UNITED HIGH INCOME FUND INC
485BPOS, EX-99.B(P), 2000-06-29
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                                                                EX-99.B(p)hicode




                                 CODE OF ETHICS


                         Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc.
                              Waddell & Reed, Inc.
                  Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company
                         Austin, Calvert & Flavin, Inc.
                    Fiduciary Trust Company of New Hampshire
                          United Group of Mutual Funds
                           Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc.
                            Target/United Funds, Inc.



                                                  As Revised:  February 9, 2000

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1.  PREFACE

    Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "Act") requires
    registered investment companies and their investment advisers and principal
    underwriters to adopt codes of ethics and certain other requirements to
    prevent fraudulent, deceptive and manipulative practices. Each investment
    company in the United Group of Mutual Funds, Waddell & Reed Funds, Inc. and
    Target/United Funds, Inc. (each a "Fund," and collectively the "Funds") is
    registered as an open-end management investment company under the Act.
    Waddell & Reed, Inc. ("W&R") is the principal underwriter of each of the
    Funds. Waddell & Reed Investment Management Company ("WRIMCO") is the
    investment adviser of the Funds and may also serve as investment adviser to
    institutional clients other than the Funds. Austin, Calvert & Flavin, Inc.
    ("ACF") is a subsidiary of WRIMCO and serves as investment adviser to
    individuals and institutional clients other than the Funds. Fiduciary Trust
    Company of New Hampshire ("FTC"), is a trust company and a subsidiary of
    W&R; Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. ("WDR") is the public holding company.
    Except as otherwise specified herein, this Code applies to all employees,
    officers and directors of W&R, WRIMCO, ACF and the Funds, (collectively, the
    "Companies").

    This Code of Ethics (the "Code") is based on the principle that the
    officers, directors and employees of the Companies have a fiduciary duty to
    place the interests of their respective advisory clients first, to conduct
    all personal securities transactions consistently with this Code and in such
    a manner as to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest or any
    abuse of their position of trust and responsibility, and to conduct their
    personal securities transactions in a manner which does not interfere with
    the portfolio transactions of any advisory client or otherwise take unfair
    advantage of their relationship to any advisory client. Persons covered by
    this Code must adhere to this general principle as well as comply with the
    specific provisions of this Code. Technical compliance with this Code will
    not insulate from scrutiny trades which indicate an abuse of an individual's
    fiduciary duties to any advisory client.

    This Code has been approved, and any material change to it must be approved,
    by each Fund's board of directors, including a majority of the Fund's
    Disinterested directors.

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2.  DEFINITIONS

    "Access Person" means (i) any employee, director, officer or general partner
    of a Fund, WRIMCO or ACF, (ii) any director or officer of W&R, FTC or WDR or
    any employee of any company in a control relationship to the Companies who,
    in the ordinary course of his or her business, makes, participates in or
    obtains information regarding the purchase or sale of securities for an
    advisory client or whose principal function or duties relate to the making
    of any recommendation to an advisory client regarding the purchase or sale
    of securities and (iii) any natural person in a control relationship to the
    Companies who obtains information concerning recommendations made to an
    advisory client with regard to the purchase or sale of a security. A natural
    person in a control relationship or an employee of a company in a control
    relationship does not become an "Access Person" simply by virtue of the
    following: normally assisting in the preparation of public reports, but not
    receiving information about CURRENT recommendations or trading; or a single
    instance of obtaining knowledge of current recommendations or trading
    activity, or infrequently and inadvertently obtaining such knowledge. The
    Legal Department, in cooperation with department heads, is responsible for
    determining who are Access Persons.

    "Advisory Client" means any client (including both investment companies and
    managed accounts) for which WRIMCO or ACF serves as an investment adviser,
    renders investment advice or makes investment decisions.

    A security is "being considered for purchase or sale" when the order to
    purchase or sell such security has been given to the trading room, or prior
    thereto when, in the opinion of the portfolio manager or division head, a
    decision, whether or not conditional, has been made (even though not yet
    implemented) to make the purchase or sale, or when the decision-making
    process has reached a point where such a decision is imminent.

    "Beneficial Ownership" shall be interpreted in the same manner as it would
    be under Rule 16a-1(a)(2) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 in
    determining whether a person is the beneficial owner of a security for
    purposes of Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. (See Appendix
    A for a more complete description.)

