

     And for  investors  who invest $1 million  or more,  in most cases  Class A
     shares will be the most advantageous  choice, no matter how long you intend
     to hold your shares.  For that reason,  the  Distributor  normally will not
     accept  purchase orders of $500,000 or more of Class B shares or $1 million
     or more of Class C shares from a single investor.
  o  Investing for the Longer Term. If you are investing  less than $100,000 for
     the  longer-term,  for  example for  retirement,  and do not expect to need
     access  to your  money  for  seven  years  or more,  Class B shares  may be
     appropriate.

Are  There  Differences  In Account  Features  That Matter To You?  Some account
     features (such as checkwriting)  may not be available to Class B or Class C
     shareholders.  Other features (such as Automatic  Withdrawal Plans) may not
     be  advisable  (because  of the  effect of the  contingent  deferred  sales
     charge)  for  Class  B or  Class  C  shareholders.  Therefore,  you  should
     carefully  review  how  you  plan to use  your  investment  account  before
     deciding which class of shares to buy. Additionally,  the dividends payable
     to Class B and  Class C  shareholders  will be  reduced  by the  additional
     expenses borne by those classes that are not borne by Class A shares,  such
     as the Class B and Class C asset-based  sales charge described below and in
     the  Statement  of  Additional  Information.  Share  certificates  are  not
     available for Class B and Class C shares,  and if you are considering using
     your shares as  collateral  for a loan,  that may be a factor to  consider.
     Also,  checkwriting  privileges  are not  available  for Class B or Class C
     shares.


How  Do Share  Classes  Affect  Payments to My Broker?  A financial  advisor may
     receive  different  compensation  for  selling one class of shares than for
     selling  another  class.  It is important to remember that Class B, Class C
     and Class N contingent deferred sales charges and asset-based sales charges
     have the same  purpose as the  front-end  sales  charge on sales of Class A
     shares:  to compensate the Distributor for commissions and expenses it pays
     to dealers and financial  institutions for selling shares.  The Distributor
     may pay  additional  compensation  from  its own  resources  to  securities
     dealers  or  financial  institutions  based upon the value of shares of the
     Fund owned by the dealer or  financial  institution  for its own account or
     for its customers.


SPECIAL SALES CHARGE  ARRANGEMENTS  AND WAIVERS.  Appendix C to the Statement of
Additional  Information  details the  conditions for the waiver of sales charges
that apply in certain  cases,  and the special  sales charge rates that apply to
purchases of shares of the Fund by certain groups, or under specified retirement
plan arrangements or in other special types of transactions. To receive a waiver
or special sales charge rate, you must advise the  Distributor  when  purchasing
shares or the Transfer Agent when redeeming  shares that the special  conditions
apply.

HOW CAN YOU BUY CLASS A SHARES? Class A shares are sold at their offering price,
which is normally net asset value plus an initial sales charge. However, in some
cases,  described  below,  purchases are not subject to an initial sales charge,
and the  offering  price will be the net asset value.  In other  cases,  reduced
sales  charges may be  available,  as  described  below or in the  Statement  of
Additional Information.  Out of the amount you invest, the Fund receives the net
asset value to invest for your account.

     The sales charge varies depending on the amount of your purchase. A portion
of the sales  charge may be retained by the  Distributor  or  allocated  to your
dealer as commission.  The Distributor  reserves the right to reallow the entire
commission to dealers.  The current sales charge rates and  commissions  paid to
dealers and brokers are as follows:

                                Front-End Sales Front-End Sales
-------------------------------   Charge As a     Charge As a    Commission as
                                 Percentage of   Percentage of   Percentage of
                                Offering Price        Net          Offering
Amount of Purchase                              Amount Invested      Price
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than $50,000                    4.75%           4.98%           4.00%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$50,000 or more but less than        4.50%           4.71%           4.00%
$100,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$100,000 or more but less than       3.50%           3.63%           3.00%
$250,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$250,000 or more but less than       2.50%           2.56%           2.25%
$500,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$500,000 or more but less than       2.00%           2.04%           1.80%
$1 million
--------------------------------

ClassA Contingent  Deferred  Sales  Charge.  There is no initial sales charge on
     purchases  of Class A shares  of any one or more of the  Oppenheimer  funds
     aggregating  $1 million or more.  The  Distributor  pays  dealers of record
     commissions  in an amount equal to 0.50% of purchases of $1 million or more
     (other than purchases by retirement  plans,  which are not permitted in the
     Fund).  That  commission  will be paid  only on  purchases  that  were  not
     previously subject to a front-end sales charge and dealer commission.

     If you  redeem  any of those  shares  within an 18 month  "holding  period"
     measured from the end of the calendar month of their purchase, a contingent
     deferred  sales  charge  (called  the "Class A  contingent  deferred  sales
     charge") may be deducted from the  redemption  proceeds.  That sales charge
     will be equal to 1.0% of the lesser of (1) the aggregate net asset value of
     the redeemed shares at the time of redemption  (excluding  shares purchased
     by  reinvestment  of dividends or capital  gain  distributions)  or (2) the
     original  net asset  value of the  redeemed  shares.  However,  the Class A
     contingent  deferred  sales charge will not exceed the aggregate  amount of
     the  commissions  the  Distributor  paid to your dealer on all purchases of
     Class A shares of all  Oppenheimer  funds you made that were subject to the
     Class A contingent deferred sales charge.


Can   You  Reduce  Class A Sales  Charges?  You may be  eligible  to buy Class A
      shares  at  reduced   sales  charge  rates  under  the  Fund's  "Right  of
      Accumulation"  or a Letter of  Intent,  as  described  in  "Reduced  Sales
      Charges" in the Statement of Additional  Information.  The Class A initial
      and contingent deferred sales charges are not imposed in the circumstances
      described  in "Reduced  Sales  Charges"  in the  Statement  of  Additional
      Information.

HOW CAN YOU BUY CLASS B SHARES?  Class B shares are sold at net asset  value per
share without an initial sales charge.  However,  if Class B shares are redeemed
within 6 years of the end of the calendar month of their purchase,  a contingent
deferred sales charge will be deducted from the redemption proceeds. The Class B
contingent  deferred sales charge is paid to compensate the  Distributor for its
expenses of providing  distribution-related  services to the Fund in  connection
with the sale of Class B shares.

  The amount of the  contingent  deferred sales charge will depend on the number
of years since you invested and the dollar amount being  redeemed,  according to
the following schedule for the Class B contingent  deferred sales charge holding
period:

 -------------------------------------
 Years Since Beginning of Month in    Contingent Deferred Sales Charge on
 Which Purchase Order Was Accepted    Redemptions In that Year (As % of
                                      Amount Subject to Charge)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 0-1                                  5.0%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1-2                                  4.0%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 2-3                                  3.0%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 3-4                                  3.0%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 4-5                                  2.0%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 5-6                                  1.0%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 6 and following                      None
 -------------------------------------

 In the table, a "year" is a 12-month period. In applying the sales charge,  all
 purchases are considered to have been made on the first regular business day of
 the month in which the purchase was made.

Automatic Conversion of Class B Shares. Class B shares automatically  convert to
     Class A shares 72 months after you purchase them. This  conversion  feature
     relieves Class B shareholders of the asset-based  sales charge that applies
     to  Class B  shares  under  the  Class B  Distribution  and  Service  Plan,
     described below. The conversion is based on the relative net asset value of
     the two classes, and no sales load or other charge is imposed. When Class B
     shares you hold convert, any other Class B shares that were acquired by the
     reinvestment of dividends and  distributions  on the converted  shares will
     also convert to Class A shares.  For further  information on the conversion
     feature and its tax implications, see "Class B Conversion" in the Statement
     of Additional Information.

HOW CAN YOU BUY CLASS C SHARES?  Class C shares are sold at net asset  value per
share without an initial sales charge.  However,  if Class C shares are redeemed
within a holding period of 12 months from the end of the calendar month of their
purchase,  a contingent  deferred sales charge of 1.0% will be deducted from the
redemption  proceeds.  The Class C contingent  deferred  sales charge is paid to
compensate the  Distributor  for its expenses of providing  distribution-related
services to the Fund in connection with the sale of Class C shares.


HOW CAN YOU BUY CLASS N SHARES?  As discussed above,  Class N shares are offered
only  through  retirement  plans  that  purchase  Class N shares  of one or more
Oppenheimer  funds totaling $500,000 or more, or that have assets of $500,000 or
more, or 100 or more eligible plan participants.  Non-retirement  plan investors
cannot buy Class N shares directly.  A contingent deferred sales charge of 1.00%
will be imposed if the  retirement  plan is  terminated or Class N shares of all
Oppenheimer funds are terminated as an investment option of the plan and Class N
shares are redeemed  within 18 months after the plan's first purchase of Class N
shares of any Oppenheimer fund.


  DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE (12b-1)PLANS.
Service Plan For Class A Shares. The Fund has adopted a Service Plan for Class A
     shares.  It reimburses the  Distributor for a portion of its costs incurred
     for services  provided to accounts that hold Class A shares.  Reimbursement
     is made  quarterly  at an annual rate of up to 0.25% of the average  annual
     net assets of Class A shares of the Fund.  The  Distributor  currently uses
     all of those fees to compensate dealers, brokers, banks and other financial
     institutions  quarterly for providing  personal  service and maintenance of
     accounts of their customers that hold Class A shares.

Distribution and Service Plans For Class B, Class C and Class N Shares. The Fund
     has adopted Distribution and Service Plans for Class B, Class C and Class N
     shares  to  compensate  the  Distributor  for its  services  and  costs  in
     distributing  Class B, Class C and Class N shares and  servicing  accounts.
     Under the plans, the Fund pays the Distributor an annual  asset-based sales
     charge  of 0.75% per year on Class B shares  and on Class C shares  and the
     Fund pays the  Distributor an annual  asset-based  sales charge of 0.25% on
     Class N shares.  The  Distributor  also receives a service fee of 0.25% per
     year under each plan.

     The asset-based  sales charge and service fees increase Class B and Class C
     expenses by up to 1.00% and the asset-based  sales charge increases Class N
     expense  by  0.25% of the net  assets  per  year of the  respective  class.
     Because these fees are paid out of the Fund's assets on an on-going  basis,
     over time these fees will increase the cost of your investment and may cost
     you more than other types of sales charges.

     The Distributor  uses the service fees to compensate  dealers for providing
     personal  services  for  accounts  that  hold  Class B,  Class C or Class N
     shares.  The Distributor  pays the 0.25% service fees to dealers in advance
     for the first  year  after the  shares  are sold by the  dealer.  After the
     shares have been held for a year, the Distributor  pays the service fees to
     dealers on a quarterly basis.

     The Distributor  currently pays a sales commission of 3.75% of the purchase
     price of Class B shares to dealers  from its own  resources  at the time of
     sale.  Including  the advance of the service  fee, the total amount paid by
     the  Distributor  to the  dealer  at the time of sales of Class B shares is
     therefore 4.00% of the purchase price. The Distributor  retains the Class B
     asset-based sales charge.

     The Distributor  currently pays sales  commissions of 0.75% of the purchase
     price of Class C shares to dealers  from its own  resources  at the time of
     sale.  Including  the advance of the service  fee, the total amount paid by
     the  Distributor  to the  dealer  at the time of sale of Class C shares  is
     therefore  1.00% of the purchase price.  The  Distributor  plans to pay the
     asset-based sales charge as an ongoing  commission to the dealer on Class C
     shares that have been outstanding for a year or more.


     The Distributor  currently pays sales  commissions of 1.00% of the purchase
     price of Class N shares to dealers  from its own  resources  at the time of
     sale.  The  Distributor  retains the  asset-based  sales  charge on Class N
     shares.



Special Investor Services
ACCOUNTLINK.  You can use our AccountLink feature to link your Fund account
with an account at a U.S. bank or other financial institution. It must be an
Automated Clearing House (ACH) member. AccountLink lets you:
  o  transmit funds  electronically  to purchase shares by telephone  (through a
     service  representative  or by  PhoneLink)  or  automatically  under  Asset
     Builder Plans, or
  o  have the Transfer Agent send redemption  proceeds or to transmit  dividends
     and distributions  directly to your bank account.  Please call the Transfer
     Agent for more information.
     You may  purchase  shares by  telephone  only after your  account  has been
established.  To purchase  shares in amounts up to $250,000  through a telephone
representative,  call the Distributor at  1.800.852.8457.  The purchase  payment
will be debited from your bank account.

     AccountLink  privileges  should be  requested on your  Application  or your
dealer's settlement  instructions if you buy your shares through a dealer. After
your account is established,  you can request AccountLink  privileges by sending
signature-guaranteed  instructions to the Transfer Agent. AccountLink privileges
will apply to each  shareholder  listed in the  registration  on your account as
well as to your dealer  representative  of record  unless and until the Transfer
Agent receives written  instructions  terminating or changing those  privileges.
After you establish  AccountLink  for your  account,  any change of bank account
information  must be made by  signature-guaranteed  instructions to the Transfer
Agent signed by all shareholders who own the account.

PHONELINK.  PhoneLink is the OppenheimerFunds automated telephone system that
enables shareholders to perform a number of account transactions
automatically using a touch-tone phone. PhoneLink may be used on
already-established Fund accounts after you obtain a Personal Identification
Number (PIN), by calling the special PhoneLink number, 1.800.533.3310.
Purchasing Shares. You may purchase shares in amounts up to $100,000 by
     phone, by calling  1.800.533.3310.  You must have  established  AccountLink
     privileges  to link  your  bank  account  with  the  Fund to pay for  these
     purchases.
Exchanging  Shares.  With the  OppenheimerFunds  Exchange  Privilege,  described
     below,  you can  exchange  shares  automatically  by phone  from  your Fund
     account to another  Oppenheimer funds account you have already  established
     by calling the special PhoneLink number.
Selling Shares. You can redeem shares by telephone  automatically by calling the
     PhoneLink  number  and the Fund will  send the  proceeds  directly  to your
     AccountLink  bank account.  Please refer to "How to Sell Shares," below for
     details.

CAN YOU SUBMIT  TRANSACTION  REQUESTS BY FAX? You may send  requests for certain
types of account transactions to the Transfer Agent by fax (telecopier).  Please
call 1-800-525-7048 for information about which transactions may be handled this
way.  Transaction  requests  submitted  by fax are subject to the same rules and
restrictions as written and telephone requests described in this Prospectus.

OPPENHEIMERFUNDS  INTERNET WEB SITE. You can obtain  information about the Fund,
as well as your account balance, on the  OppenheimerFunds  Internet web site, at
http://www.oppenheimerfunds.com.   Additionally,   shareholders  listed  in  the
account  registration  (and the dealer of record)  may request  certain  account
transactions  through a special  section of that web site.  To  perform  account
transactions,  you must first obtain a personal  identification  number (PIN) by
calling  the  Transfer  Agent  at  1-800-533-3310.  If you do not  want  to have
Internet  account  transaction  capability  for your  account,  please  call the
Transfer Agent at  1.800.525.7048.  At times, the website may be inaccessible or
its transaction features may be unavailable.

AUTOMATIC  WITHDRAWAL AND EXCHANGE PLANS. The Fund has several plans that enable
you to sell shares  automatically  or exchange them to another  Oppenheimer fund
account on a regular  basis.  Please  call the  Transfer  Agent or  consult  the
Statement of Additional Information for details.


REINVESTMENT  PRIVILEGE.  If you  redeem  some or all of your Class A or Class B
shares  of the  Fund,  you have up to 6 months  to  reinvest  all or part of the
redemption  proceeds  in Class A shares of the Fund or other  Oppenheimer  funds
without  paying a sales charge.  This  privilege  applies only to Class A shares
that you purchased  subject to an initial sales charge and to Class A or Class B
shares on which you paid a  contingent  deferred  sales charge when you redeemed
them.  This privilege does not apply to Class C and Class N shares.  You must be
sure to ask the Distributor for this privilege when you send your payment.


How to Sell Shares

You can sell  (redeem)  some or all of your shares on any regular  business day.
Your shares will be sold at the next net asset value calculated after your order
is received in proper form (which means that it must comply with the  procedures
described  below) and is accepted by the Transfer Agent.  The Fund lets you sell
your shares by writing a letter, by using the Fund's  checkwriting  privilege or
by telephone. You can also set up Automatic Withdrawal Plans to redeem shares on
a  regular  basis.  If you have  questions  about any of these  procedures,  and
especially if you are redeeming  shares in a special  situation,  such as due to
the death of the owner, please call the Transfer Agent first, at 1.800.525.7048,
for assistance.

Certain Requests Require a Signature Guarantee. To protect you and the Fund from
     fraud,  the  following  redemption  requests  must be in  writing  and must
     include a signature  guarantee (although there may be other situations that
     also require a signature guarantee):
  o You wish to redeem more than  $100,000 and receive a check o The  redemption
  check is not payable to all shareholders listed on the
     account statement
  o  The redemption check is not sent to the address of record on your
     account statement
  o  Shares are being transferred to a Fund account with a different owner or
     name
  o  Shares are being redeemed by someone (such as an Executor) other than
     the owners


Where Can You Have Your Signature  Guaranteed?  The Transfer Agent will accept a
      guarantee  of  your  signature  by a  number  of  financial  institutions,
      including:

   o  a U.S. bank, trust company, credit union or savings association,
   o  a foreign bank that has a U.S. correspondent bank,
   o  a U.S. registered dealer or broker in securities, municipal securities
      or government securities, or
   o  a U.S. national securities exchange, a registered  securities  association
      or a  clearing  agency.  If you are  signing  on behalf of a  corporation,
      partnership  or other  business or as a  fiduciary,  you must also include
      your title in the signature.

Sending Redemption Proceeds By Wire. While the Fund normally sends your money by
      check, you can arrange to have the proceeds of the shares you sell sent by
      Federal  Funds  wire  to a  bank  account  you  designate.  It  must  be a
      commercial bank that is a member of the Federal  Reserve wire system.  The
      minimum redemption you can have sent by wire is $2,500. There is a $10 fee
      for each wire.  To find out how to set up this  feature on your account or
      to arrange a wire, call the Transfer agent at 1.800.852.8457.

HOW DO YOU SELL SHARES BY MAIL?  Write a "letter of instructions" that
includes:
  o  Your name
  o  The Fund's name
  o Your Fund account  number (from your account  statement) o The dollar amount
  or number of shares to be redeemed o Any special  payment  instructions  o Any
  share  certificates  for the shares you are  selling o The  signatures  of all
  registered owners exactly as the account is
     registered, and
  o  Any special  documents  requested  by the Transfer  Agent to assure  proper
     authorization of the person asking to sell the shares.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Use the following address for            Send courier or express mail
requests by mail:                        requests to:
OppenheimerFunds Services                OppenheimerFunds Services
P.O. Box 5270                            10200 E. Girard Avenue, Building D
Denver, Colorado 80217                   Denver, Colorado 80231
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

HOW DO YOU SELL  SHARES BY  TELEPHONE?  You and your  dealer  representative  of
record may also sell your shares by telephone.  To receive the redemption  price
calculated on a particular  regular  business day, your call must be received by
the Transfer  Agent by the close of The New York Stock  Exchange that day, which
is  normally  4:00 P.M.,  but may be  earlier  on some days.  You may not redeem
shares held under a share certificate by telephone.
  o To redeem shares through a service representative,  call 1.800.852.8457 o To
  redeem shares automatically on PhoneLink, call 1.800.533.3310
     Whichever  method you use,  you may have a check sent to the address on the
     account  statement,  or, if you have linked your Fund  account to your bank
     account  on  AccountLink,  you may  have  the  proceeds  sent to that  bank
     account.

Are There Limits On Amounts Redeemed By Telephone?
Telephone Redemptions Paid by Check. Up to $100,000 may be redeemed by
     telephone in any 7-day  period.  The check must be payable to all owners of
     record  of the  shares  and  must  be sent to the  address  on the  account
     statement.  This  service is not  available  within 30 days of changing the
     address on an account.
Telephone Redemptions Through AccountLink or Wire. There are no dollar limits on
     telephone  redemption  proceeds sent to a bank account  designated when you
     establish AccountLink.  Normally the ACH transfer to your bank is initiated
     on the business day after the redemption.  You do not receive  dividends on
     the  proceeds  of the shares  you  redeemed  while  they are  waiting to be
     transferred.

     Shareholders  may also have the Transfer Agent send redemption  proceeds of
     $2,500  or more by  Federal  Funds  wire to a  designated  commercial  bank
     account.  The bank must be a member of the  Federal  Reserve  wire  system.
     There is a $10 fee for each Federal Funds wire. To place a wire  redemption
     request, call the Transfer Agent at 1.800.852.8457.  The wire will normally
     be transmitted on the next bank business day after the shares are redeemed.
     There is a  possibility  that the wire may be  delayed  up to seven days to
     enable  the Fund to sell  securities  to pay the  redemption  proceeds.  No
     dividends  are  accrued or paid on the  proceeds  of shares  that have been
     redeemed and are awaiting transmittal by wire. To establish wire redemption
     privileges on an account that is already  established,  please  contact the
     Transfer Agent for instructions.

CHECKWRITING.  To write checks against your Fund account, request that privilege
on your account Application,  or contact the Transfer Agent for signature cards.
They must be signed  (with a signature  guarantee)  by all owners of the account
and  returned  to the  Transfer  Agent so that checks can be sent to you to use.
Shareholders  with joint  accounts can elect in writing to have checks paid over
the  signature  of one  owner.  If you  previously  signed a  signature  card to
establish  checkwriting in another  Oppenheimer fund, simply call 1.800.525.7048
to request  checkwriting for an account in this Fund with the same  registration
as the other account.
  o  Checks  can be written to the order of  whomever  you wish,  but may not be
     cashed at the bank.  The checks are payable  through  the Fund's  custodian
     bank.
  o  Checkwriting  privileges are not available for accounts holding shares that
     are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge.
  o Checks must be written for at least $100.
  o  Checks cannot be paid if they are written for more than your account
     value. Remember: your shares fluctuate in value and you should not write
     a check close to the total account value.
  o  You may not write a check that would require the Fund to redeem shares that
     were purchased by check or Asset Builder Plan payments  within the prior 10
     days.
  o  Don't use your checks if you changed  your Fund account  number,  until you
     receive new checks.

CAN YOU SELL SHARES THROUGH YOUR DEALER?  The Distributor has made  arrangements
to repurchase Fund shares from dealers and brokers on behalf of their customers.
Brokers or dealers may charge for that  service.  If your shares are held in the
name of your dealer, you must redeem them through your dealer.


HOW CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGES AFFECT REDEMPTIONS. If you purchase shares
subject to a Class A, Class B or Class C  contingent  deferred  sales charge and
redeem any of those shares during the applicable holding period for the class of
shares you own, the  contingent  deferred sales charge will be deducted from the
redemption  proceeds  (unless you are eligible for a waiver of that sales charge
based on the  categories  listed in Appendix C to the  Statement  of  Additional
Information and you advise the Transfer Agent of your eligibility for the waiver
when you place your redemption request).  With respect to Class N shares, if you
redeem your shares within 18 calendar months of the end of the calendar month in
which the retirement plan first  purchased  shares of the Fund or the retirement
plan is terminated or eliminates  Class N shares of all Oppenheimer  funds as an
investment  option within 18 calendar months of the end of the calendar month in
which the Fund was selected  and you redeem your shares  within 18 months of the
plan's first purchase of the Fund, a 1% contingent deferred sales charge will be
imposed.



      A contingent  deferred sales charge will be based on the lesser of the net
asset value of the redeemed shares at the time of redemption or the original net
asset value. A contingent deferred sales charge is not imposed on:
   o  the amount of your account value represented by an increase in net
      asset value over the initial purchase price,
   o  shares purchased by the reinvestment of dividends or capital gains
      distributions, or
   o  shares  redeemed in the special  circumstances  described in Appendix C to
      the Statement of Additional Information.

      To determine  whether a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  applies to a
      redemption, the Fund redeems shares in the following order:
   1. shares acquired by reinvestment of dividends and capital gains
   distributions,
   2. shares held for the holding period that applies to the class, and
   3. shares held the longest during the holding period.

      Contingent deferred sales charges are not charged when you exchange shares
of the Fund for shares of other Oppenheimer funds. However, if you exchange them
within the  applicable  contingent  deferred sales charge  holding  period,  the
holding period will carry over to the fund whose shares you acquire.  Similarly,
if you acquire shares of this Fund by exchanging  shares of another  Oppenheimer
fund that are still  subject  to a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  holding
period, that holding period will carry over to this Fund.


How to Exchange Shares

Shares of the Fund may be exchanged for shares of certain  Oppenheimer  funds at
net asset value per share at the time of exchange,  without sales charge. Shares
of the Fund can be purchased by exchange of shares of other Oppenheimer funds on
the same basis. To exchange shares, you must meet several conditions:
  o  Shares of the fund selected for exchange must be available for sale in your
     state of residence.
  o The prospectuses of both funds must offer the exchange privilege. o You must
  hold the shares you buy when you establish your account for at
     least 7 days  before you can  exchange  them.  After the  account is open 7
     days, you can exchange shares every regular business day.
  o  You must meet the minimum  purchase  requirements for the fund whose shares
     you purchase by exchange.
  o Before exchanging into a fund, you must obtain and read its prospectus.

Shares of a particular class of the Fund may be exchanged only for shares of the
same class in the other Oppenheimer funds. For example, you can exchange Class A
shares of this Fund only for Class A shares  of  another  fund.  In some  cases,
sales  charges  may be  imposed  on  exchange  transactions.  For tax  purposes,
exchanges  of  shares  involve  a sale of the  shares  of the fund you own and a
purchase of the shares of the other fund,  which may result in a capital gain or
loss.  Please refer to "How to Exchange  Shares" in the  Statement of Additional
Information for more details.

     You can find a list of Oppenheimer funds currently  available for exchanges
in the  Statement of Additional  Information  or obtain one by calling a service
representative at 1.800.525.7048. That list can change from time to time.

HOW DO YOU SUBMIT EXCHANGE REQUESTS?  Exchanges may be requested in writing
or by telephone:
Written Exchange Requests. Submit an OppenheimerFunds Exchange Request form,
     signed by all owners of the account.  Send it to the Transfer  Agent at the
     address on the Back  Cover.  Exchanges  of shares  held under  certificates
     cannot be processed  unless the Transfer  Agent  receives the  certificates
     with the request.
Telephone Exchange  Requests.  Telephone exchange requests may be made either by
     calling a service  representative at 1.800.852.8457,  or by using PhoneLink
     for automated exchanges by calling 1.800.533.3310.  Telephone exchanges may
     be made only between accounts that are registered with the same name(s) and
     address. Shares held under certificates may not be exchanged by telephone.

ARE THERE LIMITATIONS ON EXCHANGES?  There are certain exchange policies you
should be aware of:
  o  Shares are normally  redeemed  from one fund and  purchased  from the other
     fund in the exchange  transaction on the same regular business day on which
     the  Transfer  Agent  receives an  exchange  request  that  conforms to the
     policies  described above. It must be received by the close of The New York
     Stock  Exchange that day, which is normally 4:00 P.M. but may be earlier on
     some days.  However,  either  fund may delay the  purchase of shares of the
     fund you are exchanging  into up to seven days if it determines it would be
     disadvantaged by a same-day exchange.  For example, the receipt of multiple
     exchange  requests  from a "market  timer"  might  require the Fund to sell
     securities at a disadvantageous time and/or price.
  o  Because excessive trading can hurt fund performance and harm  shareholders,
     the Fund reserves the right to refuse any exchange request that it believes
     will disadvantage it, or to refuse multiple exchange requests  submitted by
     a shareholder or dealer.
  o  The Fund may amend,  suspend or  terminate  the  exchange  privilege at any
     time. The Fund will provide you notice  whenever it is required to do so by
     applicable  law,  but it may  impose  changes  at any  time  for  emergency
     purposes.
  o  If the Transfer Agent cannot exchange all the shares you request because of
     a restriction  cited above,  only the shares  eligible for exchange will be
     exchanged.


Shareholder Account Rules and Policies
     More  information  about the Fund's  policies  and  procedures  for buying,
     selling and  exchanging  shares  shares is  continued  in the  Statement of
     Additional Information.

The  offering  of  shares  may be  suspended  during  any  period  in which  the
     determination  of net asset value is  suspended,  and the  offering  may be
     suspended by the Board of Trustees at any time the Board  believes it is in
     the Fund's best interest to do so.
Telephone transaction privileges for purchases,  redemptions or exchanges may be
     modified,  suspended or  terminated  by the Fund at any time. If an account
     has more than one owner,  the Fund and the  Transfer  Agent may rely on the
     instructions of any one owner.  Telephone privileges apply to each owner of
     the account and the dealer  representative of record for the account unless
     the Transfer Agent receives cancellation  instructions from an owner of the
     account.
The  Transfer  Agent will record any telephone  calls to verify data  concerning
     transactions  and has adopted other  procedures  to confirm that  telephone
     instructions   are   genuine,   by   requiring   callers  to  provide   tax
     identification  numbers and other  account  data or by using  PINs,  and by
     confirming such  transactions  in writing.  The Transfer Agent and the Fund
     will  not be  liable  for  losses  or  expenses  arising  out of  telephone
     instructions reasonably believed to be genuine.
Redemption or transfer  requests  will not be honored  until the Transfer  Agent
     receives all required  documents  in proper  form.  From time to time,  the
     Transfer Agent in its discretion may waive certain of the  requirements for
     redemptions stated in this Prospectus.
Dealers that can perform account transactions for their clients by participating
     in NETWORKING  through the National  Securities  Clearing  Corporation  are
     responsible  for  obtaining  their  clients'  permission  to perform  those
     transactions,  and are responsible to their clients who are shareholders of
     the Fund if the dealer performs any transaction erroneously or improperly.
The  redemption prices for shares will vary from day to day because the value of
     the securities in the Fund's portfolio  fluctuates.  The redemption  price,
     which is the net asset value per share, will normally differ for each class
     of shares.  The  redemption  value of your  shares may be more or less than
     their original cost.
Payment for redeemed shares ordinarily is made in cash. It is forwarded by check
     or  through  AccountLink  or by  Federal  Funds  wire  (as  elected  by the
     shareholder) within seven days after the Transfer Agent receives redemption
     instructions  in  proper  form.   However,   under  unusual   circumstances
     determined  by the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  payment  may be
     delayed  or   suspended.   For  accounts   registered  in  the  name  of  a
     broker-dealer,  payment will  normally be forwarded  within three  business
     days after redemption.
The  Transfer  Agent may delay  forwarding  a check or  processing a payment via
     AccountLink  for  recently  purchased  shares,  but only until the purchase
     payment has cleared. That delay may be as much as 10 days from the date the
     shares were purchased.  That delay may be avoided if you purchase shares by
     Federal Funds wire or certified check, or arrange with your bank to provide
     telephone or written  assurance to the  Transfer  Agent that your  purchase
     payment has cleared.
Involuntary redemptions of small accounts may be made by the Fund if the account
     value has fallen below $200 for reasons other than the fact that the market
     value of shares has dropped.  In some cases involuntary  redemptions may be
     made to repay the  Distributor  for losses from the  cancellation  of share
     purchase orders.
Shares may be "redeemed in kind" under unusual  circumstances (such as a lack of
     liquidity in the Fund's portfolio to meet redemptions). This means that the
     redemption  proceeds  will be paid with liquid  securities  from the Fund's
     portfolio.
"Backup  Withholding"  of  Federal  income tax may be  applied  against  taxable
     dividends,  distributions and redemption proceeds (including  exchanges) if
     you fail to furnish the Fund your  correct,  certified  Social  Security or
     Employer  Identification  Number when you sign your application,  or if you
     under-report your income to the Internal Revenue Service.
To   avoid sending  duplicate  copies of materials to households,  the Fund will
     mail only one copy of each  prospectus,  annual and  semi-annual  report to
     shareholders  having the same last name and address on the Fund's  records.
     The consolidation of these mailings, called householding, benefits the Fund
     through reduced mailing expense.

     If you want to receive multiple copies of these materials, you may call the
     Transfer Agent at 1.800.525.7048. You may also notify the Transfer Agent in
     writing.  Individual copies of prospectuses and reports will be sent to you
     within 30 days  after the  Transfer  Agent  receives  your  request to stop
     householding.


Dividends and Taxes
DIVIDENDS. The Fund intends to declare dividends separately for Class A, Class B
and Class C shares from net tax-exempt  income and/or net investment income each
regular  business day and to pay those  dividends to  shareholders  monthly on a
date selected by the Board of Trustees.  Daily dividends will not be declared or
paid on newly  purchased  shares until  Federal  Funds are available to the Fund
from the purchase payment for such shares.

     The Fund attempts to pay  dividends on Class A shares at a constant  level.
There is no  assurance  that it will be able to do so. The Board of Trustees may
change  the  targeted  dividend  level at any  time,  without  prior  notice  to
shareholders.  Additionally, the amount of those dividends and the distributions
paid on Class B and C shares may vary over time, depending on market conditions,
the  composition of the Fund's  portfolio,  and expenses borne by the particular
class of  shares.  Dividends  and  distributions  paid on  Class A  shares  will
generally  be higher than for Class B and Class C shares,  which  normally  have
higher  expenses  than Class A. The Fund cannot  guarantee  that it will pay any
dividends or distributions.

CAPITAL  GAINS.  Although the Fund does not seek capital  gains,  it may realize
capital  gains  on the sale of  portfolio  securities.  If it does,  it may make
distributions  out of any net short-term or long-term  capital gains in December
of each year.  The Fund may make  supplemental  distributions  of dividends  and
capital gains following the end of its fiscal year. Long-term capital gains will
be separately identified in the tax information the Fund sends you after the end
of the calendar year.

WHAT  CHOICES  DO YOU  HAVE FOR  RECEIVING  DISTRIBUTIONS?  When  you open  your
account,  specify on your application how you want to receive your dividends and
distributions. You have four options:
Reinvest All Distributions in the Fund. You can elect to reinvest all
     dividends and capital gains distributions in additional shares of the
     Fund.
Reinvest   Dividends  or  Capital   Gains.   You  can  elect  to  reinvest  some
     distributions  (dividends,  short-term  capital gains or long-term  capital
     gains  distributions)  in the  Fund  while  receiving  the  other  types of
     distributions  by check or having  them sent to your bank  account  through
     AccountLink.
Receive All  Distributions  in Cash.  You can  elect to  receive a check for all
     dividends  and capital gains  distributions  or have them sent to your bank
     through AccountLink.
Reinvest  Your  Distributions  in  Another  OppenheimerFunds  Account.  You  can
     reinvest  all  distributions  in  the  same  class  of  shares  of  another
     Oppenheimer fund account you have established.


TAXES. Dividends paid from net investment income earned by the Fund on municipal
securities  will be excludable from gross income for Federal  individual  income
tax  purposes.  A portion of a dividend  that is derived from  interest  paid on
certain  "private  activity  bonds" may be an item of tax  preference if you are
subject to the  alternative  minimum tax. If the Fund earns  interest on taxable
investments,  any  dividends  derived  from  those  earnings  will be taxable as
ordinary income to shareholders.
     Dividends and capital gains  distributions may be subject to state or local
taxes.  Long-term  capital  gains are taxable as  long-term  capital  gains when
distributed  to  shareholders.  It does not  matter  how long you have held your
shares.  Dividends  paid from  short-term  capital gains are taxable as ordinary
income.  Whether you reinvest your  distributions  in additional  shares or take
them in cash,  the tax treatment is the same.  Every year the Fund will send you
and the IRS a  statement  showing  the amount of any  taxable  distribution  you
received in the previous year as well as the amount of your tax-exempt income.
Remember There  May be Taxes on  Transactions.  Even  though  the Fund  seeks to
     distribute  tax-exempt income to shareholders,  you may have a capital gain
     or loss when you sell or exchange  your  shares.  A capital gain or loss is
     the difference  between the price you paid for the shares and the price you
     received  when you sold them.  Any capital gain is subject to capital gains
     tax.
Returns of Capital Can Occur. In certain cases,  distributions  made by the Fund
     may be considered a non-taxable return of capital to shareholders.  If that
     occurs, it will be identified in notices to shareholders.

     This   information  is  only  a  summary  of  certain  federal  income  tax
information  about your  investment.  You should  consult  with your tax adviser
about the effect of an investment in the Fund on your particular tax situation.

Financial Highlights
The Financial  Highlights  Table is presented to help you  understand the Fund's
financial performance for the past fiscal periods.  Certain information reflects
financial  results  for a single  Fund  share.  The total  returns  in the table
represent the rate that an investor would have earned (or lost) on an investment
in the Fund (assuming  reinvestment  of all dividends and  distributions).  This
information has been audited by KPMG LLP, the Fund's independent auditors, whose
report, along with the Fund's financial statements, is included in the Statement
of Additional Information, which is available on request.



<PAGE>


                            Appendix to Prospectus of
                         Oppenheimer Municipal Bond Fund

      Graphic Material included in the Prospectus of Oppenheimer  Municipal Bond
Fund: "Annual Total Returns (Class A) (% as of 7/31 each year)":

      A bar chart will be included in the  Prospectus of  Oppenheimer  Municipal
Bond Fund (the  "Fund")  depicting  the annual total  returns of a  hypothetical
investment  in  Class A shares  of the  Fund  for each of the last ten  calendar
years,  without  deducting sales charges.  Set forth below are the relevant data
points that will appear on the bar chart.