    "Control" shall have the same meaning as that set forth in Section 2(a)(9)
    of the Act.


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    "De Minimis Transaction" means a transaction in an equity security (or an
    equivalent security) which is equal to or less than 300 shares, or is a
    fixed-income security (or an equivalent security) which is equal to or less
    than $15,000 principal amount. Purchases and sales, as the case may be, in
    the same security or an equivalent security within 30 days will be
    aggregated for purposes of determining if the transaction meets the
    definition of a De Minimis Transaction.

    "Disinterested Director" means a director who is not an "interested person"
    within the meaning of Section 2(a)(19) of the Act.

    "Equivalent Security" means any security issued by the same entity as the
    issuer of a subject security, including options, rights, warrants, preferred
    stock, restricted stock, phantom stock, bonds and other obligations of that
    company, or security convertible into another security.

    "Immediate Family" of an individual means any of the following persons who
    reside in the same household as the individual:

         child                      grandparent               son-in-law
         stepchild                  spouse                    daughter-in-law
         grandchild                 sibling                   brother-in-law
         parent                     mother-in-law             sister-in-law
         stepparent                 father-in-law

    Immediate Family includes adoptive relationships and any other relationship
    (whether or not recognized by law) which the Legal Department determines
    could lead to possible conflicts of interest, diversions of corporate
    opportunity, or appearances of impropriety which this Code is intended to
    prevent.

    "Investment Personnel" means those employees who provide information and
    advice to a portfolio manager or who help execute the portfolio manager's
    decisions.

    "Large Cap Transaction" means a purchase or sale of securities issued by (or
    equivalent securities with respect to) companies with market capitalization
    of at least $2.5 billion.


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    "Non-Affiliated Director" is a Director that is not an affiliated person of
    W&R.

    "Portfolio Manager" means those employees entrusted with the direct
    responsibility and authority to make investment decisions affecting an
    Advisory Client.

    "Purchase or sale of a security" includes, without limitation, the writing,
    purchase or exercise of an option to purchase or sell a security,
    conversions of convertible securities and short sales.

    "Security" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 2(a)(36) of the Act,
    except that it shall not include shares of registered open-end investment
    companies, securities issued by the Government of the United States,
    short-term debt securities which are "government securities" within the
    meaning of Section 2(a)(16) of the Act, bankers' acceptances, bank
    certificates of deposit, commercial paper, high quality short-term debt
    instruments, including repurchase agreements, and such other money market
    instruments as are designated by the boards of directors of the Companies.

    Security does not include futures contracts or options on futures contracts
    (provided these instruments are not used to indirectly acquire an interest
    which would be prohibited under this Code), but the purchase and sale of
    such instruments are nevertheless subject to the reporting requirements of
    this Code.

    "Security held or to be acquired" by an Advisory Client means (a) any
    security which, within the most recent 15 days, (i) is or has been held by
    an Advisory Client or (ii) is being or has been considered for purchase by
    an Advisory Client, and (b) any option to purchase or sell, and any security
    convertible into or exchangeable into, a security described in the preceding
    clause (a).

3.  PRE-CLEARANCE REQUIREMENTS

    Except as otherwise specified in this Code, all Access Persons, except a
    Non-Affiliated Director or a member of his or her Immediate Family, shall
    clear in advance through the Legal Department any purchase or sale, direct
    or indirect, of any Security in which such Access Person has, or by reason
    of such transaction acquires, any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership;
    provided, however, that an Access Person shall not be required to clear
    transactions effected for or securities held in any account over which such
    Access

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    Person does not have any direct or indirect influence or control. The
    Legal Department shall retain written records of such clearance requests.
    For accounts affiliated with Waddell & Reed, Inc. or any of its affiliates
    or related companies ("affiliated accounts"), WRIMCO must clear in
    advance purchases of equity securities in initial public offerings only.

    Except as otherwise provided in Section 5, the Legal Department will not
    grant clearance for any purchase by an Access Person if the Security is
    currently being considered for purchase or being purchased by any Advisory
    Client or for sale by an Access Person if currently being considered for
    sale or being sold by any Advisory Client. If the Security proposed to be
    purchased or sold by the Access Person is an option, clearance will not be
    granted if the securities subject to the option are being considered for
    purchase or sale as indicated above. If the Security proposed to be
    purchased or sold is a convertible security, clearance will not be granted
    if either that security or the securities into which it is convertible are
    being considered for purchase or sale as indicated above. The Legal
    Department will not grant clearance for any purchase by an affiliated
    account of any security in an initial public offering if an Advisory Client
    is considering the purchase or has submitted an indication of interest in
    purchasing shares in such initial public offering. For all other purchases
    and sales of securities for affiliated accounts, no clearance is necessary,
    but such transactions are subject to WRIMCO's Procedures for Aggregation of
    Orders for Advisory Clients, as amended from time to time.

    The Legal Department may refuse to preclear a transaction if it deems the
    transaction to involve a conflict of interest, possible diversion of
    corporate opportunity, or an appearance of impropriety.

    Clearance is effective, unless earlier revoked, until the earlier of (1) the
    close of business on the fifth trading day, beginning on and including the
    day on which such clearance was granted, or (2) such time as the Access
    Person learns that the information provided to the Legal Department in such
    Access Person's request for clearance is not accurate. If an Access Person
    places an order for a transaction within the five trading days but such
    order is not executed within the five trading days (e.g., a limit order),
    clearance need not be reobtained unless the person who placed the original
    order amends such order in any way. Clearance may be revoked at any time and
    is deemed revoked if, subsequent to receipt of clearance, the Access Person
    has knowledge that a Security to which the clearance relates is being
    considered for purchase or sale by an Advisory Client.

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4.  EXEMPTED TRANSACTIONS

    The pre-clearance requirements in Section 3 and the prohibited actions and
    transactions in Section 5 of this Code shall not apply to:

    (a) Purchases or sales which are non-volitional on the part of either the
        Access Person or the Advisory Client.

    (b) Purchases which are part of an automatic dividend reinvestment plan.

    (c) Purchases effected upon the exercise of rights issued by an issuer PRO
        RATA to all holders of a class of its securities, to the extent such
        rights were acquired from such issuer, and sales of such rights so
        acquired.

    (d) Transactions in securities of WDR; however, individuals subject to the
        Insider Trading Policy remain subject to such policy. (See Appendix B).

    (e) Purchases or sales by a Non-Affiliated Director or a member of his or
        her Immediate Family.

5.  PROHIBITED ACTIONS AND TRANSACTIONS

    Clearance will not be granted under Section 3 hereof with respect to the
    following prohibited actions and transactions. Engaging in any such actions
    or transactions by Access Persons will result in sanctions, including, but
    not limited to, the sanctions expressly provided for in this Section.

    (a) Except with respect to Large Cap Transactions, Investment Personnel and
        Portfolio Managers shall not acquire any security for any account in
        which such Investment Personnel or Portfolio Manager has a beneficial
        interest, excluding the Funds, in an initial public offering of that
        security.

    (b) Except with respect to Large Cap Transactions, Access Persons shall not
        execute a securities transaction on a day during which an Advisory
        Client has a pending buy or sell order in that same security or an
        equivalent security until that order is

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        executed or withdrawn. An Access Person shall disgorge any profits
        realized on trades within such period.

    (c) Except for De Minimis Transactions and Large Cap Transactions, a
        Portfolio Manager shall not buy or sell a Security within seven (7)
        trading days before or after an Advisory Client that the Portfolio
        Manager manages trades in that Security or an equivalent security. A
        Portfolio Manager shall disgorge any profits realized on such trades
        within such period.

    (d) Except for De Minimis Transactions and Large Cap Transactions,
        Investment Personnel and Portfolio Managers shall not profit in the
        purchase or sale, or sale and purchase, of the same (or equivalent)
        securities within sixty (60) calendar days. The Legal Department will
        review all such short-term trading by Investment Personnel and Portfolio
        Managers and may, in its sole discretion, allow exceptions when it has
        determined that an exception would be equitable and that no abuse is
        involved. Investment Personnel and Portfolio Managers profiting from a
        transaction shall disgorge any profits realized on such transaction.
        This section shall not apply to options on securities used for hedging
        purposes for securities held longer than sixty (60) days.