                  Calendar          Oppenheimer
                            Year Municipal Bond Fund
                  Ended             Class A Shares

                  12/31/99              -5.09%
                  12/31/98               6.05%
                  12/31/97               9.38%
                  12/31/96               5.17%
                  12/31/95              18.28%
                  12/31/94              -9.19%
                  12/31/93              13.79%
                  12/31/92               9.20%
                  12/31/91              12.11%
                  12/31/90               5.93%



<PAGE>


                                       97
INFORMATION AND SERVICES

For  More  Information  on  Oppenheimer   Municipal  Bond  Fund:  The  following
additional information about the Fund is available without charge upon request:

STATEMENT  OF  ADDITIONAL   INFORMATION   This  document   includes   additional
information about the Fund's investment policies,  risks, and operations.  It is
incorporated by reference into this  Prospectus  (which means it is legally part
of this Prospectus).

ANNUAL  AND  SEMI-ANNUAL   REPORTS  Additional   information  about  the  Fund's
investments  and  performance is available in the Fund's Annual and  Semi-Annual
Reports to  shareholders.  The Annual  Report  includes a  discussion  of market
conditions  and investment  strategies  that  significantly  affected the Fund's
performance during its last fiscal year.

How to Get More Information:
You can  request  the  Statement  of  Additional  Information,  the  Annual  and
Semi-Annual Reports, and other information about the Fund or your account:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Telephone:                    Call OppenheimerFunds Services toll-free:
                                 1.800.525.7048
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Mail:                         Write to:
                                 OppenheimerFunds Services
                                 P.O. Box 5270
                                 Denver, Colorado 80217-5270
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On the Internet:                 You can send us a request by e-mail or
                                 read or down-load documents on
                                 the OppenheimerFunds web site:
                                 http://www.oppenheimerfunds.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You can also obtain copies of the Statement of Additional  Information and other
Fund  documents  and  reports by visiting  the SEC's  Public  Reference  Room in
Washington,  D.C.  (Phone  1.202.942.8090)  or the EDGAR  database  on the SEC's
Internet web site at http://www.sec.gov. Copies may be obtained after payment of
a  duplicating  fee by electronic  request at the request SEC's e-mail  address:
http://www.  [email protected]  or by  writing  to the SEC's  Public  Reference
Section, Washington, D.C. 20549-0102.



No one has been authorized to provide any information  about the Fund or to make
any  representations  about  the  Fund  other  than  what is  contained  in this
Prospectus.  This  Prospectus is not an offer to sell shares of the Fund,  nor a
solicitation  of an offer to buy shares of the Fund,  to any person in any state
or other jurisdiction where it is unlawful to make such an offer.



SEC File No. 811-2668                     The Fund's shares are distributed
by:
PR0310.001.1100                     [logo] Oppenheimer Funds Distributors,
Inc.
Printed on recycled paper.                               Distributor, Inc.
                                               Oppenheimer Municipal Bond Fund

6803 South Tuscon Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112
1-800-525-7048


Statement of Additional Information dated January 8, 2001

     This Statement of Additional Information is not a Prospectus. This document
contains  additional  information about the Fund and supplements  information in
the  Prospectus  dated  January 8,  2001.  It should be read  together  with the
Prospectus,  which may be  obtained  by writing to the  Fund's  Transfer  Agent,
OppenheimerFunds  Services,  at P.O.  Box  5270,  Denver,  Colorado  80217 or by
calling the Transfer Agent at the toll-free number shown above or by downloading
it from the OppenheimerFunds Internet web site at www.oppenheimerfunds.com.


Contents
                                      Page
About the Fund
Additional Information About the Fund's Investment Policies and Risks...
    The Fund's Investment Policies......................................
    Other Investment Techniques and Strategies..........................
    Investment Restrictions.............................................
How the Fund is Managed ................................................
    Organization and History............................................
    Trustees and Officers of the Fund...................................
    The Manager.........................................................
    Brokerage Policies of the Fund......................................
    Distribution and Service Plans......................................
    Performance of the Fund.............................................

About Your Account
How To Buy Shares.......................................................
How To Sell Shares......................................................
How to Exchange Shares..................................................
Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes......................................
Additional Information About the Fund...................................

Financial Information About the Fund
Independent Auditors' Report
Financial Statements ...................................................

Appendix A: Municipal Bond Ratings......................................
Appendix B: Industry Classifications....................................
Appendix C: Special Sales Charge Arrangements and Waivers...............



<PAGE>


ABOUT THE FUND

Additional Information About the Fund's Investment Policies and Risks

     The investment  objective and the principal investment policies of the Fund
are  described  in the  Prospectus.  This  Statement of  Additional  Information
contains  supplemental  information  about  those  policies  and  the  types  of
securities  that the Fund's  investment  Manager,  OppenheimerFunds,  Inc., will
select  for the  Fund.  Additional  explanations  are also  provided  about  the
strategies the Fund may use to try to achieve its objective.

The Fund's  Investment  Policies.  The Fund does not make  investments  with the
objective of seeking capital growth,  since that would generally be inconsistent
with its goal of seeking tax-exempt income. However, the value of the securities
held by the Fund may be affected by changes in general  interest rates.  Because
the current value of debt securities varies inversely with changes in prevailing
interest rates, if interest rates increased after a security was purchased, that
security  would normally  decline in value.  Conversely,  should  interest rates
decrease after a security was purchased, normally its value would rise.

     However,  those fluctuations in value will not generally result in realized
gains or  losses  to the  Fund  unless  the Fund  sells  the  security  prior to
maturity.  A debt  security held to maturity is redeemable by its issuer at full
principal  value plus  accrued  interest.  The Fund does not  usually  intend to
dispose of securities prior to their maturity,  but may do so for liquidity,  or
because of other factors affecting the issuer that cause the Manager to sell the
particular  security.  In that case, the Fund could experience a capital gain or
loss on the sale.

     There are  variations in the credit quality of municipal  securities,  both
within a particular rating  classification  and between  classifications.  These
variations depend on numerous factors. The yields of municipal securities depend
on a number of factors, including general conditions in the municipal securities
market,  the size of a particular  offering,  the maturity of the obligation and
rating (if any) of the issue.  These  factors are  discussed  in greater  detail
below.

Municipal  Securities.  The types of municipal  securities in which the Fund may
invest are  described in the  Prospectus  under "About the Fund's  Investments."
Municipal  securities  are  generally  classified as general  obligation  bonds,
revenue bonds and notes.  A discussion of the general  characteristics  of these
principal types of municipal securities follows below.

     |X| Municipal Bonds. We have classified longer term municipal securities as
"municipal bonds." The principal  classifications  of long-term  municipal bonds
are "general  obligation"  and "revenue"  (including  "industrial  development")
bonds. They may have fixed, variable or floating rates of interest, as described
below.

     Some bonds may be  "callable,"  allowing  the issuer to redeem  them before
their maturity date. To protect  bondholders,  callable bonds may be issued with
provisions that prevent them from being called for a period of time.  Typically,
that is 5 to 10 years from the issuance date.  When interest  rates decline,  if
the call protection on a bond has expired, it is more likely that the issuer may
call the bond.  If that occurs,  the Fund might have to reinvest the proceeds of
the called bond in bonds that pay a lower rate of return.

            |_| General  Obligation  Bonds.  The basic  security  behind general
obligation  bonds is the issuer's pledge of its full faith and credit and taxing
power,  if any,  for the  repayment  of  principal  and the payment of interest.
Issuers of general obligation bonds include states, counties, cities, towns, and
regional  districts.  The proceeds of these  obligations are used to fund a wide
range of public  projects,  including  construction  or  improvement of schools,
highways and roads,  and water and sewer systems.  The rate of taxes that can be
levied  for the  payment  of debt  service  on these  bonds  may be  limited  or
unlimited. Additionally, there may be limits as to the rate or amount of special
assessments that can be levied to meet these obligations.

            |_| Revenue  Bonds.  The  principal  security  for a revenue bond is
generally  the  net  revenues  derived  from a  particular  facility,  group  of
facilities,  or, in some cases,  the  proceeds of a special  excise tax or other
specific  revenue source.  Revenue bonds are issued to finance a wide variety of
capital  projects.  Examples  include  electric,  gas,  water and sewer systems;
highways,  bridges,  and  tunnels;  port and airport  facilities;  colleges  and
universities; and hospitals.

            Although  the  principal  security for these types of bonds may vary
from  bond to  bond,  many  provide  additional  security  in the form of a debt
service reserve fund that may be used to make principal and interest payments on
the  issuer's  obligations.  Housing  finance  authorities  have a wide range of
security, including partially or fully insured mortgages, rent subsidized and/or
collateralized  mortgages,  and/or the net revenues from housing or other public
projects.  Some  authorities  provide further  security in the form of a state's
ability (without obligation) to make up deficiencies in the debt service reserve
fund.

            |_| Industrial  Development Bonds.  Industrial development bonds are
considered  municipal  bonds if the interest paid is exempt from federal  income
tax.  They are issued by or on behalf of public  authorities  to raise  money to
finance various privately  operated  facilities for business and  manufacturing,
housing,  sports, and pollution control. These bonds may also be used to finance
public  facilities such as airports,  mass transit systems,  ports, and parking.
The payment of the principal  and interest on such bonds is dependent  solely on
the ability of the  facility's  user to meet its financial  obligations  and the
pledge,  if any, of real and personal  property financed by the bond as security
for those payments.

            |_| Private  Activity  Municipal  Securities.  The Tax Reform Act of
1986 (the "Tax Reform Act") reorganized, as well as amended, the rules governing
tax  exemption for interest on certain  types of municipal  securities.  The Tax
Reform Act  generally  did not change the tax treatment of bonds issued in order
to finance governmental  operations.  Thus, interest on general obligation bonds
issued by or on behalf of state or local governments,  the proceeds of which are
used to finance the operations of such governments,  continues to be tax-exempt.
However,   the  Tax  Reform  Act  limited  the  use  of  tax-exempt   bonds  for
non-governmental  (private) purposes. More stringent restrictions were placed on
the use of proceeds of such bonds. Interest on certain private activity bonds is
taxable  under  the  revised  rules.  There  is  an  exception  for  "qualified"
tax-exempt private activity bonds, for example,  exempt facility bonds including
certain  industrial  development  bonds,  qualified  mortgage  bonds,  qualified
Section 501(c)(3) bonds, and qualified student loan bonds.

     In addition,  limitations as to the amount of private  activity bonds which
each state may issue were  revised  downward by the Tax Reform  Act,  which will
reduce the supply of such  bonds.  The value of the  Fund's  portfolio  could be
affected if there is a reduction in the availability of such bonds.

     Interest on certain  private  activity  bonds  issued after August 7, 1986,
which  continues  to be  tax-exempt,  will be treated as a tax  preference  item
subject  to the  alternative  minimum  tax  (discussed  below) to which  certain
taxpayers are subject.  The Fund may hold  municipal  securities the interest on
which (and thus a proportionate share of the  exempt-interest  dividends paid by
the Fund) will be subject to the Federal  alternative minimum tax on individuals
and corporations.

     The Federal  alternative minimum tax is designed to ensure that all persons
who receive  income pay some tax,  even if their  regular  tax is zero.  This is
accomplished in part by including in taxable income certain tax preference items
that are used to calculate  alternative  minimum taxable income.  The Tax Reform
Act  made  tax-exempt  interest  from  certain  private  activity  bonds  a  tax
preference item for purposes of the  alternative  minimum tax on individuals and
corporations.  Any  exempt-interest  dividend  paid  by a  regulated  investment
company will be treated as interest on a specific  private  activity bond to the
extent of the  proportionate  relationship  the interest the investment  company
receives on such bonds bears to all its exempt interest dividends.

     In addition,  corporate  taxpayers  subject to the alternative  minimum tax
may,  under some  circumstances,  have to include  exempt-interest  dividends in
calculating  their  alternative  minimum  taxable  income.  That could  occur in
situations where the "adjusted current earnings" of the corporation  exceeds its
alternative minimum taxable income.

     To determine  whether a municipal  security is treated as a taxable private
activity  bond,  it is subject to a test for:  (a) a trade or  business  use and
security  interest,  or (b) a  private  loan  restriction.  Under  the  trade or
business use and security  interest  test, an  obligation is a private  activity
bond if: (i) more than 10% of the bond  proceeds  are used for private  business
purposes  and (ii) 10% or more of the  payment of  principal  or interest on the
issue is directly or  indirectly  derived from such private use or is secured by
the privately used property or the payments  related to the use of the property.
For certain types of uses, a 5% threshold is substituted for this 10% threshold.

     The term "private business use" means any direct or indirect use in a trade
or  business  carried  on by an  individual  or  entity  other  than a state  or
municipal  governmental unit. Under the private loan restriction,  the amount of
bond proceeds that may be used to make private loans is limited to the lesser of
5% or $5.0 million of the proceeds. Thus, certain issues of municipal securities
could lose their  tax-exempt  status  retroactively  if the issuer fails to meet
certain  requirements as to the expenditure of the proceeds of that issue or the
use of the bond-financed  facility. The Fund makes no independent  investigation
of the users of such bonds or their use of  proceeds  of the bonds.  If the Fund
should hold a bond that loses its tax-exempt status  retroactively,  there might
be  an  adjustment  to  the   tax-exempt   income   previously   distributed  to
shareholders.

     Additionally,  a private  activity bond that would otherwise be a qualified
tax-exempt  private  activity bond will not, under Internal Revenue Code Section
147(a),  be a qualified  bond for any period during which it is held by a person
who is a "substantial user" of the facilities or by a "related person" of such a
substantial user. This "substantial  user" provision applies primarily to exempt
facility bonds,  including industrial  development bonds. The Fund may invest in
industrial  development bonds and other private activity bonds.  Therefore,  the
Fund may not be an appropriate  investment  for entities which are  "substantial
users" (or persons  related to "substantial  users") of such exempt  facilities.
Those entities and persons should consult their tax advisers  before  purchasing
shares of the Fund.

     A  "substantial  user"  of  such  facilities  is  defined  generally  as  a
"non-exempt  person who  regularly  uses part of a facility"  financed  from the
proceeds  of exempt  facility  bonds.  Generally,  an  individual  will not be a
"related  person" under the Internal  Revenue Code unless such individual or the
individual's   immediate  family  (spouse,   brothers,   sisters  and  immediate
descendants)  own directly or indirectly in the aggregate more than 50% in value
of the equity of a corporation or partnership which is a "substantial user" of a
facility financed from the proceeds of exempt facility bonds.

     |X|  Municipal  Notes.  Municipal  securities  having a maturity  (when the
security  is  issued)  of less than one year are  generally  known as  municipal
notes.  Municipal  notes  generally are used to provide for  short-term  working
capital needs.  Some of the types of municipal  notes the Fund can invest in are
described below.

            |_| Tax  Anticipation  Notes.  These are issued to  finance  working
capital needs of municipalities.  Generally,  they are issued in anticipation of
various  seasonal  tax revenue,  such as income,  sales,  use or other  business
taxes, and are payable from these specific future taxes.

            |_|  Revenue   Anticipation   Notes.   These  are  notes  issued  in
expectation  of  receipt of other  types of  revenue,  such as Federal  revenues
available under Federal revenue-sharing programs.

            |_| Bond Anticipation  Notes. Bond anticipation  notes are issued to
provide  interim  financing  until  long-term  financing  can be  arranged.  The
long-term  bonds  that are  issued  typically  also  provide  the  money for the
repayment of the notes.

            |_|  Construction  Loan  Notes.  These are sold to  provide  project
construction   financing  until  permanent  financing  can  be  secured.   After
successful  completion and acceptance of the project,  it may receive  permanent
financing through public agencies, such as the Federal Housing Administration.

     |X|  Tax  Exempt  Commercial  Paper.  This  type of  short-term  obligation
(usually  having a maturity of 270 days or less) is issued by a municipality  to
meet current working capital needs.

     |X| Municipal Lease Obligations.  The Fund's investments in municipal lease
obligations  may be through  certificates of  participation  that are offered to
investors by public  entities.  Municipal leases may take the form of a lease or
an installment purchase contract issued by a state or local government authority
to obtain funds to acquire a wide variety of equipment and facilities.

     Some municipal lease securities may be deemed to be "illiquid"  securities.
Their  purchase  by the Fund would be limited as  described  below in  "Illiquid
Securities."  From  time to time  the Fund may  invest  more  than 5% of its net
assets in municipal  lease  obligations  that the Manager has  determined  to be
liquid under guidelines set by the Board of Trustees.  Those guidelines  require
the Manager to evaluate:
     |_| the frequency of trades and price quotations for such  securities;  |_|
     the number of dealers or other potential buyers willing to purchase
      or sell such securities;  |_| the availability of  market-makers;  and |_|
     the nature of the trades for such securities.

     While the Fund holds such  securities,  the Manager will also  evaluate the
likelihood of a continuing market for these securities and their credit quality.

     Municipal   leases  have  special  risk   considerations.   Although  lease
obligations do not constitute general  obligations of the municipality for which
the  municipality's  taxing power is pledged,  a lease  obligation is ordinarily
backed by the  municipality's  covenant to budget for,  appropriate and make the
payments due under the lease  obligation.  However,  certain  lease  obligations
contain  "non-appropriation"  clauses which provide that the municipality has no
obligation to make lease or installment purchase payments in future years unless
money is appropriated  for that purpose on a yearly basis.  While the obligation
might be secured by the lease, it might be difficult to dispose of that property
in case of a default.

     Projects  financed with  certificates  of  participation  generally are not
subject to state constitutional debt limitations or other statutory requirements
that may apply to other municipal  securities.  Payments by the public entity on
the obligation  underlying the certificates  are derived from available  revenue
sources.  That  revenue  might be  diverted  to the  funding of other  municipal
service  projects.  Payments of interest  and/or  principal  with respect to the
certificates  are not  guaranteed and do not constitute an obligation of a state
or any of its political subdivisions.

     In addition to the risk of "non-appropriation,"  municipal lease securities
do not have as highly liquid a market as conventional municipal bonds. Municipal
leases,  like  other  municipal  debt  obligations,  are  subject to the risk of
non-payment of interest or repayment of principal by the issuer.  The ability of
issuers of  municipal  leases to make timely  lease  payments  may be  adversely
affected in general economic downturns and as relative governmental cost burdens
are reallocated among federal,  state and local governmental units. A default in
payment of income would  result in a reduction  of income to the Fund.  It could
also result in a reduction in the value of the municipal lease and that, as well
as a default in  repayment of  principal,  could result in a decrease in the net
asset value of the Fund.

     |X| Ratings of Municipal Securities.  Ratings by ratings organizations such
as Moody's  Investors  Service,  Standard & Poor's  Corporation and Fitch,  Inc.
represent the respective  rating agency's  opinions of the credit quality of the
municipal securities they undertake to rate. However,  their ratings are general
opinions and are not guarantees of quality.  Municipal  securities that have the
same  maturity,  coupon  and  rating  may have  different  yields,  while  other
municipal  securities  that have the same  maturity  and  coupon  but  different
ratings may have the same yield.

     Lower grade securities may have a higher yield than securities rated in the
higher rating  categories.  In addition to having a greater risk of default than
higher-grade, securities, there may be less of a market for these securities. As
a result they may be harder to sell at an acceptable price. The additional risks
mean that the Fund may not  receive the  anticipated  level of income from these
securities,  and the Fund's net asset  value may be  affected by declines in the
value of  lower-grade  securities.  However,  because  the  added  risk of lower
quality   securities   might  not  be  consistent  with  the  Fund's  policy  of
preservation  of  capital,  the Fund  limits its  investments  in lower  quality
securities.

     Subsequent  to its purchase by the Fund, a municipal  security may cease to
be rated or its rating may be reduced below the minimum required for purchase by
the Fund. Neither event requires the Fund to sell the security,  but the Manager
will consider  such events in  determining  whether the Fund should  continue to
hold the  security.  To the extent that  ratings  given by  Moody's,  Standard &
Poor's, or Fitch change as a result of changes in those rating  organizations or
their  rating  systems,  the Fund will  attempt  to use  comparable  ratings  as
standards for investments in accordance with the Fund's investment policies.

     The Fund may buy municipal securities that are "pre-refunded." The issuer's
obligation  to  repay  the   principal   value  of  the  security  is  generally
collateralized with U.S. government securities placed in an escrow account. This
causes the  pre-refunded  security to have essentially the same risks of default
as a AAA-rated security.

     A list of the rating  categories  of Moody's,  S&P and Fitch for  municipal
securities  is  contained  in  Appendix  A  to  this   Statement  of  Additional
Information.  Because  the Fund may  purchase  securities  that are  unrated  by
nationally  recognized  rating  organizations,  the  Manager  will  make its own
assessment of the credit  quality of unrated  issues the Fund buys.  The Manager
will use criteria similar to those used by the rating agencies,  and assigning a
rating category to a security that is comparable to what the Manager  believes a
rating agency would assign to that security.  However, the Manager's rating does
not constitute a guarantee of the quality of a particular issue.

Other Investment Techniques and Strategies.  In seeking its objective,  the Fund
may from time to time employ the types of investment  strategies and investments
described below.

     Portfolio Turnover. A change in the securities held by the Fund from buying
and selling  investments is known as "portfolio  turnover."  Short-term  trading
increases  the  rate  of  portfolio  turnover  and  could  increase  the  Fund's
transaction  costs.  However,  the Fund ordinarily incurs little or no brokerage
expense because most of the Fund's  portfolio  transactions are principal trades
that do not require payment of brokerage commissions.

     The Fund ordinarily does not trade securities to achieve short-term capital
gains,  because they would not be tax-exempt  income.  To a limited degree,  the
Fund may engage in short-term trading to attempt to take advantage of short-term
market variations. It may also do so to dispose of a portfolio security prior to
its maturity. That might be done if, on the basis of a revised credit evaluation
of the  issuer  or other  considerations,  the Fund  believes  such  disposition
advisable  or it needs to  generate  cash to  satisfy  requests  to redeem  Fund
shares.  In those  cases,  the Fund may  realize a  capital  gain or loss on its
investments.  The Fund's annual portfolio turnover rate normally is not expected
to exceed 100%.

     |X|  Floating  Rate and Variable  Rate  Obligations.  Variable  rate demand
obligations  have a demand feature that allows the Fund to tender the obligation
to the issuer or a third party prior to its  maturity.  The tender may be at par
value plus accrued interest, according to the terms of the obligation.

     The  interest  rate on a  floating  rate  demand  note is based on a stated
prevailing  market rate,  such as a bank's prime rate, the 91-day U.S.  Treasury
Bill rate, or some other standard,  and is adjusted automatically each time such
rate is adjusted. The interest rate on a variable rate demand note is also based
on a stated  prevailing  market rate but is adjusted  automatically at specified
intervals of not less than one year. Generally, the changes in the interest rate
on such  securities  reduce the  fluctuation in their market value.  As interest
rates  decrease  or  increase,   the  potential  for  capital   appreciation  or
depreciation is less than that for fixed-rate  obligations of the same maturity.
The Manager may determine that an unrated  floating rate or variable rate demand
obligation  meets the Fund's  quality  standards  by reason of being backed by a
letter  of credit  or  guarantee  issued  by a bank  that  meets  those  quality
standards.

     Floating rate and variable rate demand notes that have a stated maturity in
excess of one year may have  features  that  permit the  holder to  recover  the
principal amount of the underlying security at specified intervals not exceeding
one year and upon not more than 30 days' notice. The issuer of that type of note
normally has a corresponding  right in its discretion,  after a given period, to
prepay  the  outstanding  principal  amount of the note plus  accrued  interest.
Generally  the issuer  must  provide a specified  number of days'  notice to the
holder.

     |X| Inverse Floaters and Other Derivative Investments. Inverse floaters may
offer  relatively high current income,  reflecting the spread between  long-term
and short-term tax exempt  interest  rates. As long as the municipal yield curve
remains  relatively steep and short-term rates remain  relatively low, owners of
inverse  floaters will have the  opportunity  to earn  interest at  above-market
rates because they receive  interest at the higher long-term rates but have paid
for bonds with lower  short-term  rates.  If the yield curve flattens and shifts
upward,  an inverse  floater will lose value more  quickly  than a  conventional
long-term  bond.  The Fund  will  invest  in  inverse  floaters  to seek  higher
tax-exempt  yields than are available from fixed-rate bonds that have comparable
maturities and credit  ratings.  In some cases the holder of an inverse  floater
may have an option to convert the floater to a  fixed-rate  bond,  pursuant to a
"rate-lock option."

     Some inverse  floaters  have a feature  known as an interest  rate "cap" as
part of the terms of the  investment.  Investing in inverse  floaters  that have
interest  rate caps might be part of a  portfolio  strategy to try to maintain a
high current  yield for the Fund when the Fund has invested in inverse  floaters
that  expose  the Fund to the risk of  short-term  interest  rate  fluctuations.
"Embedded"  caps can be used to hedge a portion of the Fund's exposure to rising
interest  rates.  When  interest  rates exceed a  pre-determined  rate,  the cap
generates additional cash flows that offset the decline in interest rates on the
inverse floater,  and the hedge is successful.  However, the Fund bears the risk
that if interest rates do not rise above the pre-determined rate, the cap (which
is purchased for  additional  cost) will not provide  additional  cash flows and
will expire worthless.

         Inverse  floaters  are  a  form  of  derivative   investment.   Certain
     derivatives, such as options, futures, indexed securities and entering into
     swap agreements, can be used to increase or decrease the Fund's exposure to
     changing  security prices,  interest rates or other factors that affect the
     value of securities.  However,  these  techniques could result in losses to
     the Fund, if the Manager judges market conditions  incorrectly or employs a
     strategy  that does not correlate  well with the Fund's other  investments.
     These techniques can cause losses if the counterparty  does not perform its
     promises.  An additional risk of investing in municipal securities that are
     derivative investments is that their market value could be expected to vary
     to a much greater extent than the market value of municipal securities that
     are not derivative investments but have similar credit quality,  redemption
     provisions and maturities.

     |X| When-Issued and Delayed  Delivery  Transactions.  The Fund can purchase
securities on a "when-issued" basis, and may purchase or sell such securities on
a "delayed  delivery"  basis.  "When-issued"  or  "delayed  delivery"  refers to
securities  whose  terms  and  indenture  are  available  and for which a market
exists, but which are not available for immediate delivery.

     When  such  transactions  are  negotiated  the price  (which  is  generally
expressed in yield terms) is fixed at the time the commitment is made.  Delivery
and  payment  for the  securities  take  place  at a later  date.  Normally  the
settlement  date is within six months of the  purchase  of  municipal  bonds and
notes.  However,  the Fund may, from time to time, purchase municipal securities
having a settlement  date more than six months and possibly as long as two years
or more after the trade date. The securities are subject to change in value from
market  fluctuation  during the settlement  period. The value at delivery may be
less than the  purchase  price.  For  example,  changes in  interest  rates in a
direction other than that expected by the Manager before  settlement will affect
the value of such securities and may cause loss to the Fund.

     The Fund will engage in when-issued transactions in order to secure what is
considered  to be an  advantageous  price and yield at the time of entering into
the  obligation.  When the Fund  engages  in  when-issued  or  delayed  delivery
transactions,  it relies on the buyer or seller, as the case may be, to complete
the  transaction.  Their  failure  to do so may  cause  the  Fund  to  lose  the
opportunity   to  obtain  the  security  at  a  price  and  yield  it  considers
advantageous.

     When the Fund engages in when-issued and delayed delivery transactions,  it
does so for the purpose of acquiring or selling  securities  consistent with its
investment  objective and policies for its portfolio or for delivery pursuant to
options  contracts it has entered  into,  and not for the purposes of investment
leverage.  Although  the Fund will enter into  when-issued  or  delayed-delivery
purchase  transactions  to  acquire  securities,  the  Fund  may  dispose  of  a
commitment  prior to settlement.  If the Fund chooses to dispose of the right to
acquire a when-issued  security  prior to its  acquisition  or to dispose of its
right to deliver or receive against a forward commitment, it may incur a gain or
loss.

     At the time the Fund makes a commitment to purchase or sell a security on a
when-issued or forward commitment basis, it records the transaction on its books
and reflects  the value of the security  purchased.  In a sale  transaction,  it
records the proceeds to be received,  in  determining  its net asset value.  The
Fund will identify to its Custodian  cash, U.S.  Government  securities or other
high grade debt obligations at least equal to the value of purchase  commitments
until the Fund pays for the investment.

     When-issued transactions and forward commitments can be used by the Fund as
a defensive technique to hedge against anticipated changes in interest rates and
prices.  For instance,  in periods of rising  interest rates and falling prices,
the Fund might sell securities in its portfolio on a forward commitment basis to
attempt to limit its  exposure  to  anticipated  falling  prices.  In periods of
falling  interest  rates  and  rising  prices,  the Fund  might  sell  portfolio
securities  and  purchase the same or similar  securities  on a  when-issued  or
forward commitment basis, to obtain the benefit of currently higher cash yields.

     |X|  Zero-Coupon  Securities.  The Fund  may buy  zero-coupon  and  delayed
interest  municipal  securities.  Zero-coupon  securities  do not make  periodic
interest  payments and are sold at a deep  discount  from their face value.  The
buyer recognizes a rate of return determined by the gradual  appreciation of the
security,  which is redeemed at face value on a specified  maturity  date.  This
discount  depends on the time remaining  until  maturity,  as well as prevailing
interest  rates,  the  liquidity of the  security and the credit  quality of the
issuer.  In the absence of threats to the issuer's credit quality,  the discount
typically decreases as the maturity date approaches. Some zero-coupon securities
are convertible,  in that they are zero-coupon  securities until a predetermined
date, at which time they convert to a security with a specified coupon rate.

     Because zero-coupon  securities pay no interest and compound  semi-annually
at the rate fixed at the time of their  issuance,  their value is generally more
volatile  than the value of other  debt  securities.  Their  value may fall more
dramatically than the value of  interest-bearing  securities when interest rates
rise. When prevailing interest rates fall,  zero-coupon  securities tend to rise
more rapidly in value because they have a fixed rate of return.

     The  Fund's  investment  in  zero-coupon  securities  may cause the Fund to
recognize income and make  distributions to shareholders  before it receives any
cash payments on the zero-coupon  investment.  To generate cash to satisfy those
distribution  requirements,  the Fund may have to sell portfolio securities that
it  otherwise  might  have  continued  to hold or to use cash  flows  from other
sources such as the sale of Fund shares.

     |X| Puts and Standby  Commitments.  When the Fund buys a municipal security
subject to a standby commitment to repurchase the security, the Fund is entitled
to same-day  settlement from the purchaser.  The Fund receives an exercise price
equal to the amortized cost of the underlying security plus any accrued interest
at the  time of  exercise.  A put  purchased  in  conjunction  with a  municipal
security  enables the Fund to sell the  underlying  security  within a specified
period of time at a fixed exercise price.

     The Fund might  purchase a standby  commitment or put separately in cash or
it might  acquire the security  subject to the standby  commitment  or put (at a
price that reflects  that  additional  feature).  The Fund will enter into these
transactions  only with banks and  securities  dealers  that,  in the  Manager's
opinion,  present minimal credit risks.  The Fund's ability to exercise a put or
standby  commitment  will depend on the ability of the bank or dealer to pay for
the  securities if the put or standby  commitment  is exercised.  If the bank or
dealer should default on its  obligation,  the Fund might not be able to recover
all or a  portion  of any  loss  sustained  from  having  to sell  the  security
elsewhere.

     Puts  and  standby  commitments  are not  transferable  by the  Fund.  They
terminate if the Fund sells the underlying  security to a third party.  The Fund
intends to enter into these  arrangements  to  facilitate  portfolio  liquidity,
although  such  arrangements  might  enable  the  Fund to sell a  security  at a
pre-arranged  price that may be higher than the  prevailing  market price at the
time the put or standby commitment is exercised. However, the Fund might refrain
from  exercising  a  put  or  standby   commitment  if  the  exercise  price  is
significantly  higher than the prevailing market price, to avoid imposing a loss
on the seller that could jeopardize the Fund's business  relationships  with the
seller.

         A put or standby  commitment  increases  the cost of the  security  and
     reduces the yield otherwise available from the security.  Any consideration
     paid by the Fund for the put or standby commitment will be reflected on the
     Fund's books as unrealized depreciation while the put or standby commitment
     is  held,  and a  realized  gain or loss  when  the  put or  commitment  is
     exercised or expires.  Interest  income received by the Fund from municipal
     securities  subject to puts or stand-by  commitments may not qualify as tax
     exempt in its hands if the terms of the put or  stand-by  commitment  cause
     the Fund not to be  treated  as the tax owner of the  underlying  municipal
     securities.

     |X|  Repurchase  Agreements.  The Fund may  acquire  securities  subject to
repurchase  agreements.  It may do so for liquidity purposes to meet anticipated
redemptions of Fund shares, or pending the investment of the proceeds from sales
of Fund  shares,  or  pending  the  settlement  of  portfolio  securities.  In a
repurchase  transaction,  the Fund acquires a security from, and  simultaneously
resells it to an approved vendor for delivery on an agreed upon future date. The
resale  price  exceeds  the  purchase  price  by  an  amount  that  reflects  an
agreed-upon  interest rate  effective for the period during which the repurchase
agreement is in effect.  Approved vendors include U.S.  commercial  banks,  U.S.
branches of foreign banks or broker-dealers  that have been designated a primary
dealer in government  securities,  which meet the credit requirements set by the
Fund's Board of Trustees from time to time.

     The majority of these  transactions run from day to day.  Delivery pursuant
to  resale  typically  will  occur  within  one to five  days  of the  purchase.
Repurchase  agreements  having a maturity  beyond  seven days are subject to the
Fund's limits on holding illiquid  investments.  There is no limit on the amount
of the Fund's assets that may be subject to repurchase  agreements of seven days
or less.

     Repurchase agreements, considered "loans" under the Investment Company Act,
are collateralized by the underlying security.  The Fund's repurchase agreements
require  that at all times  while the  repurchase  agreement  is in effect,  the
collateral's   value  must  equal  or  exceed  the  repurchase  price  to  fully
collateralize  the repayment  obligation.  The Manager will monitor the vendor's
creditworthiness  to  confirm  that the  vendor  is  financially  sound and will
continuously monitor the collateral's value. However, if the vendor fails to pay
the resale price on the delivery  date, the Fund may incur costs in disposing of
the collateral and may experience losses if there is any delay in its ability to
do so.

     |X| Illiquid Securities.  The Fund has percentage limitations that apply to
purchases  of  illiquid  securities,  as stated in the  Prospectus.  The  Fund's
fundamental  policies  prohibit it from purchasing any restricted  security that
would require registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission before it
could be sold publicly.

     |X| Loans of Portfolio Securities. To attempt to raise income or raise cash
for liquidity purposes,  the Fund may lend its portfolio  securities to brokers,
dealers and other  financial  institutions.  These loans are limited to not more
than 25% of the value of the Fund's total assets.  There are risks in connection
with  securities  lending.  The  Fund  might  experience  a delay  in  receiving
additional  collateral  to secure a loan,  or a delay in  recovery of the loaned
securities.  The Fund presently does not intend to engage in loans of securities
that will exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's  total assets in the coming year.
Income from securities loans does not constitute  exempt-interest income for the
purpose of paying tax-exempt dividends.

     The Fund must  receive  collateral  for a loan.  Under  current  applicable
regulatory  requirements (which are subject to change), on each business day the
loan collateral must be at least equal to the value of the loaned securities. It
must consist of cash, bank letters of credit,  securities of the U.S. government
or its agencies or  instrumentalities,  or other cash  equivalents  in which the
Fund is permitted to invest.  To be acceptable as collateral,  letters of credit
must obligate a bank to pay amounts demanded by the Fund if the demand meets the
terms of the letter. The terms of the letter of credit and the issuing bank both
must be satisfactory to the Fund.

     When it lends securities,  the Fund receives amounts equal to the dividends
or  interest  on the  loaned  securities.  It also  receives  one or more of (a)
negotiated  loan fees, (b) interest on securities  used as  collateral,  and (c)
interest on  short-term  debt  securities  purchased  with the loan  collateral.
Either  type of  interest  may be  shared  with the  borrower.  The Fund may pay
reasonable  finder's,  administrative  or other  fees in  connection  with these
loans.  The terms of the  Fund's  loans  must meet  applicable  tests  under the
Internal Revenue Code and must permit the Fund to reacquire loaned securities on
five days' notice or in time to vote on any important matter.

     |X|  Hedging.  The Fund may use  hedging  to  attempt  to  protect  against
declines  in the  market  value of its  portfolio,  to permit the Fund to retain
unrealized gains in the value of portfolio securities that have appreciated,  or
to facilitate selling securities for investment reasons. To do so the Fund may:
     |_| sell interest  rate futures or municipal  bond index  futures,  |_| buy
     puts  on  such  futures  or  securities,  or |_|  write  covered  calls  on
     securities, interest rate futures or
       municipal bond index  futures.  Covered calls may also be written on debt
       securities  to attempt to  increase  the Fund's  income,  but that income
       would not be  tax-exempt.  Therefore  it is unlikely  that the Fund would
       write covered calls for that purpose.

     The  Fund  may  also  use  hedging  to  establish  a  position  in the debt
securities  market as a temporary  substitute  for  purchasing  individual  debt
securities. In that case the Fund will normally seek to purchase the securities,
and then terminate  that hedging  position.  For this type of hedging,  the Fund
may:
     |_| buy interest rate futures or municipal bond index  futures,  or |_| buy
     calls on such futures or on securities.

     The Fund is not  obligated  to use hedging  instruments,  even though it is
permitted  to use them in the  Manager's  discretion,  as described  below.  The
Fund's  strategy  of  hedging  with  futures  and  options  on  futures  will be
incidental to the Fund's  investment  activities in the underlying  cash market.
The particular  hedging  instruments the Fund can use are described  below.  The
Fund may employ new hedging  instruments and strategies when they are developed,
if those investment methods are consistent with the Fund's investment  objective
and are permissible under applicable regulations governing the Fund.

     |_| Futures.  The Fund may buy and sell futures contracts  relating to debt
securities (these are called "interest rate futures") and municipal bond indices
(these are referred to as "municipal bond index futures").

         An  interest  rate  future  obligates  the seller to  deliver  (and the
     purchaser to take) cash or a specific  type of debt  security to settle the
     futures  transaction.  Either  party  could also  enter into an  offsetting
     contract to close out the futures position.

     A "municipal bond index" assigns  relative values to the municipal bonds in
the index, and is used as the basis for trading long-term municipal bond futures
contracts.  Municipal  bond index  futures are similar to interest  rate futures
except that  settlement is made only in cash. The obligation  under the contract
may also be satisfied by entering into an offsetting  contract.  The  strategies
which the Fund  employs in using  municipal  bond index  futures  are similar to
those with regard to interest rate futures.

     Upon  entering  into a futures  transaction,  the Fund will be  required to
deposit an initial margin payment in cash or U.S. government securities with the
futures commission merchant (the "futures broker"). Initial margin payments will
be deposited with the Fund's  Custodian in an account  registered in the futures
broker's name. However,  the futures broker can gain access to that account only
under certain specified conditions.  As the future is marked to market (that is,
its value on the  Fund's  books is  changed)  to  reflect  changes in its market
value,  subsequent margin payments,  called variation margin, will be paid to or
by the futures broker daily.

     At any time prior to the  expiration  of the future,  the Fund may elect to
close out its  position  by taking an  opposite  position  at which time a final
determination  of variation margin is made and additional cash is required to be
paid by or released to the Fund.  Any gain or loss is then  realized by the Fund
on the Future for tax  purposes.  Although  interest rate futures by their terms
call for  settlement  by the  delivery  of debt  securities,  in most  cases the
obligation  is fulfilled  without such  delivery by entering  into an offsetting
transaction.  All futures  transactions  are effected  through a clearing  house
associated with the exchange on which the contracts are traded.

     The Fund may  concurrently  buy and sell  futures  contracts  in a strategy
anticipating  that the future the Fund  purchased  will perform  better than the
future the Fund sold. For example, the Fund might buy municipal bond futures and
concurrently  sell U.S.  Treasury Bond futures (a type of interest rate future).
The Fund would benefit if municipal bonds  outperform  U.S.  Treasury Bonds on a
duration-adjusted basis.

     Duration is a volatility  measure  that refers to the  expected  percentage
change in the value of a bond resulting from a change in general  interest rates
(measured  by each 1%  change  in the rates on U.S.  Treasury  securities).  For
example,  if a bond has an effective  duration of three years,  a 1% increase in
general  interest  rates  would be  expected  to cause  the value of the bond to
decline about 3%. There are risks that this type of futures strategy will not be
successful.  U.S.  Treasury  bonds might perform  better on a  duration-adjusted
basis than municipal  bonds,  and the assumptions  about duration that were used
might be incorrect (in this case,  the duration of municipal  bonds  relative to
U.S. Treasury Bonds might have been greater than anticipated).

     |_| Put and Call  Options.  The Fund may buy and sell certain  kinds of put
options (puts) and call options (calls). These strategies are described below.

     |_| Writing  Covered  Call  Options.  The Fund may write (that is,  sell)
call options. The Fund's call writing is subject to a number of restrictions:
(1)   After  the Fund  writes a call,  not more than 25% of the  Fund's  total
         assets may be subject to calls.
(2)      Calls the Fund  sells  must be listed on a  securities  or  commodities
         exchange or quoted on NASDAQ,  the  automated  quotation  system of The
         Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. or traded in the over-the-counter market.
(3)      Each call the Fund writes must be  "covered"  while it is  outstanding.
         That  means  the Fund  must own the  investment  on which  the call was
         written.
(4)      The Fund may write calls on futures  contracts  that it owns, but these
         calls must be covered by  securities  or other  liquid  assets that the
         Fund owns and segregates to enable it to satisfy its obligations if the
         call is exercised.

     When the Fund writes a call on a security,  it receives  cash (a  premium).
The  Fund  agrees  to  sell  the  underlying  investment  to  a  purchaser  of a
corresponding  call on the  same  security  during  the call  period  at a fixed
exercise price  regardless of market price changes  during the call period.  The
call period is usually not more than nine months.  The exercise price may differ
from the market price of the underlying security. The Fund has retained the risk
of loss that the price of the  underlying  security may decline  during the call
period. That risk may be offset to some extent by the premium the Fund receives.
If the value of the investment  does not rise above the call price, it is likely
that the call will lapse  without being  exercised.  In that case the Fund would
keep the cash premium and the investment.

     The Fund's Custodian,  or a securities depository acting for the Custodian,
will act as the Fund's  escrow  agent  through  the  facilities  of the  Options
Clearing  Corporation  ("OCC"),  as to the  investments  on  which  the Fund has
written calls traded on exchanges,  or as to other acceptable escrow securities.
In that way, no margin will be required for such transactions.  OCC will release
the securities on the expiration of the calls or upon the Fund's entering into a
closing purchase transaction.

     When the Fund writes an over-the-counter ("OTC") option, it will enter into
an  arrangement  with a primary  U.S.  Government  securities  dealer which will
establish  a formula  price at which the Fund  will have the  absolute  right to
repurchase  that OTC option.  The formula  price would  generally  be based on a
multiple of the premium  received  for the option,  plus the amount by which the
option is exercisable  below the market price of the  underlying  security (that
is, the option is  "in-the-money").  When the Fund writes an OTC option, it will
treat as illiquid (for purposes of its  restriction on illiquid  securities) the
mark-to-market  value of any OTC option held by it, unless the option is subject
to a buy-back  agreement by the executing  broker.  The  Securities and Exchange
Commission  is  evaluating  whether  OTC  options  should be  considered  liquid
securities.  The procedure  described  above could be affected by the outcome of
that evaluation.

     To terminate its obligation on a call it has written, the Fund may purchase
a corresponding  call in a "closing  purchase  transaction."  The Fund will then
realize a profit or loss,  depending  upon  whether the net of the amount of the
option transaction costs and the premium received on the call the Fund wrote was
more or less  than the  price of the call the Fund  purchased  to close  out the
transaction.  A profit  may also be  realized  if the call  lapses  unexercised,
because the Fund retains the underlying investment and the premium received. Any
such profits are considered  short-term  capital gains for Federal tax purposes,
as are premiums on lapsed calls.  When  distributed by the Fund they are taxable
as ordinary income.

     The Fund may also  write  calls on  futures  contracts  without  owning the
futures contract or securities  deliverable under the contract. To do so, at the
time the call is written,  the Fund must cover the call by segregating in escrow
an equivalent dollar value of liquid assets. The Fund will segregate  additional
liquid  assets if the  value of the  escrowed  assets  drops  below  100% of the
current  value  of  the  future.  Because  of  this  escrow  requirement,  in no
circumstances  would the Fund's receipt of an exercise  notice as to that future
put the Fund in a "short" futures position.

     |_|  Purchasing  Calls and Puts. The Fund may buy calls only on securities,
broadly-based municipal bond indices,  municipal bond index futures and interest
rate  futures.  It may also buy  calls to close  out a call it has  written,  as
discussed  above.  Calls  the  Fund  buys  must be  listed  on a  securities  or
commodities  exchange,  or quoted on NASDAQ,  or traded in the  over-the-counter
market.  A call or put option must not be purchased if the purchase  would cause
the  value of all the  Fund's  put and call  options  to  exceed 5% of its total
assets.

     When  the  Fund  purchases  a  call  (other  than  in  a  closing  purchase
transaction),  it pays a premium. For calls on securities that the Fund buys, it
has the right to buy the underlying  investment from a seller of a corresponding
call on the same  investment  during the call period at a fixed exercise  price.
The Fund  benefits  only if (1) the call is sold at a profit  or (2) the call is
exercised when the market price of the underlying investment is above the sum of
the exercise price plus the transaction  costs and premium paid for the call. If
the call is not either  exercised or sold (whether or not at a profit),  it will
become  worthless at its  expiration  date.  In that case the Fund will lose its
premium payment and the right to purchase the underlying investment.

     Calls on municipal  bond indices,  interest rate futures and municipal bond
index  futures  are settled in cash rather  than by  delivering  the  underlying
investment.  Gain or loss depends on changes in the  securities  included in the
index in question  (and thus on price  movements in the debt  securities  market
generally) rather than on changes in price of the individual futures contract.

     The Fund may buy only those puts that  relate to  securities  that the Fund
owns,  broadly-based  municipal  bond indices,  municipal  bond index futures or
interest rate futures  (whether or not the Fund owns the futures).  The Fund may
not sell puts other than puts it has previously purchased.

     When the Fund  purchases  a put,  it pays a premium.  The Fund then has the
right to sell the underlying  investment to a seller of a  corresponding  put on
the same  investment  during the put period at a fixed exercise  price.  Puts on
municipal  bond  indices are settled in cash.  Buying a put on a debt  security,
interest rate future or municipal  bond index future the Fund owns enables it to
protect  itself  during  the put  period  against a decline  in the value of the
underlying  investment  below the  exercise  price.  If the market  price of the
underlying  investment  is equal to or above the exercise  price and as a result
the put is not  exercised  or  resold,  the put  will  become  worthless  at its
expiration  date.  In that case the Fund will lose its  premium  payment and the
right to sell the underlying  investment.  A put may be sold prior to expiration
(whether or not at a profit).

     |_|  Risks  of  Hedging  with  Options  and  Futures.  The  use of  hedging
instruments requires special skills and knowledge of investment  techniques that
are  different  than what is required for normal  portfolio  management.  If the
Manager uses a hedging  instrument at the wrong time or judges market conditions
incorrectly, hedging strategies may reduce the Fund's returns.

     The Fund's option  activities  may affect its  portfolio  turnover rate and
brokerage  commissions.  The exercise of calls written by the Fund may cause the
Fund to sell related  portfolio  securities,  thus increasing its turnover rate.
The exercise by the Fund of puts on securities will cause the sale of underlying
investments,  increasing  portfolio  turnover.  Although the decision whether to
exercise a put it holds is within the Fund's control,  holding a put might cause
the Fund to sell the related investments for reasons that would not exist in the
absence of the put.

     The Fund may pay a  brokerage  commission  each time it buys a call or put,
sells a call, or buys or sells an underlying  investment in connection  with the
exercise of a call or put. Such  commissions  may be higher on a relative  basis
than  the  commissions   for  direct   purchases  or  sales  of  the  underlying
investments. Premiums paid for options are small in relation to the market value
of the underlying  investments.  Consequently,  put and call options offer large
amounts of leverage.  The leverage offered by trading in options could result in
the Fund's net asset value being more  sensitive  to changes in the value of the
underlying investment.

     If a covered call written by the Fund is  exercised on an  investment  that
has increased in value,  the Fund will be required to sell the investment at the
call  price.  It will not be able to realize  any profit if the  investment  has
increased in value above the call price.

     There is a risk in using short hedging by selling interest rate futures and
municipal  bond index  futures or purchasing  puts on municipal  bond indices or
futures  to  attempt  to  protect  against  declines  in the value of the Fund's
securities.  The risk is that the prices of such futures or the applicable index
will  correlate  imperfectly  with the  behavior  of the cash (that is,  market)
prices of the Fund's securities. It is possible for example, that while the Fund
has used hedging  instruments  in a short hedge,  the market may advance and the
value of debt  securities  held in the Fund's  portfolio  may  decline.  If that
occurred,  the  Fund  would  lose  money  on the  hedging  instruments  and also
experience a decline in value of its debt securities.  However, while this could
occur over a brief  period or to a very small  degree,  over time the value of a
diversified portfolio of debt securities will tend to move in the same direction
as the indices upon which the hedging instruments are based.

     The risk of  imperfect  correlation  increases  as the  composition  of the
Fund's portfolio diverges from the securities  included in the applicable index.
To compensate  for the imperfect  correlation  of movements in the price of debt
securities  being hedged and movements in the price of the hedging  instruments,
the Fund may use hedging  instruments in a greater dollar amount than the dollar
amount  of debt  securities  being  hedged.  It  might  do so if the  historical
volatility of the prices of the debt securities being hedged is greater than the
historical volatility of the applicable index.

     The ordinary  spreads  between  prices in the cash and futures  markets are
subject to distortions  due to differences in the natures of those markets.  All
participants   in  the  futures  markets  are  subject  to  margin  deposit  and
maintenance   requirements.   Rather  than  meeting  additional  margin  deposit
requirements,  investors  may close out  futures  contracts  through  offsetting
transactions  which could distort the normal  relationship  between the cash and
futures markets. From the point of view of speculators, the deposit requirements
in the  futures  markets  are  less  onerous  than  margin  requirements  in the
securities  markets.  Therefore,  increased  participation by speculators in the
futures markets may cause temporary price distortions.

     The Fund  may use  hedging  instruments  to  establish  a  position  in the
municipal  securities  markets as a  temporary  substitute  for the  purchase of
individual  securities  (long  hedging).  It is  possible  that the  market  may
decline.  If the Fund then concludes not to invest in such securities because of
concerns that there may be further market decline or for other reasons, the Fund
will realize a loss on the hedging instruments that is not offset by a reduction
in the purchase price of the securities.

     An  option  position  may be  closed  out  only on a market  that  provides
secondary  trading for options of the same series.  There is no assurance that a
liquid  secondary market will exist for a particular  option.  If the Fund could
not effect a closing  purchase  transaction due to a lack of a market,  it would
have to hold the callable investment until the call lapsed or was exercised.

     |_| Interest Rate Swap Transactions. In an interest rate swap, the Fund and
another  party  exchange  their  right to  receive  or their  obligation  to pay
interest on a security.  For example,  they may swap a right to receive floating
rate  payments  for fixed  rate  payments.  The Fund  enters  into swaps only on
securities it owns.  The Fund may not enter into swaps with respect to more than
25% of its total assets.  Also, the Fund will  segregate  liquid assets (such as
cash or U.S.  Government  securities)  to cover any  amounts  it could owe under
swaps that exceed the amounts it is entitled to receive, and it will adjust that
amount daily, as needed. Income from interest rate swaps may be taxable.

     Swap agreements  entail both interest rate risk and credit risk. There is a
risk that, based on movements of interest rates in the future, the payments made
by the Fund under a swap agreement will have been greater than those received by
it. Credit risk arises from the possibility that the counterparty  will default.
If the  counterparty  to an interest  rate swap  defaults,  the Fund's loss will
consist of the net amount of contractual interest payments that the Fund has not
yet received. The Manager will monitor the creditworthiness of counterparties to
the Fund's interest rate swap transactions on an ongoing basis.

     The Fund will enter into swap transactions with appropriate  counterparties
pursuant to master netting agreements.  A master netting agreement provides that
all swaps done between the Fund and that counterparty under the master agreement
shall be regarded as parts of an integral agreement.  If on any date amounts are
payable under one or more swap transactions, the net amount payable on that date
shall be paid. In addition, the master netting agreement may provide that if one
party  defaults  generally or on one swap,  the  counterparty  may terminate the
swaps with that party.  Under master netting  agreements,  if there is a default
resulting  in a loss to one  party,  that  party's  damages  are  calculated  by
reference to the average cost of a  replacement  swap with respect to each swap.
The  gains  and  losses on all  swaps  are then  netted,  and the  result is the
counterparty's gain or loss on termination. The termination of all swaps and the
netting  of  gains  and  losses  on  termination  is  generally  referred  to as
"aggregation."

     |_|  Regulatory  Aspects of Hedging  Instruments.  When using  futures  and
options on futures,  the Fund is required to operate within  certain  guidelines
and restrictions  established by the Commodity  Futures Trading  Commission (the
"CFTC"). In particular,  the Fund is exempted from registration with the CFTC as
a "commodity  pool operator" if the Fund complies with the  requirements of Rule
4.5 adopted by the CFTC.  That Rule does not limit the  percentage of the Fund's
assets that may be used for Futures  margin and related  options  premiums for a
bona fide  hedging  position.  However,  under the Rule the Fund must  limit its
aggregate initial futures margin and related options premiums to no more than 5%
of the Fund's net assets for hedging  strategies  that are not  considered  bona
fide hedging  strategies  under the Rule. Under the Rule, the Fund also must use
short  futures and  options on futures  positions  solely for bona fide  hedging
purposes  within the  meaning  and intent of the  applicable  provisions  of the
Commodity Exchange Act.

     Transactions in options by the Fund are subject to limitations  established
by the option exchanges.  The exchanges limit the maximum number of options that
may be  written or held by a single  investor  or group of  investors  acting in
concert.  Those limits apply  regardless  of whether the options were written or
purchased  on the  same  or  different  exchanges,  or are  held  in one or more
accounts  or through  one or more  different  exchanges  or through  one or more
brokers.  Thus,  the  number of  options  that the Fund may write or hold may be
affected  by  options  written  or  held  by  other  entities,  including  other
investment  companies having the same adviser as the Fund (or an adviser that is
an affiliate of the Fund's  adviser).  The exchanges also impose position limits
on futures  transactions.  An exchange  may order the  liquidation  of positions
found to be in violation of those limits and may impose certain other sanctions.

     Under the Investment  Company Act, when the Fund purchases an interest rate
future  or  municipal  bond  index  future,  it must  maintain  cash or  readily
marketable short-term debt instruments in an amount equal to the market value of
the investments underlying the future, less the margin deposit applicable to it.
The account must be a segregated account or accounts held by its custodian bank.

     |X| Temporary Defensive  Investments.  The securities the Fund may invest
in for temporary defensive purposes include the following:
     |_| short-term municipal securities;
     |_|     obligations  issued or guaranteed  by the U.S.  Government or its
       agencies or instrumentalities;
     |_|     corporate debt  securities  rated within the three highest grades
       by a nationally recognized rating agency;
     |_|     commercial  paper rated "A-1" by S&P, or a  comparable  rating by
       another nationally recognized rating agency; and
     |_| certificates  of deposit of domestic banks with assets of $1 billion or
         more.

     |X| Taxable  Investments.  While the Fund can invest up to 20% of its total
assets in investments  that generate income subject to income taxes, it does not
anticipate  investing  substantial  amounts of its assets in taxable investments
under normal market  conditions or as part of its normal trading  strategies and
policies. To the extent it invests in taxable securities,  the Fund would not be
able to met its objective of providing  tax exempt  income to its  shareholders.
Taxable  investments  include,  for  example,  hedging  instruments,  repurchase
agreements,  and the types of securities  it would buy for  temporary  defensive
purposes.

Investment Restrictions

     |X|  What  Are  "Fundamental  Policies?"  Fundamental  policies  are  those
policies that the Fund has adopted to govern its investments that can be changed
only by the vote of a "majority" of the Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities.
Under the Investment  Company Act, such a "majority" vote is defined as the vote
of the holders of the lesser of:
     |_|67% or  more  of  the  shares  present  or  represented  by  proxy  at a
        shareholder  meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding
        shares are present or represented by proxy, or
     |_|          more than 50% of the outstanding shares.

     The Fund's  investment  objective is a fundamental  policy.  Other policies
described in the  Prospectus  or this  Statement of Additional  Information  are
"fundamental"  only if they are identified as such. The Fund's Board of Trustees
can change  non-fundamental  policies  without  shareholder  approval.  However,
significant  changes to investment  policies will be described in supplements or
updates to the  Prospectus  or this  Statement  of  Additional  Information,  as
appropriate.  The Fund's most significant  investment  policies are described in
the Prospectus.

     |X| Does the Fund Have  Additional  Fundamental  Policies?  The following
investment restrictions are fundamental policies of the Fund:

     |_| The Fund cannot invest in securities  or other  investments  other than
municipal  securities,  the temporary  investments  described in its Prospectus,
repurchase agreements,  covered calls, private activity municipal securities and
hedging  instruments  described  in "About the Fund" in the  Prospectus  or this
Statement of Additional Information.

     |_| The Fund cannot lend any of its assets. However,  repurchase agreements
and the  purchase  of debt  securities  in  accordance  with  the  Fund's  other
investment  policies and restrictions are permitted.  The Fund may also lend its
portfolio securities as described in "Loans of Portfolio Securities.

     |_| The Fund cannot borrow money in excess of 10% of the value of its total
assets.  The  Fund  may  borrow  only  from  banks as a  temporary  measure  for
extraordinary or emergency  purposes,  and not for the purpose of leveraging its
investments.  No  assets  of the Fund may be  pledged,  mortgaged  or  otherwise
encumbered, transferred or assigned to secure a debt. However, the use of escrow
or other  collateral  arrangements  in connection  with hedging  instruments  is
permitted.

     |_| The Fund cannot invest more than 5% of the value of its total assets in
the  securities of any one issuer.  The Fund cannot acquire more than 10% of the
total value of all outstanding securities of any one issuer. In both cases, this
restriction does not apply to securities of the U.S.  Government or its agencies
or instrumentalities.

     |_| The Fund cannot concentrate its investments to the extent of 25% of its
total assets in any industry.  However,  there is no limitation as to the Fund's
investments  in  municipal  securities  or in  obligations  issued  by the  U.S.
Government and its agencies or instrumentalities.

         |_| The Fund cannot invest in real estate.  This restriction  shall not
     prevent the Fund from investing in Municipal  Securities or other permitted
     securities that are secured by real estate or interests in real estate.

     |_| The Fund cannot purchase  securities on margin.  However,  the Fund may
obtain such  short-term  credits  that may be  necessary  for the  clearance  of
purchases  and  sales of  securities.  Furthermore,  the  Fund  may make  margin
deposits in connection  with the use of hedging  instruments as permitted by any
of its other fundamental policies.

     |_| The Fund cannot sell securities short.

     |_| The Fund cannot underwrite  securities or invest in securities that are
subject to restrictions on resale.

     |_| The Fund cannot invest in or hold  securities of any issuer if officers
and Trustees of the Fund or the Manager individually  beneficially own more than
1/2 of 1% of the  securities of that issuer and together own more than 5% of the
securities of that issuer.

     |_| The Fund cannot invest in securities of any other  investment  company,
except in connection with a merger with another investment company.

     |_|  The  Fund  cannot  issue  any  bonds,   debentures  or  senior  equity
securities.

     The Fund  currently  has an operating  policy  (which is not a  fundamental
policy but will not be changed without the approval of a shareholder  vote) that
prohibits the Fund from issuing senior securities. However, that policy does not
prohibit  certain  activities  that are permitted by the Fund's other  policies,
including  borrowing  money for  emergency  purposes as  permitted  by its other
investment policies and applicable  regulations,  entering into delayed-delivery
and when-issued arrangements for portfolio securities transactions, and entering
into contracts to buy or sell derivatives, hedging instruments, options, futures
and the related margin,  collateral or escrow  arrangements  permitted under its
other investment policies.

     Unless the Prospectus or Statement of Additional  Information states that a
percentage  restriction applies on an ongoing basis, it applies only at the time
the Fund makes an investment.  In that case the Fund need not sell securities to
meet  the  percentage  limits  if the  value  of  the  investment  increases  in
proportion to the size of the Fund.

Diversification.  The  Fund  intends  to be  "diversified"  as  defined  in  the
Investment  Company Act and to satisfy the  restrictions  against  investing too
much of its assets in any "issuer" as set forth in the  restrictions  above.  In
implementing  this  policy,  the  identification  of the  issuer of a  municipal
security  depends on the terms and  conditions of the security.  When the assets
and  revenues  of an  agency,  authority,  instrumentality  or  other  political
subdivision  are  separate  from  those of the  government  creating  it and the
security is backed only by the assets and revenues of the  subdivision,  agency,
authority or instrumentality,  the latter would be deemed to be the sole issuer.
Similarly,  if an industrial  development  bond is backed only by the assets and
revenues of the non-governmental  user, then that user would be deemed to be the
sole issuer.  However,  if in either case the creating  government or some other
entity  guarantees  a security,  the  guarantee  would be  considered a separate
security and would be treated as an issue of such government or other entity.

Applying the Restriction Against  Concentration.  To implement its policy not to
concentrate its investments,  the Fund has adopted the industry  classifications
set forth in  Appendix B to this  Statement  of  Additional  Information.  Those
industry classifications are not a fundamental policy.

     In implementing the Fund's policy not to concentrate its  investments,  the
Manager  will  consider  a  non-governmental  user  of  facilities  financed  by
industrial  development  bonds as being in a particular  industry.  That is done
even  though  the bonds are  municipal  securities,  as to which the Fund has no
concentration  limitation.   Although  this  application  of  the  concentration
restriction  is not a  fundamental  policy of the Fund,  it will not be  changed
without shareholder approval.

     The  Manager has no present  intention  of  investing  more than 25% of the
total assets of the Fund in securities of issuers  located in the same state, or
in  securities  paying  interest  derived  from  revenues  of  similar  types of
projects.  Neither of these is a fundamental  policy,  and therefore,  either of
them may be changed without shareholder approval.  Should any such change occur,
the  Prospectus  and/or  this  Statement  of  Additional   Information  will  be
supplemented or revised to reflect the change.

How the Fund Is Managed

Organization  and  History.  The  Fund is an  open-end,  diversified  management
investment  company with an unlimited number of authorized  shares of beneficial
interest.  The Fund was  originally  incorporated  in  Maryland  in 1976 but was
reorganized in 1987 as a Massachusetts business trust.

     The Fund is  governed  by a Board of  Trustees,  which is  responsible  for
protecting the interests of shareholders  under  Massachusetts law. The Trustees
meet periodically  throughout the year to oversee the Fund's activities,  review
its performance,  and review the actions of the Manager.  Although the Fund will
not normally hold annual meetings of its  shareholders,  it may hold shareholder
meetings from time to time on important matters, and shareholders have the right
to call a meeting to remove a Trustee or to take other  action  described in the
Fund's Declaration of Trust.


     |_|  Classes  of  Shares.  The Board of  Trustees  has the  power,  without
shareholder  approval,  to divide  unissued  shares of the Fund into two or more
classes.  The Board has done so,  and the Fund  currently  has four  classes  of
shares,  Class A, Class B, Class C and Class N. All  classes  invest in the same
investment portfolio. Shares are freely transferable. Each share has one vote at
shareholder  meetings,  with fractional shares voting  proportionally on matters
submitted to the vote of shareholders. Each class of shares:

     |_|                has its own dividends and distributions,
     |_|                  pays certain  expenses  which may be  different  for
   the different classes,
     |_|                  may have a different net asset value,
     |_|                  may have separate  voting rights on matters in which
        the  interests  of one  class  are  different  from the  interests  of
        another class, and
     |_| votes as a class on matters that affect that class alone.

     |_| Meetings of Shareholders.  As a Massachusetts  business trust, the Fund
is not required to hold, and does not plan to hold,  regular annual  meetings of
shareholders.  The  Fund  will  hold  meetings  when  required  to do so by  the
Investment  Company  Act or  other  applicable  law.  It will  also do so when a
shareholder  meeting is called by the  Trustees  or upon  proper  request of the
shareholders.

     Shareholders  have the right,  upon the  declaration  in writing or vote of
two-thirds  of the  outstanding  shares of the Fund,  to remove a  Trustee.  The
Trustees will call a meeting of shareholders to vote on the removal of a Trustee
upon the written request of the record holders of 10% of its outstanding shares.
If the  Trustees  receive a request from at least 10  shareholders  stating that
they wish to communicate with other  shareholders to request a meeting to remove
a Trustee,  the  Trustees  will then  either  make the Fund's  shareholder  list
available  to  the  applicants  or  mail  their   communication   to  all  other
shareholders at the applicants'  expense.  The  shareholders  making the request
must have been  shareholders for at least six months and must hold shares of the
Fund  valued  at  $25,000  or more or  constituting  at least  1% of the  Fund's
outstanding  shares,  whichever is less. The Trustees may also take other action
as permitted by the Investment Company Act.

     |_|  Shareholder  and Trustee  Liability.  The Fund's  Declaration of Trust
contains an express  disclaimer  of  shareholder  or Trustee  liability  for the
Fund's  obligations.  It also provides for  indemnification and reimbursement of
expenses out of the Fund's property for any shareholder  held personally  liable
for its obligations. The Declaration of Trust also states that upon request, the
Fund shall  assume the defense of any claim made against a  shareholder  for any
act or  obligation  of the Fund and shall  satisfy  any  judgment on that claim.
Massachusetts  law permits a shareholder  of a business trust (such as the Fund)
to be  held  personally  liable  as a  "partner"  under  certain  circumstances.
However,  the risk that a Fund  shareholder will incur financial loss from being
held  liable as a  "partner"  of the Fund is  limited to the  relatively  remote
circumstances in which the Fund would be unable to meet its obligations.

     The Fund's  contractual  arrangements  state that any person doing business
with the Fund (and each shareholder of the Fund) agrees under its Declaration of
Trust to look solely to the assets of the Fund for  satisfaction of any claim or
demand  that may arise out of any  dealings  with the  Fund.  Additionally,  the
Trustees  shall have no personal  liability  to any such  person,  to the extent
permitted by law.

Trustees  and Officers of the Fund.  The Fund's  Trustees and officers and their
principal  occupations and business affiliations and occupations during the past
five years are listed  below.  Trustees  denoted  with an asterisk (*) below are
deemed to be "interested  persons" of the Fund under the Investment Company Act.
All of the Trustees are Trustees or Directors of the  following  New  York-based
Oppenheimer funds1:

Oppenheimer California Municipal Fund      Oppenheimer Large Cap Growth Fund
Oppenheimer Capital Appreciation Fund      Oppenheimer Money Market Fund, Inc.
Oppenheimer Capital Preservation Fund      Oppenheimer Multiple Strategies Fund
Oppenheimer Developing Markets Fund        Oppenheimer Multi-Sector Income Trust
                                           Oppenheimer   Multi-State   Municipal
Oppenheimer Discovery Fund                 Trust
Oppenheimer Emerging Growth Fund           Oppenheimer Municipal Bond Fund
Oppenheimer Emerging Technologies Fund     Oppenheimer New York Municipal Fund
Oppenheimer Enterprise Fund                Oppenheimer Series Fund, Inc.
Oppenheimer Europe Fund                    Oppenheimer U.S. Government Trust
Oppenheimer Global Fund                    Oppenheimer Trinity Core Fund
Oppenheimer Global Growth & Income Fund    Oppenheimer Trinity Growth Fund
Oppenheimer Gold & Special Minerals Fund   Oppenheimer Trinity Value Fund
Oppenheimer Growth Fund                    Oppenheimer World Bond Fund
Oppenheimer International Growth Fund
Oppenheimer  International  Small  Company
Fund

     Ms. Macaskill and Messrs.  Spiro,  Donohue,  Bowen, Zack, Bishop and Farrar
respectively  hold the same  offices with the other New  York-based  Oppenheimer
funds as with the Fund. As of November 8, 2000, the Trustees and officers of the
Fund as a group  owned of record or  beneficially  less than 1% of each class of
shares of the Fund. The foregoing statement does not reflect ownership of shares
of the Fund held of record by an  employee  benefit  plan for  employees  of the
Manager, other than the shares beneficially owned under the plan by the officers
of the Fund listed above.  Ms.  Macaskill  and Mr.  Donohue are trustees of that
plan.

Leon Levy, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Age: 75.
280 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017
General Partner of Odyssey  Partners,  L.P.  (investment  partnership)  (since
1982) and Chairman of Avatar Holdings, Inc. (real estate development).

Donald W. Spiro, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Age: 74. 399 Ski Trail,
Smoke Rise, New Jersey 07405 Formerly he held the following positions:  Chairman
Emeritus  (August 1991 - August 1999),  Chairman  (November 1987 - January 1991)
and a  director  (January  1969 - August  1999) of the  Manager;  President  and
Director of OppenheimerFunds Distributor,  Inc., a subsidiary of the Manager and
the Fund's Distributor (July 1978 - January 1992).

Bridget A. Macaskill*, President and Trustee, Age: 52.
Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048-0203
Chairman (since August 2000), Chief Executive Officer (since September 1995) and
a director  (since  December 1994) of the Manager;  President  (since  September
1995) and a director (since October 1990) of Oppenheimer  Acquisition Corp., the
Manager's  parent holding  company;  President,  Chief  Executive  Officer and a
director  (since March 2000) of OFI Private  Investments,  Inc.,  an  investment
adviser  subsidiary  of the  Manager;  Chairman  and a director  of  Shareholder
Services,  Inc. (since August 1994) and  Shareholder  Financial  Services,  Inc.
(since September 1995),  transfer agent  subsidiaries of the Manager;  President
(since  September  1995) and a director  (since  November  1989) of  Oppenheimer
Partnership  Holdings,  Inc.,  a  holding  company  subsidiary  of the  Manager;
President and a director (since October 1997) of OppenheimerFunds  International
Ltd., an offshore fund  management  subsidiary of the Manager and of Oppenheimer
Millennium  Funds plc; a director of HarbourView  Asset  Management  Corporation
(since July 1991) and of Oppenheimer  Real Asset  Management,  Inc.  (since July
1996),  investment adviser  subsidiaries of the Manager; a director (since April
2000) of OppenheimerFunds Legacy Program, a charitable trust program established
by the  Manager;  a director of  Prudential  Corporation  plc (a U.K.  financial
service company);  President and a trustee of other Oppenheimer funds;  formerly
President of the Manager (June 1991 - August 2000).

Robert G. Galli, Trustee, Age: 67.
19750 Beach Road, Jupiter, FL 33469
A Trustee or Director of other Oppenheimer funds. Formerly he held the following
positions:  Vice  Chairman  (October 1995 - December  1997) and  Executive  Vice
President  (December  1977 -  October  1995)  of  the  Manager;  Executive  Vice
President  and a  director  (April  1986 - October  1995) of  HarbourView  Asset
Management Corporation.

Phillip A. Griffiths, Trustee, Age: 62.
97 Olden Lane, Princeton, N. J. 08540
The Director of the Institute for Advanced Study,  Princeton,  N.J. (since 1991)
and a member of the  National  Academy of Sciences  (since  1979);  formerly (in
descending chronological order) a director of Bankers Trust Corporation, Provost
and Professor of Mathematics at Duke University, a director of Research Triangle
Institute, Raleigh, N.C., and a Professor of Mathematics at Harvard University.

Benjamin Lipstein, Trustee, Age: 77.
591 Breezy Hill Road, Hillsdale, N.Y. 12529
Professor   Emeritus  of  Marketing,   Stern   Graduate   School  of  Business
Administration, New York University.

Elizabeth B. Moynihan, Trustee, Age: 71.
801 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20004
Author  and  architectural  historian;  a trustee  of the Freer  Gallery  of Art
(Smithsonian  Institute),  Executive  Committee  of  Board  of  Trustees  of the
National Building Museum; a member of the Trustees Council,  Preservation League
of New York State.

Kenneth A. Randall, Trustee, Age: 73.
6 Whittaker's Mill, Williamsburg, Virginia 23185
A director of Dominion  Resources,  Inc.  (electric  utility holding company),
Dominion  Energy,  Inc.  (electric  power and oil & gas  producer),  and Prime
Retail,  Inc. (real estate  investment  trust);  formerly  President and Chief
Executive Officer of The Conference Board,  Inc.  (international  economic and
business  research)  and a director of  Lumbermens  Mutual  Casualty  Company,
American  Motorists  Insurance  Company  and  American   Manufacturers  Mutual
Insurance Company.

Edward V. Regan, Trustee, Age: 70.
40 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10016
Chairman of Municipal  Assistance  Corporation for the City of New York;  Senior
Fellow of Jerome Levy Economics  Institute,  Bard College; a director of RBAsset
(real estate manager);  a director of OffitBank;  Trustee,  Financial Accounting
Foundation (FASB and GASB); President,  Baruch College of the City University of
New York;  formerly New York State  Comptroller and trustee,  New York State and
Local Retirement Fund.

Russell S. Reynolds, Jr., Trustee, Age: 68.
8 Sound Shore Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut 06830
Chairman  of  The  Directorship  Search  Group,  Inc.  (corporate   governance
consulting  and  executive  recruiting);  a  director  of  Professional  Staff
Limited (a U.K. temporary  staffing company);  a life trustee of International
House (non-profit  educational  organization),  and a trustee of the Greenwich
Historical Society.

Clayton K. Yeutter, Trustee, Age: 69.
10475 E. Laurel Lane, Scottsdale, Arizona 85259
Of  Counsel,  Hogan & Hartson (a law firm);  a  director  of Zurich  Financial
Services  (financial  services),  Zurich  Allied AG and Allied  Zurich  p.l.c.
(insurance investment  management);  Caterpillar,  Inc. (machinery),  ConAgra,
Inc. (food and agricultural products),  Farmers Insurance Company (insurance),
FMC   Corp.   (chemicals   and   machinery)   and  Texas   Instruments,   Inc.
(electronics);  formerly (in descending  chronological  order),  Counsellor to
the President (Bush) for Domestic Policy,  Chairman of the Republican National
Committee,  Secretary  of the  U.S.  Department  of  Agriculture,  U.S.  Trade
Representative.

Jerry A. Webman, Vice President and Portfolio Manager,  Age: 50. Two World Trade
Center,  New York,  New York  10048-0203  Senior Vice  President  of the Manager
(since February 1996) and of HarborView Asset Management  Corporation (since May
1999);  a  portfolio  manager of other  Oppenheimer  funds;  before  joining the
Manager  in  February  1996,  he was  an  officer  and  portfolio  manager  with
Prudential  Mutual Funds - Investment  Management,  Inc.  (March 1986 - February
1996).