    (e) Investment Personnel and Portfolio Managers shall not accept from any
        person or entity that does or proposes to do business with or on behalf
        of an Advisory Client a gift or other thing of more than de minimis
        value or any other form of advantage. The solicitation or giving of such
        gifts by Investment Personnel and Portfolio Managers is also prohibited.
        For purposes of this subparagraph, "de minimis" means $75 or less if
        received in the ordinary course of business.

    (f) Investment Personnel and Portfolio Managers shall not serve on the board
        of directors of publicly traded companies, absent prior authorization
        from the Legal Department. The Legal Department will grant authorization
        only if it is determined that the board service would be consistent with
        the interests of any Advisory Client. In the event board service is
        authorized, such individuals serving as directors shall be isolated from
        those making investment decisions through procedures designed to
        safeguard against potential conflicts of interest, such as a Chinese
        Wall policy or investment restrictions.


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    (g) Except with respect to Large Cap Transactions, Investment Personnel and
        Portfolio Managers shall not acquire a security in a private placement,
        absent prior authorization from the Legal Department. The Legal
        Department will not grant clearance for the acquisition of a security in
        a private placement if it is determined that the investment opportunity
        should be reserved for an Advisory Client or that the opportunity to
        acquire the security is being offered to the individual requesting
        clearance by virtue of such individual's position with the Companies. An
        individual who has been granted clearance to acquire securities in a
        private placement shall disclose such investment when participating in
        an Advisory Client's subsequent consideration of an investment in the
        issuer. A subsequent decision by an Advisory Client to purchase such a
        security shall be subject to independent review by Investment Personnel
        with no personal interest in the issuer.

    (h) An Access Person shall not execute a securities transaction while in
        possession of material non-public information regarding the security or
        its issuer.

    (i) An Access Person shall not execute a securities transaction which is
        intended to result in market manipulation, including but not limited to,
        a transaction intended to raise, lower, or maintain the price of any
        security or to create a false appearance(s) of active trading.

    (j) Except with respect to Large Cap Transactions, an Access Person shall
        not execute a securities transaction involving the purchase or sale of a
        security at a time when such Access Person intends, or knows of
        another's intention, to purchase or sell that security (or an equivalent
        security) on behalf of an Advisory Client. This prohibition would apply
        whether the transaction is in the same (e.g., two purchases) or the
        opposite (a purchase and sale) direction as the transaction of the
        Advisory Client.

    (k) An Access Person shall not cause or attempt to cause any Advisory Client
        to purchase, sell, or hold any security in a manner calculated to create
        any personal benefit to such Access Person or his or her Immediate
        Family. If an Access Person or his or her Immediate Family stands to
        materially benefit from an investment decision for an Advisory Client
        that the Access Person is recommending or in which the Access Person is
        participating, the Access Person


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        shall disclose to the persons with authority to make investment
        decisions for the Advisory Client, any beneficial interest that the
        Access Person or his or her Immediate Family has in such security or
        an equivalent security, or in the issuer thereof, where the decision
        could create a material benefit to the Access Person or his or her
        Immediate Family or result in the appearance of impropriety.

6.  REPORTING BY ACCESS PERSONS

    (a) Each Access Person, except a Non-Affiliated Director or a member of his
        or her Immediate Family, shall require a broker-dealer or bank effecting
        a transaction in any security in which such Access Person has, or by
        reason of such transaction acquires, any direct or indirect Beneficial
        Ownership in the security to timely send duplicate copies of each
        confirmation for each securities transaction and periodic account
        statement for each brokerage account in which such Access Person has a
        beneficial interest to Waddell & Reed, Inc., Attention: Legal
        Department.

    (b) Each Access Person, except a Non-Affiliated Director or a member of his
        or her Immediate Family, shall report to the Legal Department no later
        than 10 days after the end of each calendar quarter the information
        described below with respect to transactions during the quarter in any
        security in which such Access Person has, or by reason of such
        transaction acquired, any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership in the
        security and with respect to any account established by the Access
        Person in which securities were held during the quarter for the direct
        or indirect benefit of the Access Person; provided, however, that an
        Access Person shall not be required to make a report with respect to
        transactions effected for or securities held in any account over which
        such Access Person does not have any direct or indirect influence or
        control:

        (i)  The date of the transaction, the name, the interest rate and
             maturity date (if applicable), the number of shares and the
             principal amount of the security;

        (ii) The nature of the transaction (i.e., purchase, sale or any other
             type of acquisition or disposition);

        (iii)The price at which the transaction was effected;


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        (iv) The name of the broker, dealer or bank with or through whom the
             transaction was effected and, with respect to an account described
             above in this paragraph, with whom the Access Person established
             the account;

        (v)  The date the account was established; and

        (vi) The date the report is submitted.