Andrew J. Donohue, Age: 50.
Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048-0203
Executive Vice President  (since January 1993),  General  Counsel (since October
1991) and a director  (since  September  1995) of the  Manager;  Executive  Vice
President  (since  September  1993)  and a  director  (since  January  1992)  of
OppenheimerFunds  Distributor,  Inc.; Executive Vice President,  General Counsel
and  a  director  (since   September  1995)  of  HarbourView   Asset  Management
Corporation,  Shareholder Services,  Inc., Shareholder Financial Services,  Inc.
and Oppenheimer  Partnership  Holdings,  Inc., of OFI Private Investments,  Inc.
(since March 2000), and of PIMCO Trust Company (since May 2000); President and a
director of Centennial Asset Management  Corporation  (since September 1995) and
of Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc. (since July 1996); Vice President and
a director (since  September 1997) of  OppenheimerFunds  International  Ltd. and
Oppenheimer   Millennium   Funds  plc;  a  director   (since   April   2000)  of
OppenheimerFunds Legacy Program;  General Counsel (since May 1996) and Secretary
(since  April  1997) of  Oppenheimer  Acquisition  Corp.;  an  officer  of other
Oppenheimer funds.

Brian W. Wixted,  Treasurer,  Principal Financial and Accounting Officer, Age:
41.
6803 South Tucson Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112
Senior Vice President and Treasurer (since March 1999) of the Manager; Treasurer
(since March 1999) of  HarbourView  Asset  Management  Corporation,  Shareholder
Services,  Inc.,  Oppenheimer  Real Asset  Management  Corporation,  Shareholder
Financial  Services,  Inc. and Oppenheimer  Partnership  Holdings,  Inc., of OFI
Private   Investments,   Inc.   (since  March  2000)  and  of   OppenheimerFunds
International  Ltd.  and  Oppenheimer  Millennium  Funds plc  (since  May 2000);
Treasurer and Chief  Financial  Officer (since May 2000) of PIMCO Trust Company;
Assistant  Treasurer (since March 1999) of Oppenheimer  Acquisition Corp. and of
Centennial Asset Management Corporation;  an officer of other Oppenheimer funds;
formerly Principal and Chief Operating  Officer,  Bankers Trust Company - Mutual
Fund  Services  Division  (March 1995 - March 1999);  Vice  President  and Chief
Financial Officer of CS First Boston Investment Management Corp. (September 1991
- March 1995).


Robert G. Zack, Assistant Secretary, Age: 52.
Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048-0203
Senior Vice President  (since May 1985) and Associate  General  Counsel (since
May 1981) of the Manager;  Assistant Secretary of Shareholder  Services,  Inc.
(since May 1985),  Shareholder Financial Services, Inc. (since November 1989);
OppenheimerFunds  International  Ltd.  and  Oppenheimer  Millennium  Funds plc
(since October 1997); an officer of other Oppenheimer funds.

Robert J. Bishop, Assistant Treasurer, Age: 41.
6803 South Tucson Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112
Vice  President  of the  Manager/Mutual  Fund  Accounting  (since May 1996);  an
officer of other Oppenheimer funds;  formerly an Assistant Vice President of the
Manager/Mutual  Fund Accounting (April 1994 - May 1996) and a Fund Controller of
the Manager.

Scott T. Farrar, Assistant Treasurer, Age: 35.
6803 South Tucson Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112
Vice President of the Manager/Mutual Fund Accounting (since May 1996); Assistant
Treasurer of Oppenheimer  Millennium  Funds plc (since October 1997); an officer
of  other  Oppenheimer  Funds;  formerly  an  Assistant  Vice  President  of the
Manager/Mutual Fund Accounting (April 1994 - May 1996), and a Fund Controller of
the Manager.

     |X| Remuneration of Trustees. The officers of the Fund and certain Trustees
of the  Fund  (Ms.  Macaskill  and  prior to July 31,  1999 Mr.  Spiro)  who are
affiliated  with the  Manager  receive  no  salary  or fee from  the  Fund.  The
remaining  Trustees of the Fund  received  the  compensation  shown  below.  The
compensation  from the Fund was paid during its fiscal year ended July 31, 2000.
The compensation from all of the New York-based Oppenheimer funds (including the
Fund) was received as a director, trustee or member of a committee of the boards
of those funds during the calendar year 1999.



<PAGE>


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                                              Retirement    Compensation
                                              Benefits      From all
                              Aggregate       Accrued       New York-Based
 Director's Name              Compensation    as Fund       Oppenheimer Funds
 and Other Positions          From Fund (1)   Expenses      (29 Funds) (2)

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Leon Levy     $10,507        $5,644          $166,700

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

          Robert G. Galli (3)     $2,440           $0            $177,715
 Study Committee Member

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Philip Griffiths (4)     $1,032           $0             $5,125

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Benjamin Lipstein     $9,711         $5,507          $144,100
 Study Committee Chairman
 Audit Committee Member
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Elizabeth B. Moynihan     $4,714         $1,753          $101,500
 Study Committee Member
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

           Kenneth A. Randall     $5,990         $3,305          $93,100
 Audit Committee Chairman

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Edward V. Regan     $2,687           $0            $92,100
 Proxy Committee Chairman,
 Audit Committee Member
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Russell S. Reynolds, Jr.         $3,103         $1,093          $68,900
 Proxy Committee Member
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Donald Spiro                     $1,101           $0            $10,250

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       Clayton K. Yeutter (5)     $1,777           $0            $51,675
 Proxy Committee Member
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1)  Aggregrate  compensation includes fees, deferred compensation,  if any, and
     retirement plan benefits accrued for a Director.
(2)   For the 1999 Calendar year.

  Total compensation for the 1999 calendar year includes  compensation  received
     for services as trustee (director) of ten other Oppenheimer funds.

(4)  Includes $1,032 deferred under Deferred Compensation Plan described below.
(5)   Includes $355 deferred under Deferred Compensation Plan described below.


     |X| Retirement  Plan for Trustees.  The Fund has adopted a retirement  plan
that  provides for payments to retired  Trustees.  Payments are up to 80% of the
average  compensation paid during a Trustee's five years of service in which the
highest  compensation  was received.  A Trustee must serve as trustee for any of
the New  York-based  Oppenheimer  funds for at least 15 years to be eligible for
the maximum  payment.  Each  Trustee's  retirement  benefits  will depend on the
amount of the Trustee's future compensation and length of service.

     |X|  Deferred  Compensation  Plan for  Trustees.  The Board of Trustees has
adopted a Deferred  Compensation  Plan for  disinterested  trustees that enables
them to elect to defer  receipt of all or a portion of the annual  fees they are
entitled to receive from the Fund. Under the plan, the compensation  deferred by
a Trustee  is  periodically  adjusted  as though an  equivalent  amount had been
invested in shares of one or more Oppenheimer funds selected by the Trustee. The
amount  paid to the  Trustee  under the plan will be  determined  based upon the
performance of the selected funds.

     Deferral of Trustees'  fees under the plan will not  materially  affect the
Fund's assets,  liabilities or net income per share.  The plan will not obligate
the Fund to retain the services of any Trustee or to pay any particular level of
compensation  to any Trustee.  Pursuant to an Order issued by the Securities and
Exchange  Commission,  the Fund may invest in the funds  selected by the Trustee
under  the  plan  without  shareholder  approval  for  the  limited  purpose  of
determining the value of the Trustee's deferred fee account.

     |X| Major Shareholders.  As of November 8, 2000, the only persons who owned
of record or were known by the Fund to own  beneficially 5% or more of any class
of the Fund's outstanding shares were the following:

      Merrill  Lynch  Pierce  Fenner & Smith,  Inc.  4800 Deer Lake  Drive E.,
      Floor 3,  Jacksonville,  Florida 32246,  which owned 559,791.229 Class B
      shares (9.63% of the Class B shares then  outstanding),  for the benefit
      of its customers.

      Merrill  Lynch  Pierce  Fenner & Smith,  Inc.  4800 Deer Lake  Drive E.,
      Floor 3,  Jacksonville,  Florida 32246,  which owned 127,445.114 Class C
      shares (9.84% of the Class C shares then  outstanding),  for the benefit
      of its customers.


The Manager.  The Manager is wholly-owned by Oppenheimer  Acquisition Corp., a
holding company controlled by Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company.

      |X| Code of Ethics.  The Fund, the Manager and the Distributor have a Code
of Ethics.  It is designed to detect and prevent  improper  personal  trading by
certain employees, including portfolio managers, that would compete with or take
advantage of the Fund's portfolio transactions.  Covered persons include persons
with  knowledge of the  investments  and  investment  intentions of the Fund and
other funds  advised by the  Manager.  The Code of Ethics does permit  personnel
subject to the Code to invest in securities,  including  securities  that may be
purchased or held by the Fund, subject to a number of restrictions and controls.
Compliance  with the Code of Ethics is carefully  monitored  and enforced by the
Manager.

             The  Code  of  Ethics  is an  exhibit  to the  Fund's  registration
statement filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission and can be reviewed
and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. You can obtain
information about the hours of operation of the Public Reference Room by calling
the SEC at 1-202-942-8090.  The Code of Ethics can also be viewed as part of the
Fund's registration  statement on the SEC's EDGAR database at the SEC's Internet
web  site  at  http://www.sec.gov.  Copies  may  be  obtained,  after  paying  a
duplicating  fee,  by  electronic  request  at  the  following  E-mail  address:
[email protected].,  or by  writing  to the  SEC's  Public  Reference  Section,
Washington, D.C. 20549-0102.

     |X| The Investment  Advisory  Agreement.  The Manager  provides  investment
advisory  and  management  services  to the Fund  under an  investment  advisory
agreement  between the Manager and the Fund. The Manager selects  securities for
the  Fund's  portfolio  and  handles  its day-to day  business.  That  agreement
requires the Manager,  at its expense,  to provide the Fund with adequate office
space,  facilities  and  equipment.  It also requires the Manager to provide and
supervise the activities of all  administrative  and clerical personnel required
to   provide   effective   corporate   administration   for  the   Fund.   Those
responsibilities include the compilation and maintenance of records with respect
to the Fund's operations,  the preparation and filing of specified reports,  and
the  composition of proxy materials and  registration  statements for continuous
public sale of shares of the Fund.

     Expenses not expressly assumed by the Manager under the advisory  agreement
are paid by the Fund.  The  investment  advisory  agreement  lists  examples  of
expenses paid by the Fund. The major categories relate to interest,  taxes, fees
to  disinterested  Trustees,  legal and audit  expenses,  custodian and transfer
agent expenses,  share issuance costs,  certain printing and registration costs,
brokerage commissions,  and non-recurring  expenses,  including litigation cost.
The management  fees paid by the Fund to the Manager are calculated at the rates
described  in the  Prospectus,  which are applied to the assets of the Fund as a
whole.  The fees are  allocated  to each class of shares based upon the relative
proportion of the Fund's net assets  represented  by that class.  The management
fees paid by the Fund to the  Manager  during  its last three  fiscal  years are
listed below.

          ------------------------------------------------------------
                 Fiscal Year              Management Fee Paid to
                 Ending 7/31              OppenheimerFunds, Inc.
          ------------------------------------------------------------
          ------------------------------------------------------------
                     1998                       $3,563,611
          ------------------------------------------------------------
          ------------------------------------------------------------
                     1999                       $3,651,960
          ------------------------------------------------------------
          ------------------------------------------------------------
                     2000                       $3,203,499
          ------------------------------------------------------------

         The investment advisory agreement states that in the absence of willful
     misfeasance,  bad faith, gross negligence in the performance of its duties,
     or reckless  disregard for its  obligations and duties under the investment
     advisory  agreement,  the Manager is not liable for any loss  sustained  by
     reason of any  investment of the Fund assets made with due care and in good
     faith.

         The agreement permits the Manager to act as investment  adviser for any
     other person,  firm or  corporation  and to use the name  "Oppenheimer"  in
     connection  with  other  investment  companies  for  which  it  may  act as
     investment adviser or general  distributor.  If the Manager shall no longer
     act as investment  adviser to the Fund, the Manager may withdraw the Fund's
     right to use the name "Oppenheimer" as part of its name.

Brokerage Policies of the Fund

Brokerage Provisions of the Investment Advisory Agreement.  One of the duties of
the Manager under the investment advisory agreement is to buy and sell portfolio
securities for the Fund. The investment advisory agreement allows the Manager to
use  broker-dealers  to effect  the  Fund's  portfolio  transactions.  Under the
agreement,  the Manager may employ those broker-dealers  (including "affiliated"
brokers,  as that term is defined in the  Investment  Company Act) that,  in the
Manager's best judgment based on all relevant factors, will implement the Fund's
policy to obtain,  at  reasonable  expense,  the "best  execution"  of portfolio
transactions.  "Best execution"  refers to prompt and reliable  execution at the
most  favorable  price  obtainable.   The  Manager  need  not  seek  competitive
commission bidding. However, the Manager is expected to minimize the commissions
paid to the extent  consistent  with the  interest  and  policies of the Fund as
established by its Board of Trustees.

     Under the  investment  advisory  agreement,  the Manager may select brokers
that provide  brokerage  and/or research  services for the Fund and/or the other
accounts over which the Manager or its affiliates  have  investment  discretion.
The commissions paid to such brokers may be higher than another qualified broker
would  charge,  if  the  Manager  makes  a good  faith  determination  that  the
commission is fair and reasonable in relation to the services provided.  Subject
to those other  considerations,  as a factor in selecting brokers for the Fund's
portfolio  transactions,  the Manager may also  consider  sales of shares of the
Fund and other investment companies managed by the Manager or its affiliates.

Brokerage Practices Followed by the Manager. The Manager allocates brokerage for
the Fund subject to the provisions of the investment  advisory agreement and the
procedures and rules described above.  Generally the Manager's portfolio traders
allocate brokerage upon  recommendations  from the Manager's portfolio managers.
In certain instances,  portfolio managers may directly place trades and allocate
brokerage.  In either case,  the  Manager's  executive  officers  supervise  the
allocation of brokerage.

     Most securities purchases made by the Fund are in principal transactions at
net prices.  The Fund  usually  deals  directly  with the selling or  purchasing
principal or market maker without incurring charges for the services of a broker
on its behalf unless the Manager determines that a better price or execution may
be obtained  by using the  services  of a broker.  Therefore,  the Fund does not
incur  substantial   brokerage  costs.   Portfolio   securities  purchased  from
underwriters  include  a  commission  or  concession  paid by the  issuer to the
underwriter in the price of the security.  Portfolio  securities  purchased from
dealers include a spread between the bid and asked price.

     The Fund seeks to obtain prompt  execution of orders at the most  favorable
net prices. In an option  transaction,  the Fund ordinarily uses the same broker
for the purchase or sale of the option and any  transaction in the investment to
which the option relates. When possible, the Manager tries to combine concurrent
orders to  purchase or sell the same  security by more than one of the  accounts
managed by the Manager or its affiliates.  The transactions under those combined
orders are averaged as to price and allocated in accordance with the purchase or
sale orders actually placed for each account.

     The investment advisory agreement permits the Manager to allocate brokerage
for research services. The research services provided by a particular broker may
be useful  only to one or more of the  advisory  accounts of the Manager and its
affiliates. Investment research received by the Manager for the commissions paid
by those  other  accounts  may be useful both to the Fund and one or more of the
Manager's other accounts.  Investment  research  services may be supplied to the
Manager by a third party at the  instance of a broker  through  which trades are
placed.  Investment  research  services  include  information  and  analyses  on
particular  companies and  industries  as well as market or economic  trends and
portfolio  strategy,  market quotations for portfolio  evaluations,  information
systems,  computer  hardware and similar  products and  services.  If a research
service also assists the Manager in a non-research capacity (such as bookkeeping
or other administrative  functions),  then only the percentage or component that
provides assistance to the Manager in the investment decision-making process may
be paid in commission dollars.

     The Board of  Trustees  has  permitted  the Manager to use  concessions  on
fixed-price offerings to obtain research, in the same manner as is permitted for
agency  transactions.  The Board has also  permitted  the  Manager to use stated
commissions on secondary  fixed-income  agency trades to obtain  research if the
broker  represents  to the  Manager  that:  (i) the trade is not from or for the
broker's own  inventory,  (ii) the trade was executed by the broker on an agency
basis at the stated commission,  and (iii) the trade is not a riskless principal
transaction.

     The research  services provided by brokers broaden the scope and supplement
the research activities of the Manager.  That research provides additional views
and  comparisons  for  consideration  and helps  the  Manager  to obtain  market
information  for the valuation of securities  that are either held in the Fund's
portfolio or are being considered for purchase. The Manager provides information
to the  Board of the Fund  about  the  commissions  paid to  brokers  furnishing
research services, together with the Manager's representation that the amount of
such  commissions  was  reasonably  related  to the  value  or  benefit  of such
services.

     Other funds advised by the Manager have investment  objectives and policies
similar to those of the Fund.  Those other  funds may  purchase or sell the same
securities  as the Fund at the same time as the Fund,  which  could  affect  the
supply  and  price of the  securities.  If two or more of funds  advised  by the
Manager  purchase the same  security on the same day from the same  dealer,  the
Manager may average the price of the transactions and allocate the average among
the funds.

Distribution and Service Plans

The Distributor.  Under its General  Distributor's  Agreement with the Fund, the
Distributor  acts as the Fund's principal  underwriter in the continuous  public
offering of the Fund's Class A, Class B and Class C shares.  The  Distributor is
not  obligated  to  sell  a  specific  number  of  shares.   Expenses   normally
attributable to sales are borne by the Distributor.  They exclude payments under
the  Distribution  and  Service  Plans but include  advertising  and the cost of
printing  and  mailing  prospectuses  (other  than those  furnished  to existing
shareholders).

The  compensation  paid to (or  retained  by) the  Distributor  from the sale of
shares or on the redemption of shares is discussed in the table below:

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Aggregate     Class A     Commissions   Commissions   Commissions
 Fiscal     Front-End    Front-End     on Class A    on Class B   on Class C
 Year         Sales        Sales         Shares        Shares       Shares
 Ended     Charges on     Charges     Advanced by   Advanced by   Advanced by
  7/31:      Class A    Retained by   Distributor1  Distributor1 Distributor1
             Shares     Distributor
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1998     $896,039      $197,524      $135,952      $675,133      $62,750
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1999     $801,669      $216,077      $65,289       $707,523      $71,786
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2000     $447,841      $117,360      $42,151       $282,071      $28,093
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 1.The Distributor  advances commission payments to dealers for certain sales of
   Class A  shares  and for  sales of  Class B and  Class C shares  from its own
   resources at the time of sale.

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Class A Contingent   Class B Contingent    Class C Contingent
 Fiscal Year Deferred Sales       Deferred Sales        Deferred Sales Charges
 Ended 7/31: Charges              Charges               Retained by
             Retained by          Retained by           Distributor
             Distributor          Distributor
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    2000           $28,514              $299,760               $20,741
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     For  additional  information  about  distribution  of  the  Fund's  shares,
including fees and expenses, please refer to "Distribution and Service Plans."


Distribution  and Service  Plans.  The Fund has  adopted a Service  Plan for its
Class A shares and  Distribution  and Service Plans for its Class B, Class C and
Class N shares  under Rule 12b-1 of the  Investment  Company  Act.  Under  those
plans,  the Fund  makes  payments  to the  Distributor  in  connection  with the
distribution and/or servicing of the shares of the particular class.


     Under  the plans the  Manager  and the  Distributor  may make  payments  to
affiliates  and, in their sole  discretion,  from time to time may use their own
resources to make payments to brokers,  dealers or other financial  institutions
for  distribution  and  administrative  services  they perform at no cost to the
Fund.  The Manager may use profits from the  advisory  fee it receives  from the
Fund. The Distributor and the Manager may, in their sole discretion, increase or
decrease  the amount of  payments  they make to plan  recipients  from their own
resources.

     Unless a plan is  terminated  as  described  below,  the plan  continues in
effect  from year to year,  but only if the  Fund's  Board of  Trustees  and its
Independent  Trustees  specifically  vote  annually to approve its  continuance.
Approval must be by a vote cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of
voting on continuing  the plan. A plan may be terminated at any time by the vote
of a majority  of the  Independent  Trustees  or by the vote of the holders of a
"majority" (as defined in the Investment  Company Act) of the outstanding shares
of that class.

         The  Board and the  Independent  Trustees  must  approve  all  material
     amendments  to a plan.  An amendment to increase  materially  the amount of
     payments to be made under the plan must be approved by  shareholders of the
     class  affected  by the  amendment.  Because  Class B shares  automatically
     convert  into  Class A shares  after six  years,  the Fund must  obtain the
     approval of both Class A and Class B  shareholders  for an amendment to the
     Class A plan that  would  materially  increase  the amount to be paid under
     that  plan.  That  approval  must be by a  "majority"  (as  defined  in the
     Investment  Company Act) of the shares of each class,  voting separately by
     Class.
     While the plans are in effect,  the  Treasurer  of the Fund  shall  provide
separate  written  reports on the plans to the Fund's Board of Trustees at least
quarterly  for its review.  The reports  shall detail the amount of all payments
made  under a plan and the  purpose  for which the  payments  were  made.  Those
reports are subject to the review and  approval of the  Independent  Trustees in
the exercise of their fiduciary duty.

     Each plan states that while it is in effect,  the selection or  replacement
and nomination of those Trustees of the Fund who are not "interested persons" of
the Fund is  committed  to the  discretion  of the  Independent  Trustees.  This
provision  does not  prevent  the  involvement  of others in the  selection  and
nomination  process as long as the final  decision as to selection or nomination
is approved by a majority of the Independent Trustees.

     Under the plans, no payment will be made to any recipient in any quarter in
which the aggregate net asset value of all Fund shares held by the recipient for
itself and its customers does not exceed a minimum  amount,  if any, that may be
set  from  time  to time  by a  majority  of the  Fund's  Independent  Trustees.
Initially,  the Board of Trustees  has set the fees at the maximum  rate allowed
under  the plans and has set no  minimum  asset  amount  needed to  qualify  for
payments.

     |_| Class A  Service  Plan  Fees.  Under  the  Class A  service  plan,  the
Distributor  currently  uses the fees it receives  from the Fund to pay brokers,
dealers and other financial  institutions (they are referred to as "recipients")
for personal  services and account  maintenance  services they provide for their
customers who hold Class A shares. The services include, among others, answering
customer  inquiries about the Fund,  assisting in  establishing  and maintaining
accounts in the Fund, making the Fund's investment plans available and providing
other services at the request of the Fund or the  Distributor.  The  Distributor
makes  payments  to plan  recipients  quarterly  at an annual rate not to exceed
0.25% of the average annual net assets of Class A shares.

     For the fiscal year ended July 31, 2000,  payments under the Plan for Class
A shares  totaled  $1,163,111,  all of  which  was  paid by the  Distributor  to
recipients.  That included $92,596 paid to an affiliate of the Distributor.  Any
unreimbursed  expenses the Distributor incurs with respect to Class A shares for
any fiscal year may not be recovered in subsequent  years.  The  Distributor may
not use  payments  received  under the  Class A plan to pay any of its  interest
expenses, carrying charges, other financial costs, or allocation of overhead.


     |_| Class B, Class C and Class N Service and Distribution  Plan Fees. Under
each plan, service fees and distribution fees are computed on the average of the
net asset value of shares in the respective class, determined as of the close of
each regular  business  day during the period.  The Class B, Class C and Class N
plans provide for the Distributor to be compensated at a flat rate,  whether the
Distributor's  distribution  expenses  are more or less than the amounts paid by
the Fund under the plans  during that  period.  The Class B, Class C and Class N
plans permit the  Distributor to retain both the  asset-based  sales charges and
the  service fee on shares or to pay  recipients  the service fee on a quarterly
basis, without payment in advance.

     The  Distributor  presently  intends to pay  recipients  the service fee on
Class B, Class C and Class N shares in advance for the first year the shares are
outstanding.  After the first year shares are outstanding, the Distributor makes
payments  quarterly  on those  shares.  The advance  payment is based on the net
asset value of shares sold.  Shares  purchased by exchange do not qualify for an
advance service fee payment. If Class B, Class C and Class N shares are redeemed
during the first year after their purchase, the recipient of the service fees on
those shares will be obligated  to repay the  Distributor  a pro rata portion of
the advance payment made on those shares.

     The Distributor retains the asset-based sales charge on Class B and Class N
shares.  The Distributor  retains the asset-based sales charge on Class C shares
during the first year the shares are outstanding.  It pays the asset-based sales
charge as an ongoing  commission to the dealer on Class C shares outstanding for
a year or more. If a dealer has a special  agreement with the  Distributor,  the
Distributor  will pay the Class B, Class C and/or  Class N service  fees and the
asset-based  sales  charge to the dealer  quarterly  in lieu of paying the sales
commission and service fee in advance at the time of purchase.

     The asset-based  sales charge on Class B, Class C and Class N shares allows
investors to buy shares  without a front-end  sales  charge  while  allowing the
Distributor  to  compensate  dealers that sell those shares.  The  Distributor's
actual  expenses  in  selling  Class B and  Class C shares  may be more than the
payments it  receives  from  contingent  deferred  sales  charges  collected  on
redeemed shares and from the Fund under the plans. The Fund pays the asset-based
sales charge to the Distributor for its services rendered in distributing  Class
B,  Class C and Class N shares.  The  payments  are made to the  Distributor  in
recognition that the Distributor:

     |_|pays sales commissions to authorized  brokers and dealers at the time of
        sale and pays service fees as described in the Prospectus,
     |_|may  finance  payment of sales  commissions  and/or  the  advance of the
        service fee payment to recipients  under the plans,  or may provide such
        financing from its own resources or from the resources of an affiliate,
     |_| employs personnel to support distribution of shares, and
     |_|    bears the costs of sales literature,  advertising and prospectuses
        (other than those  furnished  to current  shareholders)  and state "blue
        sky" registration fees and certain other distribution expenses.


         The Distributor's actual expenses in selling Class B, Class C and Class
     N shares may be more than the  payments  it  receives  from the  contingent
     deferred sales charges collected on redeemed shares and from the Fund under
     the plans.  If either the Class B, Class C or Class N plan is terminated by
     the Fund, the Board of Trustees may allow the Fund to continue  payments of
     the asset-based  sales charge to the Distributor  for  distributing  shares
     before the plan was terminated.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distribution Fees Paid to the Distributor in the Fiscal Year Ended 7/31/00
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Distributor's   Distributor's
                                                  Aggregate      Unreimbursed
                     Total         Amount       Unreimbursed    Expenses as %
                   Payments     Retained by       Expenses      of Net Assets
                  Under Plan    Distributor      Under Plan        of Class
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Plan       $702,540       $570,027       $1,782,711         3.12%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Plan       $145,341            $          $224,766          1.85%
                               42,406
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


     All  payments  under the Class B, Class C and Class N plans are  subject to
the  limitations  imposed by the Conduct  Rules of the National  Association  of
Securities  Dealers,  Inc. on payments of asset-based  sales charges and service
fees.


Performance of the Fund

Explanation  of  Performance  Terminology.  The Fund uses a variety  of terms to
illustrate  its   performance.   These  terms  include   "standardized   yield,"
"tax-equivalent   yield,"  "dividend  yield,"  "average  annual  total  return,"
"cumulative  total return," "average annual total return at net asset value" and
"total  return at net asset  value."  An  explanation  of how  yields  and total
returns are  calculated  is set forth  below.  The charts  below show the Fund's
performance  during its most  recent  fiscal  year end.  You can obtain  current
performance  information by calling the Fund's Transfer Agent at  1-800-525-7048
or    by    visiting    the    OppenheimerFunds    Internet    web    site    at
http://www.oppenheimerfunds.com.

     The Fund's  illustrations  of its performance data in  advertisements  must
comply  with  rules of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission.  Those  rules
describe  the  types of  performance  data  that may be used and how it is to be
calculated.  In general,  any  advertisement by the Fund of its performance data
must include the average annual total returns for the advertised class of shares
of the Fund.  Those  returns must be shown for the 1, 5 and 10-year  periods (or
the life of the class,  if less) ending as of the most recently  ended  calendar
quarter prior to the  publication  of the  advertisement  (or its submission for
publication).  Certain types of yields may also be shown, provided that they are
accompanied by standardized average annual total returns.

     Use of standardized performance calculations enables an investor to compare
the Fund's  performance to the  performance of other funds for the same periods.
However,  a number of  factors  should be  considered  before  using the  Fund's
performance information as a basis for comparison with other investments:
     |_|Yields and total  returns  measure  the  performance  of a  hypothetical
        account in the Fund over various periods and do not show the performance
        of each shareholder's account. Your account's performance will vary from
        the model  performance  data if your  dividends are received in cash, or
        you buy or sell shares during the period, or you bought your shares at a
        different time and price than the shares used in the model.
     |_|The Fund's  performance  returns do not  reflect  the effect of taxes on
        distributions.
     |_|An  investment  in the  Fund is not  insured  by the  FDIC or any  other
        government agency.
     |_|The  principal  value of the  Fund's  shares,  and its  yields and total
        returns are not guaranteed and normally will fluctuate on a daily basis.
     |_|When an investor's  shares are redeemed,  they may be worth more or less
        than their original cost.
     |_|Yields and total returns for any given past period represent  historical
        performance  information  and are not, and should not be  considered,  a
        prediction of future yields or returns.

     The  performance of each class of shares is shown  separately,  because the
performance  of each class of shares will usually be different.  That is because
of the  different  kinds of  expenses  each  class  bears.  The yields and total
returns of each class of shares of the Fund are  affected by market  conditions,
the quality of the Fund's  investments,  the maturity of those investments,  the
types of  investments  the  Fund  holds,  and its  operating  expenses  that are
allocated to the particular class.

     |X| Yields.  The Fund uses a variety of different  yields to illustrate its
current returns. Each class of shares calculates its yield separately because of
the different expenses that affect each class.

     |_| Standardized  Yield. The "standardized  yield"  (sometimes  referred to
just as "yield") is shown for a class of shares for a stated 30-day  period.  It
is not based on actual  distributions  paid by the Fund to  shareholders  in the
30-day period,  but is a hypothetical yield based upon the net investment income
from the Fund's portfolio  investments for that period.  It may therefore differ
from the "dividend yield" for the same class of shares, described below.

     Standardized  yield is calculated using the following  formula set forth in
rules  adopted by the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  designed to assure
uniformity in the way that all funds calculate their yields:

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


                                       a-b       6
             Standardized Yield = 2 [( ----- + 1)  -1]
                                       cd

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     The symbols above represent the following factors:
     a =  dividends and interest earned during the 30-day period.
     b =  expenses accrued for the period (net of any expense assumptions).
     c =  the average daily number of shares of that class outstanding  during
          the 30-day period that were entitled to receive dividends.
     d =  the maximum  offering  price per share of that class on the last day
          of the period, adjusted for undistributed net investment income.

         The standardized  yield for a particular  30-day period may differ from
     the yield for other periods.  The SEC formula assumes that the standardized
     yield for a 30-day period occurs at a constant rate for a six-month  period
     and is annualized at the end of the six-month period. Additionally, because
     each class of shares is subject to  different  expenses,  it is likely that
     the standardized yields of the Fund's classes of shares will differ for any
     30-day period.

     |_| Dividend Yield. The Fund may quote a "dividend yield" for each class of
its shares.  Dividend  yield is based on the dividends paid on a class of shares
during the actual dividend period. To calculate dividend yield, the dividends of
a class  declared  during a stated  period  are added  together,  and the sum is
multiplied by 12 (to  annualize  the yield) and divided by the maximum  offering
price on the last day of the dividend period. The formula is shown below:

  Dividend Yield = dividends paid x 12/maximum offering price (payment date)

     The maximum  offering price for Class A shares includes the current maximum
initial sales charge.  The maximum offering price for Class B and Class C shares
is the net asset value per share,  without  considering the effect of contingent
deferred  sales  charges.  The Class A dividend yield may also be quoted without
deducting the maximum initial sales charge.

     |_| Tax-Equivalent  Yield. The "tax-equivalent  yield" of a class of shares
is the equivalent yield that would have to be earned on a taxable  investment to
achieve the after-tax results represented by the Fund's tax-equivalent yield. It
adjusts the Fund's  standardized yield, as calculated above, by a stated Federal
tax rate.  Using  different tax rates to show  different tax  equivalent  yields
shows  investors in different tax brackets the tax equivalent  yield of the Fund
based on their own tax bracket.

     The  tax-equivalent  yield is based on a 30-day period,  and is computed by
dividing  the  tax-exempt  portion of the Fund's  current  yield (as  calculated
above) by one minus a stated income tax rate. The result is added to the portion
(if any) of the Fund's current yield that is not tax-exempt.

     The  tax-equivalent  yield may be used to compare the tax effects of income
derived  from the Fund with income  from  taxable  investments  at the tax rates
stated.  Your tax bracket is determined by your Federal  taxable income (the net
amount  subject to Federal  income tax after  deductions  and  exemptions).  The
tax-equivalent  yield table  assumes  that the  investor is taxed at the highest
bracket, regardless of whether a switch to non-taxable investments would cause a
lower bracket to apply.

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          The Fund's Yields for the 30-Day Periods Ended 7/31/00
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         Tax-Equivalent Yield
               Standardized Yield     Dividend Yield       (39.6% Fed. Tax
                                                                        Bracket)
 Class of
 Shares
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               Without     After    Without     After    Without      After
                Sales      Sales     Sales      Sales     Sales       Sales
                Charge    Charge     Charge    Charge     Charge     Charge
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class A        5.46%      5.19%     5.57%      5.30%     9.04%       8.59%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class B        4.68%       N/A      4.85%       N/A      7.75%        N/A
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class C        4.68%       N/A      4.85%       N/A      7.75%        N/A
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     |X| Total Return Information.  There are different types of "total returns"
to measure  the  Fund's  performance.  Total  return is the change in value of a
hypothetical  investment  in the Fund  over a given  period,  assuming  that all
dividends and capital gains  distributions  are reinvested in additional  shares
and that  the  investment  is  redeemed  at the end of the  period.  Because  of
differences  in expenses  for each class of shares,  the total  returns for each
class are separately  measured.  The cumulative total return measures the change
in value over the entire  period (for  example,  ten years).  An average  annual
total  return  shows the  average  rate of return for each year in a period that
would  produce the  cumulative  total  return over the entire  period.  However,
average annual total returns do not show actual  year-by-year  performance.  The
Fund uses  standardized  calculations for its total returns as prescribed by the
SEC. The methodology is discussed below.

     In calculating total returns for Class A shares,  the current maximum sales
charge of 4.75% (as a  percentage  of the offering  price) is deducted  from the
initial  investment  ("P") (unless the return is shown without sales charge,  as
described  below).  For Class B shares,  payment  of the  applicable  contingent
deferred  sales charge is applied,  depending on the period for which the return
is shown: 5.0% in the first year, 4.0% in the second year, 3.0% in the third and
fourth  years,  2.0%  in the  fifth  year,  1.0%  in the  sixth  year  and  none
thereafter.  For Class C shares,  the 1%  contingent  deferred  sales  charge is
deducted for returns for the 1-year period.

     |_| Average Annual Total Return.  The "average annual total return" of each
class  is an  average  annual  compounded  rate of  return  for  each  year in a
specified number of years. It is the rate of return based on the change in value
of a hypothetical  initial  investment of $1,000 ("P" in the formula below) held
for a number of years ("n") to achieve an Ending  Redeemable Value ("ERV" in the
formula) of that investment, according to the following formula:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 1/n
            (ERV)
            (---)   -1 = Average Annual Total Return
            ( P )

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     |_| Cumulative  Total Return.  The  "cumulative  total return"  calculation
measures  the change in value of a  hypothetical  investment  of $1,000  over an
entire period of years. Its calculation uses some of the same factors as average
annual  total  return,  but it does not  average the rate of return on an annual
basis. Cumulative total return is determined as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            ERV - P
            ------- = Total Return
               P

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

     |_| Total  Returns at Net Asset Value.  From time to time the Fund may also
quote a  cumulative  or an average  annual  total  return  "at net asset  value"
(without  deducting  sales  charges)  for Class A,  Class B,  Class C or Class N
shares.  Each is based on the  difference  in net  asset  value per share at the
beginning and the end of the period for a hypothetical  investment in that class
of shares (without  considering  front-end or contingent deferred sales charges)
and takes into  consideration  the  reinvestment  of dividends and capital gains
distributions.



<PAGE>



 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          The Fund's Total Returns for the Periods Ended 7/31/00
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Cumulative Total             Average Annual Total Returns
          Returns (10 years
          or life of class)

 Class of
 Shares
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 5-Year           10-Year
                                 1-Year        (or life of      (or life of
                                                 class)           class)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
           After   Without   After   Without  After  Without  After   Without
           Sales    Sales    Sales    Sales   Sales   Sales   Sales    Sales
           Charge   Charge   Charge  Charge  Charge  Charge   Charge   Charge
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class A  74.67%(1) 83.38%   -5.56%  -0.85%   3.98%   5.00%   5.74%    6.25%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class B  34.26%(2) 34.26%   -6.28%  -1.62%   3.86%   4.19%  4.08%(2) 4.08%(2)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class C  22.39%(3) 22.39%   -2.55%  -1.62%  4.19%(3)4.19%(3)  N/A      N/A
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  1.Inception of Class A: 10/27/76
  2.Inception of Class B: 3/16/93.
  3.Inception of Class C: 8/29/95

Other  Performance  Comparisons.  The Fund compares its performance  annually to
that of an  appropriate  broadly  based  market  index in its  Annual  Report to
shareholders.  You can obtain that  information by contacting the Transfer Agent
at the addresses or telephone  numbers  shown on the cover of this  Statement of
Additional  Information.  The Fund may also compare its  performance  to that of
other  investments,  including  other  mutual  funds,  or  use  rankings  of its
performance  by  independent  ranking  entities.  Examples of these  performance
comparisons are set forth below.

     |_| Lipper Rankings.  From time to time the Fund may publish the ranking of
the  performance of its Class A, Class B or Class C shares by Lipper  Analytical
Services, Inc. ("Lipper"). Lipper is a widely-recognized independent mutual fund
monitoring  service.  Lipper  monitors the  performance of regulated  investment
companies,  including the Fund, and ranks their  performance for various periods
based on categories  relating to investment  objectives.  The performance of the
Fund is ranked by Lipper  against all other general  municipal  bond funds.  The
Lipper  performance  rankings  are  based  on total  returns  that  include  the
reinvestment of capital gain  distributions and income dividends but do not take
sales charges or taxes into  consideration.  Lipper also publishes  "peer-group"
indices of the  performance  of all mutual funds in a category  that it monitors
and averages of the performance of the funds in particular categories.

     |_|  Morningstar  Rankings.  From  time to time the Fund  may  publish  the
ranking  and/or  star  rating of the  performance  of its  classes  of shares by
Morningstar,  Inc., an independent mutual fund monitoring  service.  Morningstar
ranks  mutual  funds in  broad  investment  categories:  domestic  stock  funds,
international stock funds, taxable bond funds and municipal bond funds. The Fund
is ranked among municipal bond funds.

     Morningstar proprietary star ratings reflect historical risk-adjusted total
investment return.  Investment return measures a fund's (or class's) one, three,
five and ten-year  average  annual total returns  (depending on the inception of
the fund or  class)  in  excess  of 90-day  U.S.  Treasury  bill  returns  after
considering  the fund's sales charges and  expenses.  Risk measures a fund's (or
class's)  performance  below  90-day  U.S.  Treasury  bill  returns.   Risk  and
investment  return are combined to produce star ratings  reflecting  performance
relative to the other funds in a fund's  category.  Five stars is the  "highest"
ranking (top 10% of funds in a category),  four stars is "above  average"  (next
22.5%),  three stars is "average" (next 35%), two stars is "below average" (next
22.5%) and one star is "lowest"  (bottom  10%).  The current  star rating is the
fund's (or class's)  overall  rating,  which is the fund's  3-year rating or its
combined 3- and 5-year rating (weighted 60%/40%  respectively),  or its combined
3-, 5-, and 10-year rating (weighted  40%/30%/30%,  respectively),  depending on
the  inception  date of the fund (or  class).  Rankings  are  subject  to change
monthly.

     The Fund may also compare its total  return  ranking to that of other funds
in its Morningstar category. In addition to its star ratings. Those total return
rankings are percentage from one percent to one hundred percent and are not risk
adjusted. For example, if a fund is in the 94th percentile,  that means that 94%
of the funds in the same category performed better than it did.

     |_|   Performance   Rankings  and   Comparisons   by  Other   Entities  and
Publications.  From time to time the Fund may include in its  advertisements and
sales literature performance  information about the Fund cited in newspapers and
other periodicals such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Barron's,
or similar  publications.  That information may include  performance  quotations
from other sources,  including  Lipper and  Morningstar.  The performance of the
Fund's Class A, Class B or Class C shares may be compared in publications to the
performance  of various  market  indices  or other  investments,  and  averages,
performance  rankings or other  benchmarks  prepared by  recognized  mutual fund
statistical services.

     Investors  may also wish to compare the Fund's  Class A, Class B or Class C
returns  to the  return on  fixed-income  investments  available  from banks and
thrift   institutions.   Those  include   certificates   of  deposit,   ordinary
interest-paying  checking  and  savings  accounts,  and other  forms of fixed or
variable time deposits,  and various other  instruments  such as Treasury bills.
However, the Fund's returns and share price are not guaranteed or insured by the
FDIC or any  other  agency  and will  fluctuate  daily,  while  bank  depository
obligations  may be insured by the FDIC and may  provide  fixed rates of return.
Repayment of principal and payment of interest on Treasury  securities is backed
by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.

     From time to time, the Fund may publish  rankings or ratings of the Manager
or Transfer Agent, and of the investor services provided by them to shareholders
of the Oppenheimer  funds,  other than  performance  rankings of the Oppenheimer
funds themselves. Those ratings or rankings of shareholder and investor services
by third parties may include  comparisons of their services to those provided by
other mutual fund families selected by the rating or ranking services.  They may
be based upon the opinions of the rating or ranking  service  itself,  using its
research or judgment, or based upon surveys of investors,  brokers, shareholders
or others.


ABOUT YOUR ACCOUNT

How to Buy Shares

     Additional  information  is  presented  below about the methods that can be
used to buy shares of the Fund.  Appendix C contains more information  about the
special sales charge arrangements  offered by the Fund, and the circumstances in
which sales charges may be reduced or waived for certain classes of investors.

AccountLink.  When shares are purchased through AccountLink,  each purchase must
be at least $25.  Shares  will be  purchased  on the  regular  business  day the
Distributor  is  instructed  to initiate the  Automated  Clearing  House ("ACH")
transfer to buy the shares.  Dividends will begin to accrue on shares  purchased
with the proceeds of ACH transfers on the business day the Fund received Federal
Funds for the purchase  through the ACH system  before the close of The New York
Stock Exchange. The Exchange normally closes at 4:00 P.M., but may close earlier
on certain days. If Federal Funds are received on a business day after the close
the Exchange, the shares will be purchased and dividends will begin to accrue on
the next  regular  business  day.  The  proceeds of ACH  transfers  are normally
received  by the Fund  three (3) days after the  transfers  are  initiated.  The
Distributor and the Fund are not responsible for any delays in purchasing shares
resulting from delays in ACH transmissions.

Reduced Sales Charges.  As discussed in the  Prospectus,  a reduced sales charge
rate may be obtained for Class A shares under Right of Accumulation  and Letters
of Intent  because of the  economies of sales  efforts and reduction in expenses
realized by the  Distributor,  dealers and brokers  making such sales.  No sales
charge is imposed in certain other circumstances described in Appendix C to this
Statement of Additional  Information because the Distributor or dealer or broker
incurs little or no selling expenses.

     |X| Right of Accumulation. To qualify for the lower sales charge rates that
apply to  larger  purchases  of Class A  shares,  you and  your  spouse  can add
together:
     |_|Class A and Class B shares you  purchase for your  individual  accounts,
        or for your joint accounts, or for trust or custodial accounts on behalf
        of your children who are minors, and
     |_|Current  purchases  of Class A and  Class B shares of the Fund and other
        Oppenheimer  funds to reduce  the sales  charge  rate  that  applies  to
        current purchases of Class A shares, and
     |_|Class  A  and  Class  B  shares  of  Oppenheimer  funds  you  previously
        purchased  subject to an initial or contingent  deferred sales charge to
        reduce the sales  charge rate for current  purchases  of Class A shares,
        provided that you still hold your  investment in one of the  Oppenheimer
        funds.

     A fiduciary  can count all shares  purchased  for a trust,  estate or other
fiduciary  account  (including  one or more  employee  benefit plans of the same
employer) that has multiple  accounts.  The  Distributor  will add the value, at
current offering price, of the shares you previously purchased and currently own
to the value of  current  purchases  to  determine  the sales  charge  rate that
applies. The reduced sales charge will apply only to current purchases. You must
request it when you buy shares.

     |X| The Oppenheimer Funds. The Oppenheimer funds are those mutual funds for
which  the  Distributor  acts  as the  distributor  or the  sub-distributor  and
currently include the following:

                                        Oppenheimer   Main   Street   California
Oppenheimer Bond Fund                   Municipal Fund
                                        Oppenheimer  Main Street Growth & Income
Oppenheimer Capital Appreciation Fund   Fund
Oppenheimer  Capital  Income  Fund  Oppenheimer  Main  Street  Opportunity  Fund
Oppenheimer  Capital  Preservation  Fund  Oppenheimer Main Street Small Cap Fund
Oppenheimer  California  Municipal  Fund  Oppenheimer  MidCap  Fund  Oppenheimer
Champion  Income  Fund   Oppenheimer   Multiple   Strategies  Fund   Oppenheimer
Convertible   Securities  Fund  Oppenheimer   Municipal  Bond  Fund  Oppenheimer
Developing   Markets  Fund  Oppenheimer  New  York  Municipal  Fund  Oppenheimer
Disciplined  Allocation Fund  Oppenheimer New Jersey  Municipal Fund Oppenheimer
Disciplined  Value Fund  Oppenheimer  Pennsylvania  Municipal  Fund  Oppenheimer
Discovery Fund Oppenheimer Quest Balanced Value Fund
                                        Oppenheimer  Quest  Capital  Value Fund,
Oppenheimer Enterprise Fund             Inc.
                                        Oppenheimer  Quest  Global  Value  Fund,
Oppenheimer Emerging Growth Fund        Inc.
Oppenheimer Emerging  Technologies Fund Oppenheimer Quest Opportunity Value Fund
Oppenheimer  Europe  Fund  Oppenheimer  Quest  Small Cap Value Fund  Oppenheimer
Florida  Municipal Fund Oppenheimer  Quest Value Fund, Inc.  Oppenheimer  Global
Fund  Oppenheimer  Real  Asset  Fund  Oppenheimer  Global  Growth & Income  Fund
Oppenheimer  Senior Floating Rate Fund  Oppenheimer Gold & Special Minerals Fund
Oppenheimer  Strategic  Income Fund Oppenheimer  Growth Fund  Oppenheimer  Total
Return Fund,  Inc.  Oppenheimer  High Yield Fund  Oppenheimer  Trinity Core Fund
Oppenheimer  Insured Municipal Fund Oppenheimer  Trinity Growth Fund Oppenheimer
Intermediate   Municipal  Fund   Oppenheimer   Trinity  Value  Fund  Oppenheimer
International   Bond  Fund   Oppenheimer  U.S.   Government  Trust   Oppenheimer
International Growth Fund Oppenheimer World Bond Fund Oppenheimer  International
Small Company Fund  Limited-Term New York Municipal Fund  Oppenheimer  Large Cap
Growth Fund Rochester Fund Municipals Oppenheimer Limited-Term Government Fund

And the following money market funds:

Centennial America Fund, L. P.           Centennial New York Tax Exempt Trust
Centennial California Tax Exempt Trust   Centennial Tax Exempt Trust
Centennial Government Trust              Oppenheimer Cash Reserves
Centennial Money Market Trust            Oppenheimer Money Market Fund, Inc.

     There is an initial  sales charge on the purchase of Class A shares of each
of  the  Oppenheimer  funds  except  the  money  market  funds.   Under  certain
circumstances described in this Statement of Additional Information,  redemption
proceeds of certain  money  market  fund  shares may be subject to a  contingent
deferred sales charge.

Letters of Intent.  Under a Letter of Intent,  if you purchase Class A shares or
Class A and  Class B shares  of the Fund and other  Oppenheimer  funds  during a
13-month  period,  you can reduce  the sales  charge  rate that  applies to your
purchases of Class A shares. The total amount of your intended purchases of both
Class A and Class B shares will  determine the reduced sales charge rate for the
Class A shares purchased during that period.  You can include  purchases made up
to 90 days before the date of the Letter.

         A Letter  of  Intent  is an  investor's  statement  in  writing  to the
     Distributor  of the  intention  to  purchase  Class A shares or Class A and
     Class B shares of the Fund (and other Oppenheimer  funds) during a 13-month
     period (the "Letter of Intent period"). At the investor's request, this may
     include  purchases made up to 90 days prior to the date of the Letter.  The
     Letter  states the  investor's  intention to make the  aggregate  amount of
     purchases of shares which, when added to the investor's  holdings of shares
     of those  funds,  will equal or exceed the amount  specified in the Letter.
     Purchases made by  reinvestment  of dividends or  distributions  of capital
     gains and  purchases  made at net asset value  without  sales charge do not
     count toward satisfying the amount of the Letter.

     A Letter  enables  an  investor  to count  the  Class A and  Class B shares
purchased  under the Letter to obtain the reduced sales charge rate on purchases
of Class A shares of the Fund (and other  Oppenheimer  funds) that applies under
the Right of Accumulation to current purchases of Class A shares.  Each purchase
of Class A shares  under the Letter  will be made at the public  offering  price
(including  the sales  charge)  that  applies to a single  lump-sum  purchase of
shares in the amount intended to be purchased under the Letter.

     In  submitting  a Letter,  the  investor  makes no  commitment  to purchase
shares.  However,  if the  investor's  purchases of shares  within the Letter of
Intent  period,  when added to the value (at offering  price) of the  investor's
holdings  of shares on the last day of that  period,  do not equal or exceed the
intended  purchase amount,  the investor agrees to pay the additional  amount of
sales charge applicable to such purchases. That amount is described in "Terms of
Escrow,"  below  (those  terms may be  amended by the  Distributor  from time to
time).  The  investor  agrees that shares  equal in value to 5% of the  intended
purchase  amount  will be held in escrow by the  Transfer  Agent  subject to the
Terms of  Escrow.  Also,  the  investor  agrees  to be bound by the terms of the
Prospectus,  this Statement of Additional  Information and the Application  used
for a Letter of Intent. If those terms are amended,  as they may be from time to
time by the Fund,  the  investor  agrees to be bounded by the amended  terms and
that those amendments will apply automatically to existing Letters of Intent.

     If the total eligible  purchases made during the Letter of Intent period do
not equal or exceed the intended  purchase  amount,  the commissions  previously
paid to the dealer of record  for the  account  and the  amount of sales  charge
retained by the Distributor  will be adjusted to the rates  applicable to actual
total purchases.  If total eligible purchases during the Letter of Intent period
exceed the intended  purchase amount and exceed the amount needed to qualify for
the next sales  charge rate  reduction  set forth in the  Prospectus,  the sales
charges paid will be adjusted to the lower rate.  That  adjustment  will be made
only if and when the dealer returns to the  Distributor the excess of the amount
of commissions allowed or paid to the dealer over the amount of commissions that
apply to the actual amount of purchases.  The excess commissions returned to the
Distributor  will be used  to  purchase  additional  shares  for the  investor's
account at the net asset value per share in effect on the date of such purchase,
promptly after the Distributor's receipt thereof.

     In determining  the total amount of purchases  made under a Letter,  shares
redeemed by the investor prior to the termination of the Letter of Intent period
will be deducted.  It is the  responsibility  of the dealer of record and/or the
investor  to advise the  Distributor  about the Letter in placing  any  purchase
orders  for the  investor  during  the  Letter  of  Intent  period.  All of such
purchases must be made through the Distributor.

     |_| Terms of Escrow That Apply to Letters of Intent.

     1. Out of the initial purchase (or subsequent  purchases if necessary) made
pursuant to a Letter, shares of the Fund equal in value up to 5% of the intended
purchase amount  specified in the Letter shall be held in escrow by the Transfer
Agent. For example, if the intended purchase amount is $50,000, the escrow shall
be shares valued in the amount of $2,500  (computed at the public offering price
adjusted for a $50,000 purchase).  Any dividends and capital gains distributions
on the escrowed shares will be credited to the investor's account.

     2. If the total minimum investment  specified under the Letter is completed
within the  thirteen-month  Letter of Intent period, the escrowed shares will be
promptly released to the investor.

     3. If, at the end of the  thirteen-month  Letter of Intent period the total
purchases  pursuant  to the Letter are less than the  intended  purchase  amount
specified in the Letter,  the investor must remit to the  Distributor  an amount
equal to the difference between the dollar amount of sales charges actually paid
and the amount of sales  charges  which would have been paid if the total amount
purchased  had been made at a single  time.  That sales charge  adjustment  will
apply to any shares  redeemed  prior to the  completion  of the  Letter.  If the
difference  in sales charges is not paid within twenty days after a request from
the Distributor or the dealer,  the Distributor  will,  within sixty days of the
expiration  of the Letter,  redeem the number of escrowed  shares  necessary  to
realize such difference in sales charges.  Full and fractional  shares remaining
after such redemption will be released from escrow.  If a request is received to
redeem escrowed shares prior to the payment of such additional sales charge, the
sales charge will be withheld from the redemption proceeds.

     4. By signing the Letter, the investor irrevocably constitutes and appoints
the Transfer  Agent as  attorney-in-fact  to surrender for redemption any or all
escrowed shares.

     5. The shares  eligible  for  purchase  under the Letter (or the holding of
which may be counted toward completion of a Letter) include:

(a)         Class A shares  sold with a front-end  sales  charge or subject to a
            Class A contingent deferred sales charge,
(b)   Class  B  shares  of  other  Oppenheimer  funds  acquired  subject  to a
            contingent deferred sales charge, and
(c)         Class A or Class B shares acquired by exchange of either (1) Class A
            shares  of one of the other  Oppenheimer  funds  that were  acquired
            subject to a Class A initial or contingent  deferred sales charge or
            (2) Class B shares of one of the other  Oppenheimer  funds that were
            acquired subject to a contingent deferred sales charge.

     6. Shares held in escrow  hereunder  will  automatically  be exchanged  for
shares of another  fund to which an exchange is  requested,  as described in the
section of the Prospectus  entitled "How to Exchange Shares" and the escrow will
be transferred to that other fund.

Asset Builder Plans.  To establish an Asset Builder Plan to buy shares  directly
from a bank  account,  you must  enclose a check  (the  minimum  is $25) for the
initial purchase with your  application.  Shares purchased by Asset Builder Plan
payments  from bank  accounts  are subject to the  redemption  restrictions  for
recent purchases described in the Prospectus.  Asset Builder Plans are available
only if your bank is an ACH member.  Asset  Builder Plans may not be used to buy
shares for  OppenheimerFunds-employer-sponsored  qualified  retirement accounts.
Asset Builder Plans also enable shareholders of Oppenheimer Cash Reserves to use
their account in that fund to make monthly  automatic  purchases of shares of up
to four other Oppenheimer funds.

     If you make  payments from your bank to purchase  shares of the Fund,  your
bank account will be debited automatically. Normally, the debit will be made two
business days prior to the  investment  dates you selected on your  Application.
Neither the  Distributor,  the Transfer  Agent nor the Fund shall be responsible
for  any  delays  in   purchasing   shares   that  result  from  delays  in  ACH
transmissions.

     Before you establish Asset Builder payments, you should obtain a prospectus
of the selected  fund(s) from your financial  advisor (or the  Distributor)  and
request an application from the Distributor. Complete the application and return
it.  You may  change  the  amount  of your  Asset  Builder  payment  or your can
terminate  these  automatic  investments  at any time by writing to the Transfer
Agent. The Transfer Agent requires a reasonable  period  (approximately 10 days)
after  receipt of your  instructions  to implement  them.  The Fund reserves the
right to amend, suspend, or discontinue offering Asset Builder plans at any time
without prior notice.

Cancellation of Purchase Orders.  Cancellation of purchase orders for the Fund's
shares (for  example,  when a purchase  check is  returned  to the Fund  unpaid)
causes a loss to be incurred  when the net asset  value of the Fund's  shares on
the  cancellation  date is less than on the purchase date. That loss is equal to
the amount of the  decline in the net asset  value per share  multiplied  by the
number of shares in the purchase  order.  The investor is  responsible  for that
loss. If the investor fails to compensate the Fund for the loss, the Distributor
will do so. The Fund may reimburse the  Distributor for that amount by redeeming
shares from any account  registered in that investor's  name, or the Fund or the
Distributor may seek other redress.


Classes of Shares.  Each class of shares of the Fund  represents  an interest in
the same portfolio of investments of the Fund. However, each class has different
shareholder  privileges and features.  The net income  attributable  to Class B,
Class C or Class N shares and the dividends payable on Class B, Class C or Class
N shares will be reduced by  incremental  expenses  borne  solely by that class.
Those expenses include the asset-based  sales charges to which Class B and Class
C are subject.

     The  availability  of three classes of shares permits an investor to choose
the method of purchasing shares that is more appropriate for the investor.  That
may  depend  on the  amount of the  purchase,  the  length of time the  investor
expects to hold  shares,  and other  relevant  circumstances.  Class A shares in
general are sold subject to an initial sales  charge.  While Class B and Class C
and Class N shares have no initial  sales  charge,  the purpose of the  deferred
sales charge and asset-based sales charge on Class B, Class C and Class N shares
is the  same as  that of the  initial  sales  charge  on  Class  A  shares  - to
compensate the Distributor and brokers,  dealers and financial institutions that
sell shares of the Fund. A salesperson  who is entitled to receive  compensation
for selling Fund shares may receive different levels of compensation for selling
to one class of shares than another.


     The Distributor will not accept any order in the amount of $500,000 or more
for  Class B shares  or $1  million  or more for  Class C shares  on behalf of a
single investor (not including dealer "street name" or omnibus  accounts).  That
is because  generally it will be more advantageous for that investor to purchase
Class A shares of the Fund.

     |_| Class B Conversion. Under current interpretations of applicable federal
income tax law by the Internal Revenue Service, the conversion of Class B shares
to Class A shares  after six  years is not  treated  as a taxable  event for the
shareholder.  If  those  laws or the IRS  interpretation  of those  laws  should
change,  the automatic  conversion  feature may be suspended.  In that event, no
further conversions of Class B shares would occur while that suspension remained
in effect. Although Class B shares could then be exchanged for Class A shares on
the basis of relative net asset value of the two classes, without the imposition
of a sales charge or fee, such exchange could constitute a taxable event for the
holder, and absent such exchange, Class B shares might continue to be subject to
the asset-based sales charge for longer than six years.

     |_|  Allocation of Expenses.  The Fund pays  expenses  related to its daily
operations,  such as custodian fees, trustees' fees, transfer agency fees, legal
fees and auditing  costs.  Those  expenses are paid out of the Fund's assets and
are not paid directly by  shareholders.  However,  those expenses reduce the net
asset  value of shares,  and  therefore  are  indirectly  borne by  shareholders
through their investment.

     The  methodology  for  calculating  the  net  asset  value,  dividends  and
distributions  of the Fund's  share  classes  recognizes  two types of expenses.
General expenses that do not pertain specifically to any one class are allocated
pro rata to the shares of all classes. The allocation is based on the percentage
of the Fund's total assets that is represented by the assets of each class,  and
then  equally to each  outstanding  share  within a given  class.  Such  general
expenses include  management fees, legal,  bookkeeping and audit fees,  printing
and mailing costs of shareholder reports, Prospectuses, Statements of Additional
Information and other materials for current  shareholders,  fees to unaffiliated
Trustees,  custodian expenses,  share issuance costs,  organization and start-up
costs, interest,  taxes and brokerage commissions,  and non-recurring  expenses,
such as litigation costs.

     Other  expenses that are directly  attributable  to a particular  class are
allocated equally to each outstanding share within that class.  Examples of such
expenses  include  distribution  and service  plan  (12b-1)  fees,  transfer and
shareholder  servicing  agent fees and  expenses,  share  registration  fees and
shareholder meeting expenses (to the extent that such expenses pertain only to a
specific class).

Determination  of Net Asset Values Per Share.  The net asset values per share of
each class of shares of the Fund are  determined  as of the close of business of
The New York Stock Exchange on each day that the Exchange is open. It is done by
dividing  the value of the Fund's net assets  attributable  to that class by the
number of shares of that  class  that are  outstanding.  The  Exchange  normally
closes at 4:00  P.M.,  New York time,  but may close  earlier on some other days
(for  example,  in case of  weather  emergencies  or on days  falling  before  a
holiday).  The Exchange's most recent annual  announcement  (which is subject to
change)  states that it will close on New Year's Day,  Martin  Luther King,  Jr.
Day,  Presidents' Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence Day, Labor Day,
Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. It may also close on other days.

     Dealers  other than  Exchange  members  may  conduct  trading in  municipal
securities on days on which the Exchange is closed (including  weekends and U.S.
holidays) or after 4:00 P.M. on a regular  business day.  Because the Fund's net
asset values will not be calculated  on those days,  the Fund's net asset values
per share may be significantly  affected on such days when  shareholders may not
purchase or redeem shares.

     |X| Securities  Valuation.  The Fund's Board of Trustees has  established
procedures  for the  valuation  of the Fund's  securities.  In  general  those
procedures are as follows:

     |_|Long-term debt  securities  having a remaining  maturity in excess of 60
        days are valued based on the mean  between the "bid" and "asked"  prices
        determined by a portfolio  pricing service  approved by the Fund's Board
        of Trustees or obtained by the Manager from two active  market makers in
        the security on the basis of reasonable inquiry.
     |_|The  following  securities  are valued at the mean between the "bid" and
        "asked" prices  determined by a pricing  service  approved by the Fund's
        Board of Trustees or  obtained  by the  Manager  from two active  market
        makers in the  security  on the basis of  reasonable  inquiry:  (1) debt
        instruments that have a maturity of more than 397 days when
            issued,
        (2) debt instruments that had a maturity of 397 days or less when issued
            and have a remaining maturity of more than 60 days, and
        (3) non-money market debt instruments that had a maturity of 397 days or
            less when issued and which have a  remaining  maturity of 60 days or
            less.
     |_|The following  securities are valued at cost,  adjusted for amortization
        of premiums and accretion of discounts: (1) money market debt securities
        held by a non-money market fund that
            had a  maturity  of less  than  397 days  when  issued  that  have a
            remaining maturity of 60 days or less, and
        (2) debt  instruments  held by a money market fund that have a remaining
            maturity of 397 days or less.
     |_|Securities not having  readily-available market quotations are valued at
        fair value determined under the Board's procedures.

     If the  Manager  is unable to locate  two  market  makers  willing  to give
quotes,  a  security  may be priced at the mean  between  the "bid" and  "asked"
prices  provided by a single  active market maker (which in certain cases may be
the "bid" price if no "asked" price is available).

          In the case of municipal securities, when last sale information is not
     generally  available,  the Manager may use pricing services approved by the
     Board of Trustees.  The pricing service may use "matrix" comparisons to the
     prices for comparable instruments on the basis of quality, yield, maturity.
     Other special factors may be involved (such as the tax-exempt status of the
     interest  paid by  municipal  securities).  The  Manager  will  monitor the
     accuracy of the pricing  services.  That  monitoring may include  comparing
     prices used for  portfolio  valuation  to actual  sales  prices of selected
     securities.

     Puts,  calls,  interest rate futures and  municipal  bond index futures are
valued at the last sale price on the principal exchange on which they are traded
or on NASDAQ, as applicable,  as determined by a pricing service approved by the
Board of Trustees or by the Manager. If there were no sales that day, they shall
be valued at the last sale price on the  preceding  trading  day if it is within
the spread of the closing "bid" and "asked" prices on the principal  exchange or
on NASDAQ on the  valuation  date.  If not,  the value  shall be the closing bid
price on the principal  exchange or on NASDAQ on the valuation date. If the put,
call or future is not traded on an exchange or on NASDAQ,  it shall be valued by
the mean  between  "bid" and "asked"  prices  obtained  by the Manager  from two
active  market  makers.  In certain  cases that may be at the "bid"  price if no
"asked" price is available.

     When the Fund writes an option,  an amount equal to the premium received is
included  in the Fund's  Statement  of Assets and  Liabilities  as an asset.  An
equivalent credit is included in the liability  section.  The credit is adjusted
("marked-to-market")  to reflect the  current  market  value of the  option.  In
determining the Fund's gain on investments, if a call or put written by the Fund
is exercised,  the proceeds are increased by the premium received.  If a call or
put  written  by the Fund  expires,  the Fund  has a gain in the  amount  of the
premium. If the Fund enters into a closing purchase transaction,  it will have a
gain or loss,  depending  on whether the premium  received was more or less than
the cost of the closing  transaction.  If the Fund exercises a put it holds, the
amount the Fund receives on its sale of the underlying  investment is reduced by
the amount of premium paid by the Fund.

How to Sell Shares

     The  information  below  supplements the terms and conditions for redeeming
shares set forth in the Prospectus.

Checkwriting.  When a check is presented to the Fund's bank for  clearance,  the
bank will ask the Fund to  redeem a  sufficient  number  of full and  fractional
shares in the  shareholder's  account  to cover the  amount of the  check.  This
enables the  shareholder to continue to receive  dividends on those shares until
the check is presented to the Fund.  Checks may not be presented  for payment at
the  offices of the bank  listed on the check or at the Fund's  custodian  bank.
That limitation does not affect the use of checks for the payment of bills or to
obtain cash at other banks.  The Fund  reserves  the right to amend,  suspend or
discontinue offering Checkwriting privileges at any time without prior notice.

     In choosing to take advantage of the Checkwriting  privilege by signing the
Account  Application or by completing a Checkwriting  card,  each individual who
signs:

(1)   for  individual  accounts,  represents  that  they  are  the  registered
         owner(s) of the shares of the Fund in that account;
(2)      for accounts for corporations, partnerships, trusts and other entities,
         represents that they are an officer,  general partner, trustee or other
         fiduciary or agent, as applicable,  duly authorized to act on behalf of
         such registered owner(s);
(3)      authorizes  the Fund, its Transfer Agent and any bank through which the
         Fund's drafts  (checks) are payable to pay all checks drawn on the Fund
         account of such  person(s) and to redeem a sufficient  amount of shares
         from that account to cover payment of each check;
(4)      specifically  acknowledges  that if they choose to permit  checks to be
         honored if there is a single  signature on checks drawn  against  joint
         accounts, or accounts for corporations,  partnerships,  trusts or other
         entities,  the  signature  of any  one  signatory  on a  check  will be
         sufficient to authorize  payment of that check and redemption  from the
         account,  even if that account is  registered in the names of more than
         one  person  or more  than  one  authorized  signature  appears  on the
         Checkwriting card or the Application, as applicable;
(5)   understands  that  the  Checkwriting  privilege  may  be  terminated  or
         amended at any time by the Fund and/or the Fund's bank; and
(6)      acknowledges  and agrees that neither the Fund nor its bank shall incur
         any  liability  for  that  amendment  or  termination  of  checkwriting
         privileges or for redeeming shares to pay checks reasonably believed by
         them to be genuine, or for returning or not paying checks that have not
         been accepted for any reason.

Reinvestment Privilege.  Within six months of a redemption,  a shareholder may
reinvest all or part of the redemption proceeds of:
     |_| Class A shares that you purchased subject to an initial sales charge or
         Class A shares on which a contingent deferred sales charge was paid, or
     |_| Class B shares  that were  subject to the Class B  contingent  deferred
         sales charge when redeemed.

     The reinvestment may be made without sales charge only in Class A shares of
the Fund or any of the other Oppenheimer funds into which shares of the Fund are
exchangeable as described in "How to Exchange Shares" below.  Reinvestment  will
be at the net asset value next computed  after the Transfer  Agent  receives the
reinvestment  order.  The  shareholder  must  ask the  Transfer  Agent  for that
privilege at the time of reinvestment.  This privilege does not apply to Class C
shares.  The  Fund  may  amend,  suspend  or cease  offering  this  reinvestment
privilege at any time as to shares  redeemed  after the date of such  amendment,
suspension or cessation.
Any capital gain that was realized when the shares were redeemed is taxable, and
reinvestment will not alter any capital gains tax payable on that gain. If there
has been a capital  loss on the  redemption,  some or all of the loss may not be
tax deductible,  depending on the timing and amount of the  reinvestment.  Under
the Internal Revenue Code, if the redemption  proceeds of Fund shares on which a
sales  charge  was paid are  reinvested  in shares of the Fund or another of the
Oppenheimer  funds  within  90  days  of  payment  of  the  sales  charge,   the
shareholder's basis in the shares of the Fund that were redeemed may not include
the amount of the sales charge paid.  That would reduce the loss or increase the
gain  recognized  from the  redemption.  However,  in that case the sales charge
would be added to the basis of the shares  acquired by the  reinvestment  of the
redemption proceeds.

Payments "In Kind".  The Prospectus  states that payment for shares tendered for
redemption is  ordinarily  made in cash.  However,  the Board of Trustees of the
Fund may determine  that it would be  detrimental  to the best  interests of the
remaining  shareholders of the Fund to make payment of a redemption order wholly
or partly in cash.  In that case,  the Fund may pay the  redemption  proceeds in
whole or in part by a  distribution  "in  kind" of  liquid  securities  from the
portfolio of the Fund, in lieu of cash.

     The Fund has  elected to be  governed  by Rule 18f-1  under the  Investment
Company Act.  Under that rule,  the Fund is obligated to redeem shares solely in
cash up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the net assets of the Fund during any
90-day  period for any one  shareholder.  If shares are  redeemed  in kind,  the
redeeming  shareholder  might  incur  brokerage  or other  costs in selling  the
securities for cash. The Fund will value  securities  used to pay redemptions in
kind  using the same  method  the Fund uses to value  its  portfolio  securities
described  above  under  "Determination  of Net Asset  Values Per  Share."  That
valuation will be made as of the time the redemption price is determined.

Involuntary Redemptions. The Fund's Board of Trustees has the right to cause the
involuntary  redemption  of the shares held in any account if the  aggregate net
asset value of those shares is less than $200 or such lesser amount as the Board
may fix.  The Board of Trustees  will not cause the  involuntary  redemption  of
shares in an account if the  aggregate net asset value of such shares has fallen
below the stated minimum solely as a result of market fluctuations. If the Board
exercises  this  right,  it may also fix the  requirements  for any notice to be
given to the  shareholders  in question  (not less than 30 days).  The Board may
alternatively  set  requirements for the shareholder to increase the investment,
or set other terms and conditions so that the shares would not be  involuntarily
redeemed.

Transfers of Shares. A transfer of shares to a different  registration is not an
event that  triggers  the payment of sales  charges.  Therefore,  shares are not
subject to the payment of a contingent deferred sales charge of any class at the
time of  transfer  to the name of another  person or entity.  It does not matter
whether the transfer occurs by absolute assignment,  gift or bequest, as long as
it does not involve,  directly or indirectly,  a public sale of the shares. When
shares  subject to a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge are  transferred,  the
transferred shares will remain subject to the contingent  deferred sales charge.
It  will  be  calculated  as if the  transferee  shareholder  had  acquired  the
transferred  shares in the same manner and at the same time as the  transferring
shareholder.


     If less than all shares  held in an account are  transferred,  and some but
not all shares in the account  would be subject to a contingent  deferred  sales
charge if redeemed at the time of  transfer,  the  priorities  described  in the
Prospectus  under "How to Buy Shares" for the imposition of the Class B, Class C
or Class N contingent  deferred sales charge will be followed in determining the
order in which shares are transferred.


Special  Arrangements  for  Repurchase  of Shares from Dealers and Brokers.  The
Distributor is the Fund's agent to repurchase its shares from authorized dealers
or brokers  on behalf of their  customers.  Shareholders  should  contact  their
broker or dealer to arrange this type of redemption.  The  repurchase  price per
share will be the net asset value next computed after the  Distributor  receives
an order placed by the dealer or broker.  However, if the Distributor receives a
repurchase  order from a dealer or broker  after the close of The New York Stock
Exchange on a regular business day, it will be processed at that day's net asset
value if the order was received by the dealer or broker from its customers prior
to the time the Exchange closes. Normally, the Exchange closes at 4:00 P.M., but
may do so  earlier  on  some  days.  Additionally,  the  order  must  have  been
transmitted  to and received by the  Distributor  prior to its close of business
that day (normally 5:00 P.M.).

     Ordinarily,  for accounts redeemed by a broker-dealer under this procedure,
payment  will be made  within  three  business  days after the shares  have been
redeemed upon the Distributor's  receipt of the required redemption documents in
proper  form.  The  signature(s)  of the  registered  owners  on the  redemption
documents must be guaranteed as described in the Prospectus.

Automatic  Withdrawal and Exchange  Plans.  Investors  owning shares of the Fund
valued at $5,000  or more can  authorize  the  Transfer  Agent to redeem  shares
(having  a  value  of at  least  $50)  automatically  on a  monthly,  quarterly,
semi-annual or annual basis under an Automatic  Withdrawal Plan.  Shares will be
redeemed three business days prior to the date requested by the  shareholder for
receipt of the payment.  Automatic  withdrawals of up to $1,500 per month may be
requested  by  telephone  if  payments  are to be made by check  payable  to all
shareholders of record.  Payments must also be sent to the address of record for
the account and the address must not have been changed within the prior 30 days.
Required minimum distributions from OppenheimerFunds-sponsored  retirement plans
may not be arranged on this basis.

     Payments are normally made by check,  but shareholders  having  AccountLink
privileges  (see "How To Buy Shares") may arrange to have  Automatic  Withdrawal
Plan  payments  transferred  to the  bank  account  designated  on  the  Account
Application or by signature-guaranteed  instructions sent to the Transfer Agent.
Shares are  normally  redeemed  pursuant to an Automatic  Withdrawal  Plan three
business  days  before the  payment  transmittal  date you select in the Account
Application.  If a contingent  deferred sales charge applies to the  redemption,
the amount of the check or payment will be reduced accordingly.

     The Fund cannot guarantee  receipt of a payment on the date requested.  The
Fund reserves the right to amend, suspend or discontinue offering these plans at
any time without prior notice.  Because of the sales charge  assessed on Class A
share purchases,  shareholders  should not make regular additional Class A share
purchases while participating in an Automatic Withdrawal Plan. Class B and Class
C shareholders should not establish  withdrawal plans, because of the imposition
of the contingent  deferred sales charge on such  withdrawals  (except where the
contingent  deferred  sales charge is waived as described in "Waivers of Class B
and Class C Sales Charges" below).