    (c) Upon commencement of employment, or, if later, at the time he or she
        becomes an Access Person each such Access Person, except a
        Non-Affiliated Director or a member of his or her Immediate Family,
        shall provide the Legal Department with a report that discloses:

         (i)      The name, number of shares and principal amount of each
                  security in which the Access Person had any direct or indirect
                  Beneficial Ownership when he or she became an Access Person;

         (ii)     The name of any broker, dealer or bank with which the Access
                  Person maintained an account in which securities were held for
                  the direct or indirect benefit of the Access Person as of the
                  date he or she became an Access Person; and

         (iii)    The date of the report.

         Annually thereafter, each Access Person, except a Non-Affiliated
         Director or a member of his or her Immediate Family, shall provide the
         Legal Department with a report that discloses the following information
         (current as of a date no more than 30 days before the report is
         submitted):

         (i)      The name, number of shares and principal amount of each
                  security in which the Access Person had any direct or indirect
                  Beneficial Ownership;

         (ii)     The name of any broker, dealer or bank with which the Access
                  Person maintains an account in which securities were held for
                  the direct or indirect benefit of the Access Person; and


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         (iii)    The date the report is submitted.

        However, an Access Person shall not be required to make a report with
        respect to securities held in any account over which such Access Person
        does not have any direct or indirect influence or control.

        In addition, each Access Person, except a Non-Affiliated Director or a
        member of his or her Immediate Family, shall annually certify in writing
        that all transactions in any security in which such Access Person has,
        or by reason of such transaction has acquired, any direct or indirect
        Beneficial Ownership have been reported to the Legal Department. If an
        Access Person had no transactions during the year, such Access Person
        shall so advise the Legal Department.

    (d) A Non-Affiliated Director or a member of his or her Immediate Family
        need only report a transaction in a security if such director, at the
        time of that transaction, knew or, in the ordinary course of fulfilling
        his or her official duties as a director, should have known that, during
        the 15-day period immediately preceding the date of the transaction by
        the director, such security was purchased or sold by an Advisory Client
        or was being considered for purchase or sale by an Advisory Client.

    (e) In connection with a report, recommendation or decision of an Access
        Person to purchase or sell a security, the Companies may, in their
        discretion, require such Access Person to disclose his or her direct or
        indirect Beneficial Ownership of such security. Any such report may
        contain a statement that the report shall not be construed as an
        admission by the person making such report that he or she has any direct
        or indirect Beneficial Ownership in the security to which the report
        relates.

    (f) The Legal Department shall identify all Access Persons who are required
        to make reports under this section and shall notify those persons of
        their reporting obligations hereunder. The Legal Department shall
        review, or determine other appropriate personnel to review, the reports
        submitted under this section.


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7.  REPORTS TO BOARD

    At least annually, each Fund, WRIMCO and W&R shall provide the Fund's board
    of directors, and the board of directors shall consider, a written report
    that:

    (a) Describes any issues arising under this Code or the related procedures
        instituted to prevent violation of this Code since the last report to
        the board of directors, including, but not limited to, information about
        material violations of this Code or such procedures and sanctions
        imposed in response to such violations; and

    (b) Certifies that the Fund, WRIMCO and W&R, as applicable, has adopted
        procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Access Persons from violating
        this Code.

        In addition to the written report otherwise required by this section,
        all material violations of this Code and any sanctions imposed with
        respect thereto shall be periodically reported to the board of directors
        of the Fund with respect to whose securities the violation occurred.