By   requesting an Automatic Withdrawal or Exchange Plan, the shareholder agrees
     to the terms and  conditions  that apply to such  plans,  as stated  below.
     These  provisions  may be amended  from time to time by the Fund and/or the
     Distributor.  When adopted,  any  amendments  will  automatically  apply to
     existing Plans.

     |X| Automatic Exchange Plans. Shareholders can authorize the Transfer Agent
to  exchange  a  pre-determined  amount of shares of the Fund for shares (of the
same class) of other  Oppenheimer funds  automatically on a monthly,  quarterly,
semi-annual or annual basis under an Automatic Exchange Plan. The minimum amount
that may be exchanged to each other fund account is $25.  Instructions should be
provided   on   the   OppenheimerFunds   Application   or   signature-guaranteed
instructions.  Exchanges made under these plans are subject to the  restrictions
that  apply  to  exchanges  as set  forth  in "How to  Exchange  Shares"  in the
Prospectus and below in this Statement of Additional Information.

     |X| Automatic  Withdrawal  Plans. Fund shares will be redeemed as necessary
to meet  withdrawal  payments.  Shares  acquired  without a sales charge will be
redeemed  first.  Shares  acquired with  reinvested  dividends and capital gains
distributions  will be redeemed next,  followed by shares  acquired with a sales
charge, to the extent necessary to make withdrawal payments.  Depending upon the
amount withdrawn, the investor's principal may be depleted.  Payments made under
these plans should not be considered as a yield or income on your investment.

     The Transfer Agent will administer the investor's Automatic Withdrawal Plan
as  agent  for the  shareholder(s)  (the  "Planholder")  who  executed  the Plan
authorization and application  submitted to the Transfer Agent. Neither the Fund
nor the  Transfer  Agent shall incur any  liability  to the  Planholder  for any
action taken or not taken by the Transfer  Agent in good faith to administer the
Plan. Share certificates will not be issued for shares of the Fund purchased for
and held under the Plan,  but the Transfer  Agent will credit all such shares to
the account of the Planholder on the records of the Fund. Any share certificates
held by a Planholder  may be  surrendered  unendorsed to the Transfer Agent with
the Plan  application so that the shares  represented by the  certificate may be
held under the Plan.

     For  accounts  subject to  Automatic  Withdrawal  Plans,  distributions  of
capital gains must be  reinvested  in shares of the Fund,  which will be done at
net asset value without a sales charge.  Dividends on shares held in the account
may be paid in cash or reinvested.

     Shares will be redeemed to make withdrawal  payments at the net asset value
per share  determined on the redemption  date.  Checks or  AccountLink  payments
representing the proceeds of Plan withdrawals will normally be transmitted three
business days prior to the date  selected for receipt of the payment,  according
to the choice specified in writing by the Planholder.  Receipt of payment on the
date selected cannot be guaranteed.

         The amount and the interval of disbursement payments and the address to
     which checks are to be mailed or AccountLink payments are to be sent may be
     changed at any time by the Planholder by writing to the Transfer Agent. The
     Planholder  should  allow at least  two  weeks'  time  after  mailing  such
     notification for the requested  change to be put in effect.  The Planholder
     may, at any time,  instruct the Transfer  Agent by written notice to redeem
     all, or any part of, the shares held under the Plan. That notice must be in
     proper  form  in  accordance  with  the  requirements  of the  then-current
     Prospectus  of the Fund. In that case,  the Transfer  Agent will redeem the
     number of shares  requested  at the net asset value per share in effect and
     will mail a check for the proceeds to the Planholder.

     The  Planholder may terminate a Plan at any time by writing to the Transfer
Agent.  The Fund may also give  directions to the Transfer  Agent to terminate a
Plan. The Transfer Agent will also terminate a Plan upon its receipt of evidence
satisfactory  to it that the  Planholder  has died or is legally  incapacitated.
Upon  termination of a Plan by the Transfer Agent or the Fund,  shares that have
not  been  redeemed  will  be  held in  uncertificated  form in the  name of the
Planholder. The account will continue as a dividend-reinvestment, uncertificated
account unless and until proper  instructions  are received from the Planholder,
his or her executor or guardian, or another authorized person.

     To use shares held under the Plan as collateral  for a debt, the Planholder
may  request  issuance  of a portion of the shares in  certificated  form.  Upon
written  request from the  Planholder,  the Transfer  Agent will  determine  the
number of shares  for which a  certificate  may be issued  without  causing  the
withdrawal checks to stop.  However,  should such  uncertificated  shares become
exhausted, Plan withdrawals will terminate.

     If the  Transfer  Agent ceases to act as transfer  agent for the Fund,  the
Planholder will be deemed to have appointed any successor  transfer agent to act
as agent in administering the Plan.

How to Exchange Shares

     As stated in the  Prospectus,  shares of a particular  class of Oppenheimer
funds having more than one class of shares may be  exchanged  only for shares of
the same class of other Oppenheimer funds. Shares of Oppenheimer funds that have
a single class without a class  designation are deemed "Class A" shares for this
purpose.  You can obtain a current list showing  which funds offer which classes
by calling the Distributor at 1-800-525-7048.

     o  All of the  Oppenheimer  funds  currently  offer Class A, B and C shares
        except  Oppenheimer  Money Market Fund,  Inc.,  Centennial  Money Market
        Trust,   Centennial  Tax  Exempt  Trust,  Centennial  Government  Trust,
        Centennial New York Tax Exempt Trust,  Centennial  California Tax Exempt
        Trust,  and  Centennial  America  Fund,  L.P.,  which only offer Class A
        shares.
     o  Oppenheimer Main Street California  Municipal Fund currently offers only
        Class A and Class B shares.
     o  Class B and Class C shares of  Oppenheimer  Cash  Reserves are generally
        available  only by  exchange  from the same  class  of  shares  of other
        Oppenheimer funds or through OppenheimerFunds-sponsored 401 (k) plans.
     o  Only certain  Oppenheimer funds currently offer Class Y shares.  Class Y
        shares of Oppenheimer Real Asset Fund may not be exchanged for shares of
        any other fund.
     o  Class  M  shares  of  Oppenheimer  Convertible  Securities  Fund  may be
        exchanged only for Class A shares of other  Oppenheimer  funds. They may
        not be  acquired  by  exchange  of  shares  of any  class  of any  other
        Oppenheimer funds except Class A shares of Oppenheimer Money Market Fund
        or Oppenheimer Cash Reserves acquired by exchange of Class M shares.
         o Class A shares  of  Oppenheimer  Senior  Floating  Rate  Fund are not
        available  by exchange  of shares of  Oppenheimer  Money  Market Fund or
        Class A shares of Oppenheimer  Cash  Reserves.  If any Class A shares of
        another  Oppenheimer  fund  that are  exchanged  for  Class A shares  of
        Oppenheimer  Senior  Floating  Rate  Fund  are  subject  to the  Class A
        contingent  deferred sales charge of the other  Oppenheimer  fund at the
        time of  exchange,  the  holding  period  for  that  Class A  contingent
        deferred  sales  charge  will  carry  over  to the  Class  A  shares  of
        Oppenheimer  Senior  Floating Rate Fund  acquired in the  exchange.  The
        Class A shares of Oppenheimer Senior Floating Rate Fund acquired in that
        exchange  will be  subject  to the  Class A Early  Withdrawal  Charge of
        Oppenheimer Senior Floating Rate Fund if they are repurchased before the
        expiration of the holding period.
     o  Class X shares of Limited Term New York  Municipal Fund can be exchanged
        only for Class B shares of other  Oppenheimer funds and no exchanges may
        be made to Class X shares.
     o  Shares of Oppenheimer Capital Preservation Fund may not be exchanged for
        shares of Oppenheimer Money Market Fund, Inc., Oppenheimer Cash Reserves
        or  Oppenheimer  Limited-Term  Government  Fund.  Only  participants  in
        certain  retirement  plans may purchase  shares of  Oppenheimer  Capital
        Preservation  Fund, and only those  participants  may exchange shares of
        other Oppenheimer funds for shares of Oppenheimer  Capital  Preservation
        Fund.

     Class A shares of Oppenheimer funds may be exchanged at net asset value for
shares of any money market fund offered by the Distributor.  Shares of any money
market fund  purchased  without a sales  charge may be  exchanged  for shares of
Oppenheimer  funds offered with a sales charge upon payment of the sales charge.
They may also be used to  purchase  shares of  Oppenheimer  funds  subject  to a
contingent deferred sales charge.

     Shares of Oppenheimer Money Market Fund, Inc. purchased with the redemption
proceeds  of shares of other  mutual  funds  (other  than  funds  managed by the
Manager or its subsidiaries)  redeemed within the 30 days prior to that purchase
may  subsequently  be exchanged  for shares of other  Oppenheimer  funds without
being subject to an initial or contingent  deferred sales charge. To qualify for
that  privilege,   the  investor  or  the  investor's  dealer  must  notify  the
Distributor  of  eligibility  for  this  privilege  at the time  the  shares  of
Oppenheimer  Money Market Fund,  Inc. are  purchased.  If  requested,  they must
supply proof of entitlement to this privilege.

     Shares of the Fund acquired by reinvestment  of dividends or  distributions
from any of the other  Oppenheimer  funds or from any unit investment  trust for
which  reinvestment  arrangements  have been made  with the  Distributor  may be
exchanged at net asset value for shares of any of the Oppenheimer funds.

     The Fund may amend,  suspend or  terminate  the  exchange  privilege at any
time.  Although the Fund may impose these  changes at any time,  it will provide
you with notice of those changes  whenever it is required to do so by applicable
law. It may be required to provide 60 days notice prior to  materially  amending
or  terminating  the exchange  privilege.  That 60 day notice is not required in
extraordinary circumstances.

     |_| How Exchanges Affect Contingent  Deferred Sales Charges.  No contingent
deferred  sales charge is imposed on exchanges of shares of any class  purchased
subject to a contingent  deferred  sales  charge.  However,  when Class A shares
acquired  by  exchange of Class A shares of other  Oppenheimer  funds  purchased
subject to a Class A contingent  deferred  sales  charge are redeemed  within 18
months of the end of the calendar month of the initial purchase of the exchanged
Class A shares,  the Class A contingent  deferred sales charge is imposed on the
redeemed  shares.  The Class B  contingent  deferred  sales charge is imposed on
Class B shares  acquired by exchange if they are redeemed  within 6 years of the
initial  purchase  of the  exchanged  Class B  shares.  The  Class C  contingent
deferred sales charge is imposed on Class C shares  acquired by exchange if they
are redeemed  within 12 months of the initial  purchase of the exchanged Class C
shares.


     When  Class B or Class C shares are  redeemed  to effect an  exchange,  the
priorities described in "How To Buy Shares" in the Prospectus for the imposition
of the Class B or the Class C contingent  deferred sales charge will be followed
in determining  the order in which the shares are exchanged.  Before  exchanging
shares,  shareholders  should take into  account how the exchange may affect any
contingent  deferred  sales  charge  that  might be  imposed  in the  subsequent
redemption of remaining  shares.  With respect to Class N shares,  if you redeem
your shares  within 18 months of the  retirement  plan's  first  purchase or the
retirement plan eliminates the Fund as a plan investment option within 18 months
of selecting the Fund, a 1% contingent  deferred sales charge will be imposed on
the plan.

     Shareholders  owning shares of more than one class must specify which class
of shares they wish to exchange.


     |_| Limits on Multiple  Exchange  Orders.  The Fund  reserves  the right to
reject  telephone or written  exchange  requests  submitted in bulk by anyone on
behalf of more than one account.  The Fund may accept  requests for exchanges of
up to 50  accounts  per day from  representatives  of  authorized  dealers  that
qualify for this privilege.

     |_| Telephone  Exchange  Requests.  When exchanging shares by telephone,  a
shareholder  must have an existing  account in the fund to which the exchange is
to be made.  Otherwise,  the  investors  must obtain a  Prospectus  of that fund
before the exchange  request may be submitted.  If all telephone  lines are busy
(which  might  occur,  for  example,   during  periods  of  substantial   market
fluctuations),  shareholders might not be able to request exchanges by telephone
and would have to submit written exchange requests.

     |_| Processing  Exchange  Requests.  Shares to be exchanged are redeemed on
the regular  business day the  Transfer  Agent  receives an exchange  request in
proper form (the "Redemption Date"). Normally, shares of the fund to be acquired
are  purchased on the  Redemption  Date,  but such  purchases  may be delayed by
either  fund up to  five  business  days  if it  determines  that  it  would  be
disadvantaged  by an immediate  transfer of the  redemption  proceeds.  The Fund
reserves the right, in its discretion,  to refuse any exchange  request that may
disadvantage it. For example,  if the receipt of multiple exchange requests from
a dealer might require the disposition of portfolio securities at a time or at a
price  that  might be  disadvantageous  to the  Fund,  the Fund may  refuse  the
request.  When you exchange some or all of your shares from one fund to another,
any  special  account  feature  such  as an  Asset  Builder  Plan  or  Automatic
Withdrawal  Plan,  will be switched to the new fund account  unless you tell the
Transfer Agent not to do so. However,  special  redemption and exchange features
such as  Automatic  Exchange  Plans and  Automatic  Withdrawal  Plans  cannot be
switched to an account in Oppenheimer Senior Floating Rate Fund.

         In connection with any exchange request, the number of shares exchanged
     may be less  than  the  number  requested  if the  exchange  or the  number
     requested  would  include  shares  subject  to a  restriction  cited in the
     Prospectus or this  Statement of Additional  Information,  or would include
     shares  covered  by a share  certificate  that  is not  tendered  with  the
     request.  In those cases,  only the shares  available for exchange  without
     restriction will be exchanged.

     The different  Oppenheimer  funds  available  for exchange  have  different
investment objectives,  policies and risks. A shareholder should assure that the
fund selected is  appropriate  for his or her  investment and should be aware of
the tax  consequences  of an  exchange.  For  federal  income tax  purposes,  an
exchange  transaction  is  treated as a  redemption  of shares of one fund and a
purchase of shares of another.  "Reinvestment  Privilege," above, discusses some
of the tax  consequences of  reinvestment of redemption  proceeds in such cases.
The  Fund,  the  Distributor,  and the  Transfer  Agent are  unable  to  provide
investment,  tax or legal advice to a shareholder in connection with an exchange
request or any other investment transaction.

Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes

Dividends and Distributions.  Dividends will be payable on shares held of record
at the time of the previous  determination  of net asset value,  or as otherwise
described in "How to Buy Shares."  Daily  dividends will not be declared or paid
on newly purchased  shares until such time as Federal Funds (funds credited to a
member  bank's  account at the  Federal  Reserve  Bank) are  available  from the
purchase  payment for such  shares.  Normally,  purchase  checks  received  from
investors  are  converted  to Federal  Funds on the next  business  day.  Shares
purchased through dealers or brokers normally are paid for by the third business
day following the placement of the purchase order.

     Shares  redeemed  through the  regular  redemption  procedure  will be paid
dividends  through  and  including  the day on which the  redemption  request is
received by the  Transfer  Agent in proper form.  Dividends  will be declared on
shares  repurchased  by a dealer or broker for three business days following the
trade  date (that is, up to and  including  the day prior to  settlement  of the
repurchase).  If all shares in an account are redeemed, all dividends accrued on
shares  of the  same  class  in the  account  will be  paid  together  with  the
redemption proceeds.

     The Fund's  practice of  attempting to pay dividends on Class A shares at a
constant  level  requires  the Manager to monitor the Fund's  portfolio  and, if
necessary, to select higher-yielding securities when it is deemed appropriate to
seek income at the level  needed to meet the target.  Those  securities  must be
within  the  Fund's  investment  parameters,  however.  The Fund  expects to pay
dividends  at a  targeted  level  from  its  net  investment  income  and  other
distributable income without any impact on the net asset values per share.

     Dividends,  distributions and the proceeds of the redemption of Fund shares
represented  by checks  returned to the Transfer  Agent by the Postal Service as
undeliverable  will be invested in shares of Oppenheimer Money Market Fund, Inc.
Reinvestment  will be made as  promptly  as  possible  after the  return of such
checks  to the  Transfer  Agent,  to  enable  the  investor  to earn a return on
otherwise  idle funds.  Unclaimed  accounts may be subject to state  escheatment
laws, and the Fund and the Transfer Agent will not be liable to  shareholders or
their representatives for compliance with those laws in good faith.


     The amount of a  distribution  paid on a class of shares may vary from time
to time depending on market conditions, the composition of the Fund's portfolio,
and expenses  borne by the Fund or borne  separately  by a class.  Dividends are
calculated  in the same manner,  at the same time and on the same day for shares
of each  class.  However,  dividends  on Class B, Class C and Class N shares are
expected to be lower than dividends on Class A shares. That is due to the effect
of the  asset-based  sales charge on Class B, Class C and Class N shares.  Those
dividends  will also differ in amount as a consequence  of any difference in net
asset value among Class A, Class B and Class C shares.


Tax  Status of the  Fund's  Dividends  and  Distributions.  The Fund  intends to
qualify  under  the  Internal  Revenue  Code  during  each  fiscal  year  to pay
"exempt-interest dividends" to its shareholders.  Exempt-interest dividends that
are  derived  from  net  investment  income  earned  by the  Fund  on  municipal
securities  will be  excludable  from gross income of  shareholders  for Federal
income tax purposes.

     Net investment income includes the allocation of amounts of income from the
municipal  securities in the Fund's  portfolio that are free from Federal income
taxes.  This  allocation  will be made by the use of one  designated  percentage
applied  uniformly to all income dividends paid during the Fund's tax year. That
designation  will  normally be made  following the end of each fiscal year as to
income dividends paid in the prior year. The percentage of income  designated as
tax-exempt  may  substantially  differ from the  percentage of the Fund's income
that was tax-exempt for a given period.

     A portion of the exempt-interest  dividends paid by the Fund may be an item
of tax preference for shareholders  subject to the alternative  minimum tax. The
amount of any dividends attributable to tax preference items for purposes of the
alternative  minimum tax will be identified  when tax information is distributed
by the Fund.

     A shareholder  receiving a dividend from income earned by the Fund from one
or more of the  following  sources  treats the  dividend  as a receipt of either
ordinary  income or long-term  capital gain in the  computation of gross income,
regardless of whether the dividend is reinvested:  (1) certain taxable temporary
investments (such as certificates of deposit,
         repurchase  agreements,  commercial paper and obligations of the U.S.
         government, its agencies and instrumentalities);
(2)   income from securities loans;
(3)   income or gains from options or futures; or
(4)      an excess of net  short-term  capital gain over net  long-term  capital
         loss from the Fund.

     The  Fund's  dividends  will  not be  eligible  for the  dividends-received
deduction for  corporations.  Shareholders  receiving  Social Security  benefits
should be aware  that  exempt-interest  dividends  are a factor  in  determining
whether such  benefits  are subject to Federal  income tax.  Losses  realized by
shareholders  on the  redemption  of Fund  shares  within six months of purchase
(which period may be shortened by  regulation)  will be  disallowed  for Federal
income tax purposes to the extent of exempt-interest  dividends received on such
shares.

     If the  Fund  qualifies  as a  "regulated  investment  company"  under  the
Internal Revenue Code, it will not be liable for Federal income taxes on amounts
paid by it as dividends and distributions.  That qualification  enables the Fund
to "pass through" its income and realized capital gains to shareholders  without
having to pay tax on them. The Fund qualified as a regulated  investment company
in its last fiscal year and intends to qualify in future years, but reserves the
right not to qualify.  The Internal  Revenue  Code  contains a number of complex
tests to  determine  whether the Fund  qualifies.  The Fund might not meet those
tests in a particular year. If it does not qualify, the Fund will be treated for
tax purposes as an ordinary  corporation  and will receive no tax  deduction for
payments of dividends and distributions made to shareholders.

     Under the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  by December 31 each year the Fund must
distribute  98% of its taxable  investment  income earned from January 1 through
December  31 of that year and 98% of its  capital  gains  realized in the period
from November 1 of the prior year through  October 31 of the current year. If it
does not, the Fund must pay an excise tax on the amounts not distributed.  It is
presently  anticipated that the Fund will meet those requirements.  However, the
Fund's Board of Trustees and the Manager  might  determine in a particular  year
that it would be in the best interest of shareholders not to make  distributions
at the required levels and to pay the excise tax on the  undistributed  amounts.
That  would  reduce  the  amount  of  income  or  capital  gains  available  for
distribution to shareholders.

Dividend  Reinvestment  in Another Fund.  Shareholders  of the Fund may elect to
reinvest all dividends and/or capital gains  distributions in shares of the same
class of any of the other Oppenheimer  funds listed above.  Reinvestment will be
made at net  asset  value  without  sales  charge.  To elect  this  option,  the
shareholder  must notify the Transfer Agent in writing and must have an existing
account in the fund selected for  reinvestment.  Otherwise the shareholder  must
first obtain a  prospectus  for that fund and an  application  from the Transfer
Agent to  establish  an account.  The  investment  will be made at the net asset
value per share in effect at the close of business  on the  payable  date of the
dividend or  distribution.  Dividends and/or  distributions  from certain of the
other  Oppenheimer  funds  may be  invested  in  shares of this Fund on the same
basis.

Additional Information About the Fund

The Transfer Agent. The Fund's Transfer Agent,  OppenheimerFunds  Services, is a
division  of  the  Manager.   It  is  responsible  for  maintaining  the  Fund's
shareholder  registry  and  shareholder   accounting  records,  and  for  paying
dividends  and  distributions  to  shareholders  of the  Fund.  It also  handles
shareholder servicing and administrative  functions.  It is paid on an "at-cost"
basis.

The  Custodian.  Citibank,  N.A.  is the  Custodian  of the Fund's  assets.  The
Custodian's  responsibilities  include  safeguarding  and controlling the Fund's
portfolio  securities  and handling the delivery of such  securities to and from
the Fund.  It will be the  practice of the Fund to deal with the  Custodian in a
manner uninfluenced by any banking  relationship the Custodian may have with the
Manager and its  affiliates.  The Fund's cash  balances  with the  Custodian  in
excess of  $100,000  are not  protected  by  Federal  Deposit  Insurance.  Those
uninsured balances may at times be substantial.

Independent  Auditors.  KPMG LLP are the independent  auditors of the Fund. They
audit the Fund's financial  statements and perform other related audit services.
They also act as auditors for certain other funds advised by the Manager and its
affiliates.




<PAGE>


                                       C-1
                                   Appendix A

                       MUNICIPAL BOND RATINGS DEFINITIONS

Below are summaries of the rating definitions used by the  nationally-recognized
rating agencies listed below for municipal  securities.  Those ratings represent
the opinion of the agency as to the credit quality of issues that they rate. The
summaries below are based upon  publicly-available  information  provided by the
rating organizations.

                                               Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                        Long-Term Bond Ratings

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Con. (...):  Bonds for which the security  depends on the completion of some act
or the  fulfillment of some condition are rated  conditionally.  These bonds are
secured by (a) earnings of projects under construction, (b) earnings of projects
unseasoned in operating  experience,  (c) rentals that begin when facilities are
completed,  or (d) payments to which some other limiting condition attaches. The
parenthetical   rating  denotes  probable  credit  stature  upon  completion  of
construction  or  elimination  of the basis of the  condition.  Moody's  applies
numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 in each generic rating  classification from "Aa"
through  "Caa." The  modifier "1"  indicates  that the  obligation  ranks in the
higher  end of its  generic  rating  category;  the  modifier  "2"  indicates  a
mid-range ranking;  and the modifier "3" indicates a ranking in the lower end of
that  generic  rating  category.  Advanced  refunded  issues that are secured by
certain assets are identified with a # symbol.

Short-Term Ratings - U.S. Tax-Exempt Municipals

There are three ratings for short-term  obligations  that are investment  grade.
Short-term speculative obligations are designated "SG." For variable rate demand
obligations,  a  two-component  rating  is  assigned.  The first  (MIG)  element
represents  an  evaluation  by  Moody's of the  degree of risk  associated  with
scheduled principal and interest payments.  The second element (VMIG) represents
an evaluation of the degree of risk associated with the demand feature.

MIG 1/VMIG 1: Denotes superior credit quality.  Excellent protection is afforded
by established  cash flows,  highly reliable  liquidity  support or demonstrated
broad-based access to the market for refinancing..

MIG 2/VMIG 2: Denotes  strong credit  quality.  Margins of protection  are ample
although not as large as in the preceding group.

MIG  3/VMIG 3:  Denotes  acceptable  credit  quality.  Liquidity  and  cash-flow
protection may be narrow, and market access for refinancing is likely to be less
well established.

SG:  Denotes  speculative-grade  credit  quality.  Debt  instruments  in  this
category may lack margins of protection.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Standard & Poor's Rating Services

                                                      Long-Term Credit Ratings

AAA: Bonds rated "AAA" have the highest rating  assigned by Standard & Poor's.
The obligor's  capacity to meet its financial  commitment on the obligation is
extremely strong.

AA: Bonds rated "AA" differ from the highest rated  obligations  only in small
degree.  The  obligor's  capacity  to meet  its  financial  commitment  on the
obligation is very strong.

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

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

BB, B, CCC, CC, and C

Bonds rated "BB",  "B", "CCC",  "CC" and "C" are regarded as having  significant
speculative characteristics.  "BB" indicates the least degree of speculation and
"C" the  highest.  While such  obligations  will  likely  have some  quality and
protective  characteristics,  these may be outweighed by large  uncertainties or
major exposures to adverse conditions.

BB: Bonds rated "BB" are less  vulnerable to nonpayment  than other  speculative
issues.  However,  these face major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse
business,  financial,  or economic  conditions which could lead to the obligor's
inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

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

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

CC:  Bonds rated "CC" are currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.

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

D: Bonds rated "D" are in default. Payments on the obligation are not being made
on the date due even if the  applicable  grace  period has not  expired,  unless
Standard and Poor's  believes  that such payments will be made during such grace
period.  The "D"  rating  will  also be used  upon the  filing  of a  bankruptcy
petition  or the taking of a similar  action if payments  on an  obligation  are
jeopardized.

The ratings  from "AA" to "CCC" may be modified by the addition of a plus (+) or
minus (-) sign to show relative standing within the major rating categories. The
"p" symbol indicates that the rating is provisional.  The "r" symbol is attached
to the ratings of instruments with significant noncredit risks.

Short-Term Issue Credit Ratings

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

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

SP-3: Speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.


Fitch, Inc.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

International Long-Term Credit Ratings

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

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

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


<PAGE>


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

Speculative Grade:

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

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

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

DDD, DD, and D: Default.  The ratings of  obligations in this category are based
on their prospects for achieving partial or full recovery in a reorganization or
liquidation  of  the  obligor.   While  expected   recovery  values  are  highly
speculative  and cannot be estimated with any precision,  the following serve as
general  guidelines.  "DDD" obligations have the highest potential for recovery,
around  90%-100% of  outstanding  amounts and accrued  interest.  "DD" indicates
potential  recoveries  in the  range of  50%-90%,  and "D" the  lowest  recovery
potential, i.e., below 50%.

Entities  rated  in  this  category  have  defaulted  on  some  or all of  their
obligations.  Entities  rated "DDD" have the highest  prospect for resumption of
performance  or  continued  operation  with or  without a formal  reorganization
process.  Entities  rated  "DD"  and  "D"  are  generally  undergoing  a  formal
reorganization or liquidation process;  those rated "DD" are likely to satisfy a
higher portion of their outstanding obligations, while entities rated "D" have a
poor prospect for repaying all obligations.

Plus (+) and  minus  (-)  signs  may be  appended  to a rating  symbol to denote
relative status within the major rating categories. Plus and minus signs are not
added to the "AAA"  category or to  categories  below  "CCC," nor to  short-term
ratings other than "F1" (see below).

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Short-Term Credit Ratings
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

F1: Highest credit quality. Strongest capacity for timely payment of
financial commitments. May have an added "+" to denote any exceptionally
strong credit feature.

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

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

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

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

D: Default. Denotes actual or imminent payment default.

                                   Appendix B

                   Municipal Bond Industry Classifications

Adult Living Facilities
Bond Anticipation Notes
Education
Electric Utilities
Gas Utilities
General Obligation
Higher Education
Highways/Railways
Hospital/Healthcare
Manufacturing, Durable Goods
Manufacturing, Non Durable Goods Marine/Aviation Facilities Multi-Family Housing
Municipal Leases Non Profit  Organization  Parking Fee Revenue Pollution Control
Resource Recovery Revenue  Anticipation  Notes Sales Tax Revenue Sewer Utilities
Single Family Housing Special  Assessment  Special Tax Sports  Facility  Revenue
Student Loans Tax Anticipation Notes Tax & Revenue  Anticipation Notes Telephone
Utilities Water Utilities


                                   Appendix C

        OppenheimerFunds Special Sales Charge Arrangements and Waivers

In certain cases,  the initial sales charge that applies to purchases of Class A
shares1 of the  Oppenheimer  funds or the contingent  deferred sales charge that
may apply to Class A, Class B or Class C shares may be waived.2  That is because
of the  economies of sales  efforts  realized by  OppenheimerFunds  Distributor,
Inc.,  (referred  to in this  document as the  "Distributor"),  or by dealers or
other  financial  institutions  that offer  those  shares to certain  classes of
investors.

Not all waivers apply to all funds. For example,  waivers relating to Retirement
Plans do not apply to Oppenheimer municipal funds, because shares of those funds
are not  available  for  purchase  by or on behalf of  retirement  plans.  Other
waivers apply only to shareholders of certain funds.

For the purposes of some of the waivers  described  below and in the  Prospectus
and Statement of Additional Information of the applicable Oppenheimer funds, the
term  "Retirement  Plan"  refers  to the  following  types of  plans:  (1) plans
qualified under Sections 401(a) or 401(k) of the Internal Revenue
           Code,
(2) non-qualified  deferred  compensation plans, (3) employee benefit plans3 (4)
Group  Retirement  Plans4 (5) 403(b)(7)  custodial  plan accounts (6) Individual
Retirement Accounts ("IRAs"), including traditional IRAs,
           Roth IRAs, SEP-IRAs, SARSEPs or SIMPLE plans

The  interpretation  of these  provisions as to the  applicability  of a special
arrangement  or waiver in a  particular  case is in the sole  discretion  of the
Distributor or the transfer agent (referred to in this document as the "Transfer
Agent")  of  the  particular   Oppenheimer   fund.  These  waivers  and  special
arrangements  may be amended or terminated at any time by a particular fund, the
Distributor, and/or OppenheimerFunds,  Inc. (referred to in this document as the
"Manager").
Waivers  that apply at the time shares are  redeemed  must be  requested  by the
shareholder and/or dealer in the redemption request.

--------------
1.    Certain waivers also apply to Class M shares of Oppenheimer Convertible
   Securities Fund.
2. In the case of Oppenheimer Senior Floating Rate Fund, a  continuously-offered
   closed-end  fund,  references to contingent  deferred  sales charges mean the
   Fund's  Early  Withdrawal   Charges  and  references  to  "redemptions"  mean
   "repurchases" of shares.
3. An "employee  benefit plan" means any plan or arrangement,  whether or not it
   is "qualified" under the Internal Revenue Code, under which Class A shares of
   an  Oppenheimer  fund  or  funds  are  purchased  by  a  fiduciary  or  other
   administrator  for the account of participants  who are employees of a single
   employer or of affiliated employers.  These may include, for example, medical
   savings accounts, payroll deduction plans or similar plans. The fund accounts
   must be registered in the name of the fiduciary or  administrator  purchasing
   the shares for the benefit of participants in the plan.
4. The term  "Group  Retirement  Plan"  means  any  qualified  or  non-qualified
   retirement  plan  for  employees  of a  corporation  or sole  proprietorship,
   members and  employees of a partnership  or  association  or other  organized
   group of persons  (the  members of which may include  other  groups),  if the
   group has made special  arrangements  with the Distributor and all members of
   the group  participating  in (or who are eligible to participate in) the plan
   purchase  Class A shares  of an  Oppenheimer  fund or funds  through a single
   investment dealer,  broker or other financial  institution  designated by the
   group.  Such plans  include 457 plans,  SEP-IRAs,  SARSEPs,  SIMPLE plans and
   403(b) plans other than plans for public  school  employees.  The term "Group
   Retirement Plan" also includes  qualified  retirement plans and non-qualified
   deferred  compensation  plans  and IRAs  that  purchase  Class A shares of an
   Oppenheimer fund or funds through a single investment dealer, broker or other
   financial institution that has made special arrangements with the Distributor
   enabling  those  plans to  purchase  Class A shares  at net  asset  value but
   subject to the Class A contingent deferred sales charge.
 I. Applicability of Class A Contingent Deferred Sales Charges in Certain Cases

Purchases of Class A Shares of Oppenheimer Funds That Are Not Subject to Initial
Sales Charge but May Be Subject to the Class A Contingent  Deferred Sales Charge
(unless a waiver applies).

      There is no initial  sales charge on purchases of Class A shares of any of
the Oppenheimer funds in the cases listed below. However, these purchases may be
subject to the Class A contingent  deferred  sales charge if redeemed  within 18
months of the end of the calendar month of their  purchase,  as described in the
Prospectus (unless a waiver described  elsewhere in this Appendix applies to the
redemption).  Additionally,  on shares  purchased  under these  waivers that are
subject to the Class A contingent  deferred sales charge,  the Distributor  will
pay the  applicable  commission  described  in the  Prospectus  under  "Class  A
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge."2 This waiver provision applies to:
|_| Purchases of Class A shares aggregating $1 million or more. |_| Purchases by
a Retirement Plan (other than an IRA or 403(b)(7)
         custodial plan) that:
(1)   buys shares costing $500,000 or more, or
(2)   has, at the time of purchase, 100 or more eligible employees or total
              plan assets of $500,000 or more, or
(3)           certifies to the Distributor  that it projects to have annual plan
              purchases of $200,000 or more.
|_|      Purchases  by  an  OppenheimerFunds-sponsored   Rollover  IRA,  if  the
         purchases are made:
(1)           through a broker,  dealer,  bank or registered  investment adviser
              that has made special  arrangements with the Distributor for those
              purchases, or
(2)           by a direct rollover of a distribution from a qualified Retirement
              Plan  if  the   administrator   of  that  Plan  has  made  special
              arrangements with the Distributor for those purchases.
|_|      Purchases  of Class A shares by  Retirement  Plans that have any of the
         following record-keeping arrangements:
(1)   The record keeping is performed by Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith,
              Inc. ("Merrill Lynch") on a daily valuation basis for the
              Retirement Plan. On the date the plan sponsor signs the
              record-keeping service agreement with Merrill Lynch, the Plan
              must have $3 million or more of its assets invested in (a)
              mutual funds, other than those advised or managed by Merrill
              Lynch Asset Management, L.P. ("MLAM"), that are made available
              under a Service Agreement between Merrill Lynch and the mutual
              fund's principal underwriter or distributor, and  (b)  funds
              advised or managed by MLAM (the funds described in (a) and (b)
              are referred to as "Applicable Investments").
(2)   The record keeping for the Retirement Plan is performed on a daily
              valuation basis by a record keeper whose services are provided
              under a contract or arrangement between the Retirement Plan and
              Merrill Lynch. On the date the plan sponsor signs the record
              keeping service agreement with Merrill Lynch, the Plan must
              have $3 million or more of its assets (excluding assets
              invested in money market funds) invested in Applicable
              Investments.
(3)           The  record  keeping  for a  Retirement  Plan is  handled  under a
              service  agreement  with  Merrill  Lynch  and on the date the plan
              sponsor  signs that  agreement,  the Plan has 500 or more eligible
              employees  (as  determined  by the Merrill  Lynch plan  conversion
              manager).
|_|      Purchases   by  a   Retirement   Plan   whose   record   keeper  had  a
         cost-allocation  agreement  with the Transfer Agent on or before May 1,
         1999.


<PAGE>


          II. Waivers of Class A Sales Charges of Oppenheimer Funds

A.  Waivers of Initial and Contingent Deferred Sales Charges for Certain
Purchasers.

Class A shares purchased by the following investors are not subject to any Class
A sales  charges  (and  no  commissions  are  paid  by the  Distributor  on such
purchases):
|_| The Manager or its affiliates.
|_|   Present or former officers, directors, trustees and employees (and
         their "immediate families") of the Fund, the Manager and its
         affiliates, and retirement plans established by them for their
         employees. The term "immediate family" refers to one's spouse,
         children, grandchildren, grandparents, parents, parents-in-law,
         brothers and sisters, sons- and daughters-in-law, a sibling's
         spouse, a spouse's siblings, aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews;
         relatives by virtue of a remarriage (step-children, step-parents,
         etc.) are included.
|_|      Registered  management  investment  companies,  or separate accounts of
         insurance  companies  having  an  agreement  with  the  Manager  or the
         Distributor for that purpose.
|_|      Dealers or brokers that have a sales agreement with the Distributor, if
         they purchase shares for their own accounts or for retirement plans for
         their employees.
|_|   Employees and registered representatives (and their spouses) of dealers
         or brokers described above or financial institutions that have
         entered into sales arrangements with such dealers or brokers (and
         which are identified as such to the Distributor) or with the
         Distributor. The purchaser must certify to the Distributor at the
         time of purchase that the purchase is for the purchaser's own
         account (or for the benefit of such employee's spouse or minor
         children).
|_|      Dealers,  brokers,  banks or registered  investment  advisors that have
         entered into an agreement with the Distributor  providing  specifically
         for the use of shares  of the Fund in  particular  investment  products
         made  available  to their  clients.  Those  clients  may be  charged  a
         transaction  fee by  their  dealer,  broker,  bank or  advisor  for the
         purchase or sale of Fund shares.
|_|      Investment  advisors  and  financial  planners who have entered into an
         agreement  for this  purpose  with the  Distributor  and who  charge an
         advisory, consulting or other fee for their services and buy shares for
         their own accounts or the accounts of their clients.
|_|      "Rabbi trusts" that buy shares for their own accounts, if the purchases
         are made through a broker or agent or other financial intermediary that
         has made special arrangements with the Distributor for those purchases.
|_|   Clients of investment advisors or financial planners (that have entered
         into an agreement for this purpose with the Distributor) who buy
         shares for their own accounts may also purchase shares without sales
         charge but only if their accounts are linked to a master account of
         their investment advisor or financial planner on the books and
         records of the broker, agent or financial intermediary with which
         the Distributor has made such special arrangements . Each of these
         investors may be charged a fee by the broker, agent or financial
         intermediary for purchasing shares.
|_|      Directors,  trustees, officers or full-time employees of OpCap Advisors
         or its  affiliates,  their  relatives  or any  trust,  pension,  profit
         sharing or other benefit plan which  beneficially owns shares for those
         persons.
|_|      Accounts  for  which  Oppenheimer  Capital  (or its  successor)  is the
         investment   advisor   (the   Distributor   must  be  advised  of  this
         arrangement)  and persons who are  directors or trustees of the company
         or trust which is the beneficial owner of such accounts.
|_|      A unit investment trust that has entered into an appropriate  agreement
         with the Distributor.
|_|      Dealers,  brokers,  banks, or registered  investment advisers that have
         entered  into an  agreement  with the  Distributor  to sell  shares  to
         defined  contribution  employee  retirement plans for which the dealer,
         broker or investment adviser provides administration services.
|-|

<PAGE>


      Retirement Plans and deferred  compensation  plans and trusts used to fund
         those plans (including,  for example,  plans qualified or created under
         sections 401(a),  401(k),  403(b) or 457 of the Internal Revenue Code),
         in each case if those  purchases  are made  through a broker,  agent or
         other financial  intermediary  that has made special  arrangements with
         the Distributor for those purchases.
|_|      A  TRAC-2000  401(k)  plan  (sponsored  by the  former  Quest for Value
         Advisors)  whose Class B or Class C shares of a Former  Quest for Value
         Fund  were  exchanged  for  Class  A  shares  of that  Fund  due to the
         termination  of the Class B and Class C  TRAC-2000  program on November
         24, 1995.
|_|      A qualified  Retirement  Plan that had agreed with the former Quest for
         Value Advisors to purchase  shares of any of the Former Quest for Value
         Funds  at  net  asset  value,  with  such  shares  to be  held  through
         DCXchange,  a sub-transfer  agency mutual fund  clearinghouse,  if that
         arrangement was  consummated and share purchases  commenced by December
         31, 1996.

B.  Waivers of Initial and Contingent Deferred Sales Charges in Certain
Transactions.

Class A shares issued or purchased in the following transactions are not subject
to  sales  charges  (and no  commissions  are  paid by the  Distributor  on such
purchases):
|_|      Shares  issued  in  plans of  reorganization,  such as  mergers,  asset
         acquisitions and exchange offers, to which the Fund is a party.
|_|      Shares   purchased   by  the   reinvestment   of   dividends  or  other
         distributions  reinvested  from  the Fund or  other  Oppenheimer  funds
         (other than  Oppenheimer  Cash Reserves) or unit investment  trusts for
         which reinvestment arrangements have been made with the Distributor.
|_|   Shares purchased through a broker-dealer that has entered into a
         special agreement with the Distributor to allow the broker's
         customers to purchase and pay for shares of Oppenheimer funds using
         the proceeds of shares redeemed in the prior 30 days from a mutual
         fund (other than a fund managed by the Manager or any of its
         subsidiaries) on which an initial sales charge or contingent
         deferred sales charge was paid. This waiver also applies to shares
         purchased by exchange of shares of Oppenheimer Money Market Fund,
         Inc. that were purchased and paid for in this manner. This waiver
         must be requested when the purchase order is placed for shares of
         the Fund, and the Distributor may require evidence of qualification
         for this waiver.
|_|      Shares  purchased with the proceeds of maturing  principal units of any
         Qualified Unit Investment Liquid Trust Series.
|_|      Shares   purchased  by  the   reinvestment  of  loan  repayments  by  a
         participant in a Retirement  Plan for which the Manager or an affiliate
         acts as sponsor.

C.  Waivers of the Class A Contingent Deferred Sales Charge for Certain
Redemptions.

The Class A contingent deferred sales charge is also waived if shares that would
otherwise be subject to the contingent deferred sales charge are redeemed in the
following cases:
|_|      To make Automatic Withdrawal Plan payments that are limited annually to
         no more than 12% of the account value adjusted annually.
|_|      Involuntary  redemptions  of shares by operation of law or  involuntary
         redemptions of small  accounts  (please refer to  "Shareholder  Account
         Rules and Policies," in the applicable fund Prospectus).
|_|      For distributions from Retirement Plans, deferred compensation plans or
         other employee benefit plans for any of the following purposes:
(1)           Following  the death or  disability  (as  defined in the  Internal
              Revenue  Code) of the  participant  or  beneficiary.  The death or
              disability  must  occur  after  the   participant's   account  was
              established.
(2)   To return excess contributions.
(3)

<PAGE>


         To return  contributions  made due to a mistake of fact.  (4)  Hardship
withdrawals,  as defined in the plan.3 (5) Under a Qualified  Domestic Relations
Order, as defined in the Internal
              Revenue  Code,  or, in the case of an IRA, a divorce or separation
              agreement described in Section 71(b) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(6)   To meet the minimum distribution requirements of the Internal Revenue
              Code.
(7)           To make  "substantially  equal periodic  payments" as described in
              Section 72(t) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(8)   For loans to participants or beneficiaries.
(9)   Separation from service.4
         (10) Participant-directed  redemptions  to purchase  shares of a mutual
              fund (other than a fund managed by the Manager or a subsidiary  of
              the  Manager) if the plan has made special  arrangements  with the
              Distributor.
         (11) Plan termination or "in-service  distributions," if the redemption
              proceeds are rolled over directly to an OppenheimerFunds-sponsored
              IRA.
|_|      For  distributions  from  Retirement  Plans having 500 or more eligible
         employees,  except  distributions  due  to  termination  of  all of the
         Oppenheimer funds as an investment option under the Plan.
|_|      For distributions  from 401(k) plans sponsored by  broker-dealers  that
         have entered into a special  agreement  with the  Distributor  allowing
         this waiver.


III.  Waivers of Class B and Class C Sales Charges of Oppenheimer Funds

The Class B and Class C contingent deferred sales charges will not be applied to
shares  purchased  in  certain  types of  transactions  or  redeemed  in certain
circumstances described below.

A.  Waivers for Redemptions in Certain Cases.

The Class B and Class C  contingent  deferred  sales  charges will be waived for
redemptions of shares in the following cases: |_| Shares redeemed involuntarily,
as described in "Shareholder Account
         Rules and Policies," in the applicable Prospectus.
|_|   Redemptions from accounts other than Retirement Plans following the
         death or  disability  of the last  surviving  shareholder,  including a
         trustee  of a grantor  trust or  revocable  living  trust for which the
         trustee is also the sole beneficiary. The death or disability must have
         occurred after the account was established, and for disability you must
         provide  evidence  of a  determination  of  disability  by  the  Social
         Security Administration.
|_|      Distributions  from accounts for which the  broker-dealer of record has
         entered into a special  agreement  with the  Distributor  allowing this
         waiver.
|_|      Redemptions  of Class B shares held by  Retirement  Plans whose records
         are  maintained  on a daily  valuation  basis  by  Merrill  Lynch or an
         independent record keeper under a contract with Merrill Lynch.
|_|      Redemptions of Class C shares of Oppenheimer U.S. Government Trust from
         accounts of clients of financial  institutions that have entered into a
         special arrangement with the Distributor for this purpose.
|_|      Redemptions  requested in writing by a Retirement Plan sponsor of Class
         C shares of an  Oppenheimer  fund in amounts of $1 million or more held
         by the  Retirement  Plan for  more  than one  year,  if the  redemption
         proceeds  are  invested  in Class A shares  of one or more  Oppenheimer
         funds.
|-|

<PAGE>


      Distributions  from Retirement  Plans or other employee  benefit plans for
         any of the following purposes:
(1)           Following  the death or  disability  (as  defined in the  Internal
              Revenue  Code) of the  participant  or  beneficiary.  The death or
              disability  must  occur  after  the   participant's   account  was
              established in an Oppenheimer fund.
(2)   To return excess contributions made to a participant's account.
(3)   To return contributions made due to a mistake of fact.
(4)   To make hardship withdrawals, as defined in the plan.5
(5)   To make distributions required under a Qualified Domestic Relations
              Order or, in the case of an IRA, a divorce or separation agreement
              described in Section 71(b) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(6)   To meet the minimum distribution requirements of the Internal Revenue
              Code.
(7)           To make  "substantially  equal periodic  payments" as described in
              Section 72(t) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(8)  For  loans  to  participants  or  beneficiaries.6  (9)  On  account  of the
participant's separation from service.7 (10) Participant-directed redemptions to
purchase shares of a mutual fund
              (other than a fund managed by the Manager or a  subsidiary  of the
              Manager)  offered as an investment  option in a Retirement Plan if
              the plan has made special arrangements with the Distributor.
(11)          Distributions   made  on   account  of  a  plan   termination   or
              "in-service" distributions,  if the redemption proceeds are rolled
              over directly to an OppenheimerFunds-sponsored IRA.
(12)          Distributions  from  Retirement  Plans having 500 or more eligible
              employees,  but excluding distributions made because of the Plan's
              elimination  as  investment  options  under the Plan of all of the
              Oppenheimer funds that had been offered.
(13)          For distributions from a participant's  account under an Automatic
              Withdrawal Plan after the participant  reaches age 59 1/2, as long
              as the aggregate value of the distributions does not exceed 10% of
              the account's value, adjusted annually.
(14)          Redemptions of Class B shares under an Automatic  Withdrawal  Plan
              for an account  other than a  Retirement  Plan,  if the  aggregate
              value of the redeemed  shares does not exceed 10% of the account's
              value, adjusted annually.
      |_|Redemptions  of Class B shares  or  Class C shares  under an  Automatic
         Withdrawal  Plan from an account  other than a  Retirement  Plan if the
         aggregate  value of the  redeemed  shares  does not  exceed  10% of the
         account's value annually.

B.  Waivers for Shares Sold or Issued in Certain Transactions.

The  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  is also  waived on Class B and Class C
shares sold or issued in the following  cases: |_| Shares sold to the Manager or
its affiliates.
|_|      Shares sold to registered  management  investment companies or separate
         accounts of insurance companies having an agreement with the Manager or
         the Distributor for that purpose.
|_| Shares issued in plans of  reorganization  to which the Fund is a party. |_|
Shares sold to present or former officers, directors, trustees or
         employees (and their "immediate families" as defined above in
         Section I.A.) of the Fund, the Manager and its affiliates and
         retirement plans established by them for their employees.



<PAGE>



IV. Special Sales Charge Arrangements for Shareholders of Certain Oppenheimer
                      Funds Who Were Shareholders of Former
                              Quest for Value Funds

The initial and contingent  deferred sales charge rates and waivers for Class A,
Class  B and  Class  C  shares  described  in the  Prospectus  or  Statement  of
Additional  Information of the Oppenheimer funds are modified as described below
for certain  persons who were  shareholders of the former Quest for Value Funds.
To be eligible,  those persons must have been shareholders on November 24, 1995,
when OppenheimerFunds,  Inc. became the investment advisor to those former Quest
for Value Funds. Those funds include:



<PAGE>


  Oppenheimer Quest Value Fund, Inc.    Oppenheimer   Quest   Small   Cap
                                        Value Fund
  Oppenheimer Quest Balanced Value Fund Oppenheimer  Quest  Global  Value
                                        Fund
  Oppenheimer  Quest  Opportunity Value
  Fund

      These  arrangements also apply to shareholders of the following funds when
they merged (were  reorganized)  into various  Oppenheimer funds on November 24,
1995:

  Quest   for  Value   U.S.   Government Quest for  Value  New York  Tax-Exempt
Income Fund                              Fund
  Quest  for  Value  Investment  Quality Quest  for Value  National  Tax-Exempt
Income Fund                              Fund
  Quest for Value Global Income Fund     Quest for Value California  Tax-Exempt
                                         Fund

      All of the funds  listed  above are  referred  to in this  Appendix as the
"Former Quest for Value Funds." The waivers of initial and  contingent  deferred
sales charges  described in this Appendix apply to shares of an Oppenheimer fund
that are either:
|_|      acquired  by such  shareholder  pursuant to an exchange of shares of an
         Oppenheimer fund that was one of the Former Quest for Value Funds, or
|_|      purchased  by  such  shareholder  by  exchange  of  shares  of  another
         Oppenheimer  fund that were  acquired  pursuant to the merger of any of
         the Former  Quest for Value Funds into that other  Oppenheimer  fund on
         November 24, 1995.

A.  Reductions or Waivers of Class A Sales Charges.

      |X|         Reduced Class A Initial Sales Charge Rates for Certain
Former Quest for Value Funds Shareholders.

Purchases by Groups and Associations. The following table sets forth the initial
sales  charge rates for Class A shares  purchased  by members of  "Associations"
formed for any purpose other than the purchase of  securities.  The rates in the
table apply if that Association  purchased shares of any of the Former Quest for
Value Funds or received a proposal to purchase such shares from OCC Distributors
prior to November 24, 1995.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           Initial Sales Initial Sales
Number of Eligible   Charge as a % of    Charge as a % of    Commission as %
Employees or Members Offering Price      Net Amount Invested of Offering Price
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
9 or Fewer                  2.50%               2.56%              2.00%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At  least 10 but not        2.00%               2.04%              1.60%
more than 49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



<PAGE>


      For  purchases by  Associations  having 50 or more  eligible  employees or
members,  there is no initial  sales charge on purchases of Class A shares,  but
those  shares  are  subject  to the Class A  contingent  deferred  sales  charge
described in the applicable fund's Prospectus.

      Purchases made under this arrangement  qualify for the lower of either the
sales charge rate in the table based on the number of members of an Association,
or the sales charge rate that applies under the Right of Accumulation  described
in the applicable  fund's  Prospectus  and Statement of Additional  Information.
Individuals who qualify under this arrangement for reduced sales charge rates as
members  of  Associations  also may  purchase  shares  for their  individual  or
custodial  accounts at these  reduced  sales charge  rates,  upon request to the
Distributor.

      |X| Waiver of Class A Sales  Charges  for  Certain  Shareholders.  Class A
shares  purchased  by the  following  investors  are not  subject to any Class A
initial or contingent deferred sales charges:
|_|         Shareholders  who were  shareholders  of the AMA  Family of Funds on
            February 28, 1991 and who acquired shares of any of the Former Quest
            for Value Funds by merger of a portfolio of the AMA Family of Funds.
|_|         Shareholders  who acquired shares of any Former Quest for Value Fund
            by merger of any of the portfolios of the Unified Funds.

      |X|  Waiver  of  Class A  Contingent  Deferred  Sales  Charge  in  Certain
Transactions.  The Class A  contingent  deferred  sales charge will not apply to
redemptions  of Class A shares  purchased by the  following  investors  who were
shareholders of any Former Quest for Value Fund:

      Investors  who  purchased  Class A shares from a dealer that is or was not
permitted  to receive a sales load or  redemption  fee imposed on a  shareholder
with  whom  that  dealer  has  a  fiduciary  relationship,  under  the  Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 and regulations adopted under that law.

B.  Class A, Class B and Class C Contingent Deferred Sales Charge Waivers.

      |X| Waivers for Redemptions of Shares Purchased Prior to March 6, 1995. In
the following  cases,  the  contingent  deferred sales charge will be waived for
redemptions  of Class A, Class B or Class C shares of an  Oppenheimer  fund. The
shares must have been  acquired  by the merger of a Former  Quest for Value Fund
into the fund or by exchange  from an  Oppenheimer  fund that was a Former Quest
for Value Fund or into  which  such fund  merged.  Those  shares  must have been
purchased prior to March 6, 1995 in connection with:
|_|         withdrawals  under an automatic  withdrawal plan holding only either
            Class B or Class C shares if the annual  withdrawal  does not exceed
            10% of the initial value of the account  value,  adjusted  annually,
            and
|_|         liquidation  of a  shareholder's  account if the aggregate net asset
            value of  shares  held in the  account  is less  than  the  required
            minimum value of such accounts.

      |X| Waivers for Redemptions of Shares  Purchased on or After March 6, 1995
but Prior to November 24, 1995. In the following cases, the contingent  deferred
sales  charge  will be waived  for  redemptions  of Class A,  Class B or Class C
shares of an Oppenheimer  fund. The shares must have been acquired by the merger
of a  Former  Quest  for  Value  Fund  into  the  fund  or by  exchange  from an
Oppenheimer  fund  that was a Former  Quest For Value  Fund or into  which  such
Former Quest for Value Fund merged.  Those shares must have been purchased on or
after March 6, 1995, but prior to November 24, 1995: |_|  redemptions  following
the death or disability of the shareholder(s) (as
            evidenced by a determination of total disability by the U.S.
            Social Security Administration);
|_|         withdrawals under an automatic withdrawal plan (but only for Class B
            or Class C shares) where the annual withdrawals do not exceed 10% of
            the initial value of the account value; adjusted annually, and
|_|         liquidation  of a  shareholder's  account if the aggregate net asset
            value of  shares  held in the  account  is less  than  the  required
            minimum account value.
      A shareholder's account will be credited with the amount of any contingent
deferred  sales charge paid on the redemption of any Class A, Class B or Class C
shares of the  Oppenheimer  fund  described  in this section if the proceeds are
invested  in the same Class of shares in that fund or another  Oppenheimer  fund
within 90 days after redemption.


     V. Special Sales Charge Arrangements for Shareholders of Certain
 Oppenheimer Funds Who Were Shareholders of Connecticut Mutual Investment
                                 Accounts, Inc.

The initial and  contingent  deferred  sale charge rates and waivers for Class A
and Class B shares described in the respective  Prospectus (or this Appendix) of
the  following  Oppenheimer  funds  (each is  referred  to as a  "Fund"  in this
section):
o     Oppenheimer U. S. Government Trust,
o     Oppenheimer Bond Fund,
o     Oppenheimer Disciplined Value Fund and
o     Oppenheimer Disciplined Allocation Fund
are  modified  as  described  below  for  those  Fund   shareholders   who  were
shareholders  of the  following  funds  (referred to as the "Former  Connecticut
Mutual  Funds")  on  March 1,  1996,  when  OppenheimerFunds,  Inc.  became  the
investment adviser to the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds:

  Connecticut Mutual Liquid Account         Connecticut Mutual Total Return
                                            Account
  Connecticut Mutual Government             CMIA LifeSpan Capital
Securities Account                          Appreciation Account
  Connecticut Mutual Income Account         CMIA LifeSpan Balanced Account
  Connecticut Mutual Growth Account         CMIA Diversified Income Account

A.  Prior Class A CDSC and Class A Sales Charge Waivers.

      |_| Class A Contingent  Deferred Sales Charge.  Certain  shareholders of a
Fund and the other Former  Connecticut  Mutual Funds are entitled to continue to
make additional purchases of Class A shares at net asset value without a Class A
initial  sales  charge,  but subject to the Class A  contingent  deferred  sales
charge that was in effect  prior to March 18,  1996 (the "prior  Class A CDSC").
Under the prior Class A CDSC,  if any of those  shares are  redeemed  within one
year of purchase, they will be assessed a 1% contingent deferred sales charge on
an amount equal to the current  market value or the original  purchase  price of
the shares  sold,  whichever  is smaller  (in such  redemptions,  any shares not
subject to the prior Class A CDSC will be redeemed first).

      Those  shareholders  who are  eligible for the prior Class A CDSC are: (1)
persons whose purchases of Class A shares of a Fund and other Former
           Connecticut  Mutual Funds were $500,000 prior to March 18, 1996, as a
           result  of direct  purchases  or  purchases  pursuant  to the  Fund's
           policies on Combined  Purchases or Rights of Accumulation,  who still
           hold those  shares in that Fund or other  Former  Connecticut  Mutual
           Funds, and
(2)        persons  whose  intended  purchases  under a Statement  of  Intention
           entered  into  prior to March  18,  1996,  with  the  former  general
           distributor of the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds to purchase shares
           valued at  $500,000  or more over a 13-month  period  entitled  those
           persons to purchase  shares at net asset value  without being subject
           to the Class A initial sales charge.

      Any of the  Class A shares  of a Fund  and the  other  Former  Connecticut
Mutual  Funds that were  purchased  at net asset value prior to March 18,  1996,
remain  subject  to the prior  Class A CDSC,  or if any  additional  shares  are
purchased by those  shareholders at net asset value pursuant to this arrangement
they will be subject to the prior Class A CDSC.

      |_| Class A Sales Charge Waivers.  Additional Class A shares of a Fund may
be purchased without a sales charge, by a person who was in one (or more) of the
categories  below and acquired Class A shares prior to March 18, 1996, and still
holds Class A shares:
(1)   any purchaser, provided the total initial amount invested in the Fund
              or any one or more of the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds
              totaled $500,000 or more, including investments made pursuant
              to the Combined Purchases, Statement of Intention and Rights of
              Accumulation features available at the time of the initial
              purchase and such investment is still held in one or more of
              the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds or a Fund into which such
              Fund merged;
(2)           any  participant  in a  qualified  plan,  provided  that the total
              initial amount invested by the plan in the Fund or any one or more
              of the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds totaled $500,000 or more;
(3)   Directors of the Fund or any one or more of the Former Connecticut
              Mutual Funds and members of their immediate families;
(4)   employee benefit plans sponsored by Connecticut Mutual Financial
              Services, L.L.C. ("CMFS"), the prior distributor of the Former
              Connecticut Mutual Funds, and its affiliated companies;
(5)           one or more  members  of a group of at least  1,000  persons  (and
              persons  who are  retirees  from such  group)  engaged in a common
              business,  profession,  civic  or  charitable  endeavor  or  other
              activity,  and the  spouses and minor  dependent  children of such
              persons,  pursuant to a marketing  program  between  CMFS and such
              group; and
(6)           an institution acting as a fiduciary on behalf of an individual or
              individuals,  if such institution was directly  compensated by the
              individual(s)  for  recommending the purchase of the shares of the
              Fund or any one or more of the Former  Connecticut  Mutual  Funds,
              provided the institution had an agreement with CMFS.

      Purchases  of Class A shares  made  pursuant  to (1) and (2)  above may be
subject to the Class A CDSC of the Former  Connecticut  Mutual  Funds  described
above.

      Additionally,  Class A shares of a Fund may be  purchased  without a sales
charge by any holder of a variable  annuity contract issued in New York State by
Connecticut  Mutual Life Insurance Company through the Panorama Separate Account
which is beyond the  applicable  surrender  charge  period and which was used to
fund a qualified plan, if that holder  exchanges the variable  annuity  contract
proceeds to buy Class A shares of the Fund.

B.  Class A and Class B Contingent Deferred Sales Charge Waivers.

In addition to the waivers  set forth in the  Prospectus  and in this  Appendix,
above,  the contingent  deferred sales charge will be waived for  redemptions of
Class A and Class B shares of a Fund and  exchanges of Class A or Class B shares
of a Fund into  Class A or Class B shares of a Former  Connecticut  Mutual  Fund
provided  that  the  Class A or Class B shares  of the  Fund to be  redeemed  or
exchanged  were (i)  acquired  prior to March 18, 1996 or (ii) were  acquired by
exchange from an  Oppenheimer  fund that was a Former  Connecticut  Mutual Fund.
Additionally,  the shares of such Former  Connecticut Mutual Fund must have been
purchased prior to March 18, 1996:
(1)   by the estate of a deceased shareholder;
(2)   upon the disability of a shareholder, as defined in Section 72(m)(7) of
           the Internal Revenue Code;
(3)        for  retirement   distributions   (or  loans)  to   participants   or
           beneficiaries  from retirement  plans qualified under Sections 401(a)
           or 403(b)(7)of the Code, or from IRAs,  deferred  compensation  plans
           created  under  Section 457 of the Code,  or other  employee  benefit
           plans;
(4)   as tax-free returns of excess contributions to such retirement or
           employee benefit plans;
(5)        in whole or in part,  in  connection  with  shares sold to any state,
           county, or city, or any instrumentality,  department,  authority,  or
           agency thereof, that is prohibited by applicable investment laws from
           paying a sales charge or commission  in connection  with the purchase
           of shares of any registered investment management company;
(6)        in  connection  with the  redemption  of  shares of the Fund due to a
           combination  with another  investment  company by virtue of a merger,
           acquisition or similar reorganization transaction;
(7)   in connection with the Fund's right to involuntarily redeem or
           liquidate the Fund;
(8)        in connection with automatic  redemptions of Class A shares and Class
           B shares in certain retirement plan accounts pursuant to an Automatic
           Withdrawal Plan but limited to no more than 12% of the original value
           annually; or
(9)        as  involuntary  redemptions  of shares by operation of law, or under
           procedures set forth in the Fund's Articles of  Incorporation,  or as
           adopted by the Board of Directors of the Fund.


            VI. Special Reduced Sales Charge for Former Shareholders of
                           Advance America Funds, Inc.

Shareholders of Oppenheimer  Municipal Bond Fund,  Oppenheimer  U.S.  Government
Trust,  Oppenheimer Strategic Income Fund and Oppenheimer Equity Income Fund who
acquired   (and  still  hold)   shares  of  those  funds  as  a  result  of  the
reorganization  of series of Advance America Funds,  Inc. into those Oppenheimer
funds on October 18, 1991, and who held shares of Advance America Funds, Inc. on
March 30, 1990, may purchase Class A shares of those four Oppenheimer funds at a
maximum sales charge rate of 4.50%.


VII.  Sales Charge Waivers on Purchases of Class M Shares of
                   Oppenheimer Convertible Securities Fund

Oppenheimer  Convertible  Securities  Fund  (referred  to as the  "Fund" in this
section)  may sell Class M shares at net asset value  without any initial  sales
charge to the classes of investors  listed  below who,  prior to March 11, 1996,
owned shares of the Fund's  then-existing Class A and were permitted to purchase
those shares at net asset value without  sales  charge:  |_| the Manager and its
affiliates,  |_| present or former officers,  directors,  trustees and employees
(and
         their  "immediate  families"  as  defined in the  Fund's  Statement  of
         Additional  Information)  of the Fund, the Manager and its  affiliates,
         and  retirement  plans  established  by  them or the  prior  investment
         advisor of the Fund for their employees,
|_|      registered  management  investment  companies  or separate  accounts of
         insurance  companies  that  had an  agreement  with  the  Fund's  prior
         investment advisor or distributor for that purpose,
|_|      dealers or brokers that have a sales agreement with the Distributor, if
         they purchase shares for their own accounts or for retirement plans for
         their employees,
|_|      employees and registered representatives (and their spouses) of dealers
         or brokers described in the preceding section or financial institutions
         that have entered into sales arrangements with those dealers or brokers
         (and  whose  identity  is made  known to the  Distributor)  or with the
         Distributor,  but only if the purchaser certifies to the Distributor at
         the time of purchase that the purchaser meets these qualifications,
|_|      dealers,  brokers,  or registered  investment advisors that had entered
         into an agreement with the Distributor or the prior  distributor of the
         Fund  specifically  providing for the use of Class M shares of the Fund
         in specific investment products made available to their clients, and
|_|      dealers,  brokers or  registered  investment  advisors that had entered
         into an agreement  with the  Distributor  or prior  distributor  of the
         Fund's  shares  to  sell  shares  to  defined   contribution   employee
         retirement plans for which the dealer,  broker,  or investment  advisor
         provides administrative services.


<PAGE>


                                      C-61
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Oppenheimer Municipal Bond Fund
------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Internet Web Site:
     ww.oppenheimerfunds.com

Investment Adviser
     OppenheimerFunds, Inc.
     Two World Trade Center
     New York, New York 10048-0203

Distributor
     OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc.
     Two World Trade Center
     New York, New York 10048-0203

Transfer Agent
     OppenheimerFunds Services
     P.O. Box 5270
     Denver, Colorado 80217-5270
     1-800-525-7048

Custodian Bank
     Citibank, N.A.
     399 Park Avenue
     New York, New York 10043

Independent Auditors
     KPMG LLP
     707 Seventeenth Street
     Denver, Colorado 80202

Legal Counsel
     Mayer, Brown & Platt
     1675 Broadway
     New York, New York 10019-5820

                                      1234



PX0310.0101


--------
1Ms. Macaskill and Mr. Griffiths are not Directors of Oppenheimer Money
Market Fund, Inc.; Mr. Griffiths is also not a Trustee of Oppenheimer
Discovery Fund.
2 However, that commission will not be paid on purchases of shares in amounts of
$1 million or more  (including any right of  accumulation)  by a Retirement Plan
that pays for the purchase with the redemption proceeds of Class C shares of one
or more Oppenheimer funds held by the Plan for more than one year.
3 This provision does not apply to IRAs.
4 This provision does not apply to 403(b)(7) custodial plans if the
participant is less than age 55, nor to IRAs.
5 This provision does not apply to IRAs.
6 This provision does not apply to loans from 403(b)(7)  custodial plans. 7 This
provision does not apply to 403(b)(7) custodial plans if the participant is less
than age 55, nor to IRAs.


                         OPPENHEIMER MUNICIPAL BOND FUND

FORM N-1A

                                     PART C

                                OTHER INFORMATION


Item 23.  Exhibits

(a)   Amended and  Restated  Declaration  of Trust dated  September  16, 1996:
Previously filed with Registrant's  Post-Effective Amendment No. 37 (11/20/96)
and incorporated herein by reference .

(b)   Amended and Restated By-Laws dated as of June 4, 1998:  Previously filed
with Registrant's  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 41(11/27/98) and incorporated
herein by reference.

(c)   (i)  Specimen  Class A Share  Certificate:  Previously  filed  with  the
Registrant's  Post  Effective  Amendment  No. 42 (11/19/99)  and  incorporated
herein by reference.

      (ii)  Specimen  Class B Share  Certificate:  Previously  filed  with the
Registrant's  Post  Effective  Amendment  No. 42 (11/19/99)  and  incorporated
herein by reference.

      (iii)  Specimen  Class C Share  Certificate:  Previously  filed with the
Registrant's  Post  Effective  Amendment  No. 42 (11/19/99)  and  incorporated
herein by reference.


      (iv)  Specimen Class N Share Certificate: Filed herewith.

 (d)  Investment Advisory Agreement dated October 22, 1990: Previously
filed with Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 27 (2/28/91),
refiled with Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 33 (4/28/95)
pursuant to Item 102 of Regulation S-T, and incorporated herein by
reference.


(e)   (i)  General   Distributor's   Agreement   dated   December   10,  1992:
Previously   filed  with   Registrant's   Post-Effective   Amendment   No.  30
(3/16/93),   refiled  with  Registrant's   Post-Effective   Amendment  No.  33
(4/28/95)  pursuant to Item 102 of Regulation S-T, and incorporated  herein by
reference.

  (ii) Form of Dealer Agreement of OppenheimerFunds  Distributor,  Inc.: Filed
with  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 2 of Oppenheimer  Trinity Value Fund (Reg.
No. 333-79707), 8/25/99, and incorporated herein by reference.

                                       (iii)    Form    of    OppenheimerFunds
Distributor,  Inc. Broker Agreement:  Filed with Post-Effective  Amendment No.
2 of  Oppenheimer  Trinity  Value  Fund (Reg.  No.  333-79707),  8/25/99,  and
incorporated herein by reference.

            (iv)   Form   of   OppenheimerFunds   Distributor,   Inc.   Agency
Agreement:  Filed with  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 2 of Oppenheimer Trinity
Value  Fund  (Reg.  No.  333-79707),   8/25/99,  and  incorporated  herein  by
reference.

(f)   (i) Retirement Plan for Non-Interested Trustees or Directors dated
6/7/90: Previously filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 97 of
Oppenheimer Fund (Reg. No. 2-14586), 8/30/90, refiled with Post-Effective
Amendment No. 45 of Oppenheimer Growth Fund (Reg. No. 2-45272), 8/22/94,
pursuant to Item 102 of Regulation S-T, and incorporated herein by
reference.

       (ii)  Retirement  Plan  for  Non-Interested  Trustees  or  Directors
dated  6/7/90  -  Filed  with  Post-Effective   Amendment  No.  97  to  the
Registration  Statement of  Oppenheimer  Fund (File No.  2-14586)  8/30/90,
refiled with  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 45 of  Oppenheimer  Growth Fund
(Reg. No.  2-45272),  8/22/94,  pursuant to Item 102 of Regulation S-T, and
incorporated herein by reference.

      (iii)  Form  of  Deferred   Compensation   Agreement  for  Disinterested
Trustees:  Filed  with  Post-Effective  Amendment  No.26  to the  Registration
Statement of  Oppenheimer  Gold & Special  Minerals Fund (Reg.  No.  2-82590),
10/28/98, and incorporated by reference.

(g)   (i) Custody Agreement dated October 7, 1976:  Previously filed with
Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 (5/18/77), refiled with
Registrant's Post-Effective Amendment No. 33 (4/28/95) pursuant to Item
102 of Regulation S-T and incorporated herein by reference .

      (ii)  Assignment  and Amendment  dated May 1, 1987 of Custody  Agreement
dated October 7, 1976 among  Oppenheimer  Tax-Free Bond Fund, Inc.,  Citibank,
N.A., and Oppenheimer  Tax-Free Bond Fund:  Previously filed with Registrant's
Post-Effective   Amendment   No.  22,   5/1/87,   refiled  with   Registrant's
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 33, 4/28/95,  pursuant to Item 102 of Regulation
S-T, and incorporated herein by reference.

      (iii)  Amendment  dated  as of  March,  1978  to  Custody  Agreement  of
Oppenheimer  Tax-Free  Bond Fund,  Inc.:  Previously  filed with  Registrant's
Post-Effective   Amendment  No.  24,   4/25/88,   refiled  with   Registrant's
Post-Effective  Amendment No. 33, 4/28/95,  pursuant to Item 102 of Regulation
S-T, and  incorporated herein by reference.

      (iv)  Amendment  dated as of August  13,  1980 to Custody  Agreement  of
Oppenheimer  Tax-Free  Bond Fund,  Inc.:  Previously  filed with  Registrant's
Post-Effective   Amendment  No.  24,   4/25/88,   refiled  with   Registrant's
Post-Effective   Amendment   No.  33,   4/28/95,   pursuant  to  Item  102  of
Regulation S-T, and  incorporated herein by reference.

  (v) Amendment dated  September 28, 1984 to Custody  Agreement of Oppenheimer
Tax-Free Bond Fund, Inc.:  Previously filed with  Registrant's  Post-Effective
Amendment  No.  24,   4/25/88,   refiled  with   Registrant's   Post-Effective
Amendment  No.  33,  4/28/95,  pursuant  to Item 102 of  Regulation  S-T,  and
incorporated herein by reference.

      (vi) Amendment  dated June 16, 1986 to Custody  Agreement of Oppenheimer
Tax-Free Bond Fund, Inc.:  Previously filed with  Registrant's  Post-Effective
Amendment No. 24, 4/25/88, refiled with Registrant's  Post-Effective Amendment
No. 33,  4/28/95,  pursuant to Item 102 of  Regulation  S-T, and  incorporated
herein by reference.

      (vii) Foreign Custody Manager Agreement between Registrant and The
Bank of New York: Previously filed with Pre-Effective Amendment No. 2 to
registration statement of Oppenheimer World Bond Fund (Reg. 333-48973),
4/23/98, and incorporated herein by reference.

(h)   Not applicable.

(i)   Opinion  and  Consent of Counsel  dated May 1,  1987:  Previously  filed
with  Registrant's  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 22 (5/1/87) , refiled  with
Registrant's  Post-Effective  Amendment No. 33 (4/28/95)  pursuant to Item 102
of Regulation S-T, and incorporated herein by reference.


(j)   Independent Auditor's Consent: To be filed by amendment.


(k)   Not applicable.

(l)   Investment  Letter  from  OppenheimerFunds,  Inc.  to  Registrant  dated
October  1,  1976:  Previously  filed  with  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 40
(9/24/98), and incorporated herein by reference.

(m)   (i) Service Plan and  Agreement  for Class A shares dated June 20, 1994:
Previously  filed  with the  Registrant's  Post  Effective  Amendment  No.  42
(11/19/99) and incorporated herein by reference.

      (ii) Distribution and Service Plan and Agreement for Class B shares
dated February 12, 1998: Previously filed with Post-Effective Amendment
No. 40 (9/24/98), and incorporated herein by reference.

      (iii)  Distribution  and Service Plan and  Agreement  for Class C shares
dated February 12, 1998:  Previously filed with  Post-Effective  Amendment No.
40 (9/24/98), and incorporated herein by reference.


          (iv) Form of  Distribution  and Service Plan and Agreement for Class
N shares: Filed herewith.