8.  CONFIDENTIALITY OF TRANSACTIONS AND INFORMATION

    Every Access Person shall treat as confidential information the fact that a
    security is being considered for purchase or sale by an Advisory Client, the
    contents of any research report, recommendation or decision, whether at the
    preliminary or final level, and the holdings of an Advisory Client and shall
    not disclose any such confidential information without prior consent from
    the Legal Department. Notwithstanding the foregoing, with respect to a Fund,
    the holdings of the Fund shall not be considered confidential after such
    holdings by the Fund have been disclosed in a public report to shareholders
    or to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Access Persons shall not disclose any such confidential information to any
    person except those employees and directors who need such information to
    carry out the duties of their position with the Companies.


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9.  SANCTIONS

    Upon discovering a violation of this Code, the Companies may impose such
    sanctions as it deems appropriate, including, without limitation, a letter
    of censure or suspension or termination of the employment of the violator.

10. CERTIFICATION OF COMPLIANCE

    Each Access Person, except a Non-Affiliated Director and members of his or
    her Immediate Family, shall annually certify that he or she has read and
    understands this Code and recognizes that he or she is subject hereto.



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                        APPENDIX A TO THE CODE OF ETHICS

                             "Beneficial Ownership"


For purposes of this Code, "Beneficial Ownership" is interpreted in the same
manner as it would be under Rule 16a-1(a)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 in determining whether a person is the beneficial owner of a security for
purposes of Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. In general, a
"beneficial owner" of a security is any person who, directly or indirectly,
through any contract, arrangement, understanding, relationship or otherwise, has
or shares any direct or indirect pecuniary interest in the security. The
Companies will interpret Beneficial Ownership in a broad sense.

The existence of Beneficial Ownership is clear in certain situations, such as:
securities held in street name by brokers for an Access Person's account, bearer
securities held by an Access Person, securities held by custodians, pledged
securities, and securities held by relatives or others for an Access Person. An
Access Person is also considered the beneficial owner of securities held by
certain family members. The SEC has indicated that an individual is considered
the beneficial owner of securities owned by such individual's Immediate Family.
The relative's ownership of the securities may be direct (i.e., in the name of
the relative) or indirect.

An Access Person is deemed to have Beneficial Ownership of securities owned by a
trust of which the Access Person is the settlor, trustee or beneficiary,
securities owned by an estate of which the Access Person is the executor or
administrator, legatee or beneficiary, securities owned by a partnership of
which the Access Person is a partner, and securities of a corporation of which
the Access Person is a director, officer or shareholder.

An Access Person must comply with the provisions of this Code with respect to
all securities in which such Access Person has a Beneficial Ownership. If an
Access Person is in doubt as to whether she or he has a Beneficial Ownership
interest in a security, the Access Person should report the ownership interest
to the Legal Department. An Access Person may disclaim Beneficial Ownership as
to any security on required reports.



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                                   APPENDIX B


                       POLICY STATEMENT ON INSIDER TRADING
                                December 8, 1994



I.       PROHIBITION ON INSIDER TRADING


         All employees, officers, directors and other persons associated with
the Companies as a term of their employment or association are forbidden to
misuse in violation of Federal securities laws or other applicable laws material
nonpublic information.

         This prohibition covers transactions for one's own benefit and also for
         the benefit of or on behalf of others, including the investment
         companies in the United Group of Mutual Funds, Waddell & Reed Funds,
         Inc. and Target/United Funds, Inc. (the "Funds") or other
         investment Advisory Clients. The prohibition also covers the unlawful
         dissemination of such information to others. Such conduct is frequently
         referred to as "insider trading". The policy of the Companies applies
         to every officer, director, employee and associated person of the
         Companies and extends to activities within and outside their duties at
         the Companies. The prohibition is in addition to the other policies and
         requirements under the Companies' Code of Ethics and other policies
         issued from time to time. It applies to transactions in any securities,
         including publicly traded securities of affiliated companies (e.g.,
         Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. (1))

         This Policy Statement is intended to inform personnel of the issues so
         as to enable them to avoid taking action that may be unlawful or to
         seek clearance and guidance from the Legal Department when in doubt. It
         is not the purpose of this Policy Statement to give precise and
         definitive rules which will relate to every situation, but rather to
         furnish enough information so that subject persons may avoid
         unintentional violations and seek guidance when necessary.

------------------------
(1)Reporting transactions in affiliated corporation securities is in addition to
and does not replace the obligation of certain senior officers to file reports
with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


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         All employees, officers and directors of the Companies will be
         furnished with or have access to a copy of this Policy Statement. Any
         questions regarding the policies or procedures described herein should
         be referred to the Legal Department. To the extent that inquiry of
         employees reveals that this Policy Statement is not self-explanatory or
         is likely to be substantively misunderstood, appropriate personnel will
         conduct individual or group meetings from time to time to assure that
         policies and procedures described herein are understood.

         The term "insider trading" is not defined in the Federal securities
         laws, but generally is used to refer to the use of material nonpublic
         information to trade in securities (whether or not one is an "insider")
         or to communications of material nonpublic information to others. In
         addition, there is no definitive and precise law as to what constitutes
         material nonpublic information or its unlawful use. The law in these
         areas has been developed through court decisions primarily interpreting
         basic anti-fraud provisions of the Federal securities laws. There is no
         statutory definition, only statutory sanctions and procedural
         requirements.

         While the law concerning insider trading is not static, it is
         generally understood that the law is as follows:

         (a)      It is unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, to
                  purchase, sell or cause the purchase or sale of any security,
                  either personally or on behalf of or for the benefit of
                  others, while in the possession of material, nonpublic
                  information relating thereto, if such person knows or
                  recklessly disregards that such information has been obtained
                  wrongfully, or that such purchase or sale would constitute a
                  wrongful use of such information. The law relates to trading
                  by an insider while in possession of material nonpublic
                  information or trading by a non-insider while in possession of
                  material nonpublic information, where the information either
                  was disclosed to the non-insider in violation of an insider's
                  duty to keep it confidential or was misappropriated.

         (b)      It is unlawful for any person involved in any transaction
                  which would violate the foregoing to communicate material
                  nonpublic information to others (or initiate a chain of
                  communication to others) who purchase or sell the subject
                  security if such sale or purchase is reasonably foreseeable.

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<PAGE>

         The major elements of insider trading and the penalties for such
         unlawful conduct are discussed below. If, after reviewing this Policy
         Statement, you have any questions, you should consult the Legal
         Department.

         1.       WHO IS AN INSIDER? The concept of "insider" is broad. It
                  includes officers, directors and employees of the company in
                  possession of nonpublic information. In addition, a person can
                  be a "temporary insider" if he or she enters into a special
                  confidential relationship in the conduct of the company's
                  affairs and as a result is given access to information solely
                  for the company's purposes. A temporary insider can include,
                  among others, a company's attorneys, accountants, consultants,
                  bank lending officers, and certain of the employees of such
                  organizations. In addition, the Companies may become a
                  temporary insider of a company it advises or for which it
                  performs services.

         2.       WHAT IS MATERIAL INFORMATION? Trading on inside information
                  is not a basis for liability unless the information is
                  material. "Material information" includes information that a
                  reasonable investor would be likely to consider important in
                  making an investment decision, information that is
                  reasonably certain to have a substantial effect on the price
                  of a company's securities if publicly known, or information
                  which would significantly alter the total mix of information
                  available to shareholders of a company. Information that one
                  may consider material includes information regarding
                  dividends, earnings, estimates of earnings, changes in
                  previously released earnings estimates, merger or
                  acquisition proposals or agreements, major litigation,
                  liquidation problems, new products or discoveries and
                  extraordinary management developments. Material information
                  is not just information that emanates from the issuer of the
                  security, but includes market information such as the intent
                  of someone to commence a tender offer for the securities, a
                  favorable or critical article in an important financial
                  publication or information relating to a Fund's buying
                  program.

         3.       WHAT IS NONPUBLIC INFORMATION? Information is nonpublic until
                  it has been effectively communicated to the marketplace and is
                  available to

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<PAGE>

                  investors generally. One must be able to point to
                  some fact to show that the information is generally public.
                  For example, information found in a report filed with the SEC,
                  or appearing in THE WALL STREET JOURNAL or other publications
                  of general circulation would be considered public.

         4.       WHEN IS A PERSON IN POSSESSION OF INFORMATION? Once a person
                  has possession of material nonpublic information, he or she
                  may not buy or sell the subject security, even though the
                  person is prompted by entirely different reasons to make the
                  transaction, if such person knows or recklessly disregards
                  that such information was wrongfully obtained or will be
                  wrongfully used. Advisory personnel's normal analytical
                  conclusions, no matter how thorough and convincing, can
                  temporarily be of no use if the analyst has material nonpublic
                  information, which he knows or recklessly disregards is
                  information which was wrongfully obtained or would be
                  wrongfully used.