(n)   Oppenheimer Funds Multiple Class Plan under Rule 18f-3 as updated
through 8/24/99:  Previously filed with Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to
the Registration Statement of Oppenheimer Senior Floating Rate Fund (Reg.
No. 333-82579), 8/27/99, and incorporated herein by reference.

     ---                  Powers of Attorney  for all  Trustees/Directors  and
     Officers (including  Certified Board Resolutions):  Previously filed with
     Pre-Effective   Amendment  No.  1  to  the   Registration   Statement  of
     Oppenheimer  Emerging  Growth Fund (Reg.  No.  333-44176),  10/5/00,  and
     incorporated herein by reference.

(p)   Amended and Restated Code of Ethics of the Oppenheimer Funds dated
March 1, 2000 under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940:
Previously filed with the Initial Registration Statement of Oppenheimer
Emerging Growth Fund (Reg. No. 333-44176), 8/21/00, and incorporated
herein by reference.



Item 24.  Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with the Fund
---------------------------------------------------------------------

None.

Item 25.  Indemnification

Reference is made to the provisions of Article Seven of Registrant's Amended and
Restated  Declaration  of Trust  filed  as  Exhibit  23(a) to this  Registration
Statement, and incorporated herein by reference.

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

Item 26.  Business and Other Connections of the Investment Adviser

(a) OppenheimerFunds,  Inc. is the investment adviser of the Registrant;  it and
certain subsidiaries and affiliates act in the same capacity to other investment
companies,  including without limitation those described in Parts A and B hereof
and listed in Item 26(b) below.

(b) There is set forth below  information as to any other business,  profession,
vocation  or  employment  of a  substantial  nature in which  each  officer  and
director of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. is, or at any time during the past two fiscal
years has been,  engaged for his/her own account or in the capacity of director,
officer, employee, partner or trustee.

           Name and Current Position Other Business and Connections
with OppenheimerFunds, Inc.         During the Past Two Years

Amy Adamshick,
Vice President

Charles E. Albers,
Senior Vice President An officer and/or portfolio manager of certain Oppenheimer
funds (since April 1998); a Chartered Financial Analyst.

Edward Amberger,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Janette Aprilante,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Victor Babin,
Senior Vice President               None.

Bruce L. Bartlett,
Senior                              Vice President An officer  and/or  portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

George Batejan,
Executive Vice President/
Chief Information Officer           Formerly Senior Vice President  (until May
                                     1998).

Connie Bechtolt,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Kathleen Beichert,
Vice President                      None.

Rajeev Bhaman,
Vice President                      None.

Mark Binning
Assistant Vice President            None.

Robert J. Bishop,
Vice                                President  Vice  President  of  Mutual  Fund
                                    Accounting  (since May 1996);  an officer of
                                    other Oppenheimer funds.

John R. Blomfield,
Vice President                      None.

Chad Boll,
Assistant Vice President            None

Scott Brooks,
Vice President                      None.

Jeffrey Burns,
Vice                                President, Assistant Counsel Stradley, Ronen
                                    Stevens    and    Young,    LLP    (February
                                    1998-September 1999).

Bruce Burroughs,
Vice President

Adele Campbell,
Assistant Vice President & Assistant
Treasurer: Rochester Division       Formerly,   Assistant  Vice  President  of
                                    Rochester Fund Services, Inc.

Michael A. Carbuto,
Vice President                      An  officer  and/or  portfolio  manager of
                                    certain  Oppenheimer funds; Vice President
                                    of     Centennial     Asset     Management
                                    Corporation.

John Cardillo,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Elisa Chrysanthis
Assistant Vice President            None.

H.C. Digby Clements,
Vice President: Rochester Division  None.

O. Leonard Darling,
Vice Chairman, Executive Vice
President and Chief Investment
Officer and Director                Chairman  of  the  Board  and  a  director
                                    (since  June  1999)  and  Senior  Managing
                                    Director    (since   December   1998)   of
                                    HarbourView Asset Management  Corporation;
                                    a  director  (since  March  2000)  of  OFI
                                    Private Investments,  Inc.; Trustee (1993)
                                    of  Awhtolia  College -  Greece;  formerly
                                    Chief  Executive  Officer  of  HarbourView
                                    Asset  Management   Corporation  (December
                                    1998 - June 1999).

John Davis
Assistant Vice President            EAB Financial (April 1998-February 1999).

Robert A. Densen,
Senior Vice President               None.

Ruggero de'Rossi
Vice President                      Formerly,  Chief Strategist at ING Barings
(July
                                    1998 - March 2000).

Sheri Devereux,
Vice President          None.

Max Dietshe
Vice President                      Deloitte & Touche LLP (1989-1999).

Craig P. Dinsell
Executive Vice President            None.

John Doney,
Vice                                President   An  officer   and/or   portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Andrew J. Donohue,
Executive Vice President,
General Counsel and Director        Executive Vice President  (since September
                                    1993) and a director  (since January 1992)
                                    of   the   Distributor;   Executive   Vice
                                    President,    General    Counsel    (since
                                    September  1995)  and  a  director  (since
                                    August   1994)   of   HarbourView    Asset
                                    Management    Corporation,     Shareholder
                                    Services,   Inc.,   Shareholder  Financial
                                    Services,     Inc.     and     Oppenheimer
                                    Partnership   Holdings,   Inc.,   of   OFI
                                    Private  Investments,  Inc.  (since  March
                                    2000),  and of PIMCO Trust Company  (since
                                    May 2000);  President  and a  director  of
                                    Centennial  Asset  Management  Corporation
                                    (since  September 1995) and of Oppenheimer
                                    Real Asset  Management,  Inc.  (since July
                                    1996);   Vice  President  and  a  director
                                    (since       September       1997)      of
                                    OppenheimerFunds  International  Ltd.  and
                                    Oppenheimer   Millennium   Funds   plc;  a
                                    director    (since    April    2000)    of
                                    OppenheimerFunds    Legacy   Program,    a
                                    charitable  trust program  established  by
                                    the Manager;  General  Counsel  (since May
                                    1996) and Secretary  (since April 1997) of
                                    Oppenheimer  Acquisition Corp.; an officer
                                    of other Oppenheimer funds.

Bruce Dunbar,
Vice President                      None.

Daniel Engstrom,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Armond Erpf
Assistant Vice President            None.

George Evans,
Vice                                President   An  officer   and/or   portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Edward N. Everett,
Assistant Vice President            None.

George Fahey,
Vice President                      None.

Leslie A. Falconio,
Vice                                President   An  officer   and/or   portfolio
                                    manager of certain  Oppenheimer funds (since
                                    6/99).

Scott Farrar,
Vice                                President Assistant Treasurer of Oppenheimer
                                    Millennium  Funds plc (since  October 1997);
                                    an officer of other Oppenheimer funds.

Katherine P. Feld,
Vice President, Senior Counsel
and Secretary                       Vice   President   and  Secretary  of  the
                                    Distributor;  Secretary  and  Director  of
                                    Centennial Asset  Management  Corporation;
                                    Vice    President    and    Secretary   of
                                    Oppenheimer Real Asset  Management,  Inc.;
                                    Secretary of HarbourView  Asset Management
                                    Corporation,    Oppenheimer    Partnership
                                    Holdings,   Inc.,   Shareholder  Financial
                                    Services,  Inc. and Shareholder  Services,
                                    Inc.

Ronald H. Fielding,
Senior Vice President; Chairman:
Rochester Division                  An  officer,   Director  and/or  portfolio
                                    manager  of  certain   Oppenheimer  funds;
                                    presently  he holds  the  following  other
                                    positions:  Director  (since  1995) of ICI
                                    Mutual Insurance Company;  Governor (since
                                    1994)  of  St.  John's  College;  Director
                                    (since  1994 - present)  of  International
                                    Museum of  Photography  at George  Eastman
                                    House..

David Foxhoven,
Assistant Vice President            Formerly   Manager,   Banking   Operations
                                    Department (July 1996 - November 1998).

Colleen Franca,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Crystal French
Vice President                      None.

Dan Gangemi,
Vice President                      None.

Subrata Ghose
Assistant Vice President            Formerly,   Equity   Analyst  at  Fidelity
                                    Investments (1995 - March 2000).

Charles Gilbert,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Alan Gilston,
Vice President                      None.

Jill Glazerman,
Vice President                      None.

Paul Goldenberg,
Vice President

Mikhail Goldverg
Assistant Vice President            None.

Laura Granger,
Vice President

Jeremy Griffiths,
Executive Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer and
Director                            Chief  Financial  Officer,  Treasurer  and
                                    director   of   Oppenheimer    Acquisition
                                    Corp.;   Executive   Vice   President   of
                                    HarbourView Asset Management  Corporation;
                                    President.  Chief  Executive  Officer  and
                                    director of PIMCO Trust Company;  director
                                    of   OppenheimerFunds,    Legacy   Program
                                    (charitable    trust    program);     Vice
                                    President  of  OFI  Private   Investments,
                                    Inc.  and  a  Member  and  Fellow  of  the
                                    Institute of Chartered Accountants.

Robert Grill,
Senior Vice President               None.

Robert Guy,
Senior Vice President               None.

Robert Haley,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Kelly Haney,
Assistant Vice President

Thomas B. Hayes,
Vice President                      None.

Dorothy Hirshman,
Assistant Vice President            None

Merryl Hoffman,
Vice President and
Senior Counsel                      None

Merrell Hora,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Scott T. Huebl,
Vice President                      None.

James Hyland,
Assistant                           Vice President  Formerly Manager of Customer
                                    Research    for    Prudential    Investments
                                    (February 1998 - July 1999).

David Hyun,
Vice                                President    Formerly   portfolio   manager,
                                    technology analyst and research associate at
                                    Fred Alger  Management,  Inc. (August 1993 -
                                    June 2000).

Steve Ilnitzki,
Senior Vice President               Formerly   Vice   President   of   Product
                                    Management  at  Ameritrade   (until  March
                                    2000).

Kathleen T. Ives,
Vice President                      None.

William Jaume,
Vice President                      Senior Vice  President  (since April 2000)
                                    of    HarbourView     Asset     Management
                                    Corporation.

Frank Jennings,
Vice                                President   An  officer   and/or   portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Andrew Jordan,
Assistant Vice President            None.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deborah Kaback,
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vice President and
Senior Counsel                      Senior Vice President and Deputy General
                                    Counsel of Oppenheimer Capital (April
                                    1989-November 1999).

Lewis Kamman
Vice President                      Senior   Consultant   for  Bell   Atlantic
                                    Network     Integration,     Inc.    (June
                                    1997-December 1998).

Jennifer Kane
Assistant Vice President            None.

Lynn Oberist Keeshan
Senior                              Vice President  Formerly  (until March 1999)
                                    Vice  President,  Business  Development  and
                                    Treasury at Liz Claiborne, Inc.

Thomas W. Keffer,
Senior Vice President               None.

Erica Klein,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Walter Konops,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Avram Kornberg,
Senior Vice President               None.

Jimmy Kourkoulakos,
Assistant Vice President.           None.

John Kowalik,
Senior                              Vice President An officer  and/or  portfolio
                                    manager for certain OppenheimerFunds.

Joseph Krist,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Christopher Leavy
Senior                              Vice  President Vice President and Portfolio
                                    Manager   at   Morgan   Stanley   Investment
                                    Management   (1997-September  2000)  and  an
                                    Analyst  and  Portfolio  Manager  at Crestar
                                    Asset Management (1995-1997).

Michael Levine,
Vice President                      None.

Shanquan Li,
Vice President                      None.

Mitchell J. Lindauer,
Vice President and Assistant
General Counsel                     None.

Malissa Lischin
Assistant Vice President            Formerly  Associate  Manager,   Investment
                                    Management  Analyst at Prudential  (1996 -
                                    March 2000).

David Mabry,
Vice President                      None.

Bridget Macaskill,
Chairman, Chief Executive Officer
and Director                        President,  Chief Executive  Officer and a
                                    director   (since   March   2000)  of  OFI
                                    Private  Investments,  Inc., an investment
                                    adviser   subsidiary   of   the   Manager;
                                    Chairman  and a  director  of  Shareholder
                                    Services,  Inc.  (since  August  1994) and
                                    Shareholder   Financial   Services,   Inc.
                                    (since  September  1995),  transfer  agent
                                    subsidiaries  of  the  Manager;  President
                                    (since  September  1995)  and  a  director
                                    (since   October   1990)  of   Oppenheimer
                                    Acquisition  Corp.,  the Manager's  parent
                                    holding    company;    President    (since
                                    September  1995)  and  a  director  (since
                                    November 1989) of Oppenheimer  Partnership
                                    Holdings,    Inc.,   a   holding   company
                                    subsidiary  of the Manager;  President and
                                    a  director   (since   October   1997)  of
                                    OppenheimerFunds  International  Ltd.,  an
                                    offshore  fund  management  subsidiary  of
                                    the Manager and of Oppenheimer  Millennium
                                    Funds  plc;  a  director  of   HarbourView
                                    Asset Management  Corporation  (since July
                                    1991)  and  of   Oppenheimer   Real  Asset
                                    Management,   Inc.   (since   July  1996),
                                    investment  adviser  subsidiaries  of  the
                                    Manager;  a director (since April 2000) of
                                    OppenheimerFunds    Legacy   Program,    a
                                    charitable  trust program  established  by
                                    the  Manager;  a  director  of  Prudential
                                    Corporation plc (a U.K.  financial service
                                    company);   President  and  a  trustee  of
                                    other    Oppenheimer    funds;    formerly
                                    President  of  the  Manager  (June  1991 -
                                    August 2000).

Steve Macchia,
Vice President                      None.

Marianne Manzolillo,
Assistant Vice President

Philip T. Masterson,
Vice President                      None.

Loretta McCarthy,
Executive Vice President            None.

Lisa Migan,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Andrew J. Mika
Senior                              Vice   President   Formerly  a  Second  Vice
                                    President  for  Guardian  Investments  (June
                                    1990 - October 1999).

Joy Milan
Assistant Vice President            None.

Denis R. Molleur,
Vice President and
Senior Counsel                      None.

Nikolaos Monoyios,
Vice                                President A Vice President  and/or portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Margaret Mudd
Assistant                           Vice  President  Formerly  Vice  President -
                                    Syndications   of  Sanwa   Bank   California
                                    (January 1998 - September 1999).

John Murphy,
President, Chief Operating
Officer                             and   Director   President   of   MassMutual
                                    Institutional Funds and the MML Series Funds
                                    until September 2000.

Kenneth Nadler,
Vice President                      None.

David Negri,
Senior                              Vice President An officer  and/or  portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Barbara Niederbrach,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Robert A. Nowaczyk,
Vice President                      None.

Ray Olson,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Gina M. Palmieri,
Vice                                President   An  officer   and/or   portfolio
                                    manager of certain  Oppenheimer funds (since
                                    June 1999).

Frank Pavlak,
Vice President                      Formerly.   Branch  Chief  of   Investment
                                    Company  Examinations  at U.S.  Securities
                                    and Exchange  Commission  (January  1981 -
                                    December 1998).

James Phillips
Assistant Vice President            None.

David Pellegrino
Vice President                      None.

Jane Putnam,
Vice                                President   An  officer   and/or   portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Michael Quinn,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Julie Radtke,
Vice President                      None.

Thomas Reedy,
Vice                                President Vice President  (since April 1999)
                                    of HarbourView Asset Management Corporation;
                                    an  officer  and/or  portfolio   manager  of
                                    certain Oppenheimer funds.

John Reinhardt,
Vice President: Rochester Division  None

David Robertson,
Senior Vice President

Jeffrey Rosen,
Vice President                      None.

Marci Rossell,
Vice President and                  Corporate Economist     Economist     with
                                    Federal  Reserve  Bank  of  Dallas  (April
                                    1996 - March 1999).

Richard H. Rubinstein,
Senior                              Vice President An officer  and/or  portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Lawrence Rudnick,
Assistant Vice President            None.

James Ruff,
Executive Vice President            President     and    director    of    the
                                    Distributor;  Vice President  (since March
                                    2000) of OFI Private Investments, Inc.

Andrew Ruotolo
Executive Vice President            President  and  director  of   Shareholder
                                    Services,  Inc.; formerly Chief Operations
                                    Officer for American  International  Group
                                    (August 1997-September 1999).

Rohit Sah,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Valerie Sanders,
Vice President                      None.

Kenneth Schlupp
Assistant Vice President            Assistant  Vice  President   (since  March
                                    2000) of OFI Private Investments, Inc.

Jeff Schneider,
Vice President                      Formerly   (until   May  1999)   Director,
                                    Personal Decisions International.

Ellen Schoenfeld,
Vice President                      None.

Allan Sedmak
Assistant Vice President            None.

Jennifer Sexton,
Vice President          None.

Martha Shapiro,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Connie Song,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Richard Soper,
Vice President                      None.

Keith Spencer,
Vice President                      None.

Cathleen Stahl,
Vice President                      Assistant  Vice  President  &  Manager  of
                                    Women & Investing Program

Richard A. Stein,
Vice President: Rochester Division  Assistant Vice  President  (since 1995) of
                                    Rochester Capitol Advisors, L.P.

Arthur Steinmetz,
Senior                              Vice President An officer  and/or  portfolio
                                    manager of certain Oppenheimer funds.

Jayne Stevlingson,
Vice President                      None.

Gregg Stitt,
Assistant Vice President            None.

John Stoma,
Senior Vice President               None.

Deborah Sullivan,
Assistant Vice President,
Assistant Counsel

Kevin Surrett,
Assistant Vice President            Assistant   Vice   President   of  Product
Development
                                    At  Evergreen  Investor   Services,   Inc.
(June 1995 -
                                    May 1999).

James C. Swain,
Vice Chairman of the Board          Chairman,  CEO and  Trustee,  Director  or
                                    Managing   Partner  of  the   Denver-based
                                    Oppenheimer  Funds;  formerly,   President
                                    and   Director   of    Centennial    Asset
                                    Management  Corporation  and  Chairman  of
                                    the Board of Shareholder Services, Inc.

Susan Switzer,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Anthony A. Tanner,
Vice President: Rochester Division  None.

Paul Temple,
Vice President                      Formerly  (until  May  2000)  Director  of
                                    Product Development at Prudential.

Angela Uttaro,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Mark Vandehey,
Vice President                      None.

Maureen VanNorstrand,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Annette Von Brandis,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Phillip Vottiero,
Vice President                      Chief  Financial  officer  for the Sovlink
                                    Group (April 1996 - June 1999).

Sloan Walker
Vice President

Teresa Ward,
Vice President                      None.

Jerry Webman,
Senior Vice President               Senior  Investment  Officer,  Director  of
                                    Fixed Income.

Barry Weiss,
Assistant Vice President            Fitch IBCA (1996 - January 2000)

Christine Wells,
Vice President                      None.

Joseph Welsh,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Catherine White,
Assistant Vice President

William L. Wilby,
Senior                              Vice President  Senior  Investment  Officer,
                                    Director of International  Equities;  Senior
                                    Vice   President   of   HarbourView    Asset
                                    Management Corporation.

Donna Winn,
Senior Vice President               Vice  President  (since March 2000) of OFI
                                    Private Investments, Inc.

Brian W. Wixted,
Senior Vice President and
Treasurer               Treasurer  (since March 1999) of HarbourView  Asset
Management  Corporation,   Shareholder  Services,  Inc.,  Oppenheimer  Real
Asset Management  Corporation,  Shareholder  Financial  Services,  Inc. and
Oppenheimer  Partnership Holdings,  Inc., of OFI Private Investments,  Inc.
(since  March  2000)  and  of   OppenheimerFunds   International  Ltd.  and
Oppenheimer  Millennium  Funds plc (since May  2000);  Treasurer  and Chief
Financial  Officer  (since  May  2000) of PIMCO  Trust  Company;  Assistant
Treasurer  (since  March  1999) of  Oppenheimer  Acquisition  Corp.  and of
Centennial Asset Management  Corporation;  an officer of other  Oppenheimer
funds;  formerly  Principal  and Chief  Operating  Officer,  Bankers  Trust
Company - Mutual Fund Services Division (March 1995 - March 1999).

Carol Wolf,
Senior Vice President An officer and/or portfolio manager of certain Oppenheimer
funds;  serves on the Board of Chinese Children Adoption  International  Parents
Council,  Supporters of Children,  and the Advisory  Board of Denver  Children's
Hospital Oncology Department.

Kurt Wolfgruber
Senior Vice President               Senior  Investment  Officer,  Director  of
                                    Domestic    Equities;    member   of   the
                                    Investment  Product  Review  Committee and
                                    the  Executive  Committee  of  HarbourView
                                    Asset  Management  Corporation;   formerly
                                    (until  April  2000) a  Managing  Director
                                    and  Portfolio   Manager  at  J.P.  Morgan
                                    Investment Management, Inc.

Caleb Wong,
Vice President                      An  officer  and/or  portfolio  manager of
                                    certain   Oppenheimer  funds  (since  June
                                    1999) .

Robert G. Zack,
Senior Vice President and
Assistant Secretary, Associate
General Counsel                     Assistant    Secretary   of    Shareholder
                                    Services,    Inc.    (since   May   1985),
                                    Shareholder   Financial   Services,   Inc.
                                    (since  November  1989),  OppenheimerFunds
                                    International    Ltd.   and    Oppenheimer
                                    Millennium   Funds  plc   (since   October
                                    1997);  an  officer  of other  Oppenheimer
                                    funds.

Jill Zachman,
Assistant Vice President:
Rochester Division                  None.

Neal Zamore,
Vice President                      Director  e-Commerce;  formerly (until May
                                    2000) Vice President at GE Capital.

Mark Zavanelli,
Assistant Vice President            None.

Arthur J. Zimmer,
Senior Vice President               Senior Vice  President  (since April 1999)
                                    of    HarbourView     Asset     Management
                                    Corporation;  Vice President of Centennial
                                    Asset Management  Corporation;  an officer
                                    and/or   portfolio   manager   of  certain
                                    Oppenheimer funds.

Susan Zimmerman,
Vice President                      None.

The  Oppenheimer  Funds  include  the  New  York-based  Oppenheimer  Funds,  the
Denver-based  Oppenheimer  Funds and the Oppenheimer  Quest /Rochester Funds, as
set forth below:

            New York-based Oppenheimer Funds

            Oppenheimer California Municipal Fund
            Oppenheimer Capital Appreciation Fund
            Oppenheimer Capital Preservation Fund
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Oppenheimer Developing Markets Fund
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Oppenheimer  Discovery Fund Oppenheimer  Emerging  Technologies Fund
            Oppenheimer  Enterprise  Fund  Oppenheimer  Europe Fund  Oppenheimer
            Global Fund Oppenheimer Global Growth & Income Fund Oppenheimer Gold
            &  Special  Minerals  Fund   Oppenheimer   Growth  Fund  Oppenheimer
            International  Growth Fund Oppenheimer  International  Small Company
            Fund  Oppenheimer  Large Cap Growth Fund  Oppenheimer  Money  Market
            Fund,  Inc.   Oppenheimer   Multi-Sector  Income  Trust  Oppenheimer
            Multi-State  Municipal Trust  Oppenheimer  Multiple  Strategies Fund
            Oppenheimer  Municipal Bond Fund Oppenheimer New York Municipal Fund
            Oppenheimer  Series  Fund,  Inc.   Oppenheimer   Trinity  Core  Fund
            Oppenheimer  Trinity  Growth  Fund  Oppenheimer  Trinity  Value Fund
            Oppenheimer U.S. Government Trust Oppenheimer World Bond Fund

            Quest/Rochester Funds

            Limited Term New York Municipal Fund
            Oppenheimer Convertible Securities Fund
            Oppenheimer MidCap Fund
            Oppenheimer Quest Capital Value Fund, Inc.
            Oppenheimer Quest For Value Funds
            Oppenheimer Quest Global Value Fund, Inc.
            Oppenheimer Quest Value Fund, Inc.
            Rochester Fund Municipals

            Denver-based Oppenheimer Funds

            Centennial America Fund, L.P.
            Centennial California Tax Exempt Trust
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Centennial Government Trust
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Centennial  Money Market Trust  Centennial New York Tax Exempt Trust
            Centennial Tax Exempt Trust  Oppenheimer  Cash Reserves  Oppenheimer
            Champion  Income Fund  Oppenheimer  Capital Income Fund  Oppenheimer
            High   Yield   Fund   Oppenheimer    Integrity   Funds   Oppenheimer
            International  Bond Fund  Oppenheimer  Limited-Term  Government Fund
            Oppenheimer  Main Street  Opportunity  Fund  Oppenheimer Main Street
            Small Cap Fund  Oppenheimer  Main  Street  Funds,  Inc.  Oppenheimer
            Municipal  Fund  Oppenheimer  Real  Asset  Fund  Oppenheimer  Senior
            Floating Rate Fund  Oppenheimer  Strategic  Income Fund  Oppenheimer
            Total Return Fund, Inc.  Oppenheimer Variable Account Funds Panorama
            Series Fund, Inc.

The address of OppenheimerFunds,  Inc.,  OppenheimerFunds  Distributor,  Inc.,
HarbourView Asset Management Corp.,  Oppenheimer  Partnership Holdings,  Inc.,
Oppenheimer  Acquisition Corp. and OFI Private Investments,  Inc. is Two World
Trade Center, New York, New York 10048-0203.

The address of the New  York-based  Oppenheimer  Funds,  the Quest Funds,  the
Rochester-based  funds,  the  Denver-based   Oppenheimer  Funds,   Shareholder
Financial  Services,  Inc.,  Shareholder  Services,   Inc.,   OppenheimerFunds
Services,  Centennial Asset Management Corporation,  Centennial Capital Corp.,
and  Oppenheimer  Real  Asset  Management,  Inc.  is 6803  South  Tucson  Way,
Englewood, Colorado 80112.

Item 27. Principal Underwriter

(a)   OppenheimerFunds   Distributor,   Inc.   is  the   Distributor   of  the
Registrant's  shares.  It is  also  the  Distributor  of  each  of  the  other
registered open-end investment companies for which  OppenheimerFunds,  Inc. is
the  investment  adviser,  as described  in Part A and B of this  Registration
Statement  and listed in Item 26(b)  above  (except  Oppenheimer  Multi-Sector
Income Trust and Panorama Series Fund, Inc.) and for MassMutual  Institutional
Funds.

(b)   The directors  and officers of the  Registrant's  principal  underwriter
are:

Name & Principal                 Positions & Offices        Positions        &
Offices
Business Address                 with Underwriter           with Registrant

Jason Bach                       Vice President             None
31 Raquel Drive
Marietta, GA 30064

William Beardsley (2)            Vice President             None

Peter Beebe                      Vice President             None
876 Foxdale Avenue
Winnetka, IL  60093

Douglas S. Blankenship           Vice President             None
17011 Woodbank
Spring, TX  77379

Kevin Brosmith                   Senior Vice President      None.
856 West Fullerton
Chicago, IL  60614

Susan Burton(2)                  Vice President             None

Robert Coli                      Vice President             None
12 White Tail Lane
Bedminster, NJ 07921


William Coughlin                 Vice President             None
1730 N. Clark Street
#3203
Chicago, IL 60614

Jeff Damia(2)                    Vice President             None

Stephen Demetrovits(2)           Vice President             None

Christopher DeSimone             Vice President             None
5105 Aldrich Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55419

Michael Dickson                  Vice President             None
21 Trinity Avenue
Glastonburg, CT 06033

Joseph DiMauro                   Vice President             None
244 McKinley Avenue
Grosse Pointe Farms, MI 48236

Steven Dombrowser                Vice President             None

Andrew John Donohue(2)           Executive Vice President   Secretary
                                  and Director

G. Patrick Dougherty (2)         Vice President             None

Cliff Dunteman                   Vice President             None
940 Wedgewood Drive
Crystal Lake, IL 60014

Wendy H. Ehrlich                 Vice President             None
4 Craig Street
Jericho, NY 11753

Kent Elwell                      Vice President             None
35 Crown Terrace
Yardley, PA  19067

George Fahey                     Vice President             None
9 Townview Ct.
Flemington, NJ 08822

Eric Fallon                      Vice President             None
10 Worth Circle
Newton, MA  02158

Katherine P. Feld(2)             Vice President and         None
                                 Corporate Secretary

Mark Ferro                       Vice President             None
43 Market Street
Breezy Point, NY 11697

Ronald H. Fielding(3)            Vice President             None

Brian Flahive                    Assistant Vice President   None

John ("J") Fortuna(2)            Vice President             None

Ronald R. Foster                 Senior Vice President      None
11339 Avant Lane
Cincinnati, OH 45249

Victoria Friece(1)               Assistant Vice President   None

Luiggino Galleto                 Vice President             None
10302 Riesling Court
Charlotte, NC 28277

Michelle Gans                    Vice President             None
18771 The Pines
Eden Prairie, MN 55347

L. Daniel Garrity                Vice President             None
27 Covington Road
Avondale Estates, GA 30002

Lucio Giliberti                  Vice President             None
6 Cyndi Court
Flemington, NJ 08822

Ralph Grant(2)                   Senior Vice President/     None
                                 National Sales Manager

Michael Guman                    Vice President             None
3913 Pleasent Avenue
Allentown, PA 18103

Webb Heidinger                   Vice President             None
90 Gates Street
Portsmouth, NH 03801

Phillip Hemery                   Vice President             None
184 Park Avenue
Rochester, NY 14607

Brian Husch(2)                   Vice President             None

Edward Hrybenko (2)              Vice President             None

Richard L. Hymes(2)              Assistant Vice President   None

Byron Ingram(1)                  Assistant Vice President   None

Kathleen T. Ives(1)              Vice President             None

Eric K. Johnson                  Vice President             None
28 Oxford Avenue
Mill Valley, CA 94941

Mark D. Johnson                  Vice President             None
409 Sundowner Ridge Court
Wildwood, MO  63011

Elyse Jurman                     Vice President             None
1194 Hillsboro Mile, #51
Hillsboro Beach, FL  33062

John Kavanaugh                   Vice President             None
2 Cervantes Blvd., Apt. #301
San Francisco, CA 94123

Brian G. ly                      Vice President             None
60 Larkspur Road
Fairfield, CT  06430

Michael Keogh(2)                 Vice President             None

Lisa Klassen(1)                  Assistant Vice President   None

Richard Klein                    Senior Vice President      None
4820 Fremont Avenue So.
Minneapolis, MN 55409

Brent Krantz                     Vice President             None
2609 SW 149th Place
Seattle, WA 98166

Oren Lane                        Vice President             None
5286 Timber Bend Drive
Brighton, MI  48116

Dawn Lind                        Vice President             None
21 Meadow Lane
Rockville Centre, NY 11570

James Loehle                     Vice President             None
30 Wesley Hill Lane
Warwick, NY 10990

John Lynch (2)                   Vice President             None

Michael Magee(2)                 Vice President             None

Steve Manns                      Vice President             None
1941 W. Wolfram Street
Chicago, IL  60657

Todd Marion                      Vice President             None
3 St. Marks Place
Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724

LuAnn Mascia(2)                  Assistant Vice President   None

Theresa-Marie Maynier            Vice President             None
2421 Charlotte Drive
Charlotte, NC  28203

Anthony Mazzariello              Vice President             None
704 Beaver Road
Leetsdale, PA 15056

John McDonough                   Vice President             None
3812 Leland Street
Chevy Chase, MD  20815

Kent McGowan                     Vice President             None
18424 12th Avenue West
Lynnwood, WA 98037

Laura Mulhall(2)                 Senior Vice President      None

Charles Murray                   Vice President             None
18 Spring Lake Drive
Far Hills, NJ 07931

Wendy Murray                     Vice President             None
32 Carolin Road
Upper Montclair, NJ 07043

Denise-Marie Nakamura            Vice President             None
4111 Colony Plaza
Newport Beach, CA 92660

John Nesnay                      Vice President             None
9511 S. Hackberry Street
Highlands Ranch, CO 80126

Kevin Neznek(2)                  Vice President             None

Chad V. Noel                     Vice President             None
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2408 Eagleridge Drive
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Henderson, NV  89014

Raymond Olson(1)                 Assistant Vice President   None
                                   & Treasurer

Alan Panzer                      Assistant Vice President   None
925 Canterbury Road, Apt. #848
Atlanta, GA 30324

Kevin Parchinski                 Vice President             None
8409 West 116th Terrace
Overland Park, KS 66210

Gayle Pereira                    Vice President             None
2707 Via Arboleda
San Clemente, CA 92672

Brian Perkes                     Vice President             None
8734 Shady Shore Drive
Frisco, TX 75034

Charles K. Pettit                Vice President             None
22 Fall Meadow Drive
Pittsford, NY  14534

Bill Presutti(2)                 Vice President             None

Steve Puckett                    Vice President             None
5297 Soledad Mountain Road
San Diego, CA  92109

Elaine Puleo(2)                  Senior Vice President      None

Minnie Ra                        Vice President             None
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
100 Dolores Street, #203
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Carmel, CA 93923

Dustin Raring                    Vice President             None
184 South Ulster
Denver, CO 80220

Michael Raso                     Vice President             None
16 N. Chatsworth Ave.
Apt. 301
Larchmont, NY  10538

Douglas Rentschler               Vice President             None
677 Middlesex Road
Grosse Pointe Park, MI 48230

Michelle Simone - Ricter(2)      Assistant Vice President   None

Ruxandra Risko(2)                Vice President             None

David Robertson(2)               Senior Vice President,     None
                                 Director of Variable
                                    Accounts

Kenneth Rosenson                 Vice President             None
26966 W. Malibu
Cove Colony Drive
Malibu, CA 90265

James Ruff(2)                    President & Director       None

William Rylander (2)             Vice President             None

Alfredo Scalzo                   Vice President             None
9616 Lale Chase Island Way
Tampa, FL  33626

Michael Sciortino                Vice President             None
785 Beau Chene Drive
Mandeville, LA  70471

Eric Sharp                       Vice President             None
862 McNeill Circle
Woodland, CA  95695

Kristen Sims (2)                 Vice President             None

Douglas Smith                    Vice President             None
808 South 194th Street
Seattle,WA 98148

David Sturgis                    Vice President             None
81 Surrey Lane
Boxford, MA 01921

Brian Summe                      Vice President             None
239 N. Colony Drive
Edgewood, KY 41017

Michael Sussman(2)               Vice President             None

Andrew Sweeny                    Vice President             None
5967 Bayberry Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45242

George Sweeney                   Senior Vice President      None
5 Smokehouse Lane
Hummelstown, PA  17036

Scott McGregor Tatum             Vice President             None
704 Inwood
Southlake, TX  76092

Martin Telles(2)                 Senior Vice President      None

David G. Thomas                  Vice President             None
2200 North Wilson Blvd.
Suite 102-176
Arlington, VA 22201

Tanya Valency (2)                Assistant Vice President   None

Mark Vandehey(1)                 Vice President             None

Brian Villec (2)                 Vice President             None

Andrea Walsh(1)                  Vice President             None

Suzanne Walters(1)               Assistant Vice President   None

Michael Weigner                  Vice President             None
5722 Harborside Drive
Tampa, FL 33615

Donn Weise                       Vice President             None
3249 Earlmar Drive
Los Angeles, CA  90064

Marjorie Williams                Vice President             None
6930 East Ranch Road
Cave Creek, AZ  85331

Cary Wozniak                     Vice President             None
18808 Bravata Court
San Diego, CA 92128

Gregor Yuska(2)                  Vice President             None

(1)6803 South Tucson Way, Englewood, CO 80112
(2)Two World Trade Center, New York, NY 10048
(3)350 Linden Oaks, Rochester, NY 14623

(c)   Not applicable.

Item 28. Location of Accounts and Records

The accounts,  books and other documents required to be maintained by Registrant
pursuant  to  Section  31(a) of the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940 and  rules
promulgated  thereunder are in the possession of  OppenheimerFunds,  Inc. at its
offices at 6803 South Tucson Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112.

Item 29. Management Services

Not applicable

Item 30. Undertakings

Not applicable.





<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES



Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and/or the Investment
Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Registration  Statement
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the
City of New York and State of New York on the 28th day of November, 2000.


                         OPPENHEIMER MUNICIPAL BOND FUND

                        By:  /s/  Bridget A. Macaskill*
                               ---------------------------------------
                               Bridget A. Macaskill, President

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

Signatures                         Title                    Date

/s/ Leon Levy*                Chairman of the

----------------------------------                          Board of Trustees
November 28, 2000
Leon Levy

/s/ Donald W. Spiro*          Vice Chairman of the          November 28, 2000
----------------------------------                          Board and Trustee
Donald W. Spiro

/s/ Bridget A. Macaskill*     President and                 November 28, 2000
---------------------------------                           Chief Executive
Bridget A. Macaskill          Officer and Trustee

/s/ Brian W. Wixted*          Treasurer and Chief           November 28, 2000
---------------------------------                           Financial and
Brian W. Wixted               Accounting Officer

/s/ Robert G. Galli*          Trustee                       November 28, 2000

----------------------------------
Robert G. Galli


/s/ Phillip A. Griffiths      Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Phillip A. Griffiths


/s/ Benjamin Lipstein*        Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Benjamin Lipstein


/s/ Elizabeth B. Moynihan*    Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Elizabeth B. Moynihan


/s/ Kenneth A. Randall*       Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Kenneth A. Randall


/s/ Edward V. Regan*          Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Edward V. Regan


/s/ Russell S. Reynolds, Jr.* Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Russell S. Reynolds, Jr.


/s/ Clayton K. Yeutter*       Trustee                       November 28, 2000

---------------------------------
Clayton K. Yeutter


*By: /s/ Robert G. Zack
-----------------------------------------
Robert G. Zack, Attorney-in-Fact


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