         5.       WHEN IS INFORMATION WRONGFULLY OBTAINED OR WRONGFULLY USED?
                  Wrongfully obtained connotes the idea of gaining the
                  information from some unlawful activity such as theft, bribery
                  or industrial espionage. It is not necessary that the subject
                  person gained the information through his or her own actions.
                  Wrongfully obtained includes information gained from another
                  person with knowledge that the information was so obtained or
                  with reckless disregard that the information was so obtained.
                  Wrongful use of information concerns circumstances where the
                  person gained the information properly, often to be used
                  properly, but instead using it in violation of some express or
                  implied duty of confidentiality. An example would be the
                  personal use of information concerning Funds' trades. The
                  employee may need to know a Fund's pending transaction and may
                  even have directed it, but it would be unlawful to use this
                  information in his or her own transaction or to reveal it to
                  someone he or she believes may personally use it.

         6.       WHEN IS COMMUNICATING INFORMATION (TIPPING) UNLAWFUL? It is
                  unlawful for a person who, although not trading himself or
                  herself, communicates material nonpublic information to those
                  who make an unlawful transaction if the transaction is
                  reasonably foreseeable. The reason for tipping the

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<PAGE>

                  information is not relevant. The tipper's motivation is not
                  of concern, but it is relevant whether the tipper knew the
                  information was unlawfully obtained or was being unlawfully
                  used. For example, if an employee tips a friend about a
                  large pending trade of a Fund, why he or she did so is not
                  relevant, but it is relevant that he or she had a duty not
                  to communicate such information. It is unlawful for a
                  tippee to trade while in possession of material nonpublic
                  information if he or she knew or recklessly ignored that
                  the information was wrongfully obtained or wrongfully
                  communicated to him or her directly or through a chain of
                  communicators.

II.      PENALTIES FOR INSIDER TRADING

         Penalties for unlawful trading or communication of material nonpublic
         information are severe, both for individuals involved in such unlawful
         conduct and their employers. A person can be subject to some or all the
         penalties below even if he or she does not personally benefit from the
         violation. Penalties include civil injunctions, treble damages,
         disgorgement of profits, jail sentences, fines for the person who
         committed the violation and fines for the employer or other controlling
         person. In addition, any violation of this Policy Statement can be
         expected to result in serious sanctions by any or all of the Companies,
         including, but not limited to, dismissal of the persons involved.

III.     MONITORING OF INSIDER TRADING

         The following are some of the procedures which have been established to
         aid the officers, directors and employees of the Companies in avoiding
         insider trading, and to aid the Companies in preventing, detecting and
         imposing sanctions against insider trading. Every officer, director and
         employee of the Companies must follow these procedures or risk serious
         sanctions, including dismissal, substantial liability and criminal
         penalties. If you have any questions about these procedures, you should
         consult the Legal Department.

         A.       IDENTIFYING INSIDE INFORMATION
                  Before trading for yourself or others in the securities of a
                  company about which you may have potential inside information,
                  ask yourself the following questions:

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<PAGE>

                  (1)      Is the information material? Is this information that
                           an investor would consider important in making his or
                           her investment decisions? Is this information that
                           would substantially affect the market price of
                           securities if generally disclosed?

                  (2)      Is the information nonpublic? To whom has this
                           information been provided? Has the information been
                           effectively communicated to the marketplace by being
                           published in a publication of general circulation?

                  (3)      Do you know or have any reason to believe the
                           information was wrongfully obtained or may be
                           wrongfully used?

                  If after consideration of the above, you believe that the
                  information is material and nonpublic and may have been
                  wrongfully obtained or may be wrongfully used, or if you have
                  questions as to whether the information is material or
                  nonpublic or may have been wrongfully obtained or may be
                  wrongfully used, you should take the following steps:

                  (1)      Report the matter immediately to the Legal
                           Department.

                  (2)      Do not purchase or sell the securities on behalf of
                           yourself or others.


                                               AS REVISED SEPTEMBER 1, 1999, AND

                                                     AS REVISED FEBRUARY 9, 2000


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